William
Barr Greenlit Bush’s Invasion of Panama, Is Venezuela Next?
The US Justice Department
unsealed an indictment on Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and other
government officials last week, accusing them of "narco-terrorism."
The move is reminiscent of the 1988 indictment of former CIA asset and Panamanian
leader Manuel Noriega. The Noriega indictment resulted in a US invasion of
Panama that left hundreds – possibly thousands – of dead civilians in its wake.
Attorney General William Barr took to the podium to announce Maduro’s
indictment. Barr happens to be the same person who gave the first Bush
administration the legal justification to invade Panama just over 30 years ago.
Barr first worked in the
DOJ in 1989 when George H. W. Bush appointed him as head of the Office of Legal
Counsel (OLC). Bush and Barr had some history together. The two first crossed
paths in 1976 when Bush was head of the CIA, and Barr served as a congressional
liaison for the agency. At the time, Manuel Noriega was also on the CIA’s
payroll.
Noriega served as a useful
tool for the CIA for decades, most notably known for helping the US send money
and weapons to the Contras in Nicaragua. But after Noriega became more of a
liability than an asset, the US turned on him. Noriega’s connection to drug
trafficking became the pretext for his disposal, something the US government
was undoubtedly aware of long before the indictment.
In 1988, the Senate
subcommittee on terrorism, narcotics, and international operations said, "It is clear that
each US government agency which had a relationship with Noriega turned a blind
eye to his corruption and drug dealing, even as he was emerging as a key player
on behalf of the Medellin Cartel (Pablo Escobar’s infamous Colombian
cartel)."
In February 1988, under the
Reagan administration, the US indicted
Noriega on charges of Drug trafficking and racketeering, and he was taken
off the CIA’s payroll. Over the next year, the US placed economic sanctions on
Panama in an effort to pressure Noriega to step down. When Bush came into the
White House in January 1989, he continued adding sanctions, and tensions
between Noriega’s military and US troops stationed in Panama increased. The US
controlled the Panama Canal at the time, so there was a strong US military
presence in the country, and tens of thousands of US citizens were living
there.
It was around the time of
ever-growing tensions between Noriega and the US that William Barr was asked by then-Attorney
General Dick Thornburgh to author a legal opinion memo. The purpose of Barr’s
opinion memo was to overrule an opinion written in 1980 by President Carter’s
head of the OLC that ruled the FBI does not have international authority to
arrest a person in another nation if that nation does not consent. The opinion
written under Carter said, "US agents have no law enforcement authority in
another nation unless it is the product of that nation’s consent."
Barr’s opinion said that
the FBI could carry out arrests in other nations, even if it violates
international law. The document, dated June 21st, 1989, reads, "At
the direction of the President or the Attorney General, the FBI may use its
statutory authority to investigate and arrest individuals for violating United
States law, even if the FBI’s actions contravene customary international
law."
Barr wrote, "The 1980
Opinion was clearly wrong in asserting that the United States is legally
powerless to carry out actions that violate international law by impinging on
the sovereignty of other countries. It is well established that both political
branches — the Congress and the Executive — have, within their respective
spheres, the authority to override customary international law."
In November 1989, after the
document’s existence became known, Barr testified before
Congress on its contents. Barr refused to make the document itself public
and did not disclose all of its contents, which caused some
controversy, but that seemed to be a distraction from the real
issue – the belief that the president is above international law. Writing in
the Los Angeles Times in October 1989, journalist Ron Astrow
said his sources in the White House dubbed Barr’s ruling "the president’s
snatch authority." Astrow speculated that this new authority could be used
to arrest Noriega.
On December 20th, 1989, President Bush
launched Operation Just Cause. Over 27,000 troops invaded Panama to arrest
Noriega, the largest US military action since the Vietnam war. The campaign
was especially brutal for
civilians. The neighborhood of El Chorillo in Panama City saw the worst
destruction. US forces indiscriminately bombed El Chorillo without giving the
residents any notice, resulting in civilian deaths and the destruction of about
4,000 homes. Horrific stories of US tanks running over and crushing civilians
surfaced after the invasion, and witnesses described a total disregard for
civilian life by the US forces.
The civilian death toll
given by the US government is around 200, but that number is widely disputed.
Some human rights groups say the number is in the thousands. Either number is
horrific considering Noriega was captured on January 3rd, 1990, and the
campaign only lasted two weeks. Victims claim many bodies were buried in mass
graves and never counted, and to this day, families of the dead are still searching for the bodies of
their loved ones. In 2019, Panama made December 20th an official day of
mourning.
Bush did not get
Congressional approval for the invasion, violating the War Powers Act that was
passed in 1973 after President Nixon’s bombings of Cambodia and Laos. Bush
publicly justified the invasion on the grounds of self-defense. A US marine was
killed in Panama a few days before the invasion, part of an escalating series
of confrontations between US troops and the Panamanian military. Some reports say US troops were
purposely provoking members of Panama’s armed forces. The indictment of Noriega
and the harsh economic sanctions were probably enough provocation to cause
incidents between the two countries’ armed forces.
The invasion violated at
least two international treaties: The United Nations Charter and the Charter of
the Organization of American States (OAS). Shortly after the invasion
began, the OAS voted 20 to 1 in favor of
an immediate US withdrawal. The UN General Assembly denounced the invasion in a vote of 75 to
20. Barr’s opinion memo made it clear that the Bush administration was not
concerned with violating international law.
Barr believed in a strong
Executive branch and later advised Bush that he did not need
Congressional approval for the war against Iraq. In 1991, Barr’s support for
Bush’s leadership was rewarded, and he was nominated to be the 77th Attorney General of
the United States. Fast forward about 30 years later, and William Barr is back
in that office.
With the indictment of
Maduro, the DOJ placed a $15 million bounty on his head, offering that money
for any information that leads to his arrest. Indicting a head of state is an
incredible provocation, but by US logic, Maduro is no longer Venezuela’s president.
Since opposition leader, Juan Guaido declared himself president of Venezuela in
January 2019, the US and its allies have not recognized the Maduro government,
even though he still holds power in Caracas. As Barr put it, "We do not
recognize Maduro as the president of Venezuela. Obviously, we indicted Noriega
under similar circumstances, we did not recognize Noriega as the president of
Panama."
Maduro has always been in
the crosshairs of the Trump administration, and this indictment is just another
transparent effort of US regime change in the South American country. The
allegation against Maduro is that he works with Colombia’s rebel FARC group to
smuggle cocaine through Venezuela that eventually reaches the US. According to
Barr, the route the cocaine takes is either on boats through the Caribbean, or
on airplanes through Honduras.
A closer look at where the cocaine
in the US comes from shows the vast majority does not pass through Venezuela.
A report released by the
Washington Office for Latin America (WOLA) earlier in March debunked the myth
spread by Washington that Venezuela is a top narco-state. Using the US
government’s own numbers, the WOLA report found that in 2017 only 7 percent of
the cocaine that came to the US moved through Venezuela’s Eastern Caribbean
waters. The vast majority, 84 percent, moved through the Eastern Pacific.
Barr estimates around 200 to 250
metric tons of cocaine transits through Venezuela per year. According to the
numbers in the WOLA report, 210 metric tons passed through Venezuela in 2018.
By comparison, Guatemala had over 1,400 metric tons pass through it that same
year. Both Venezuela and Guatemala are known as "transit countries,"
meaning they do not produce cocaine, it only transits through. Colombia, the
world’s top producer of cocaine, had about 2,400 metric tons moved through the
country in 2018.
The numbers show that if
the concern was drug trafficking and not regime change, the US has much bigger
fish to fry than Nicolas Maduro if the allegations against him are even true.
Economic sanctions placed on Venezuela by the Trump administration make it near
impossible for the country to sell its oil, Venezuela’s greatest natural
resource. If Maduro really was the corrupt "narco-terrorist" the US
claims he is, wouldn’t sanctioning the oil sector make him more reliant on drug
money and increase the flow of cocaine? Since the oil sanctions started in
2017, the flow of cocaine through Venezuela has actually decreased.
The Center for Economic
Policy and Research (CEPR) released a report in April 2019 that
found US sanctions on Venezuela were responsible for 40,000 deaths in the
country. Experts believe the updated number is
now around 100,000 since the crippling sanctions are still in effect. The CEPR
report explains how sanctions impact Venezuela’s medical supplies, and with the
country now facing a possible coronavirus
outbreak, those sanctions will only exacerbate the epidemic. The indictment of
Maduro in the midst of a global pandemic shows the world that US imperialism
never shows mercy.
Realistically, a US
invasion of Venezuela to arrest Maduro is unlikely. The task would prove much
more difficult than the invasion of Panama. Venezuela is much bigger and is
lacking the US military presence Panama had in the 80s. The military has stayed
loyal to Maduro, and Venezuela’s civilian militia has over three million members. Maduro has called for the
creation of an "Anti-Imperialist School" to train his militia members
as "professionals." Anti-imperialism is a key tenant of Maduro’s
rhetoric, and Hugo Chavez’s before him, the Trump administration’s Venezuela
policy has done nothing but play into this narrative.
But the fact is, there is a
president in the White House who has not taken the military option to remove
Maduro off the table. And the Attorney General believes the president has the
right to invade a sovereign nation to arrest its leader without Congressional
approval, even if it is in direct violation of international law.
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