Questions for Powell
by David Corn
The Nation magazine, January 8/15, 2001
Colin Powell, George W. Bush's designated Secretary of State,
is a national icon, with a personal story celebrated by millions.
When he hits Capitol Hill for his confirmation, he can expect
to receive a fair dose of senatorial genuflection. But the ~ retired
general does not deserve hands-off hearings. On policy matters,
he may be asked to explain the so-called Powell Doctrine (which
calls for an overwhelming use of force when the military is unleashed),
his initial skepticism toward US involvement in the Gulf War and
his advocacy of a Pentagon budget that would permit the United
States to fight two regional conflicts simultaneously. Such matters
could be respectfully broached by senators. But there are also
some indelicate questions about Powell's past deeds-queries that
challenge the image of Powell the Hero - that ought to be posed.
* My Lai. In July 1968, Powell was sent to Vietnam and assigned
to the Americal Division as an executive officer. On March 16,
1968, troops from this division had slaughtered more than 300
civilians in the hamlet of My Lai, and the massacre went unreported.
In December 1968, after Powell had been promoted to operations
officer at division headquarters, he was forwarded a letter written
by Tom Glen, a former GI, who criticized the American military
for brutalizing civilians, torturing prisoners and for, "without
provocation or justification," shooting at "the people
themselves." As The New Republic reported in 1995, Powell
was told to check out the allegations, which did not mention My
Lai. Powell interviewed a few officers and reported that there
was nothing to Glen's assertions. He didn't bother to ask Glen
for more specific information. Powell did not mention
this inquiry in his 1995 memoir, An American Journey. He did,
however, recall the occasion in March 1969, when an Army investigator
visited his office and asked to see the enemy-kill records of
March 1968. Powell found a high number-128-for March 16 and read
the number into the investigator's tape recorder. (That investigator,
who was probing specific allegations about My Lai, subsequently
reported that there had been no massacre.) In his autobiography,
Powell noted that his "curiosity" was aroused by the
investigator. But he did not pursue the matter. Why not? And why
had he taken a less-than-vigorous approach when conducting the
earlier investigation? Why didn't he seek more information from
Glen? Once the My Lai story broke in November 1969, why didn't
Powell look into whether he had been lied to by his fellow officers?
Moreover, what did he learn from this experience about conducting
internal investigations within a bureaucracy?
* Human rights abuses. In the 1980s Powell served on Ronald
Reagan's national security team. He was the special military assistant
to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger from 1983 to 1986, then
deputy national security adviser from late 1986 to 1987 and, after
that, National Security Adviser. Throughout the Reagan years,
the Administration supported militaries in Guatemala, El Salvador
and Honduras-and the contras in Nicaragua-which engaged in blatant
human rights abuses, misdeeds that frequently were publicized
by human rights advocates and dismissed by the Reagan Administration.
In his book Powell noted that during his stint with Weinberger,
he became "the chief administration advocate" for the
contras. Referring to the corruption of several contra leaders,
Powell wrote, "In the old days of East-West polarization,
we worked with what we had." What today might justify Washington's
support for corrupt or abusive forces abroad? Did Powell ever
take an interest in the human-rights violations committed by the
contras and the US-backed armies in Central America?
* Iran/contra. In 1987 independent counsel Lawrence Walsh
asked Weinberger to hand over records regarding the Iran/contra
scandal. Weinberger produced a modest amount of non-incriminating
material. That same year, Congressional investigators questioned
Powell about the scandal and asked whether Weinberger maintained
a diary. In sworn testimony, Powell replied, "The secretary,
to my knowledge, did not keep a diary." In 1991 Walsh discovered
that Weinberger had written thousands of pages of diary notes-which
included material contradicting his Iran/contra testimony. A grand
jury indicted Weinberger for concealing these records. Weinberger's
lawyers asked Powell for a sworn statement in which he would confirm
that Weinberger had not treated these diaries as secret material
that could be hidden from Walsh. Powell obliged and declared,
"I observed on his desk a small pad of white paper, approximately
5" X 7". He would jot down on this pad in abbreviated
form various calls and events during the day. I viewed it as his
personal diary." This sworn affidavit contradicted Powell's
1987 sworn statement. In his final report, Walsh concluded that
Powell's 1987 testimony was "at least misleading" and
"designed to protect Weinberger." But Walsh opted not
to prosecute Powell. In his memoirs Powell claimed that he told
the investigators in 1987 that Weinberger kept notes but that
he (Powell) had not considered these papers to be a diary until
they were shown to him in 1991. But in 1987 Powell had not stated
that Weinberger kept specific notes. And Walsh produced evidence
indicating that Powell had actually helped create Weinberger's
daily diary entries. So why didn't Powell in 1987 describe the
diaries to the investigators in the detailed terms he used in
1991? According to his book, Powell waited for the investigators
to "press" him with "follow-up questions"
and said nothing more because they didn't ask. Is this his view
of cooperation with Congress-never volunteer?
* Operation Just Cause. In December 1989 Powell, then Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, oversaw the US invasion of Panama.
As American troops pursued narco-dictator and onetime US asset
Manuel Noriega, they swept through El Chorrillo, a poor neighborhood
in Panama City, and many civilians were caught in the combat.
At first, the Pentagon referred to civilian casualties vaguely
as "collateral damage." Two weeks later-after Noriega
was nabbed-the Pentagon announced that 201 Panamanian civilians
had been killed (and twenty-three American troops). Several months
later, Americas Watch, a human rights organization, released a
report finding that US forces had violated the Geneva Conventions
by failing to minimize harm to the civilian population. The report
noted that the "command of the American forces also failed
to live up to its duties as to the collection of and accounting
for the wounded and the dead among civilians." And a Physicians
for Human Rights inquiry found that at least 300 civilians had
died in the invasion, that 3,000 Panamanians received serious
injuries during the operation and that 15,000 Panamanians were
displaced (of which only 3,000 received US assistance). In his
book, Powell concluded that Just Cause confirmed the Powell Doctrine:
"Use all the force necessary and do not apologize for going
in big if that's what it takes." Why did his military not
conduct a thorough evaluation of civilian casualties and better
tend to the displaced and injured? How does he reconcile the Powell
Doctrine with the Geneva Conventions?
* Gulf War Syndrome. The Persian Gulf War turned Powell into
a star. But in the years following Desert Storm, thousands of
vets developed a variety of illnesses. As of the end of 1999,
184,000 of the 697,000 Gulf War troops had filed disability claims
with the Department of Veterans Affairs, of which 136,000 were
approved. The VA has acknowledged that Gulf War veterans suffer
from chronic and ill-defined symptoms, including fatigue and neurocognitive
and musculoskeletal problems. The Pentagon concedes that 100,000
US troops were exposed to low levels of nerve gas. Veterans advocates
have accused Powell of being MIA on Gulf War Syndrome. "Four
to five years ago, Gulf War vets were being turned away from the
VA," says Charles Sheehan-Miles, a director of the National
Gulf War Resource Center and a healthy Gulf War tank crewman.
"You'd expect the military leaders would have something to
say about that. We got silence from Powell, Schwarzkopf and Cheney.
We wrote a couple of letters to Powell asking for help and never
got a response. This was a severe disappointment." In 1998,
when studies showed that Gulf War vets were sick possibly due
to nerve gas exposure, Powell, in an interview, downplayed the
link between Gulf War service and illness. Why was Powell reluctant
to recognize Gulf War syndrome? Why has he not been a vocal supporter
of the troops who fought for him?
Not standing with sick veterans, misleading Congressional
investigators, leaving the counting of civilian dead to others,
participating in a foreign policy apparatus that ignored and discounted
human rights violations, mounting a less-than-vigorous inquiry
into charges of military atrocities-all is not glory with Colin
Powell. It is unlikely senators will wade too far into the muck
of Powell's none-too-heroic past. Powell's rise-often hailed as
proof that the American Dream is real-demonstrates a potent political
reality: Star-power shine can be a most effective camouflage.
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