Spanish Front in War on Truth

Spanish Front in War on Truth
Those who want true democracy favor a well-informed public, but those who simply
want power understand that a smart electorate is a dangerous thing, so they seek
out and destroy truth-tellers, as is now happening to a crusading judge in
Spain, as Lawrence Davidson reports.
By Lawrence Davidson
Among the numerous wars that are perennially being waged worldwide is the one
between truth-tellers and those who would suppress the truth. I have alluded to
this war in prior analyses that took up the plight of such truth-tellers as
Bradley Manning and Julian Assange.
Their crime is not, as is sometimes suggested, the speaking of truth to Power.
As Noam Chomsky once suggested, Power already knows the truth, and doesn’t care
about it. No, their crime is the speaking of truth to the rest of us.
Disenchanting the public of official lies is what really rattles those in power.
Of course, it is quite possible that most of the public, in the U.S. and
elsewhere, doesn’t care about the truth either. However, Power is not taking any
chances in this regard.
Recently, a new front in this continuing war has opened up. On Jan. 17, Al
Jazeera reported that Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon had “gone on trial in the
country’s supreme court on [three separate] charges of abusing judicial powers.”
Garzon is a very important truth-teller, who has conducted a number of
investigations into violations of international law against torture. Using the
principle of universal jurisdiction, Garzon went after Chilean dictator Augusto
Pinochet back in 1998, and in March of 2009 he stated that Spain could bring
charges against six Bush Jr. administration officials for clearing the way for
the use of torture during the Iraq War.
At least four men, who are Spanish citizens and also former prisoners at the
Guantanamo Bay prison, have accused the U.S. military of torturing them. It was
at this point that the U.S. government appears to have placed Garzon in a
category that would also include Manning and Assange: the category of the
dangerous truth-teller.
The U.S. Ambassador to Spain in 2009, Eduardo Aguirre describes his actions (in
a diplomatic cable made public by Wikileaks in 2010) in relation to Garzon’s
investigation of the Bush administration’s torture policies as follows, “behind
the scenes we have fought tooth and nail to make the charges disappear.”
The significant word here is “disappear” for there are two approaches to
suppressing an unwanted truth. The first is to create a counter-story that makes
the truth appear untrue. The second is to simply suppress all evidence, all
references, all interest so that the particular truth just “disappears.”
Aguirre managed to get the cooperation of Spain’s Chief Prosecutor Javier
Zaragoza who is quoted in another U.S. diplomatic cable (also made public by
Wikileaks) to the effect that he had a plan to “embarrass” Garzon into dropping
his case against the Bush officials by misrepresenting Garzon’s actions in
previous cases. This sounds like a bit of blackmail.
Garzon did not relent and now he is on trial for “abusing judicial powers” in
this and other cases.
Garzon and his supporters, which include almost every human rights group on the
planet, claim that the charges are politically motivated and, to be sure, the
entire affair appears similar to the questionable rape charge facing Assange in
Sweden.
In the case of Garzon, the Spanish Public Prosecutor (different than the Chief
Prosecutor) has recommended acquittal on all three charges and yet there is
still serious doubt that this will happen. If Garzon is found guilty on any of
the charges, he “could be banned from serving as a judge for 20 years, in what
would be a career-ending blow to the 55-year-old,” Al Jazeera reported. This is
precisely the outcome the U.S. government would like to see.
The good news is that this battle to silence Garzon, has not yet intimidated all
other Spanish judges. On Jan. 20, another Spanish judge, Pablo Rafael Gutierrez,
took up the case of the former Spanish citizens who allege torture at Guantanamo
Bay. This judge, again used the principle of universal jurisdiction, and noted
that the U.S. government has consistently refused to investigate the Spanish
citizens’ charges.
James Goldston, the executive director of Open Society Justice Initiative,
described the situation this way: “These crimes [such as torture] are universal
crimes and it is very clear that until the United States holds to account those
responsible for these crimes, other judicial actors in other countries are going
to press for accountability.”
The most powerful and influential government in the world — the one with its
capital in Washington, D.C. — is going to fight to halt these foreign efforts.
And so, we have a war that seeks to replace the truth with either lies or
historical black holes.
Big Truths, Little Truths
One of the major themes of George Orwell’s classic novel, 1984, is the controls
of information. In book 1, chapter 3 of the novel we find this proposition if
government can control all media and all public records it can either impose a
lie as truth or simply make selected past events disappear from society’s
collective memory.
Orwell wrote: “Who controls the past…controls the future: who controls the
present controls the past.” Is this not what the U.S. government is trying to do
in the case of its policy of torture: manipulate and hide the truth so people
will ignore it and then forget it? And is this not what almost every country
tries to do relative to their present crimes or those embedded in their pasts?
It is really amazing just how common this sort of manipulation is. And, the
reason it is relatively easy for governments to get away with it is because the
average man and woman cares mainly about little truths and not big ones.
Little truths are local truths. Don’t be misled to think that little means
unimportant because that is not the case. Little truths are the truths that make
possible successful daily interactions and that, of course, makes them very
important indeed.
Thus, one major reason life can go on relatively smoothly is that, most of the
time, you can take as true what others tell you. That this is so means we can
rely on friends, have stable relationships with spouses and children, and
maintain successfully operating offices, business arrangements, etc. When the
little truths start to become lies, these relationships break down.
Alleged big truths are the ones governments and the major media outlets tell the
masses. When the U.S. government tells its citizens that unregulated capitalism
will make the nation strong and prosperous, or that there must be a war to
prevent Iraq from using weapons of mass destruction; when the major U.S. media
outlets tell their viewers and readers that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons or
Israel is “just like us,” they are shaping perceptions that are not just local
but regional and national.
The problem is that, historically, most alleged big truths turn out to be big
lies. But by the time the citizenry realizes this, it is too late. Then it turns
out that the citizens’ historical memories are short and they forget past big
lies, which allows them to swallow new ones a generation later. And, finally, as
long as the little truths work, most people either don’t notice or don’t care
about the big lies.
Yet truth-tellers — like Manning, Assange and Garzon — have good historical
memories and they do notice and do care. They realize that when big truths turn
out to be big lies people suffer they suffer in the millions, bombs rain down
from the skies, economies falter and the public sphere of life becomes like a
poisoned well.
That is why accountability for the crimes hidden behind big lies is so
important. That is why no government, no politician, no media organization
should be allowed to manipulate the truth about the past or the present. On this
the future depends.
Lawrence Davidson is a history professor at West Chester University in
Pennsylvania. He is the author of Foreign Policy Inc.: Privatizing America’s
National Interest; America’s Palestine: Popular and Offical Perceptions from
Balfour to Israeli Statehood; and Islamic Fundamentalism