Passing of President Pinochet."Gen. Augusto Pinochet Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte[1] (November 25, 1915 – December 10, 2006) was President of Chile from 1974 to 1990, and head of the military junta from 1973 to 1974. , who terrorized his opponents for 17 years after taking power in a bloody coup, died Sunday." So began the December 10 dispatch from Santiago, Chile Santiago, officially Santiago de Chile (Spanish: (helpinfo)), is the capital of Chile, and the center of its largest conurbation (Greater Santiago). , by Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. correspondent Eduardo Gallardo, a dispatch that was carried by thousands of newspapers and Internet sites worldwide. The AP story goes on to tell readers that Gen. Pinochet's name "has become a byword by·word also by-word n. 1. a. A proverbial expression; a proverb. b. An often-used word or phrase. 2. for the state terror ... that retarded democratic change across the hemisphere." Yes, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. AP (and most of the rest of the left-tilting major media), it is former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet--not Fidel Castro Noun 1. Fidel Castro - Cuban socialist leader who overthrew a dictator in 1959 and established a Marxist socialist state in Cuba (born in 1927) Castro, Fidel Castro Ruz , Vladimir Putin, Hu Jintao, Robert Mugabe, Muammar Qadaffi, or Kim Jong-Il--whose name has become a "byword" for state terrorism. By and large, the flavor of the news coverage of Pinochet's death has not deviated much from the treatment he had received for the last 30 years of his life. Which is to say that when it comes to Augusto Jose Ramon Pinochet Ugarte, president of Chile from December of 1974 to March of 1990, the Western press has been singularly, relentlessly, viciously--and unfairly--hostile. For the past three-plus decades, journalists have uniformly felt obligated--as though ordered by some invisible Central Committee--to lard all of their "news" reports and editorials on Pinochet with demonizing epithets and invective. "Brutal dictator." "Torture." "Murder." "Terror." "Bloody." "Tyrant." "Despot DESPOT. This word, in its most simple and original acceptation, signifies master and supreme lord; it is synonymous with monarch; but, taken in bad part, as it is usually employed, it signifies a tyrant. ." "Cruel." These are some of the more commonly used terms that seem to be compulsory when mentioning Gen. Pinochet. It's really quite extraordinary, if one pauses to consider it: why such unremitting animosity toward the man? Even if one accepts at face value the worst charges against Pinochet (which I don't), one must conclude that he was a mere piker pik·er n. Slang 1. A cautious gambler. 2. A person regarded as petty or stingy. [Possibly from Piker, a poor migrant to California, after Pike in the brutality department, compared to terror champs like Castro, Putin, Jintao, et al. After all, according to Pinochet's dogged critics, he's responsible for the disappearance and/or death of some 3,000 of his political opponents over a 17-year period. While it is true that even one life is immeasurably important, the tally attributed to Pinochet barely rates as a blip compared to the tens of thousands imprisoned im·pris·on tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons To put in or as if in prison; confine. [Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en- , tortured, and murdered by Fidel. Ditto for the other aforementioned dictators who, by and large, are treated with kid gloves (if not outright hugs and kisses For the XML format, see . Hugs and Kisses is a term for a sequence of the letters X and O, e.g. XOXO, typically used to express affection or good friendship at the end of a written letter or email. ) by the same media mavens who find Pinochet to be irredeemably odious. It is also true that most of the "evidence" that has been put forward by the Pinochet hounders, when not irrelevant, dubious, or fabricated, does not prove that Pinochet ordered, approved, or even knew of the alleged crimes. Most of the 3,000 "victims" died during a period when communist terrorists, backed by Cuba and the Soviet Union, had plunged Chile into chaos with a terror campaign of bombing, murder, kidnapping, and 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. . These terrorists were compadres of President Salvadore Allende, whom Pinochet overthrew in 1973, with the overwhelming support of Chile's governing officials (legislative, executive, and judicial), the military, and the Chilean people. Plans recovered from Allende's office and residence showed that he and his political henchmen intended to arrest and liquidate thousands of Chilean opponents. Allende committed suicide, but many of his Castro-trained accomplices continued the planned terror war, keeping Chile in a state of turmoil. As inevitably happens in these situations, private citizens, militias, police, or military units sometimes took the law into their own hands, either exacting revenge or striking preemptively against the perceived (and very real) threat. So, what we see in the ongoing media huff about Pinochet are charges about what allegedly happened 20-30 years ago during a genuine war against terror, in which there is little evidence inculpating Pinochet. Meanwhile, on the other hand, Messrs. Castro, Putin, Jintao, et al,--each of whom have thousands of political prisoners suffering torture today--essentially get a free pass from the same chorus shrieking about human rights abuses under Pinochet. Are any of these voices calling on Fidel Castro to release Dr. Oscar Biscet, the pacifist Christian physician who has been tortured in a filthy Cuban prison for years? Dr. Biscet is but one of thousands currently suffering in Castro's gulag. Tens of thousands more have been liquidated by Castro's regime. The evidence regarding Castro is not the least bit ambiguous, as it is regarding Pinochet. The unrelenting howls of outrage against Pinochet's alleged crimes might be more convincing if the howlers were not so obviously blind to the proven crimes of the favored dictators of the left, and were not so monomaniacally obsessed ob·sess v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es v.tr. To preoccupy the mind of excessively. v.intr. with punishing one of the very few leaders of the past century who stood up to the communists' global revolution--and won. For more information about Pinochet, see an article by Mr. Jasper from the September 13, 1999 issue of TNA TnA Total Nonstop Action (wrestling alliance) TNA The National Archives (UK) TNA Training Needs Analysis TNA Tamil National Alliance (Sri Lanka) , also available online at: www.jbs.org/node/977. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion