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The Guatemala 1954 Documents |
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Jungle exercises for the Guatemalan Kaibiles. (photo by Jeremy
Bigwood) |
Washington, D.C., November 18, 2005 - Investigative journalist
Frank Smyth breaks new ground in documenting links between retired
Guatemalan military officers and drug trafficking into the United
States in "The
Untouchable Narco-State: Guatemala's Military Defies the DEA."
Smyth's story, featured in the independent weekly Texas
Observer appearing on news stands today, uses declassified
U.S. documents from the National Security Archive among other critical
evidence.
Smyth's article tells the devastating tale of ongoing, endemic
corruption in Guatemala, made possible by the clandestine ties between
smugglers and former senior military officers. Unlike other Latin
American countries like Colombia and Mexico, Guatemala has not prosecuted
or extradited any of its drug kingpins for a over decade. Today
the country is a hub for drug smuggling into the United States -
according to statistics cited in the article, up to 75% of all cocaine
that reaches the United States passes through this Central American
nation.
Records provided by the National Security Archive for the story
describe a powerful and brutal military institution with intimate
ties to the United States and a history of corruption. They include
information on:
- Scorched-earth
tactics used by the Guatemalan army during the 30-year
civil conflict that resulted in hundreds of thousands of dead
and missing;
- The military's vast web
of informants available to them during and after
the conflict;
- How one corrupt ex-officer, Lt.
Col. Carlos Ochoa Ruiz, used his connections in the
military to protect drug trafficking and car smuggling operations
inside Guatemala.
Additional documents obtained by the Archive through the Freedom
of Information Act include U.S. intelligence reports linking senior
military and intelligence officials - such as retired Generals Francisco
Ortega Menaldo and Manuel Antonio Callejas y Callejas, both mentioned
in the Texas Observer article - to a web of corruption
run by military, police and customs officials. These and other declassified
records can be accessed through links in the text of Frank
Smyth's article.
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