Clinton: Support for Guatemala Was Wrong
|
President Clinton, left, and Guatemalan
President Alvaro Arzu Irigoyen review a military honor guard at the presidential
palace in Guatemala City on Wednesday. (AP)
|
By Charles BabingtonWashington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 11, 1999;
GUATEMALA CITY, March 10 – President Clinton
expressed regret today for the U.S. role in Guatemala's 36-year civil war,
saying that Washington "was wrong" to have supported Guatemalan security forces
in a brutal counterinsurgency campaign that slaughtered thousands of civilians.
Clinton's statements marked the first substantive comment from the
administration since an independent commission concluded last month that
U.S.-backed security forces committed the vast majority of human rights abuses
during the war, including torture, kidnapping and the murder of thousands of
rural Mayans.
"It is important that I state clearly that support for military forces or
intelligence units which engaged in violent and widespread repression of the
kind described in the report was wrong," Clinton said, reading carefully from
handwritten notes. "And the United States must not repeat that mistake. We must,
and we will, instead continue to support the peace and reconciliation process in
Guatemala."
Guatemalan President Alvaro Arzu sat next to Clinton when he made the remarks
at a "peace round table" in the ornate National Palace of Culture, but had no
immediate response. His press aides said they were unsure whether he would
comment.
Clinton's aides said the president had thought for some time about how to
word his near-apology. The Guatemalan military received training and other help
from the U.S. military in an era when the United States supported several Latin
American rightist governments fighting leftist insurgents.
The record of the Guatemalan security forces was laid bare in a report
released Feb. 25 by the Historical Clarification Commission, which grew out of
the U.N.-sponsored peace process that ended the war in 1996. The commission said
the Guatemalan military had committed "acts of genocide" during the conflict, in
which 200,000 people died.
Clinton's comments capped a busy, nation-hopping day that began in San
Salvador, El Salvador's capital. There, he told Central American leaders that
their recently democratized region deserves to be a more equal partner with the
United States, and he pledged to make several trade and immigration changes they
have sought.
In what aides billed in advance as the major address of his four-day Central
American visit, Clinton praised the nations for ending their devastating civil
wars and shifting to democratic systems of government. All Central American
countries, he noted in a speech in San Salvador before the Salvadoran
Legislative Assembly, now have freely elected leaders.
Winning applause from the legislature's 83 attending members, the president
vowed to reduce tariffs on some Central American exports, press for nearly $1
billion in new aid for victims of Hurricane Mitch and give $8 million to the
region's schools. Tiptoeing around the sensitive issue of past U.S. support for
rightist governments in the region, Clinton also acknowledged that the United
States had undergone "bitter divisions about our role in your region," which
included a "dark and painful period."
But he did not grant one key request from this region's leaders, who want the
United States to cease or slow deportation of undocumented Central Americans,
many of whom send money to relatives in their impoverished homelands.
"We must continue to discourage illegal immigration," he said. "We must
enforce our laws."
Clinton did, however, say he will fight to put illegal immigrants from
Guatemala and El Salvador on an equal footing with Nicaraguans, who enjoy easier
rules in proving "hardship," a condition that can allow them to remain in the
United States although they crossed the border illegally.
The Nicaraguan rules are a holdover from U.S. animosity toward the former
Sandinista regime, the leftist government of the 1980s that some Nicaraguans had
sought to escape by moving illegally to the United States.
"I will do everything I possibly can to overcome that different treatment,"
Clinton said, drawing a roar of approval from the Salvadoran lawmakers.
Administration officials already are drafting plans to change the guidelines,
which do not require congressional approval, presidential aides said. In
Guatemala, Clinton said he would seek to change the guidelines by law and
executive action.
In his speech in San Salvador, Clinton alluded to the brutal civil wars and
insurrections that killed thousands of people in Guatemala, El Salvador,
Nicaragua and, to a lesser degree, Honduras, in recent decades. He did not,
however, apologize for U.S. support for the Salvadoran military in the 1980s,
which totaled billions of dollars during a war that cost 70,000 lives.
"Just a few years ago, the people of Central America were suffering from a
legion of man-made disasters far more cruel than anything nature can bestow on
us," he said. Over the past several years, he said, "a battlefield of ideology
has been transformed into a marketplace of ideas."
When Clinton traveled later in the day to Guatemala City, he ran into one of
the few signs of protest during his trip. Several demonstrators held signs
decrying U.S. support for the military during its counterinsurgency campaign. A
few yelled, "Viva Monica," a reference to former White House intern Monica S.
Lewinsky.
© Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company