On this day in 1967, the socialist revolutionary Ché Guevara was captured by U.S.-trained Bolivian soldiers in a C.I.A. operation. The following day the soldiers executed him, cut his hands off, looted his personal items as trophies and dumped his body in an unmarked grave.
The US government maintained for decades that the order to kill Che came from Bolivian leadership, but US gov documents released through FOIA show that the order for the kill operation came directly from the White House.
The US government was obsessed with assassinating Che. The US believed that his death would ensure that the example of the Cuban revolution would not inspire other revolutionary Socialist movements across the world.
After parading his body in front of the media, the C.I.A.'s kill team secretly buried his body where they hoped it would never be found. For 30 years his remains were missing, but in July 1997, his bones were located on the outskirts of Villegrande, Bolivia.
Félix Rodríguez, a Cuban exile turned CIA Special Activities Division operative, who was involved in the Bay of Pigs invasion, advised Bolivian troops during the hunt for Guevara in Bolivia. Rodriguez stole Che’s watch and wore it for years afterwards.
The CIA had tried to follow Che ever since 1954, and in 1962, had used Chicago mobster Johnny Rosselli to try to poison Che in Cuba. The operation to track down Che was supervised by sixteen US Green Berets.
Twenty of the top twenty-three Bolivian military men heading Bolivia’s U.S.-supported dictatorship at the time of Che’s execution were trained at the U.S. School of the Americas.
Guevara wrote his own epitaph, stating: "Wherever death may surprise us, let it be welcome, provided that this our battle cry may have reached some receptive ear and another hand may be extended to wield our weapons."
This week in 1976, CIA-funded, anti-Castro terrorists, bombed the civilian airliner Cubana de Aviación Flight 455, killing all 73 people aboard, including all 24 members of 1975 Cuban national fencing team, many of whom were just teenagers.
On October 6, 1976, two bombs exploded on the flight 455 headed from Barbados to Jamaica just 11 minutes after take-off. The bomb was disguised as Colgate toothpaste in a suitcase. nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB2…
The 2 men who placed the explosives on the plane (Freddy Lugo and Hernan Ricardo Lozano,) confessed that CIA-trained terrorists Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch were behind the bombing.
On this day in 2015, the US Air Force committed a serious war crime by "repeatedly and precisely" attacking a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan, killing 42 patients and medical staff and injuring over 30 more.
The bombing took place despite the fact that MSF had provided the GPS coordinates of the hospital to the US Coalition just days before the attack. The attack also continued for 30 min. after MSF alerted US officials the hospital had come under attack.
“The bombs hit & then we heard the plane circle round,” said Heman Nagarathnam, MSF head of programs in North Afghanistan. "There was a pause then more bombs hit. This happened again & again. When I made it out from the office, the main hospital building was engulfed in flames."
On this day in 1980, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq invaded Iran (after getting approval from the US) launching one of 20th century's most deadly wars, killing over 1 million people and injuring over 100,000 with U.S.-supplied chemical weapons.
In 2015, the legendary journalist Robert Parry found secret congressional documents referring to Jimmy Carter’s “Green Light” for Saddam’s invasion. consortiumnews.com/2015/05/11/sad…
As early as 1982, just 2 years into the war, the US began providing major intelligence and weapons sales after it became clear Saddam would lose the war without major U.S. assistance.
On this day in 1980, a right-wing military junta, trained by the US and led by General Kenan Evran, took power in a coup in Turkey, resulting in the arrests of 650,000, thousands more sentenced to death and hundreds tortured & killed.
The junta established martial law, abolished political parties, trade unions and democratic rights. Hundreds of thousands were tried for the "crime" of belonging to a political organization or had their citizenship revoked & were denied passports. 30,000 fled as refugees.
Thousands of teachers were fired, hundreds of journalists were fired and attacked, newspapers were closed, hundreds of films were banned and books were burned. The junta unleashed a wave of repression against working class and left-wing opponents of the regime.
On Sept 11 1973, a CIA-backed coup overthrew Chile's democratic socialist president Salvador Allende & worked to install Gen. Pinochet's brutal dictatorship, who killed thousands, tortured tens of thousands & imprisoned over 130,000.
Upon Salvador Allende’s election victory in 1970, the CIA immediately began working to destabilize his government, viewing it as being too close to communists. The CIA spread propaganda through the press, facilitated economic destabilization and organized labor strikes/protests.
The US even provided the coup plotters within the military the missiles that they used to bombard the La Moneda Palace.
On this day in 2008, the US massacred 90 Afghan civilians (mostly women & children) gathering for a memorial service in the village of Azizabad. The US conducted continued air strikes on the village for 3 full hours; killing 60 children as they slept in their homes.
The US attack included a drone strike & a barrage of howitzer fire from an AC 130 gunship, which killed 60 children aged 3 months to 16 years old as they slept. “It was a heartbreaking scene,” said Mohammad Iqbal Safi, head of the Afghan parliamentary defense committee.
Many of the dead were buried under heavy rubble; the US air strikes caused seven or eight houses to be “totally destroyed” and serious damage was done to many others in the village.