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Acebass
Please contact your congressperson today and urge them to co-sponsor a bill that would close, investigate, and prevent another cosmetic remake of the SOA.
>> Click here to send a letter.


The U.S. Army School of the Americas (SOA) is a combat training school for Latin American soldiers located at Fort Benning, Georgia. SOA graduates have been responsible for some of the worst human rights atrocities in Latin American history, including:


Two of the three officers responsible for the assassination of Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero in 1980
Three of the five officers responsible for the rape and murder of four U.S. churchwomen in 1980
19 of 26 responsible for the massacre of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper, and her daughter in 1989
The man convicted in Guatemalan courts for the assassination of Guatemalan Bishop Juan Jose Gerardi in 1998
The man arrested for the murder of Colombian Bishop Isaias Duarte in 2002

Originally set up as a counterinsurgency training school in 1946, the SOA has claimed numerous reforms in the way it selects and trains its students over the years, culminating in its name change to the "Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation" (WHISC) in 2001. Each of these changes came only because of grassroots and congressional activism, but none has permanently closed the school or allowed for a full accounting of its tragic legacy. The school continues to train soldiers from countries with the worst human rights records in the region.


There are three ways to take action today to close the School of the Americas:


1. Arrange to travel to Fort Benning, Georgia, this coming weekend for the annual vigil to close the SOA. Join Martin Sheen, Susan Sarandon, Amy Ray of the Indigo Girls, Sr. Helen Prejean of Dead Man Walking fame, Bishop Gabino Zavala, and thousands more people of conscience to stand in solidarity with those affected by the atrocities committed by SOA graduates. This annual vigil serves as a powerful reminder of the work that can be accomplished by those who care enough to take a stand and take action. Go to www.soaw.org for travel details, and if you can't attend yourself, consider giving financial help to a local college or church group making the trip.


2. Begin planning to take part in the SOA Lobby Days, February 21-22, as faith-based activists from around the country make a personal appeal to congressional representatives to close the school.


3. A bill sits in Congress that would close, investigate, and prevent another cosmetic remake of the SOA. Please contact your congressperson today and urge them to co-sponsor HR 1258. >> Click here to send a letter.
random_dana
I think it's a good idea to keep the school open - the cirriculum includes training in the role of the military in a republic (i.e., why you shouldn't stage a coup), respect for international law and human rights, etc. Quoting 20 year old incidents has little bearing on the school today.

Bottom line, the school is good for Latin American nations, and it's good for America.
Acebass
QUOTE(random_dana @ Nov 16 2004, 04:56 PM)
I think it's a good idea to keep the school open - the cirriculum includes training in the role of the military in a republic (i.e., why you shouldn't stage a coup), respect for international law and human rights, etc.  Quoting 20 year old incidents has little bearing on the school today.

Bottom line, the school is good for Latin American nations, and it's good for America.
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I was sent this by Sojourners magazine. sojo.com. I thought long nd hard before posting it. Being former military I could see it as you do, then I wondered, who actually controls the school and who chooses who goes there.
Then I wondered why we were bankrolling it.
I remember how Reagan lied to us about the contra army he was bankrolling.
Things started smelling bad and since I trust the folks at Sojorners I will have to disagree with you.
random_dana
I think that you and I shall have to respectfully agree to disagree (just to differentiate ourselves from the standard rancorous disagrements). The selection process and the cirriculum are fairly transparent - outsiders can even observe classes at the school.

It's not as though we're training Contras there - it's the military forces of most Latin American nations, and most of the courses are fairly mundane: infantry officer training, artillery officer training, airborne officer training, etc.

I'm not remotely going to deny that in past decades, some graduates did things that were unpleasant and illegal, but given that the training at the school doesn't condone that, it would be like blaming USC for the murdrers committed by OJ Simpson.
Acebass
QUOTE(random_dana @ Nov 17 2004, 08:14 AM)
I think that you and I shall have to respectfully agree to disagree (just to differentiate ourselves from the standard rancorous disagrements). 
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It's America we can do that. Thanks for you honest opinion.
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