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Regime Change: Is This a New Policy?
Carl K. Savich
March, 2003
Is the Bush administration policy of "regime change" in
Iraq a new policy in US history? Regime change has been the preferred
US foreign policy strategy for the last 100 years. Regime change
is not new at all.
On April 22, 1999, US/NATO aircraft destroyed Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milosevic's official residence in Belgrade.
Was this an attempted regime change by the US government against
a democratically elected leader of an independent and sovereign
UN charter member, Yugoslavia? NATO insisted that it was not specifically
targeting the Yugoslav leader. NATO defined the home as a command
and control facility thus it was a legitimate "military target".
Kevin Bacon, the Pentagon spokesman, stated: "We're not targeting
President Milosevic." Yugoslav government minister Goran Matic
disagreed: "NATO committed a criminal act without precedence--an
assassination attempt against the president of a sovereign state."
What was the significance of the attempted regime change of Slobodan
Milosevic? According to White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, this
attempted regime change set a precedent for the George W. Bush
administration to follow in Iraq in deposing Saddam Hussein. In
a March 10, 2003 briefing, Fleischer explained:
I suppose he might still be there had it not been for NATO and
the United States. That was regime change in Serbia, wasn't it?
Fleischer argued that the illegal NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999
weakened Milosevic and led to his fall from power. The conclusion:
Bombing Saddam Hussein would likewise lead to a regime change in
Iraq.
In 2001, the UCK/KLA infiltrated and invaded Macedonia from Kosovo
in a US plan and strategy to change the constitution of Macedonia
by force. The Macedonian operation was a unique variation of the
US policy of regime change. The US put pressure on the Macedonian
PM Ljupco Georgievski and Interior Minister Ljube Boskovski to
accept the US-sponsored peace agreement. The US allowed the UCK
to move troops and weapons into Macedonia and helped negotiate
their redeployment so that they would be able to continue the terrorist
war against Macedonia. Moreover, the US prevented the Macedonian
regime/government from obtaining weapons. When Boskovski argued
for a more forceful response to the UCK invasion, the US and UK
press labeled him an "ultra-nationalist" and a "hardliner" and
sought to have him tried as a war criminal. The Macedonian operation
by the US was "regime change-lite", a watered-down and
limited regime change operation. But ultimately, if the Macedonian
regime did not capitulate to US demands, regime change was the
end-game option.
The George W. Bush administration has argued that "a regime
change" is necessary in Iraq because Saddam Hussein possesses "weapons
of mass destruction" that are a threat to US "national
security". The Bush administration has coined a new term for
a very old and very common-place notion: The overthrow of a foreign
government/regime by means of force, a coup d'etat.
The concept of regime change is endemic in American history. US
engineered regime changes in foreign states have been common and
systematic throughout US history, demonstrating a pattern and paradigm.
This is the fact that the Bush administration seeks to obscure
and negate by the new coinage, "regime change." The Iraq
regime change of 2002-2003 is not novel or unique in US history.
It is not the exception due to the threat of terrorism brought
on by 9/11. Regime change has been the norm in US history. The
Saddam Hussein regime change of 2002-2003 is only the most recent
instance. But why is a democracy overthrowing the governments/regimes
of foreign nations/states? How can we respect democracy at home
when we so blithely and arrogantly reject it abroad, in foreign
states? For ultimately, a regime change concerns a negation of
the popular will of the population whose regime is changed. Regime
change, in short, is a negation and denial of democracy. Regime
change seeks to impose a regime/government/ruler from outside of
the country so attacked, substituting the will of the US government
for that of the people of the attacked state. Regime change is
the opposite of democracy. Democracy means rule by the people,
that is, a state/nation decides its government by a vote of its
own citizens. A regime change by an outside power entails a denial
or rejection of the popular will. A regime change is the imposition
of a dictatorship or tyranny by a foreign power. In short, regime
change is a negation of democracy.
Under the Monroe Doctrine, European powers were excluded from
colonization in the Americas and were prevented from intervening
in the Western Hemisphere.
In 1904, President Theodore Roosevelt enunciated the Corollary
to the Monroe Doctrine, which allowed the US to intervene anywhere
in the Western Hemisphere to prevent intervention by European powers.
In 1903, the US needed to build the Panama Canal for strategic
military and commercial reasons. This necessitated a regime change.
Panama had been a northern province of Columbia. Columbia, however,
did not back the US plan to create a canal on Columbian territory
that the US would occupy and have sovereignty over. The way the
US government got around this problem was to send US Marines to
Columbia to engineer the "independence" of the province
of Panama from Columbia. There was then a US-sponsored regime change
in Panama, with the installation of a US-backed regime in the newly
independent nation of Panama.
The US established military bases in Nicaragua from 1912 to 1925.
In 1909, the US had engineered a regime change by helping to depose
the Liberal General Jose Zelaya. In 1925, the US created the National
Guard in Nicaragua. Augusto Cesare Sandino waged a guerrilla war
from 1926 to 1932 to expel the US military forces. In 1934, Sandino
was assassinated by the National Guard forces under Anastasio Somoza.
Somoza would rule the country as a dictator with US backing until
his own assassination in 1956. During the 1980s, the Reagan administration
trained Contras that sought to engineer a regime change in Nicaragua
by overthrowing the Daniel Ortega regime and restore a US-installed
dictator. In 1984, the US mined harbors, which was condemned by
the World Court.
In 1951, Jacobo Arbenz was democratically elected president of
Guatemala in a landslide victory. The election was free and fair.
Arbenz sought to transform the feudal economy to a modern capitalist
economy. He began with a fair redistribution of land. He passed
the Agrarian Reform Act. The United Fruit Company, however, opposed
these land seizures and wanted to maintain the feudal nature of
the economy to maximize profits. United Fruit lobbied the US government
for a regime change. US Public Relations/propaganda pioneer Edward
Bernays was hired to concoct a propaganda war that would make regime
change palatable. Arbenz was described as a tool of the "international
Communist conspiracy" who was a threat to US national security.
US Secretary of State John Foster Dulles then told his brother
Allen Dulles, the CIA director, to organize a regime change. The
US then bombed Guatemala using unmarked CIA planes and invaded
the country with a proxy army organized by the CIA. In June, 1954,
Arbenz was overthrown. The US installed a military junta under
the command of General Castillo Armas. A CIA official described
the operation as follows: "We thought we could knock off these
little brown people on the cheap."
In 1951, Mohammed Mossadegh was democratically elected Prime Minister
of Iran. He nationalized Iranian oil production. The Anglo-Iranian
Oil Company (AIOC), however, had a monopoly on Iranian oil production.
The UK oil company made 170 million pounds in profit per year.
But Iranian workers were economically exploited and saw littler
of these profits. The British government then decided to orchestrate
a regime change in Iran. British intelligence, M16, coordinated
its efforts with the CIA, Operation TPAJAX. The CIA and M16 organized
a staged mass demonstration in Teheran. In August, 1953, Mossadegh
was overthrown and the Shah was installed in power for 26 years.
In 1960, the Congo obtained its independence. Patrice Lumumba,
the leader of the MNC, became the first Prime Minister of the
Congo. Lumumba, however, obtained aid from the USSR. The Belgian
government and corporations, and the CIA saw this as a Soviet
takeover bid. The CIA then engineered a regime change in the
Congo. ANC leader Joseph Mobutu Sese Seko was put in power, imprisoning
Lumumba. On January 17, 1961, Lumumba was assassinated.
On April 15, 1961, 1,500 Cuban exiles armed, trained, and supplied
by the US in Florida, began the CIA-orchestrated attempt to engineer
a regime change in Cuba, the military overthrow of Fidel Castro.
The regime change in Cuba had been organized initially during the
President Dwight D. Eisenhower administration, known as Operation
Pluto. There have reportedly been over 600 regime change attempts
against Castro by the US.
In Ecuador, democratically elected President Jose Velasco was
forced to resign in a regime change orchestrated by the US in 1961.
Ngo Dinh Diem was assassinated in South Vietnam in 1963 in a coup
that the US was aware of and allowed to happen, in effect, dumping
Diem because he was not a pliant enough proxy.
In 1965, the Dominican Republic was invaded to support the regime
of Donald Reid Cabral in opposition to the Constitutionalist candidate
Juan Bosch, who threatened to unseat Cabral. Bosch complained: "This
country is not pro-American, it is United States property."
In 1970, Salvador Allende, described as a "Marxist",
became the democratically elected leader of Chile. Immediately
following the 1970 elections in Chile, the US planned a regime
change. US Ambassador Edward Korry recommended a "pre-emptive
military coup." The CIA began organizing Operation Fubelt,
the overthrow of the Marxist/Communist regime of Allende. Why
a regime change? A Marxist regime in the Western Hemisphere was
perceived as a threat to the national security of the US. In
the Cold War ideological/political/military conflict, the Marxist
Allende regime in Chile was perceived as a victory for the USSR.
Following the election of Allende, the US sought to destabilize
his regime. Gen. Rene Schneider, Commander in Chief of the Chilean
Army, was assassinated with CIA connivance because he rejected
a plea to overthrow Allende. Under Operation Djakarta, the CIA
planned the assassinations of Allende's Party members, the Popular
Unity Party. The ultimate goal was a regime change. Henry Kissinger
stated:
I don't think we need to stand by and watch a country go Communist
because of the irresponsibility of its own people.
Is this how democracy is defined? Kissinger gets to decide who
rules the Chilean people? The CIA destabilization policy was not
working. From the moment of Allende's election, the CIA decided
on a coup d'etat, a regime change or overthrow of the Allende regime.
The US government, however, wanted to cover-up the US role in the
regime change. A CIA cable from October 16, 1970 disclosed that
the CIA had decided on a coup or regime change in Chile but sought
to cover-up/conceal CIA involvement:
It is imperative that these actions be implemented clandestinely
and securely so that the USG and American hand be well hidden.
On September 11, 1973, the CIA engineered a regime change in Chile
with the overthrow of Salvador Allende. Allende was assassinated.
The US installed the dictator Augusto Pinochet. Pinochet would
murder 3,000-50,000 Chilean citizens. In the 1990s, Spain sought
to extradite him to stand trial for these murders. The US media
blithely reported on the Pinochet murder charges, but censored
the fact that the US had installed him in power illegally in 1973.
Isn't the US complicit in his mass murders?
On October 13, 1983, Bernard Coard, overthrew the Prime Minister
of Grenada, Maurice Bishop. Coard was described as a "Marxist" and
pro-Soviet. On October 25, in Operation Urgent Fury, 1,200 US troops
from the 75th Rangers invaded Grenada and deposed the Coard regime.
In April, 1986, Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi was targeted
for regime change in Operation El Dorado Canyon, when the US bombed
his residence, killing his daughter and wounding his two sons.
In December, 1989, US President George Bush ordered a regime change
in Panama. In Operation Just Cause, the US invaded Panama, captured
the Panamanian leader Manuel Noriega, and brought him back for
trial in the US as a POW. Manuel Noriega had been in the pay of
the US Army and CIA for over 30 years. George Bush had even worked
with Noriega. The United Nations declared the invasion "a
flagrant violation of international law."
On September 30, 1991, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was overthrown by
a military coup led by Lieutenant General Raoul Cedras. In September,
1994, 20,000 US troops invaded Haiti to re-install Aristide. Before
the US invasion, then US Joint Chiefs Chairman Colin Powell met
with Cedras and presented him with a US ultimatum: Cedras could
leave Haiti and there would be no US military assault or he could
remain in power and be overthrown by military force.
Regime change has been the norm in US foreign policy, not the
exception, as the Bush administration wants to make us believe.
The regime change in Iraq in 2003 is part of this long-standing
policy of overthrowing regimes that are hostile to US interests.
What is perhaps new and novel about the Iraqi regime change is
that it is no longer covert or shrouded in propaganda and justified
or rationalized by invoking the UN or humanitarianism, i.e., "humanitarian
intervention" to prevent a genocide. Regime change is being
advocated openly and overtly. This is what is new. But everything
else is exactly the same.

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