Difference between revisions of "Office of Public Safety"

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The '''Office of Public Safety''' was a division of [[USAID]].
+
The '''Office of Public Safety''' was a division of the [[United States Agency for International Development]]. The OPS operated in at least fifty-two countries in [[Asia]], [[Africa]] and the Americas. One of its main functions was [[counterinsurgency]], aiding governments in the suppression of communist groups. <ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without Borders: How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed American Policing. Berkeley, California: University of California Press page 6</ref>
  
According to a 1973 document revealed in the [[Family jewels (CIA)|Family jewels]] CIA documents, around 700 police officers were trained a year in the handling of [[explosives]].<ref>[[Family jewels (CIA)|Family jewels]], pages 600-603</ref> James Abourezk revealed that it had also been training [[torture]] techniques.
+
In total, it provided over $200M of [[USAID]] and [[CIA]] funds to recipient countries in weaponry, communications equipment and tactical equipment.<ref>Seigel, Micol (2018). Violence work : state power and the limits of police.  page 28</ref> Its other functions were to facilitate the planting of CIA operatives within police forces of at-risk regions, and to find suitable candidates within these foreign forces to be recruited by the CIA.<ref name="LangguthA"/>
  
It was shut down in 1974.
+
A total of 1500 advisers were deployed overseas, reaching over a million police officers.<ref>Siegel. Violence Work. p. 41.</ref> Alongside training, the OPS provided US-made equipment to overseas police forces, creating an aftermarket for upgrades and parts.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 151-2</ref> Lauren "Jack" Goin set up forensics and fingerprinting labs in [[South Korea]], [[Vietnam]], [[Indonesia]], [[the Dominican Republic]] and [[Brazil] initially under the auspices of the 1290-d program and later under the OPS.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 93</ref> 
 +
 
 +
Police assistance proved to be far more cost-effective than military aid; excluding the immense [[South Vietnam]] project, the OPS's spending in 1968 was 5.8% of the military assistance budget for that year.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 154</ref> 
 +
 
 +
According to a 1973 document revealed in the [[Family jewels (CIA)|Family jewels]] CIA documents, around 700 police officers were trained a year in the handling of [[explosives]].<ref>[[Family jewels (CIA)|Family jewels]], pages 600-603</ref> James Abourezk revealed that it had also been training [[torture]] techniques. It was officially shut down in 1974, but of course the training programs continued unabated under other names.
 +
 
 +
== Origins and Objectives ==
 +
The OPS originated in the Public Safety program under the International Cooperation Administration (ICA) in 1954. In 1962, when the ICA was replaced by the USAID, the program was reorganised under the new title of 'Office of Public Safety', consolidating various disparate overseas police training and assistance projects across the globe.<ref name=":0">Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without Borders: How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed American Policing. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 19.</ref> Its director, CIA operative and police reformer Byron Engle, served from 1962 until his retirement in 1973.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page page 57</ref>
 +
 
 +
Police assistance projects overseas had been established by the [[Eisenhower administration]], but military intervention and covert action by the [[CIA]] was the primary method of addressing communist groups and other subversives in poor and recently decolonised countries. In the 1950s and 60s, covert action was increasingly unsuccessful, the most infamous example being the disastrous [[Bay of Pigs Invasion|Bay of Pigs]] invasion.<ref>{Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 11</ref> Already a proponent of [[modernization theory]] and international development programs as an alternative method of combating the spread of Communism, Kennedy was receptive to the efforts of national security advisor [[Robert Komer|Robert W. Komer]] to grow police assistance and make it the primary agent of counterinsurgency.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 80-81</ref> 
 +
 
 +
Komer considered the police to be “more valuable than Special Forces in our global counter-insurgency efforts” and more cost-effective in that they did not require the expensive equipment and weaponry that military forces did. He described them as more successful as a preventative measure than any other program, providing "the first line of defense against demonstrations, riots and local insurrections. Only when the situation gets out of hand (as in South Vietnam) does the military have to be called in". Police were, as USAID director David Bell put it, "a most sensitive point of contact between the government and people, close to the focal points of unrest, and more acceptable than the army as keepers of order over long periods of time. The police are frequently better trained and equipped than the military to deal with minor forms of violence, conspiracy and subversion".<ref>https://apjjf.org/-Jeremy-Kuzmarov/3319/article.html</ref>
 +
 
 +
International development programs could present the modernisation and expansion of security infrastructure as growing stability and preventing crime in these nations, without the bad optics of the CIA or the military. In a document drafted to launch the concept of the OPS, the USAID expressed concern over the optics of white American soldiers killing non-white dissidents: “In countering insurgency, the major effort must be indigenous. . . . In internal war it is always better for one national to kill another than for a foreigner—especially one with a different skin coloration to do so".<ref>Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 58</ref> 
 +
 
 +
=== International Police Academy ===
 +
The OPS-operated International Police Academy (IPA) was instituted in 1963, and provided training to 7500 senior officers from seventy-seven countries in total.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 28</ref> Its first class included sixty-eight police officers from seventeen different nations.<ref>"International Police School Graduates 68". Washington Post. 1964-08-08.</ref> The officers were trained at the [[Georgetown Car Barn]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]<ref>Schoultz, Lars (2014). Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 179. </ref> Until the early 1970s, selected candidates could also receive training from [[CIA|CIA officers]] at the [[U.S. Border Patrol]] academy in [[Los Fresnos, Texas]], including the making of bombs and incendiary devices.<ref>"Police Academy Under Fire for Aiding 'Foreign Dictatorships'". Washington Post. 1974-06-07</ref>
 +
 
 +
The IPA trained senior police officers who would take the expertise and tactics home to train their subordinates.<ref>https://hub.jhu.edu/2019/10/16/badges-beyond-borders-stuart-schrader/</ref> A major objective of the IPA was to cultivate these 'assets', instilling them with a degree of loyalty to the US which would theoretically make them a source of valuable information once they had risen within their home security institutions.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 186-87</ref>
 +
 
 +
=== Role of the LAPD ===
 +
The OPS conducted a form of international knowledge exchange by recruiting ordinary US police officers for 'short-term tours of duty' on overseas police assistance projects. The LAPD was a major source of such officers, partly because a significant proportion of them spoke Spanish.<ref>Seigel, Micol (2018). Violence work : state power and the limits of police.</ref>
 +
 
 +
LAPD officers were sent to Venezuela in 1962 to train local police officers and assist them in repression against the [[Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación Nacional (Venezuela)|Armed Forces of National Liberation]] (AFNL).<ref name="LangguthA">A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978)</ref> Officers were also sent to the Dominican Republic in the same year; there was significant popular unrest following the CIA-backed assassination of dictator [[Rafael Trujillo]], and Dominican police were struggling to keep order and train officers.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. p. 227.</ref>
 +
 
 +
=== Americas ===
 +
 
 +
==== Guatemala ====
 +
The OPS program in Guatemala was the largest in Central America, with a $6 million budget and 32,000 police trained (370 at the IPA).<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 216</ref>
 +
 
 +
Guatemala first received US police assistance in 1954 following a CIA-backed [[1954 Guatemalan coup d'état|coup]] to overthrow leader [[Jacobo Árbenz]], who had implemented unprecedented land and labour reforms. Supporting his right-wing authoritarian replacement [[Carlos Castillo Armas]], the ICA's 1290-d program operated with a $600,000 budget to professionalise the country's police force which was undisciplined and poorly equipped. Officers received counterinsurgency training, and an investigations bureau was set up to more systematically root out subversives.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 217</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Nicaragua ====
 +
From 1971 until the OPS's termination, the Somoza regime received $81,000 worth of equipment including vehicles and radios from USAID to assist in rooting out "subversives", primarily the leftist anti-imperialist [[Sandinista National Liberation Front|FSLN]].<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 222</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Uruguay ====
 +
The OPS operated in [[Uruguay]] from 1964, providing $2 million in equipment, arms and training to assist the government in suppressing the National Liberation Movement (also known as the Tupamaros).<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 228</ref> Training involved courses on explosives, assassination, and [[riot control]].<ref name="Blum">[https://williamblum.org/chapters/killing-hope/uruguay William Blum, ''Killing Hope: U.S. Military and C.I.A. Interventions since World War II'', 2003 (chapter on Uruguay)]</ref><ref name="NSA">s [http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB71/ NIXON: "BRAZIL HELPED RIG THE URUGUAYAN ELECTIONS," 1971], [[National Security Archive]]</ref> Between 1969 and 1973, at least nineteen Uruguayan police officers were trained at the IPA and in Los Fresnos to be taught the handling of explosives.<ref name="Blum" /> On several occasions, the pupils were not officers, but individuals affiliated with the Uruguayan right-wing.<ref name="Blum" />
 +
 
 +
The director of the Uruguayan police stated that he had kidnapped homeless people for torture expert Dan Mitrione to use for teaching purposes, a claim corroborated by Cuban CIA operative Manuel Hevia Consculluela.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 229</ref><ref>McCoy, Alfred W. (2007). A question of torture : CIA interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (First Holt paperbacks edition 2007 ed.). New York. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4299-0068-3.</ref> Former CIA operative John Stockwell has written that their bodies would be left mutilated in the streets to induce fear.<ref>Stockwell, John (1991). The Praetorian guard : the U.S. role in the new world order. Boston, MA: South End Press. p. 75. </ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Chile ====
 +
After [[Salvador Allende]] was elected in 1970, he dismantled the OPS program in Chile and dismissed IPA-trained officials. [[Augusto Pinochet]] reinstated the program after he assumed power in the [[1973 Chilean coup d'état|1973 military coup]].<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 230</ref> The OPS helped Chile build Police Operations Control Center (POCC) facilities, which were highly advanced training rooms designed to aid in combating unrest.<ref name=":1">Schrader. Badges Without Borders. pp. 183–4</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Bolivia ====
 +
The Public Safety program's budget for Bolivia was $1.75 million in 1956, the biggest in Latin America at the time.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 227</ref>
 +
 
 +
=== Africa ===
 +
 
 +
==== Somalia ====
 +
In 1967, the OPS supplied weaponry, communications equipment and three aircraft to reinforce border security against Ethiopian forces, and built POCC facilities for civil unrest training.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 169</ref>
 +
==== Ghana ====
 +
After a 1966 CIA-backed coup to overthrow Ghana's first leader after achieving independence, [[Kwame Nkrumah]], the OPS established a $400,000 program, providing weapons and surveillance equipment to assist police in suppressing pro-Nkrumah and labour agitation.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. pages=173-4</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Democratic Republic of Congo ====
 +
After collaborating with Belgium to assassinate the newly independent Congo's first prime minister, [[Patrice Lumumba]], the US enabled [[Mobutu Sese Seko]] to take power. The OPS spent $5 million in Congo on building and staffing police training facilities, riot gear, communications equipment, and developing 'paramilitary mobile brigades'. <ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. pages=176-8</ref>
 +
 
 +
=== Asia ===
 +
 
 +
==== South Vietnam ====
 +
The OPS's most expensive and wide-ranging operation was based in South Vietnam. It took over from the [[Michigan State University Vietnam Advisory Group|Michigan State University Vietnam Advisory Group (MSUG)]] in 1962.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 147</ref>
 +
 
 +
OPS introduced stop-and-frisk and identity cards, allowing increased surveillance and enabling police to demonstrate power on a more intimate level with individuals through the process of card checks.<ref>Schrader. Badges Without Borders. p. 159.</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Cambodia ====
 +
The OPS's primary objective in Cambodia was training paramilitary units to clamp down on the Maoist [[Khmer Rouge]]. In 1963, the OPS provided $807,000 to build a police academy and a laboratory for forensics and photography, and trained six senior officers at the IPA.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century.  page 138</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Laos ====
 +
The OPS budget for Laos was $900,000 in 1965 and $1.1 million the following year, providing a laboratory, surveillance equipment, small arms, and ammunition. In 1968, riot control equipment - tear gas and projectiles - were provided. Eleven officers were trained at the IPA.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 137}}</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Thailand ====
 +
In 1973, the OPS provided Thailand's security forces with thousands of fragmentation grenades to strengthen its borders against potential insurgency in regions where relations with Laos and Malaysia were unstable.<ref>Schrader. Badges Without Borders. p. 154.</ref>
 +
 
 +
==== Jordan ====
 +
In the aftermath of the 1967 [[Six-Day War]], the OPS provided Jordan with $1.1 million to aid in fighting Palestinian guerrilla fighters and suppressing riots.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 205</ref>
 +
 
 +
== Controversy and Dissolution ==
 +
In 1966, US senator [[J. William Fulbright]] started criticizing the OPS's methods.<ref name="Langguth5">[[A. J. Langguth]]'s ''Hidden Terrors'' (Pantheon Books, 1978)</ref> The bomb-making course at Los Fresnos was already highly controversial, and in 1970, Life magazine published a photo essay revealing the horrific conditions that prisoners of Con Son Island were kept in.<ref name=":2">Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 269</ref> The same year, the kidnapping and assassination of torture expert [[Dan Mitrione]] by [[Tupamaro guerrillas]] in [[Uruguay]] attracted much attention, fuelling existing accusations over the OPS's use of torture.<ref name=":3">Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 30</ref> Growing opposition to OPS activities resulted in a protest outside the IPA in November.<ref name=":2" />
 +
 
 +
Overseas police assistance had become a serious issue simultaneously for [[antiwar]] and [[anti-imperialist]] activists, [[Black radicals]] and [[the New Left]]. This vocal coalition, in addition to information from a Brazilian opposition members about the US's role in human rights abuses in their country, spurred South Dakota Democratic senator [[James G. Abourezk]] to expose the OPS's illicit activities and call for an end to overseas police aid.<ref>Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 234</ref><ref name=":2" /> [[John A. Hannah]], head of the USAID and former president of Michigan State University, unsuccessfully tried to support the OPS by sending a letter to deputy [[Otto Passman]].<ref name="Langguth5" />
 +
 
 +
In 1974, Congress passed Section 660, an amendment to the [[Foreign Assistance Act of 1974|Foreign Assistance Act]] (FAA) which banned provision by the US of training or assistance to foreign police. Many OPS missions were transferred to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)]]. Exceptions were made to the prohibition on foreign police assistance if the recipient country was providing the funding as opposed to the US government, and for the policing of narcotics.<ref name=":3" />
 +
 
 +
The [[US Department of Defense]] continued to transfer equipment to security forces in foreign countries.<ref name="Blum" /> The International Criminal Investigative Training Assistance Program (ICITAP) was set up in 1986 as an 'officially recognized' police assistance body, employing many OPS employees.<ref name=":3" /> Many ex-OPS 'technicians' and advisors moved into the DEA, FBI and domestic law enforcement roles, bringing with them their Cold War counterinsurgency outlook and tactics.<ref>Vitale, Alex S. (2017). The end of policing. London. p. 49. </ref>
 +
 
 +
Others established or joined existing companies to do exactly what OPS had been, but for lucrative private contracts; for example, two advisors joined Vinnell Arabia which received an $80 million contract from [[Saudi Arabia]] to continue US training of its paramilitary National Guard. Venezuela and Nicaraguan governments also sought to continue training programs.<ref>Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 260</ref> [[Byron Engle]] became a consultant after his retirement in 1973, advising the [[Rhodesian]] government; [[Lauren Goin]], who succeeded him as director for the last year of the program, formed his own company, Public Safety Services, Inc.<ref>A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978) page 279</ref>
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 01:28, 6 June 2021

Group.png Office of Public Safety  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Formation1957
Extinction1974
Parent organizationUSAID
Exposed byJames Abourezk
US-led training of police forces in third world countries in counterinsurgency. Officially closed in 1974, but programs constitutes under other names.

The Office of Public Safety was a division of the United States Agency for International Development. The OPS operated in at least fifty-two countries in Asia, Africa and the Americas. One of its main functions was counterinsurgency, aiding governments in the suppression of communist groups. [1]

In total, it provided over $200M of USAID and CIA funds to recipient countries in weaponry, communications equipment and tactical equipment.[2] Its other functions were to facilitate the planting of CIA operatives within police forces of at-risk regions, and to find suitable candidates within these foreign forces to be recruited by the CIA.[3]

A total of 1500 advisers were deployed overseas, reaching over a million police officers.[4] Alongside training, the OPS provided US-made equipment to overseas police forces, creating an aftermarket for upgrades and parts.[5] Lauren "Jack" Goin set up forensics and fingerprinting labs in South Korea, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Dominican Republic and [[Brazil] initially under the auspices of the 1290-d program and later under the OPS.[6]

Police assistance proved to be far more cost-effective than military aid; excluding the immense South Vietnam project, the OPS's spending in 1968 was 5.8% of the military assistance budget for that year.[7]

According to a 1973 document revealed in the Family jewels CIA documents, around 700 police officers were trained a year in the handling of explosives.[8] James Abourezk revealed that it had also been training torture techniques. It was officially shut down in 1974, but of course the training programs continued unabated under other names.

Origins and Objectives

The OPS originated in the Public Safety program under the International Cooperation Administration (ICA) in 1954. In 1962, when the ICA was replaced by the USAID, the program was reorganised under the new title of 'Office of Public Safety', consolidating various disparate overseas police training and assistance projects across the globe.[9] Its director, CIA operative and police reformer Byron Engle, served from 1962 until his retirement in 1973.[10]

Police assistance projects overseas had been established by the Eisenhower administration, but military intervention and covert action by the CIA was the primary method of addressing communist groups and other subversives in poor and recently decolonised countries. In the 1950s and 60s, covert action was increasingly unsuccessful, the most infamous example being the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion.[11] Already a proponent of modernization theory and international development programs as an alternative method of combating the spread of Communism, Kennedy was receptive to the efforts of national security advisor Robert W. Komer to grow police assistance and make it the primary agent of counterinsurgency.[12]

Komer considered the police to be “more valuable than Special Forces in our global counter-insurgency efforts” and more cost-effective in that they did not require the expensive equipment and weaponry that military forces did. He described them as more successful as a preventative measure than any other program, providing "the first line of defense against demonstrations, riots and local insurrections. Only when the situation gets out of hand (as in South Vietnam) does the military have to be called in". Police were, as USAID director David Bell put it, "a most sensitive point of contact between the government and people, close to the focal points of unrest, and more acceptable than the army as keepers of order over long periods of time. The police are frequently better trained and equipped than the military to deal with minor forms of violence, conspiracy and subversion".[13]

International development programs could present the modernisation and expansion of security infrastructure as growing stability and preventing crime in these nations, without the bad optics of the CIA or the military. In a document drafted to launch the concept of the OPS, the USAID expressed concern over the optics of white American soldiers killing non-white dissidents: “In countering insurgency, the major effort must be indigenous. . . . In internal war it is always better for one national to kill another than for a foreigner—especially one with a different skin coloration to do so".[14]

International Police Academy

The OPS-operated International Police Academy (IPA) was instituted in 1963, and provided training to 7500 senior officers from seventy-seven countries in total.[9][15] Its first class included sixty-eight police officers from seventeen different nations.[16] The officers were trained at the Georgetown Car Barn in Washington, D.C.[17] Until the early 1970s, selected candidates could also receive training from CIA officers at the U.S. Border Patrol academy in Los Fresnos, Texas, including the making of bombs and incendiary devices.[18]

The IPA trained senior police officers who would take the expertise and tactics home to train their subordinates.[19] A major objective of the IPA was to cultivate these 'assets', instilling them with a degree of loyalty to the US which would theoretically make them a source of valuable information once they had risen within their home security institutions.[20]

Role of the LAPD

The OPS conducted a form of international knowledge exchange by recruiting ordinary US police officers for 'short-term tours of duty' on overseas police assistance projects. The LAPD was a major source of such officers, partly because a significant proportion of them spoke Spanish.[21]

LAPD officers were sent to Venezuela in 1962 to train local police officers and assist them in repression against the Armed Forces of National Liberation (AFNL).[3] Officers were also sent to the Dominican Republic in the same year; there was significant popular unrest following the CIA-backed assassination of dictator Rafael Trujillo, and Dominican police were struggling to keep order and train officers.[22]

Americas

Guatemala

The OPS program in Guatemala was the largest in Central America, with a $6 million budget and 32,000 police trained (370 at the IPA).[23]

Guatemala first received US police assistance in 1954 following a CIA-backed coup to overthrow leader Jacobo Árbenz, who had implemented unprecedented land and labour reforms. Supporting his right-wing authoritarian replacement Carlos Castillo Armas, the ICA's 1290-d program operated with a $600,000 budget to professionalise the country's police force which was undisciplined and poorly equipped. Officers received counterinsurgency training, and an investigations bureau was set up to more systematically root out subversives.[24]

Nicaragua

From 1971 until the OPS's termination, the Somoza regime received $81,000 worth of equipment including vehicles and radios from USAID to assist in rooting out "subversives", primarily the leftist anti-imperialist FSLN.[25]

Uruguay

The OPS operated in Uruguay from 1964, providing $2 million in equipment, arms and training to assist the government in suppressing the National Liberation Movement (also known as the Tupamaros).[26] Training involved courses on explosives, assassination, and riot control.[27][28] Between 1969 and 1973, at least nineteen Uruguayan police officers were trained at the IPA and in Los Fresnos to be taught the handling of explosives.[27] On several occasions, the pupils were not officers, but individuals affiliated with the Uruguayan right-wing.[27]

The director of the Uruguayan police stated that he had kidnapped homeless people for torture expert Dan Mitrione to use for teaching purposes, a claim corroborated by Cuban CIA operative Manuel Hevia Consculluela.[29][30] Former CIA operative John Stockwell has written that their bodies would be left mutilated in the streets to induce fear.[31]

Chile

After Salvador Allende was elected in 1970, he dismantled the OPS program in Chile and dismissed IPA-trained officials. Augusto Pinochet reinstated the program after he assumed power in the 1973 military coup.[32] The OPS helped Chile build Police Operations Control Center (POCC) facilities, which were highly advanced training rooms designed to aid in combating unrest.[33]

Bolivia

The Public Safety program's budget for Bolivia was $1.75 million in 1956, the biggest in Latin America at the time.[34]

Africa

Somalia

In 1967, the OPS supplied weaponry, communications equipment and three aircraft to reinforce border security against Ethiopian forces, and built POCC facilities for civil unrest training.[35]

Ghana

After a 1966 CIA-backed coup to overthrow Ghana's first leader after achieving independence, Kwame Nkrumah, the OPS established a $400,000 program, providing weapons and surveillance equipment to assist police in suppressing pro-Nkrumah and labour agitation.[36]

Democratic Republic of Congo

After collaborating with Belgium to assassinate the newly independent Congo's first prime minister, Patrice Lumumba, the US enabled Mobutu Sese Seko to take power. The OPS spent $5 million in Congo on building and staffing police training facilities, riot gear, communications equipment, and developing 'paramilitary mobile brigades'. [37]

Asia

South Vietnam

The OPS's most expensive and wide-ranging operation was based in South Vietnam. It took over from the Michigan State University Vietnam Advisory Group (MSUG) in 1962.[38]

OPS introduced stop-and-frisk and identity cards, allowing increased surveillance and enabling police to demonstrate power on a more intimate level with individuals through the process of card checks.[39]

Cambodia

The OPS's primary objective in Cambodia was training paramilitary units to clamp down on the Maoist Khmer Rouge. In 1963, the OPS provided $807,000 to build a police academy and a laboratory for forensics and photography, and trained six senior officers at the IPA.[40]

Laos

The OPS budget for Laos was $900,000 in 1965 and $1.1 million the following year, providing a laboratory, surveillance equipment, small arms, and ammunition. In 1968, riot control equipment - tear gas and projectiles - were provided. Eleven officers were trained at the IPA.[41]

Thailand

In 1973, the OPS provided Thailand's security forces with thousands of fragmentation grenades to strengthen its borders against potential insurgency in regions where relations with Laos and Malaysia were unstable.[42]

Jordan

In the aftermath of the 1967 Six-Day War, the OPS provided Jordan with $1.1 million to aid in fighting Palestinian guerrilla fighters and suppressing riots.[43]

Controversy and Dissolution

In 1966, US senator J. William Fulbright started criticizing the OPS's methods.[44] The bomb-making course at Los Fresnos was already highly controversial, and in 1970, Life magazine published a photo essay revealing the horrific conditions that prisoners of Con Son Island were kept in.[45] The same year, the kidnapping and assassination of torture expert Dan Mitrione by Tupamaro guerrillas in Uruguay attracted much attention, fuelling existing accusations over the OPS's use of torture.[46] Growing opposition to OPS activities resulted in a protest outside the IPA in November.[45]

Overseas police assistance had become a serious issue simultaneously for antiwar and anti-imperialist activists, Black radicals and the New Left. This vocal coalition, in addition to information from a Brazilian opposition members about the US's role in human rights abuses in their country, spurred South Dakota Democratic senator James G. Abourezk to expose the OPS's illicit activities and call for an end to overseas police aid.[47][45] John A. Hannah, head of the USAID and former president of Michigan State University, unsuccessfully tried to support the OPS by sending a letter to deputy Otto Passman.[44]

In 1974, Congress passed Section 660, an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act (FAA) which banned provision by the US of training or assistance to foreign police. Many OPS missions were transferred to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Exceptions were made to the prohibition on foreign police assistance if the recipient country was providing the funding as opposed to the US government, and for the policing of narcotics.[46]

The US Department of Defense continued to transfer equipment to security forces in foreign countries.[27] The International Criminal Investigative Training Assistance Program (ICITAP) was set up in 1986 as an 'officially recognized' police assistance body, employing many OPS employees.[46] Many ex-OPS 'technicians' and advisors moved into the DEA, FBI and domestic law enforcement roles, bringing with them their Cold War counterinsurgency outlook and tactics.[48]

Others established or joined existing companies to do exactly what OPS had been, but for lucrative private contracts; for example, two advisors joined Vinnell Arabia which received an $80 million contract from Saudi Arabia to continue US training of its paramilitary National Guard. Venezuela and Nicaraguan governments also sought to continue training programs.[49] Byron Engle became a consultant after his retirement in 1973, advising the Rhodesian government; Lauren Goin, who succeeded him as director for the last year of the program, formed his own company, Public Safety Services, Inc.[50]

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References

  1. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without Borders: How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed American Policing. Berkeley, California: University of California Press page 6
  2. Seigel, Micol (2018). Violence work : state power and the limits of police. page 28
  3. a b A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978)
  4. Siegel. Violence Work. p. 41.
  5. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 151-2
  6. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 93
  7. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 154
  8. Family jewels, pages 600-603
  9. a b Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without Borders: How Global Counterinsurgency Transformed American Policing. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 19.
  10. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page page 57
  11. {Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 11
  12. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 80-81
  13. https://apjjf.org/-Jeremy-Kuzmarov/3319/article.html
  14. Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 58
  15. Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 28
  16. "International Police School Graduates 68". Washington Post. 1964-08-08.
  17. Schoultz, Lars (2014). Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 179.
  18. "Police Academy Under Fire for Aiding 'Foreign Dictatorships'". Washington Post. 1974-06-07
  19. https://hub.jhu.edu/2019/10/16/badges-beyond-borders-stuart-schrader/
  20. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 186-87
  21. Seigel, Micol (2018). Violence work : state power and the limits of police.
  22. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. p. 227.
  23. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 216
  24. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 217
  25. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 222
  26. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 228
  27. a b c d William Blum, Killing Hope: U.S. Military and C.I.A. Interventions since World War II, 2003 (chapter on Uruguay)
  28. s NIXON: "BRAZIL HELPED RIG THE URUGUAYAN ELECTIONS," 1971, National Security Archive
  29. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 229
  30. McCoy, Alfred W. (2007). A question of torture : CIA interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (First Holt paperbacks edition 2007 ed.). New York. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4299-0068-3.
  31. Stockwell, John (1991). The Praetorian guard : the U.S. role in the new world order. Boston, MA: South End Press. p. 75.
  32. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 230
  33. Schrader. Badges Without Borders. pp. 183–4
  34. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 227
  35. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century page 169
  36. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. pages=173-4
  37. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. pages=176-8
  38. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 147
  39. Schrader. Badges Without Borders. p. 159.
  40. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 138
  41. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 137}}
  42. Schrader. Badges Without Borders. p. 154.
  43. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 205
  44. a b A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978)
  45. a b c Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 269
  46. a b c Siegel, Micol (2018). Violence Work: State Power and the Limits of Police. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. page 30
  47. Kuzmarov, Jeremy (2013). Modernizing Repression : Police Training and Nation-Building in the American Century. page 234
  48. Vitale, Alex S. (2017). The end of policing. London. p. 49.
  49. Schrader, Stuart (2019). Badges without borders : how global counterinsurgency transformed American policing. Oakland, California. page 260
  50. A. J. Langguth's Hidden Terrors (Pantheon Books, 1978) page 279
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