The Crimes and Dangers of Elliott Abrams [View all]
JULY 19, 2023
BY REV. GRAYLAN SCOTT HAGLER - ARIEL GOLD
It was a bright sunny March morning in 1980. Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero was saying mass at a church hospital in San Salvador when a bullet from a sniper rifle ripped through his heart. He stumbled and fell to the ground, dead.
Romero started life and ministry as a conservative. But, after his friend Rev. Rutilio Grande was assassinated to discourage other faith leaders from supporting Salvadorian peasants, Romero underwent a political and theological conversion. Picking up where Grande left off, Romero embraced a theology of liberation, a perspective that espouses G-ds preference for the poor and oppressed. His visibility as archbishop elevated his voice and the credibility of his critique of the conditions faced by peasants in El Salvador.
A month before his assassination, Romero wrote President Jimmy Carter requesting a halt to U.S. military assistance to the Salvadoran government.
Over 250,000 people attended Romeros funeral demonstrating the love of the Salvadoran people and echoing his demands for justice. Tragically, however, they were swimming against a historical current of meddling and manipulation which included murder, often orchestrated or at the very least condoned from the U.S.
Intentionally ignoring two U.S. embassy cables naming the general who ordered his personal bodyguard to carry out the assassination of Romero, in 1982, Elliot Abrams, the newly appointed Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs, said, anybody who thinks youre going to find a cable that says that Roberto dAubuisson murdered the archbishop is a fool. Thanks to Abrams and his ilks support, U.S. military assistance to the Salvadoran regime was dramatically increased that year. The following year, the U.S. gifted the Salvadoran military and government with U.S. advisors.
More:
https://www.counterpunch.org/2023/07/19/the-crimes-and-dangers-of-elliott-abrams/
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Roberto dAubuisson
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Young priest Oscar Romero
The fallen Archbishop after being assassinated
People waiting outside the funeral of Archbishop Oscar Romero
Police shooting down the crowd outside the funeral of Oscar Romero