WASHINGTON,
December 3 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iran-Contra villain
Elliott Abrams, who received a pardon from Bush Sr. for his role in the
scandal and was accused of covering up the genocidal policies of the
Guatemalan government, has been promoted as a special adviser to
President George W. Bush for Near East and North African affairs.
Abrams
will report to national security adviser Condoleezza Rice, focusing on
"Arab-Israeli relations and U.S. efforts to promote peace and
security in the region," Rice said in a statement on Monday,
December 3, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
Abrams
was one of the most odious participants in a particularly shameful
chapter of U.S. history. In the '80s, he was Ronald Reagan's assistant
secretary of state for human rights and humanitarian affairs and later
the assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs. In that
post, Abrams, in his own words, "supervised U.S. policy in Latin
America and the Caribbean," said a website called Third World
Traveler.
That
policy included backing the contras-a surrogate army dedicated to
overthrowing the democratically elected Sandinista government of
Nicaragua. It also involved funding the military thugocracy of El
Salvador and supervising its war against a popular leftist rebellion,
the website said.
In
his role as public servant, Abrams found time to cover up the genocidal
policies of the Guatemalan government and embraced the government of
Honduras while it perpetrated serial human rights abuses through
Battalion 3-16, a U.S.-trained "intelligence unit" turned
death squad, it added.
Thick
as thieves with Oliver North, Abrams helped evade congressional
restrictions on aid to the contras. When Congress-spurred on by protests
and embarrassing press disclosures-grew wary of the Central American
wars, the Reaganites sought other avenues for funding them. Ever eager
to serve, Abrams flew to London under the alias "Mr.
Kenilworth" to solicit a $10 million contribution from the Sultan
of Brunei.
In
the congressional investigations that followed disclosure of the
Iran-contra conspiracies, Abrams was never held accountable for the
human rights violations backed, hidden and funded by the Reagan
administration.
Instead
Abrams was accused of withholding information from Congress, a
Washington euphemism for bald-face Iying. In 1991, he copped to two
counts of withholding information from Congress (and was granted a
Christmas Eve pardon a year later by President George Bush).
According
to the website, Abrams was none too pleased, even with this slap on the
wrist. According to a May 30, 1994 article in Legal Times, he
called his prosecutors "filthy bastards," the proceedings
against him "Kafkaesque," and members of the Senate
Intelligence Committee "pious clowns" whose raison d'etre was
to ask him "abysmally stupid" questions. (In the spirit of
full disclosure: Abrams once called me a "rotten bitch" after
I tactlessly noted that much of the world considers him a war criminal.)
Abrams'
own "full biography," posted on the Web site of the Ethics and
Public Policy Center-an oxymoronic think tank where he wiled away much
of the Democratic interregnum awaiting the collective amnesia of the
American public-omits his unpleasantness with Congress. In any case, as
Fleischer said of Abrams' transgressions, "the president thinks
that's a matter of the past and was dealt with at the time."
Loved
ones of the thousand unarmed Salvadoran peasants, including 139
children, killed by U.S.-trained contra troops in the 1981 El Mozote
massacre may be less inclined to let bygones be bygones.
Abrams
has been a consistent massacre denier, even calling Washington's policy
in El Salvador a "fabulous achievement." He told Congress that
the reports carried in the New York Times and Washington Post
a month after El Mozote were Communist propaganda.
In
1993, members of a Salvadoran Truth commission testified about the
massacre in a congressional hearing of the House Western Hemisphere
subcommittee. Chairman Robert G. Torricelli (D-New Jersey) vowed to
review for possible perjury "every word uttered by every Reagan
administration official" in congressional testimony on El Salvador.
Abrams denounced Torricelli's words as "McCarthyite crap."
Eventually
documentation emerged proving that the Reagan administration had known
about El Mozote and other human rights violations all along. Abrams,
however, carefully denied knowledge of the assassination of Salvadoran
Archbishop Oscar Romero, committed shortly after the cleric denounced
government terror.
"Anybody
who thinks you're going to find a cable that says that Roberto
d'Aubuisson murdered the archbishop is a fool," Abrams was quoted
in a March 21, 1993 article in the Washington Post.
Now
Bush II has given Abrams a post that rewards his special experience. In
the proud ranks of America's public servants, he will join other
Iran-contra vets: Secretary of State Colin Powell; Deputy Secretary of
State Richard Armitage; Otto Reich, assistant secretary of state for
inter-American affairs; and presumably John Negroponte, awaiting
confirmation as U.N. ambassador.
Calling
George W. Bush and Jesse Helms "public servants" is like
calling Iran-contra criminal Elliott Abrams an "outstanding
diplomat"-which is precisely what White House Press Secretary Ari
Fleischer did when he announced Abrams' appointment as senior director
of the National Security Council's Office for Democracy, Human Rights
and International Operations, the website said.
Fleischer
conveyed Bush's faith-based assertion that Abrams is "the best
person to do the job," which, happily for the appointee, does not
require Senate confirmation.