International
Herald Tribune
THE CRY OF THE DISAPPEARED
By Roger Cohen
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
NEW YORK: To disappear became a transitive verb in Latin America.
Military dictatorships "disappeared" their opponents. That is to say,
they kidnapped,
tortured, murdered and disposed of them,
leaving only an inconsolable absence in
the place of a human being.
I spent some time in Argentina in the
aftermath of the 1976-83 dictatorship. Enough
to become familiar with countless picture
frames holding images of impossibly lovely young women, taken from their homes
for "brief questioning," never to be seen again. Enough to know the
unquenchable parental tears these disappearances provoked.
It was not too early then, in rooms filled
with the animal sobbing of the bereaved,
to feel rage at the junta's crimes. But it
was too early to know the full extent of
them: the 30,000 disappeared, the torture
at the Navy School of Mechanics in
Buenos Aires, the corpse-dumping flights
out to sea.
Argentines still hoped back in the 1980s.
They hoped, whatever their heads told
them, that the longing in their hearts
might return their loved ones intact. No doubt, many still hope.
With disappearance, closure is impossible,
for there is no evidence of an ending. In
this infinite prolongation of suffering
lay the particular contribution of the generals
to the infliction of pain.
There was something else we did not know
back then. Henry Kissinger, then
secretary of state, told Admiral Cˇsar
Augusto Guzzetti, the Argentine foreign
minister, in June 1976: "If there are
things that have to be done, you should do
them quickly. But you should get back
quickly to normal procedures."
Later, Kissinger assured the admiral that
the administration "won't cause you unnecessary difficulties." He also
grew angry when he learned that the U.S. ambassador in Buenos Aires, Robert
Hill, has given the junta a warning about violations of human rights. "In
what way is it compatible with my policy?" Kissinger asked, before
suggesting that Hill might have to go.
These exchanges, records of which were
obtained in recent years under the federal
Freedom of Information Act by the
nonprofit National Security Archive, suggest how the surrogate battles of the
Cold War, as fought in the American hemisphere, drew the United States into
forms of complicity that remain a shadow on its conscience.
More recently, the historian Robert Dallek
unearthed transcripts in the National
Archives that show Kissinger, bitter at
negative newspaper coverage of the 1973
coup in Chile, complaining to President
Richard Nixon that, "in the Eisenhower
period, we would be heroes." The coup
would lead to thousands of "disappearances."
I was thrust back into this Latin American
vortex, which haunted me in the 1980s,
by a powerful show called "The
Disappeared" at New York's El Museo del Barrio. It
features works about horrors, often
followed by impunity, to which the United
States turned a blind eye at best.
Ana Tiscornia's blurred portraits,
palimpsests in which the subjects seem to hover
between life and death, capture the slow
fading of the disappeared, and their flickering hold on those from whom they
were seized.
A corridor full of photographs of young
couples feature women who were pregnant when "disappeared." The
Argentine military would wait for the child to be born before murdering the
mother. The babies went to childless military couples.
Laconic captions say: "The couple and
their child remain disappeared."
As Laurel Reuter and Julian Zugazagoitia
write in their introduction to the show, organized by the North Dakota Museum
of Art, the artists "ask us, as North
Americans, to question what role our own
country played in supporting the Latin
American governments which killed their
people as a matter of course."
The artists also ask us something else.
This month six human rights groups listed 39 people they believe are secretly
imprisoned in unknown locations by the United States as part of the war on
terror.
President George W. Bush acknowledged last
year that some individuals deemed particularly dangerous had been moved
"to an environment where they can be held secretly." In effect,
categorized as enemy combatants, they have been "disappeared."
This practice is unconscionable. It does
not matter that the purpose of the disappearance is not murder, as it was in
Argentina.
Once people disappear, every basic human
right is at risk because every check, every balance, has gone with them. The
worst becomes almost inevitable because there is nothing to stop it.
The United States demands accountability of others when its own people go missing. It must demand the same accountability of itself, whatever the fight. The lovely, longing and lost young faces of Latin America require at least that.