Death squad
From Includipedia, the inclusionist encyclopedia
| This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (September 2007) |
A death squad is an armed squad of men that kills civilians. These groups tend to commit extrajudicial assassinations / extrajudicial killings and forced disappearances of persons. These killings are often conducted in ways meant to ensure the secrecy of the killers' identities, so as to avoid accountability and ensure deniability.[1][2]
Death squads are often, but not exclusively, associated with the violent political repression of dictatorships, totalitarian states and similar regimes. They typically have the tacit or express support of the state, as a whole or in part (see state terrorism). Death squads may comprise a secret police force, paramilitary group or official government units with members drawn from the military or the police. They may also be organized as vigilante groups.
Death squads may be distinguished from terrorist groups in that their violent actions are used to maintain the power of a local or national elite, rather than intending to disrupt their existing authority per se. Foreign powers may aid states where death squads are active, usually without the international criticism that would be involved when supporting states that support terrorism. Some death squads, including those with links with corrupt elites, have been classified as terrorist organizations.
Death squads can go out on patrol willing to kill and looking for trouble or seeking to commit premeditated attacks against political opponents, alleged rebel sympathizers and any other people deemed "dangerous" or simply "undesirable" (e.g.. such as homeless and squatters) by authorities or local interest groups. They may also act to remove portions of the civilian populations whose existence is perceived as not serving the purposes of the ruling elite. Death squads have been used in contexts of politicides.
[edit] History
Although the term "death squad" did not rise to notoriety until the activities of such groups in Central and South America during the 1970s and 1980s became widely known, death squads have been employed under different guises throughout history. The term was first used during the Battle of Algiers by Paul Aussaresses [3].
[edit] Recent use
As of 2006, death squads have continued to be active in several locations. They were on the rise through the 1960s and 1970s. However, they now appear to have been on the decline since about 1981 . Some known recent centers of activity include Chechnya, Congo, Colombia, Iraq, and Sudan, among others.
[edit] By Country
[edit] Argentina
Alianza Anticomunista Argentina, a far-right death squad mainly active during the "Dirty War".
[edit] Bolivia
In the late 1960s death squads killed several thousand people.[citation needed]
[edit] Brazil
- Further information: History of Brazil (1964–1985)
In Brazil, death squads first appeared during the seventies. They were linked to the military police (the most famous one being the infamous "Scuderie LeCoq") or civilian police forces (including Mão Branca which means the "White Hand"). They targeted criminals who had become famous for their crimes and for evading the police or those involved in the killing of policemen (the most notorious case involved Lúcio Flávio, an infamous criminal known as "fair-haired devil").
Scuderie LeCoq, for instance, took its name from a deceased policeman whose death was connected to organised crime. A rather surprising (and uncommon) characteristic of both these death squads are their fondness for publicity: LeCoq's members were photographed (or appeared in public) wearing black ski masks and black jackets featuring an emblem composed of a skull, a rose and a revolver. Mão Branca's members used to leave notes detailing the crimes for which the victim had been murdered (the name came from the fact that no fingerprints could ever be found, suggesting that the murderers wore gloves). These death squads were tolerated (if not outright supported) by the military government and were employed to spread fear among the régime's opponents (often likened to common criminals). After the fall of the military regime, they faded into obscurity but sometimes resurface. However, the phenomenon has become both more widespread and less organised. While in the past they got their ideological and logistic support from the military, they are now motivated by the corporatism within the police forces and fuelled by corruption. The Brazilian death squads are now more a criminal phenomenon than a type of illegal policing.
[edit] Cambodia
Assassinations and mass killings of Vietnamese in the late 1970s. The Khmer Rouge began employing death squads to purge Cambodia of non-communists after taking over the country in 1975 . They rounded up their victims, questioned them and then took them out to killing fields to be shot or beaten to death. More than 1.6 million Cambodians fell victim before the Khmer Rouge were overthrown.
[edit] Central and South America
Death squad activity became widespread in Guatemala and El Salvador during the 1980s, where plain-clothes assassins would murder dissidents fingered as "subversives" under the pretext of counter-insurgency. The Salvadorian death squads typically operated in full cooperation with elements from the National Armed Forces, most of their targets were suspected members from FMLN, BPR, FAPU and other left wing organisations / members and their sympathizers as well as undermine civilian president José Napoleón Duarte. In addition to murdering those labelled guerilla sympathizers, death squads were also known to massacre whole villages suspected of harboring guerrillas, especially in Guatemala. One well-known death squad that still operates in Central America is the Salvadoran-based Sombra Negra ("Black Shadow" in Spanish), which consists of vigilantes that hunt down suspected criminals and gang members (see MS-13).
[edit] Chile
- Further information: Chile under Pinochet and Operation Condor
The Caravan of Death, an Army death squad, roamed Chile beginning in October 1973, following Augusto Pinochet's American backed coup which overthrew the regime of President Salvador Allende. In particular, members of Chile's Socialist and Communist Parties were targeted, including two infantrymen and several Army officers. Of these included: Brigade General Sergio Arellano Stark; Lieutenant Colonel Sergio Arredondo Gonzalez, later director of the Infantry School; Mayor Pedro Espinoza Bravo, an Army Intelligence officer, later operations chief of the DINA secret police; Captain Marcelo Moren Brito, later commander of Villa Grimaldi, the torture camp; Lieutenant Armando Fernandez Lario, later a DINA operative and mastermind behind the assassination of Orlando Letelier and others. The group traveled from prison to prison in a Puma helicopter, executing political prisoners with small arms and bladed weapons. The victims were then buried in unmarked graves. In June 1999, judge Juan Guzmán Tapia ordered the arrest of five retired generals.
[edit] China
Mao Zedong made use of the Red Guards to assassinate, imprison, and terrorise millions of suspected political opponents during the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s.
[edit] Colombia
In Colombia, the United Self-Defence Forces of Colombia (AUC), as well as previous and later paramilitary groups, have been described as death squads due to aspects of their modus operandi and the support or tolerance that they have received from members of the Colombian security forces and of society in different circumstances. Links between paramilitaries and members of official security forces continue to exist. Several Colombian paramilitary groups began operating as death squads in the 1980s and later ones have often continued to do so, but there are disagreements among analysts as to the accuracy of such a classification in contemporary times. It has been argued that the AUC and newer groups have developed into more complex and autonomous entities than traditional death squads, partially because the fragmentation of the larger drug cartels (some of which sponsored or co-sponsored paramilitary groups) has allowed them to directly participate in the illegal drug trade. This has contributed to giving such groups greater degrees of economic, social and political autonomy. Death squad actions would be one part of their overall activities. Separately, private death squads also exist on a local level, unrelated to the AUC/paramilitary framework.
[edit] Cuba
Batista in the 1950s maintained BRAC secret police that conducted death squad activities.[citation needed]
[edit] Dominican Republic
Police operated the La Banda death squad in the mid-1960s.[citation needed]
[edit] East Timor
The Indonesian government operated death squads throughout this territory.
[edit] El Salvador
- Main articles: Ita Ford, Maura Clarke, Dorothy Kazel, Jean Donovan, Oscar Romero.
During the Salvadoran civil war, death squads achieved notoriety when far-right vigilantes assassinated Archbishop Óscar Romero for his social activism in March 1980 . In December 1980, three American nuns and a lay worker were raped and murdered by a military unit later found to have been acting on specific orders. Death squads were instrumental in killing hundreds of peasants and activists. Funding for the squads came primarily from right-wing Salvadoran businessmen and landowners. [4]Because the death squads involved were found to have been soldiers of the Salvadoran military, which was receiving U.S. funding and training during the Carter and Reagan administrations,these events prompted some outrage in the U.S, however human rights activists criticized U.S. administrations for denying Salvadoran government links to the death squads. Veteran Human Rights Watch researcher Cynthia J. Arnson writes that "particularly during the years 1980-1983 when the killing was at its height (numbers of killings could reach as far as 35,000), assigning responsibility for the violence and human rights abuses was a product of the intense ideological polarization in the United States. The Reagan administration downplayed the scale of abuse as well as the involvement of state actors. Because of the level of denial as well as the extent of U.S. involvement with the Salvadoran military and security forces, the U.S. role in El Salvador- what was known about death squads, when it was known, and what actions the United States did or did not take to curb their abuses- becomes an important part of El Salvador’s death squad story.” [5]. Some death squads, such as Sombra Negra, are still operating in El Salvador.[3]
[edit] France
The French military used death squads during the French-Algerian War from 1954 to 1962.[6]
[edit] Germany
During the 1930s, the leader of Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler made extensive use of death squads, starting with the infamous Night of the Long Knives and reaching a peak with the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 . Following the frontline units, the Nazis brought along four travelling death squads called Einsatzgruppen (Einsatzgruppe-A through D) to hunt down and kill Jews, Communists and other so-called undesirables in the occupied areas. This was the first of the massacres that made up the Holocaust. Typically, the victims, who included many women and children, were forcibly marched from their homes to open graves or ravines before being shot. Many others suffocated in specially designed poison trucks called gas vans. Between 1941 and 1944 , the Einsatzgruppen killed about 1.2 million Soviet Jews, as well as tens of thousands of suspected political dissidents, POWs, and uncounted numbers of Romany.
[edit] Guatemala
Guatemala has had death squads active since the 1950s up through the 1990s.[citation needed]
[edit] Haiti
In Haiti, the paramilitary death squad SIN was organized in the 1980s to use military force against narcotics smugglers, it became used as a death squad for political goals.
In Haiti the paramilitary death squad Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH), organized in mid-1993, terrorized the supporters of Jean-Bertrand Aristide by murder, massacres, public beatings, arson raids on poor neighborhoods and severing limbs by machete. Its goal was to destroy popular support for Aristide and his Lavalas political movement through indiscriminate terror. Aristide had been elected in a landslide victory in 1991 , enjoying great popularity among the Haitian poor, but served only eight months before being deposed in a military coup. The junta that ruled from 1991 to 1994 gave free rein to both military and FRAPH repression. Several thousand Haitians either fled to the Dominican Republic or Florida, where the U.S. was forced to deal with a severe refugee problem.
During the 1992 U.S. presidential campaign, candidate Bill Clinton had promised to restore democracy to Haiti if elected. Inaugurated in 1993, the administration had to deal with a continuing refugee problem in Florida. Condemning FRAPH and the military regime as nothing more than "armed thugs," the administration cooperated with a multinational force and dispatched 15,000 troops sent and a high-level negotiating team (Jimmy Carter, Sam Nunn, and Colin Powell) to force the military to step down, restoring Aristide to power in August 1994 after international sanctions and pressure had failed to produce any results. Although the presence of U.S. and UN peacekeepers helped restore calm and security, this success, claims researcher Lisa A. McGowan, was undermined by their refusal to disarm the disbanded Haitian military and paramilitaries. As McGowan wrote,
"USAID is providing funding and technical assistance to strengthen Haiti’s judicial system, yet the U.S. has refused Haïtian government requests to deport FRAPH leader Constant, who was imprisoned in the U.S. and wanted in Haïti on murder charges. Instead, the U.S. Justice Department released him from prison. Furthermore, the Clinton administration refuses to give the Haïtian government uncensored copies of the documents seized from FRAPH headquarters, raising suspicions that the documents contain incriminating information about CIA and other U.S. collaboration with Haïtian paramilitaries. Documents that were obtained revealed, for example, that the CIA knew that Constant was directly implicated in the 1993 murder of Justice Minister Guy Malory, yet kept him on their payroll until the return of Aristide in 1994. [2]"
It subsequently emerged that the US government had in fact played a significant role in establishing and funding FRAPH. The investigative journalist Allan Nairn broke the story in an article published in The Nation in 1994. [3] Nairn based his findings on interviews with military, paramilitary and intelligence officials in Haïti and the United States as well as Green Beret commanders and internal documents from the U.S. and Haïtian armies. Nairn spoke directly with Constant himself, then being held in a Maryland jail, shortly before he was due to be deported to Haïti. According to Constant, he started the group that became FRAPH at the urging of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), and that even after the U.S. occupation got under way in September 1994, "other people from my organization were working with the DIA.", aiding in operations directed against "subversive activities". [4] When Nairn tried to follow up (Constant insisted on a face-to-face meeting), the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service denied him access, explaining that Constant had had a change of heart and no longer wanted to talk.[5]
Constant later confirmed in 1995 on CBS's "60 Minutes" that the CIA paid him about $700 a month and that he created FRAPH while on the CIA payroll. According to Constant, the FRAPH had been formed "with encouragement and financial backing from the DIA and the CIA." (Miami New Times, 26 February 2004) [6]
In February 1996, the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) announced that it had obtained thousands of pages of newly declassified U.S. documents, which they claim revealed that the U.S. government recognized the brutal nature of FRAPH but denied it in public. Describing the attitude of US government officials, CCR lawyer Michael Ratner said:
"...they were talking out of both sides of their mouth. They were talking about restoring democracy to Haïti, but at the same time, they were undermining democracy in the coup period -- at times supporting a group that committed terrorist acts against the Haïtian people." [7]
According to Ratner, U.S. suspicions of Aristide’s leftist populism prodded them to seek support from even the most brutal anti-Aristide elements. Observers such as Ratner, Nairn and Lisa McGowan have argued that covert assistance to antidemocratic forces such as FRAPH was used to pressure Ariside into abandoning his ambitious program for social reform and adopt harsh economic reforms when the U.S. returned him to power.
According to Bill O'Neil, consultant for the New York-based National Coalition for Haïtian Rights, though the CIA and the Pentagon encouraged FRAPH early on, "within a few weeks or a few months, [U.S. support] was largely jettisoned." O'Neil, though, expressed concern that the U.S.'s reluctance to completely sever relations with FRAPH until 1995 (when Constant was arrested) may have allowed several high-profile figures to go into hiding. [8]
Although Aristide was indeed restored to the presidency through U.S. military intervention in 1994, he was again removed from the presidency, this time through U.S. military intervention in 2004. At this point, the death squads were quickly reconstituted and resumed their usual operations against the organizations of the poor majority.
[edit] Honduras
Honduras had death squads active through the 1980s, the most notorious of which was Battalion 316. Hundreds of people, teachers, politicians, and union bosses were assassinated by government-backed forces. Battalion 316 received substantial support and training from the United States Central Intelligence Agency.[7]
[edit] Indonesia
Indonesia used death squads to rub out the PKI the Indonesian Communist Party in the 1960s. The use of death squads continued through the 1980s.[citation needed]
[edit] Iran
During the 1950s a relatively moderate regime was put in power through the efforts of the CIA. Regardless, this regime of the Shah used SAVAK death squads to kill thousands. After the revolution death squads were used by the new regime. In 1983 the CIA gave one of the leaders of Iran Khomeni information on KGB agents in Iran. This information was probably used.[citation needed]
The Iranian regime later used death squads occasionally throughout the 1970s, 1980s. During the 1990s more than 80 writers, translators, poets, political activists, and ordinary citizens who had been critical of the government in some way, disappeared or were found murdered.[8]
- Further information: Chain Murders of Iran
[edit] Iraq
| The neutrality of this section is disputed. Please see the discussion on the talk page. This section has been tagged since December 2007. |
Iraq was formed by the British from three provinces of the Ottoman Empire following the empire's breakup after World War I. Its population is overwhelming Muslims but divided into Shia and Sunni Arabs and with a substantial Kurdish minority in the north. The new state leadership in the capital of Baghdad was comprised mostly of the old Sunni Arab elite although this ethnic group was a minority.
This leadership used death squads and committed massacres in Iraq throughout the 20th century, culuminating in the dictatorship of Saddam Hussien.[9]
After Saddam was overthrown by the US invasion in 1983 the secular socialist Baathist leadership were replaced with a provisional and later constitutional government that included leadership roles for the Shia and Kurdish. This paralleled the development of ethnic militias by the Shia, Sunni, and the Kurdish Peshmerga.
During the course of the Iraq War the country has increasingly become divided into three zones: a Kurdish ethnic zone to the north, a Sunni center and the Shia ethnic zone to the south.
While all three groups have operated death squads, [10] in the national capital of Baghdad some members of the now Shia police department and army formed unofficial, unsanctioned, but long tolerated death squads.[11] They possibly have links to the Interior Ministry and are popularly known as the 'black crows'. These groups operated night or day. They usually arrested people, then either tortured[12] or killed them.[13]
The victims of these attacks were predominantly young males who had probably been suspected of being members of the Sunni insurgency. Agitators such as Abdul Razaq al-Na’as, Dr. Abdullateef al-Mayah, and Dr. Wissam Al-Hashimi have also been killed. Women and children have also been arrested and or killed. [14] Some of these killings have also been simple robberies or other criminal activities.
A feature in a May 2005 issue of the magazine of The New York Times accused the U.S. military of modelling the "Wolf Brigade", the Iraqi interior ministry police commandos, on the death squads used in the 1980s to crush the Marxist insurgency in El Salvador.[15]
Western news organizations such as Time and People disassembled this by focusing on the aspects such as probable militia membership, religious ethnicity, as well as uniforms worn by these squads rather than stating the United States backed Iraqi government had death squads active in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.[16]
[edit] Ireland
During the Irish War of Independence, Michael Collins mounted one of the most successful guerrilla campaigns in all of history. Using a hand picked crew of gunmen who were dubbed "The Twelve Apostles," Collins assassinated carefully selected officials of the Royal Irish Constabulary, the Dublin Metropolitan Police and British Intelligence. He referred to these tactics as "Selective Terrorism." After Bloody Sunday (1920), the British Government was forced to negotiate the Anglo-Irish Treaty, which guaranteed the independence of the Irish Free State in 1921.
The use of Guerrilla warfare continued during the Irish Civil War which followed the signing of the Treaty. Michael Collins,ironically himself remains their most famous victim.
[edit] Ivory Coast
Death squads are active in this country.[17]
This has been condemned by the US[18] but appears to be difficult to stop.[19]
[edit] Jamaica
There are death squads that have been active in this country.[20][21]
[edit] Japan
During the Second World War, the Imperial Japanese Army also employed death squads to scare remainder populations under their occupation into submission. They are known as "Kempeitai".
[edit] South Korea
Any news reports of the use of death squads in Korea originates around the middle of the 20th century such as the Jeju Massacre[22] and Taejon.[23] There was also the multiple deaths that made the news 1980 in Gwangju.[24]
[edit] Lebanon
Death squads were active during the civil war from 1975 to 1990. The number of the disappeared is put around 17,000.[25][26]
[edit] Mexico
In 1968 the Mexican Army killed hundreds of people in the Tlatelolco massacre. Through the 1970s and 1980s death squads were used against students, leftists, and activists. One of these squads was the Brigada Blanca. In 1997 about forty-five people were killed by a death squad in Chenalho.[27]
In the state of Chihuahua more than four hundred women have been 'disappeared' since 1994.[28] While a few perpetrators have been found, the majority of the members of the organization committing these 'disappearances' has remained underground. The disappearances continue as of 2007.
[edit] Nicaragua
Death squads were active in this country throughout the 1970s and '80s.
During the 1980s, the Anti-Communist Contra guerillas in Nicaragua were described as death squads.[29][30][31] The Contras were considered terrorists by the Marxist Sandinista regime, which alleged that their attacks targeted civilians. The Contras, who received money, training, and arms from the Argentine junta and then the American CIA, mounted raids which targeted northern Nicaragua, destroying military bases, bridges, and airstrips. They also attempted to weaken and disrupt the enemy regime by frequently kidnapping and assassinating Sandinista officials. A CIA training manual instructed the Contras, under the heading "Selective Use of Violence", to "neutralise carefully selected and planned targets such as court judges, police or state security officials, etc."[32]
The Sandinista regime also made use of death squads to assassinate their political opponents at home and abroad. The most notable example took place in 1980, when a hand picked squad of assassins under the command of Argentine Maoist Enrique Gorriarán Merlo fired a bazooka into the car which was driving former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle through the streets of Asunción, Paraguay.
[edit] Peru
During the internal conflict in Peru, several death squads operated in the country. These included the state-sponsored Rodrigo Franco Command and Grupo Colina, the latter responsible for a number of assassinations and massacres including the Barrios Altos and La Cantuta massacres. Shining Path, the Maoist subversive organization, also had special groups to carry out "selective annihilations" of both military and civilian targets.
[edit] Philippines
New People's Army groups known as "Sparrow Units" were active in the mid-1980s, killing government officials, police personnel, military members, and anyone targeted for elimination. They were also supposedly part of an NPA operation called "Agaw Armas"(Filipino for "Stealing Weapons"), where they raided government armories as well as stealing weapons from slain military and police personnel.
Also see Davao death squads
[edit] Russia
During the Bolshevik Revolution and the Russian Civil War, Vladimir Lenin used the Cheka to murder members of the House of Romanov, the Russian nobility, officers of the White Army, Russian Orthodox priests and laity, and officials of the Russian Provisional Government.
During the late 1930s, the Soviet government under Joseph Stalin used death squads in the secret police force, the NKVD, to hunt down and kill suspected political opponents during the Great Purge. Mass graves from this era continue to be excavated by Memorial (society).
The most infamous action of Soviet death squads in the 20th century was the Katyn massacre of 1940. Several thousand Polish Army officers were transferred by the NKVD from the GULAG and shot to death at Goat Hill and buried in mass graves inside the forests of Katyn. The transportation vehicles for this were given the nickname 'Black Ravens' by the local peasantry.[33] This phrase echoes other nicknames given to other death squads.
In addition, a large number of Anti-Communists in the West were also targeted for assassination. Two of the most notable victims were Lev Rebet and Stefan Bandera, Ukrainian nationalists who were assassinated by the KGB in Munich, West Germany. Both deaths remained unsolved until the 1961 defection of their murderer, Bohdan Stashynsky.
After the invasion of Afghanistan by the Russian military in the late 1970s and through the 1980s they continued to use death squads. The occasional massacre using rifles in a district here,[34] the use of aerodynamic scatterable land mines (which appeared vaguely toy-like) to kill civilians in another.[citation needed] The use of this strategy to conquer Afghanistan was rendered ineffective through the influence and support of Western Intelligence services such as the ISI the Pakistani secret service, the French SDECE, MI6, and the American CIA.
The Russian security apparatus continued to exist after the technical dissolution of the USSR in 1991.
The corruption of the Soviet era caused Boris Yeltsin's privatization policies to be manipulated by corrupt Party officials, black marketeers, and the Russian Mafia. The resulting looting of State businesses and natural resources has created an oligarchy wherein politicians, banks, and corporate officials behaved more like drug barons than pillars of the community. These conditions allowed criminal gangs to flourish during the 1990s. The new Russian elites are known to use death squads, and many gruesome murders of mobsters and high ranking politicians took place throughout the 1990s. More recently, however, they have become more subtle.
The FSB[35] is as of 2006 the primary arm used by the authorities for wet work in non-war zones.[36][37][38][39] 'Disappearances' are not unknown in the capital Moscow.[40][41]
The Russian military continued to use death squads in war zones[42][43][44] however after the cessation of official hostilities there were be less reports of their activities.[45][46]
[edit] Rwanda
The Rwandan Genocide of 1994 was carried out by numerous death squads called the "Interahamwe" (see History of Rwanda). Members of these killing squads hunted down Tutsis and moderate Hutus in many towns and villages. There were less Tutsis death squads in operation around their single stronghold during this event. The "Interahamwe" typically chopped up their victims with machetes or shot them at close range. Many of these weapons were of French manufacture.
The Rwandan Hutu armed forces often helped in these massacres, which killed from 650,000 to 800,000 before the Rwandese Patriotic Front took over the country in July of that year. The Rwandese Patriotic Front appeared to have stopped a genocide but they are not without guilt as well. In the following years many murderers were imprisoned but the sheer number of perpetrators prevented any fair judicial proceedings from taking place. In most cases most of the perpetrators were only imprisoned for a time or simply allowed their freedom under the principles of 'truth and reconciliation'.
[edit] South Africa
Death squads were also used by the preceding Apartheid governments against Black Africans. Agents of these groups were known as 'Vultures'.[citation needed] During the 1980s, the South African Bureau of State Security also possessed very close ties to the Loyalist death squads in Northern Ireland, supplying them with a large number of clandestine arms shipments (see Ulster Defence Association, Ulster Volunteer Force).
On the other end of the struggle, Nelson Mandela's African National Congress and the South African Communist Party oversaw a campaign of terrorism and assassination directed against the Apartheid regime. This branch of the ANC was known as Umkhonto we Sizwe ("The Spear of the Nation").
[edit] Spain
Prior to World War II, Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union fought a war by proxy during the Spanish Civil War. There were death squads used by both the Falangists and Loyalists during this conflict. Probably the most famous victim of Franco's death squads was the poet Federico Garcia Lorca.
The Loyalist death squads were heavily staffed by members of Stalin's OGPU and targeted members of the Catholic clergy and the Spanish nobility for assassination (see Red Terror (Spain)). The ranks of the Loyalist secret police included Erich Mielke, the future head of the East German Ministry of State Security.
In the modern era, G.A.L.(Grupos Antiterroristas de Liberación) terrorist group were death squads illegally set up by officials within the Spanish government to fight ETA. They were active from 1983 until 1987, under PSOE's cabinets.[citation needed]
[edit] Thailand
During the 1970s, the Krathin Daeng or Red Guard was one of the more well known death squads active in this country. Assassination of political and economic opponents took place including massacres.[citation needed]
[edit] Turkey
Death squads were used by the Ottoman Turks against ethnic Armenians and Greeks before, during and after the Armenian Genocide. They have allegedly also been used against the Kurds.[citation needed]
[edit] Uruguay
The DII has been used as a cover by death squads in this country since the late 1970s.
[edit] United Kingdom
During the Hundred Years War, the English occasionally ordered the assassinations of French knights and military commanders who were seen as a threat. The Welsh soldier of fortune Owain Lawgoch remains one of their most famous victims.
During the Irish war of independence in 1916-21, the British government organised several secret assassination squads composed of drunken and trigger happy veterans of the First World War. These were dubbed the "Black and Tans" and the Auxiliary Division. In 1920 alone, British security forces murdered Tomás Mac Curtain, the Lord Mayor of Cork, as well as his counterpart in Limerick. In Limerick, the replacement mayor was also murdered, while in Cork, the new mayor, Terence McSwiney, died after a 74 day hunger strike.
During the 30 years of the The Troubles in Northern Ireland, both the Irish Republican Army and Loyalist paramilitary groups organised assassination squads.
Members of the Royal Ulster Constabulary and British Intelligence have been accused of secretly colluding with Loyalist death squads. Notable cases include Brian Nelson, an Ulster Defence Association member and British Intelligence officer who was convicted of several sectarian murders.
[edit] United States of America
After the American Civil War the white supremacist group the Ku Klux Klan carried out 'lynchings' of African-Americans. This was often with the unofficial support of some local and state level leaders in the American south.
The US has been accused of training Death Squads for use in South and Central American countries.[citation needed] The School of the Americas, run by the US Army in Georgia has been accused by the UN of having trained "500 of the worst human rights abusers in the hemisphere"[47] The CIA was accused of making extensive use of death squads in Operation Phoenix during the Vietnam War. It is estimated that 19,000 alleged Viet Cong were killed during this program. The United States continues to use death squads to this very day[48]
[edit] Yugoslavia
In the late 1990s, the alleged use of paramilitary death squads by Serb forces and President Slobodan Milošević against ethnic Albanians in Kosovo was cited by the Clinton administration as part of its rationale for its bombing campaign against Serbia. However the use of death squads by all sides in this conflict did take place. Only token highly placed perpetrators have ever been charged, and of all of the national leaders suspected of involvement, only Slobodan Milošević has ever been brought to trial.
[edit] Venezuela
In its 2003 and 2002 world reports, Human Rights Watch reported the existence of death squads in several Venezuelan states, involving members of the local police, the DISIP and the National Guard. These groups were responsible for the extrajudicial killings of civilians and wanted or alleged criminals, including street criminals, looters and drug users.[49][50]
[edit] Vietnam
During the 1960s throughout the 1970s the United States and South Vietnamese governments used kidnapping, assassination, and infiltration tactics against the Marxist Viet Cong cadre as well as suspected Communist supporters in neighbouring countries, notably Cambodia and Laos (See Phoenix Program).
The Viet Cong and their North Vietnamese masters also used death squads of their own to murder thousands of village chiefs, in addition to South Vietnamese military officers, policemen, and civil servants, as well as civilians suspected of supporting the Saigon regime. Father Nguyen Bửu Đồng, a Roman Catholic priest, remains one of their most famous victims.
[edit] In popular culture
- The television series Gunslinger Girl features a fictional Italian death squad in the near future, made up of orphaned or abandoned young girls that have been given cyborg augmentations and brainwashed after being critically injured, who is paired with a personal handler responsible for their training and welfare.
[edit] References
- ^ Death Squads in Global Perspective: Murder with Deniability”,Campbell and Brenner,eds.
- ^ El Salvador’s Decade of Terror, Americas Watch, Human Rights Watch Books, Yale University Press,1991,21
- ^ Interview of Paul Aussaresses by Marie-Monique Robin in Escadrons de la mort - l'école française (See here, starting at 8min38)
- ^ Bonner, Raymond, Weakness and Deceit:: U.S. Policy and El Salvador, New York Times Books, 1984, p.330
- ^ Arnson, Cynthia J. Window on the Past: A Declassified History of Death Squads in El Salvador in “Death Squads in Global Perspective: Murder with Deniability”, Campbell and Brenner, eds, 88
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ http://www.baltimoresun.com/bal-negroponte1a,0,1240201.story??track=sto-relcon
- ^ Elaine Sciolino, Persian Mirrors : the Elusive Face of Iran, Free Press, 2000, p.241
- ^ dailykos
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,1869439,00.html
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4719252.stm
- ^ http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/30001/story.htm
- ^ http://www.genocidewatch.org/IVORYCOAST2003Page.htm
- ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45644-2005Jan28.html
- ^ http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20040307T040000-0500_56740_OBS_LOUIS_JODEL_CHAMBLAIN_.asp
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/gayrights/story/0,12592,1659296,00.html] [http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A61549-2004Mar15
- ^ http://www.brianwillson.com/awoltruthkor.html
- ^ http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/H/history/t-z/titfortat4.html
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ http://hrw.org/english/docs/2000/04/13/lebano491.htm
- ^ http://hrw.org/english/docs/1999/11/09/lebano1962.htm
- ^ http://www.cpt.org/archives/1997/dec97/0024.html
- ^ http://www.laneta.apc.org/cmdpdh/informes/English_Summary_Torture_03_05.pdf
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ Template:Cite news
- ^ http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/katyn_wood_massacre.htm
- ^ http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/reviews/kakar-soviet-invasion/
- ^ http://www.agentura.ru/english/press/about/jointprojects/mn/fsbreform/
- ^ http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=396&issue_id=2971&article_id=236795
- ^ http://billroggio.com/archives/2006/07/chechen_terrorist_sh.php
- ^ http://www.agrnews.org/issues/170/worldnews.html
- ^ http://www.well.com/~sisu/starov.html
- ^ http://www.thenation.com/doc/20031013/bivins
- ^ http://english.pravda.ru/world/ussr/22-11-2002/1577-journalist-0
- ^ http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2006/07/28/002.html
- ^ http://www.hrvc.net/news2-03/18-2-2003.htm
- ^ http://www.hrvc.net/main.htm
- ^ http://www.mosnews.com/news/2006/08/04/chechnyadis.shtml
- ^ http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5588684
- ^ Gareau, Frederick H., "State Terrorism and the United States", Zed Books, 2004
- ^ http://www.guardian.co.uk/indonesia/Story/0,2763,200716,00.html
- ^ World Report 2002: Venezuela. Human Rights Watch.
- ^ World Report 2003: Venezuela. Human Rights Watch.
[edit] Further reading
- Haiti under the Gun, 1996 article by Allan Nairn, first published in The Nation
- CIA linked to FRAPH, coup — from Green Left Weekly
- CIA Support of Death Squads, by Ralph McGehee, ex-CIA
[edit] External links
- Haiti under the Gun, 1996 article by Allan Nairn, first published in The Nation
- CIA linked to FRAPH, coup — from Green Left Weekly
- CIA Support of Death Squads, by Ralph McGehee, ex-CIA
fr:Escadron de la mort it:Squadrone della morte ja:死の部隊 pl:Szwadron śmierci ru:Эскадроны смерти
Categories: Articles that may contain original research since September 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007 | Articles with invalid date parameter in template | NPOV disputes from December 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 | Deaths by cause | Capital punishment | Terrorism | Murder | Dirty wars | Paramilitary organizations | Terrorism tactics | Human rights abuses | War crimes | Political repression | Forced disappearance

