Loading...
post-template-default single single-post postid-6439 single-format-standard

Eisenhower Signed Patrice Lumumba’s Death Warrant

Alex Constantine - October 24, 2010

In Struggle with the American Mind (Excerpt)
by William Blum
The Anti-Empire Report
October 2, 2010

lumumba - Eisenhower Signed Patrice Lumumba’s Death WarrantPatrice Lumumba

Since The Great Flood hit Pakistan in July …  infectious diseases are rising sharply, airplanes of the United States of America have flown over Pakistan and dropped bombs on dozens of occasions [1]

... New evidence has recently come to light that reinforces the view of a CIA role in the murder of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of The Congo following its independence from Belgium in 1960. The United States didn’t pull the trigger, but it did just about everything else, including giving the green light to the Congolese officials who had kidnaped Lumumba. CIA Station Chief Larry Devlin, we now know, was consulted by these officials about the transfer of Lumumba to his sworn enemies. Devlin signaled them that he had no objection to it. Lumumba’s fate was sealed.[2]

It was a classic Cold War example of anti-communism carried to absurd and cruel lengths. Years later, Under Secretary of State C. Douglas Dillon told a Senate investigating committee that the National Security Council and President Eisenhower had believed in 1960 that Lumumba was a “very difficult if not impossible person to deal with, and was dangerous to the peace and safety of the world.”[3] This statement moved author Jonathan Kwitny to observe:

How far beyond the dreams of a barefoot jungle postal clerk in 1956, that in a few short years he would be dangerous to the peace and safety of the world! The perception seems insane, particularly coming from the National Security Council, which really does have the power to end all human life within hours.[4]

President Eisenhower personally gave the order to kill the progressive African leader.[5]

We can’t know for sure what life for the Congolese people would have been like had Lumumba been allowed to remain in office. But we do know what followed his assassination — one vicious dictator after another presiding over 50 years of mass murder, rape, and destruction as competing national forces and neighboring states fought endlessly over the vast mineral wealth in the country. The Congo would not hold another democratic election for 46 years.

Overthrowing a country’s last great hope, with disastrous consequences, is an historical pattern found throughout the long chronicle of American imperialist interventions, from Iran and Guatemala in the 1950s to Haiti and Afghanistan in the 1990s, with many examples in between. Washington has been working on Hugo Chávez in Venezuela for a decade.

Just like the commercials that warn you “Don’t try this at home”, I urge you not to waste your time trying to educate the likes of Thomas Friedman of the New York Times, who not long ago referred to “the men and women of the US Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps” as “the most important peacekeepers in the world for the last century.”[6] What can you say to such a man? And this is the leading foreign policy columnist for America’s “newspaper of record”. God help us.

Notes

[1] Wikipedia, Drone attacks in Pakistan
[2] AllAfrica.com, New Evidence Shows U.S. Role in Congo’s Decision to Send Patrice Lumumba to His Death, August 1st 2010
[3] The Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities (US Senate: The Church Committee), Interim Report: Alleged Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders, November 20, 1975, p.58
[4] Jonathan Kwitny, Endless Enemies: The Making of an Unfriendly World (1984), p.57
[5] New York Times, February 22, 1976, p.55
[6] New York Times, October 11, 2009

http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2010/10/02/in-struggle-with-the-american-mind/

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *