2013/01/09

Michel Chossudovsky: Terrorism with a "Human Face"!

The History of America's Death Squads. The recruitment of death squads is part of a well established US military intelligence agenda. There is a long and gruesome US history of covert funding and support of terror brigades, and targeted assassinations going back to the Vietnam war. As government forces continue to confront the self proclaimed "Free Syrian Army" (FSA) the historical roots of the West's covert war on Syria, which has resulted in countless atrocities, must be fully revealed. From the outset in March 2011, the US and its allies have supported the formation of death squads, and the incursion of terrorist brigades in a carefully planned undertaking. The recruitment and training of terror brigades in both Iraq and Syria, was modeled on the "Salvador Option", a "terrorist model" of mass killings by US sponsored death squads in Central America. It was first applied in El Salvador, in the heyday of resistance against the military dictatorship, resulting in an estimated 75,000 deaths. The formation of death squads in Syria builds upon the history and experience of US sponsored terror brigades in Iraq, under the Pentagon's "counterinsurgency" program. The Establishment of Death Squads in Iraq: US sponsored death squads were recruited in Iraq, starting in 2004-2005, in an initiative launched under the helm of the US Ambassador John Negroponte, who was dispatched to Baghdad by the US State Department in June 2004. Negroponte was the "man for the job". As US Ambassador to Honduras, from 1981 to 1985, Negroponte played a key role in supporting and supervising the Nicaraguan Contras based in Honduras, as well as overseeing the activities of the Honduran military death squads. "Under the rule of General Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, Honduras's military government was both a close ally of the Reagan administration, and was "disappearing" dozens of political opponents in classic death squad fashion." In January 2005, the Pentagon that it was considering "forming hit squads of Kurdish and Shia fighters to target leaders of the Iraqi insurgency, in a strategic shift borrowed from the American struggle against left wing guerrillas in Central America 20 years ago". Under the so called El Salvador option, Iraqi and American forces would be sent to kill or kidnap insurgency leaders, even in Syria, where some are thought to shelter.      

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