Fri Feb 10 2012
Departments
International Issues

Bush finds soul mate in Russia's bloody Beria
by Mark Anderson
December 7, 2005

Imagine if Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria gave a press conference. What would it sound like?

Beria, as you may remember, was head of Stalin's secret police during one of the most infamous periods in Soviet history, the Great Purge of 1938. As head of the NKVD, or Soviet secret police, he was responsible for carrying out a massive political repression that was nominally focused on a series of "enemies of the people," such as the intelligentsia, professionals and rich peasants. In reality, however, the bloody purge - and others Beria oversaw for Stalin in later years - were simply a means for Stalin to ruthlessly consolidate his power by vanquishing his political enemies through show trials, forced labor camps, torture and, when all else failed, murder.

It has been estimated that millions of people died in Stalin's purges, most of which were run by Beria. Several hundreds of thousands were executed by firing squad and millions more were forcibly resettled or sent to gulags, where many of them died due to starvation, disease, exposure and overwork. As head of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs, Beria oversaw the larger and larger network of secret camps, detention centers, prison cells and execution sites needed to terrorize anyone even slightly suspected of political disloyalty.

So what would it sound like if in, say, 1938, Beria gave a press conference to detail how the Great Purge was going? Well, it would probably sound a lot like the press conference President Bush gave in the Oval Office of the White House, today, December 6th, 2005.

It's not known for sure if the United States is currently running a secret prison system somewhere in the world that matches the size and scope of the one Beria oversaw during the 1930s and 1940s in Soviet Russia. It's unlikely, of course, but difficult to verify, especially since the Bush administration has made lying, cover-up and mendacity the order of the day when discussing what government agents are or are not doing in the name of the American people in the War on Terror. We do know, however, is that the United States is, in fact, running a secret system of prisons somewhere in the world. In fact, President Bush admitted as such today.

Even without Bush's inadvertent confirmation, however, the most critical bits of information we have on the activities of an American secret prison system come from recent reporting in both The Washington Post and the New Yorker magazine. On Nov. 4, the Post reported that the CIA has been interrogating some of its most important al Qaeda prisoners at a Soviet-era compound in Eastern Europe, which many suspect is either in Romania or Poland. Last month, the New Yorker reported that the Bush administration has implicitly authorized torture methods "that may be necessary to win the war on terrorism" as long as they are preformed overseas.

So the evidence is there, in these and other sources. And, when pressed, various members of the administration can't seem to keep their stories straight about whether the United States is breaking international law, not to mention running roughshod over every universally accepted moral and legal norm, in extraditing and torturing prisoners. Just the other day, in fact, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, speaking to a group of reporters with Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the two got into a disagreement over whether or not it was the responsibility of a U.S. soldier, in a battle zone or elsewhere, to stop torture and physical coercion when he saw it.

Gen. Pace expressed his understanding that whenever a soldier ran across "inhumane treatment," it was his responsibility to do something to stop it. Secretary Rumsfeld, of course, disagreed, noting that he believed it was simply enough to "report" the abuse.

Which brings us back to Bush and Beria. While it's difficult to imagine that the man responsible for the ministry of the interior for one of history's bloodiest police states would ever be forthcoming about governmental activities of any sort, it's not difficult to imagine that the leader of the world's foremost democracy would have no such problem. Unfortunately, that's not the case.

Bush proved so today, in the most direct and stark language one could imagine. During a meeting with the Director of the World Health Organization, he was asked by a reporter if the United States had "any plans to change the policy of renditioning and/or the detention centers alleged to be taking place in Europe." In response, Bush said "I don’t talk about secret programs."

Actually, what he said was:

"I don't talk about secret programs, covert programs, covert activities. Part of a successful war on terror is for the United States of America to be able to conduct operations, all aimed to protect the American people, covertly."

So there you have it. Not "well, I can't answer that because we don't have any detention centers in Europe." Not "I'd like to be able to talk about that, but since I don't know anything about it, I can't.' Or not even something like "It is not the policy of the United States to operate secret detention centers anywhere in the world where we would never do something as awful as torture or coerce a suspect who we have not publicly charged."

That's because, in the end, President Bush certainly does know about America's secret detention centers around the world. And, worse yet, he condones of them. His feeble attempts a few moments later to suggest the U.S doesn't torture were once again as laughable as his attempts to make the world believe things are going swimmingly in Iraq these days. Bush, like Rumsfeld, simply believes its okay to torture people in secret locations, outside of the prying eyes of the American people. And he's not ashamed to admit it.

Since the Soviet Union imagined that it was some great experiment in equality and socialism instead of a bloody police state second to perhaps no other in the history of mankind, the worst thing someone could be accused of in Stalin's day (and before, and after) was to be an "enemy of the people." Since these enemies were likely to do anything to undermine the attempts of the Soviet government to make life better for its people, it was believed, any action - no matter how extreme, horrific or unusual - was justified for the greater glory of "the people."

So you could imagine that, in a windowless room somewhere in the Kremlin in 1938 or so, with a half dozen terrified journalists hand-picked to ask Beria how the "Global War on Internal Terrorists" (GWOIT) was going, the bespectacled, balding interior minister, resplendent in his starched Red Army uniform, would likely say everything was coming along nicely, thank you. And, if one of those reporters was bold enough to ask about reports there were secret prisons buried somewhere in the basement of police headquarters, the answer would probably be something along the lines of "We don't discuss covert operations designed to protect the people." And, if the very brave reporter were to ask why people were being tortured in those prison cells, the answer might have been "We've got to take each threat seriously; we've got to stay on the offense."

Just like George Bush. Just like in 2005. Just like in the United States of America.




Recent International Issues Articles

The arrogance of power, per annum
  December 27, 2005
  Michael Winship

Rice authorized National Security Agency to spy on UN Securit
  December 27, 2005
  Jason Leopold

Beware Iraqization
  December 26, 2005
  Mike Ferner

US Russia warplanes
  December 22, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Thoughts from the heartland
  December 10, 2005
  Glenn Yeagley

Bush finds soul mate in Russia's bloody Beria
  December 7, 2005
  Mark Anderson

An international peace movement building
  December 4, 2005
  David Swanson

CIA’s “Torture Taxi” in the spotlight
  November 23, 2005
  Mike Ferner

America's corporatacracy says "No MAS"
  November 20, 2005
  Jason Miller

Leaks can be good: secret government sucks
  November 15, 2005
  Stephen Crockett

American euthanasia
  November 8, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Sweet dreams for America's ruling elite and their sycophantic loyalists
  November 6, 2005
  Jason Miller

War Keyensianism
  November 6, 2005
  John H. St.John

Rove and Cheney caught in Fitzgerald's web. Will they go down too?
  October 30, 2005
  Jason Leopold

Where is the Grand Inquisitor when you need him?
  October 27, 2005
  Jason Miller

Burma U.S. military
  October 25, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Koran Muslims
  October 21, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Was the vote on the Iraqi constitution fixed? A rotten foundation is hard to build on
  October 21, 2005
  Kevin Zeese, DemocracyRising.US

Surrender is not an option
  October 18, 2005
  Jason Miller

Dissent isn’t taken lightly down under
  October 6, 2005
  Scott Parkin

Bringing the war home to the Pentagon
  September 27, 2005
  Mike Ferner

Katrina Tsunami
  September 7, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Rev. Jackson comments on personal meeting with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
  August 30, 2005
  Rainbow/PUSH

Hopping off ears
  August 12, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Halliburton Sold Iranian Oil Company Key Nuclear Reactor Components, Sources Say
  August 10, 2005
  Jason Leopold

George Bush Knows Why They Hate Us
  August 10, 2005
  Jason Miller

Superstitious women
  July 19, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Bin Laden Souvenirs
  July 13, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

George and Tony Get their al-Qaeda Fix
  July 13, 2005
  Greg Palast

Interview with Norman Solomon: “War Made Easy”
  July 8, 2005
  Adrian Zupp

CIA Hmong
  July 8, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Turkey is Not a Role Model for the Middle East
  July 1, 2005
  Gene C. Gerard

Suu Kyi birthday (Sunday, June 19)
  June 23, 2005
  Richard S. Ehrlich

Terrorism threat and Press Freedom
  June 18, 2005
  Kamala Sarup

Pope's comments are saddening and painful to millions of Catholics
  June 8, 2005
  Jay Smith Brown

French fried Friedman
  June 8, 2005
  Greg Palast

CAFTA's hollow reforms
  May 28, 2005
  Cyril Mychalejko

Radio Havana Interviews Chomsky
  April 24, 2005
  Noam Chomsky

Capitalist Globalization and Resistance in Guatemala
  April 21, 2005
  Cyril Mychalejko

Vanunu faces new prison term: will they bury him? Dan Ellsberg calls fellow whistleblower "a prophet"
  April 17, 2005
  Mark Gaffney

A kick in the pants...
  April 17, 2005
  Sheila Samples

Is the US Navy vulnerable in the Gulf? The myth of US invincibility
  April 17, 2005
  Mark H. Gaffney

Senior Advisor at the United Nations Foundation to address the international state of women
  April 13, 2005
  Patrick Terrien, President and CEO, Columbus Council on World Affairs

An existential struggle
  April 6, 2005
  Mazin Qumsiyeh

International Women's Day: Honoring the Lives of Women in Perilous Times
  March 1, 2005
  Lucinda Marshall

Dictators of the 21st Century
  February 15, 2005
  Dr. J. Alva Scruggs

First North American Heroin Maintenance Study Now Underway in Vancouver
  February 11, 2005
  DRCNET

Editorial: A Cautious First Step
  February 11, 2005
  David Borden,Executive Director DRCNET, borden@drcnet.org

Exit stage Baghdad
  February 7, 2005
  Cynthia L. Butler, Esq.




Read International Issues Articles by Year:
2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000



FREE PRESS EMAIL UPDATE


Donate to The Free Press The Free Press Store

FOLLOW US ON
twitter
facebook


SEARCH THE FREEPRESS




1021 E. Broad St. Columbus, OH 43205 | 614.253.2571 | truth@freepress.org
All content © 1970-2012 The Columbus Free Press
Disclaimer