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A servant of the empire.


If you wink at torture, if you don't mind mass slaughter, if lying is of no concern to you, you can go far in this world.

Just ask John Negroponte John Dimitri Negroponte (born July 21, 1939 in the United Kingdom) (IPA [ˌnɛgroʊˈpɑnti]) is a American diplomat. He is currently serving as the United States Deputy Secretary of State. .

He served as a State Department political officer in Saigon from 1964 to 1968, and then he headed up the Vietnam desk at the National Security Council from 1971 to 1973. During that decade, the Johnson-Nixon war was killing three million people in Indochina, along with 58,000 U.S. soldiers.

But Negroponte did not want the war to end. In fact, as an aide to Henry Kissinger at the Paris peace talks, he urged Kissinger not to come to terms.

A decade later in Central America Central America, narrow, southernmost region (c.202,200 sq mi/523,698 sq km) of North America, linked to South America at Colombia. It separates the Caribbean from the Pacific. , Negroponte essentially ran the illegal Contra War against Nicaragua from his post as U.S. ambassador to Honduras.

This war cost the lives of some 30,000 people.

An inescapable feature of U.S.-Central America policy in the 1980s was support for torturers. Here, Negroponte did his part.

In particular, he knew about and supported Battalion 316, the Honduran intelligence unit, trained by the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency.


(1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy).
, that killed at least 184 people. One of those was the former secretary to Archbishop Oscar Romero of El Salvador, himself the victim of a CIA-funded death squad in 1980. The secretary fled to Honduras after Romero's assassination Assassination
See also Murder.

assassins

Fanatical Moslem sect that smoked hashish and murdered Crusaders (11th—12th centuries). [Islamic Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 52]

Brutus

conspirator and assassin of Julius Caesar. [Br.
. Battalion 316 then abducted abducted Distal angulation of an extremity away from the midline of the body in a transverse plane and away from a sagittal plane passing through the proximal aspect of the foot or part, or away from some other specified reference point  her and threw her from a helicopter to her death.

In 1995, the Baltimore Sun ran a prizewinning prize·win·ning also prize-win·ning  
adj.
Having won or worthy of winning a prize: the prizewinning entry.

Adj. 1.
 series on Battalion 316. It concluded that Negroponte knew about the tortures and murders and covered them up. Under his direct supervision, the embassy prepared reports to Congress that never mentioned the brutality of the Honduran military, the Sun reported. This omission allowed Honduras to keep getting U.S. funding.

"I do not believe that death squads were operating in Honduras," Negroponte testified before Congress in 2001.

But here's what the Sun said. "The intelligence unit, known as Battalion 316, used shock and suffocation suffocation: see asphyxia.  devices in interrogations," it reported. "Prisoners often were kept naked and, when no longer useful, killed and buried in unmarked graves. Newly declassified de·clas·si·fy  
tr.v. de·clas·si·fied, de·clas·si·fy·ing, de·clas·si·fies
To remove official security classification from (a document).



de·clas
 documents and other sources show that the CIA and the U.S. Embassy knew of numerous crimes, including murder and torture, committed by Battalion 316, yet continued to collaborate closely with its leaders."

When he took office in 2001, George W. Bush plucked Negroponte to be U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. There Negroponte led the diplomatic offensive for the war on Iraq, trumpeting the now-discredited claims about weapons of mass destruction Weapons that are capable of a high order of destruction and/or of being used in such a manner as to destroy large numbers of people. Weapons of mass destruction can be high explosives or nuclear, biological, chemical, and radiological weapons, but exclude the means of transporting or  and bullying other nations to go along.

For his hard work, he was rewarded the post of U.S. ambassador to Iraq, and from there he has risen now to be Bush's nominee for director of national intelligence.

Negroponte has served the empire his whole life.

To do so properly, you need to get some blood on your resume.

Negroponte has plenty. For Bush, that makes him the ideal man for the job.

The great investigative reporter Seymour Hersh warns us in our cover interview this month that Bush may be even more dangerous than we think. Hersh would have preferred that Bush was in Iraq for cynical reasons. But Bush is a true believer, Hersh says, and as a result, the body bags will keep coming. It's not a pleasant thought, but one we must grapple with.
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Article Details
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Author:Rothschild, Matthew
Publication:The Progressive
Article Type:Editorial
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:561
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