Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Bush Dynasty

There's a personal risk, too, for Bush if he picks the ''Salvador option.'' He could become an American version of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet or Guatemala's Efrain Rios Montt, leaders who turned loose their security forces to commit assassinations, ''disappear'' opponents and torture captives.

Like the policy that George W. Bush is now considering, Pinochet even sponsored his own international ''death squad'' - known as Operation Condor - that hunted down political opponents around the world. One of those attacks in September 1976 blew up a car carrying Chilean dissident Orlando Letelier as he drove through Washington D.C. with two American associates. Letelier and co-worker Ronni Moffitt were killed.

With the help of American friends in high places, the two former dictators have fended off prison until now. However, Pinochet and Rios Montt have become pariahs who are facing legal proceedings aimed at finally holding them accountable for their atrocities. [For more on George H.W. Bush's protection of Pinochet, see Parry's Secrecy & Privilege.]

One way for George W. Bush to avert that kind of trouble is to make sure his political allies remain in power even after his second term ends in January 2009. In his case, that might be achievable by promoting his brother Jeb for president in 2008, thus guaranteeing that any incriminating documents stay under wraps.

President George W. Bush's dispatching Florida Gov. Jeb Bush to inspect the tsunami damage in Asia started political speculation that one of the reasons was to burnish Jeb's international credentials in a setting where his personal empathy would be on display.
  Consortium News article

Please.

No comments:

Post a Comment