24 July 1998
Source: http://www.usia.gov/current/news/latest/98072318.llt.html?/products/washfile/newsitem.shtml


USIS Washington File
_________________________________

23 July 1998

PENTAGON DEFENDS ARMY SCHOOL OF THE AMERICAS

(Denounces efforts by legislators to close school)  (930)

By Eric Green

USIA Staff Writer

WASHINGTON -- The Defense Department has denounced as "just plain
lies" charges from some members of Congress that the U.S. Army School
of the Americas (SOA) in Fort Benning, Georgia is training Latin
American and Caribbean military personnel in acts of torture and other
human rights violations against their own countrymen.

In a July 23 interview, Defense spokesman Bill Darley described the
school as "one of the finest institutions within the United States" to
promote democracy and the rule of law in Latin America. The school, he
said, has over 60,000 graduates, "the vast majority of whom are
productive, patriotic citizens of their country." The SOA, he added,
has a "distinguished track record in terms of training" soldiers.

The school, which opened in 1946 in Panama, moved in 1984 to Fort
Benning. The SOA is described as one of the few U.S. military schools
that teach in Spanish. Officers receive training that lasts from a few
days to almost a year.

Darley took strong exception to Massachusetts Democratic
Representative Joseph Kennedy's characterization of the school as
engaging in "a total disregard for basic human rights and civil
liberties among its graduates."

At a July 23 press conference, Kennedy, along with Rep. Esteban Torres
(D-California), showed a video of Colombian soldiers beating unarmed
farmers participating in a protest and then turning on Colombian
cameraman Richard Velez. The soldiers, the legislators charged,
operated under the command of SOA graduate Nestor Ramirez, and left
Velez with serious internal injuries. Velez, who also spoke at the
press conference, has been granted asylum in the United States.

Kennedy also cited other recent human rights abuses in Colombia and
said he will submit legislation in Congress during the week of July 27
to close the school. Kennedy proclaimed that he has the votes to cut
off congressional funding for the SOA, which he said would effectively
shut the school down.

The legislators said that graduates of the school include abusers of
human rights such as Roberto D'Aubuisson of El Salvador, and former
Panamanian strongman Manuel Noriega, currently imprisoned in the
United States for drug trafficking. Another SOA graduate is Haitian
general Raoul Cedras, who overthrew that nation's elected president,
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, in 1991.

"Today the focus is on Colombia," Kennedy said. "Tomorrow, we could
talk about Guatemala and the next day El Salvador. There is hardly a
country in our hemisphere that hasn't been touched by the crimes of
School of Americas graduates. When will this end?"

Torres said that abuses by SOA graduates continue "and are not, as the
School's defenders claim, a thing of the past." Throughout Latin
America, he added, the SOA is "seen as a training ground for
repressive militaries and dictators, and its record cannot be
ignored."

Defense spokesman Darley said legislation to close the school is
submitted every year, usually by Kennedy, and "of course it's the
prerogative of Congress" to do that. "But many of the reasons set
forth" to close it down "are just patent lies, they're just not true."

Darley said that SOA critics hold the school to an unfair standard.
For example, he said, no one blames a police academy and calls for it
to be shut down if one of its graduates goes off "on their own
initiative and does things that are illegal and not correct."

Darley pointed to the fact that the Clinton administration has
certified that the school's training and teaching were in accordance
with U.S. law.

"The school is an integral part of our efforts to develop closer and
more effective ties to the militaries of Latin America," Defense
Secretary William Cohen wrote to Congress January 21. "We have ensured
that the school is an effective transmitter of our values to the
military leadership of the region."

Darley said the purpose of the school continues to be to teach Latin
American soldiers a variety of military skills, although he added that
its "curriculum" now includes training in counter-narcotics
operations.

Darley called Kennedy's charge that the school is teaching torture
"clearly absurd." Though he said he was unfamiliar with the latest
charges about the Colombian cameraman, Darley said it was unfair to
condemn the SOA as a whole because of alleged human rights abuses by
one of its graduates.

Darley said there is no "course curriculum at the SOA or any U.S.
military school in how to beat up journalists, so the connection is
absurd."

Colombia, he said, is engaged "right now in a terrible civil war, and
it's been going on now" for years. The increasing "tempo" of what's
going on in that country, with drug traffickers moving a huge quantity
of drugs along with increasing violence "lends itself to a violent
atmosphere," Darley said.

"So in an emotional and supercharged environment like Colombia, there
are bound to be all kinds of incidents. But making the connection
between a photographer getting beat up and the SOA is beyond me,"
Darley said.

He said that the "battery of detractors will cling to anything to
bring down the school." Such detractors, he said, remain silent about
the "indiscriminate killing of thousands and thousands of people in
Colombia by terrorist groups in that country. You never hear human
rights organizations complaining about them."

Darley said he was happy to be identified by name because "I'm proud
of the School of the Americas."