Third World
Fascists
 Fascism was defeated in the Second
World War. The alliance between Nazi Germany,
fascist Italy and Japan was beaten, and the
fascist regimes dismantled. Hitler committed
suicide, Mussolini was strung up by his own
people, and the Japanese government dissolved
itself. Fascism, rising during the first half of
the 20th century, collapsed before it
could see the second half.
However, the collapse of fascism did not mean
that as a problem it had been wiped off the face
of the earth. After the Second World War, and in
the Third World, fascism actually increased. The
dictators and juntas which came to power in Latin
America and Africa, were also basically committed
to fascism.
THE SAVAGERY OF FASCISM IN LATIN
AMERICA
Third World fascists did not hesitate to commit
atrocities recalling the Nazi massacres. For
instance, the Chilean dictator General Pinochet,
who came to power with a military coup against
President Allende in 1973, turned his country into
a river of blood. Pinochet had Allende killed with
tank and jet attacks on the Presidential Palace.
However, the Chilean people were told that Allende
had committed suicide because he refused to
surrender. Following that, a ruthless policy to
eliminate Allende's supporters and the opposition
was implemented. The junta killed thousands of
people in its first year in power, and
approximately 90,000 Chileans out of a population
of 9 million were arrested. The terrorizing of the
population, corpses piled up in morgues, or shot
and thrown into the Mapocho River, the detention
of suspects in the Santiago Stadium,
hostage-takings, frequent search operations and
lootings, were just a few of the crimes of the
Pinochet regime. Academic institutions were
"cleansed," and history and geography courses in
universities were subjected to censorship by the
fascist authorities.
Fascist dictatorships similar to that of
Pinochet came to power in Latin American countries
such as Argentina, Guatemala, El Salvador,
Nicaragua, Honduras and Paraguay, and also carried
out appalling cruelties. Thousands of opponents of
the junta in Argentina "disappeared." According to
the evidence that emerged after the fact, more
than 2,000 political detainees were put onto
planes and thrown out over the sea from thousands
of feet in the air. A former gendarme, Federico
Talavera, who appeared on Argentine television on
April 27, 1995, admitted the tortures carried out
during the time, saying among other things that
pregnant women were thrown into the sea and that
dogs were specially trained to bite peoples'
sexual organs. According to his confession, the
dogs would take political detainees' sexual organs
in their mouths and wait for an order. If the
detainee refused to talk, then the dog was told to
bite.
The brutality in Guatemala was also horrifying.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the fascist regime which
overthrew the country's first and only elected
president, Jacobo Arbenz, in 1954, turned the
country into killing-fields. Among the fascists'
targets, in conformity with fascism's general
hatred of religion, were men of religion. Amnesty
International announced that between October 1966
and March 1968, some 8,000 Guatemalans, including
many priests, were killed by "death squads." In
1972, the number of death squad victims went up to
12,000, and to 20,000 four years later.
The Roman Catholic Bishops Conference described
the government's policy as "genocide." In Killing
Hope:US Military and CIA Interventions Since World
War II, the American writer William Blum explained
the torture methods used by the Guatemala
regime:
Anyone attempting to organize a union or other
undertaking to improve the lot of the peasants, or
simply suspected of being in support of the
guerrillas, was subject ... unknown armed men
broke into their homes and dragged them away to
unknown places ... their tortured or mutilated or
burned bodies found buried in a mass grave, or
floating in plastic bags in a lake or river, or
lying beside the road, hands tied behind the back
... bodies dropped into the Pacific from
airplanes. In the Gual area, it was said, no one
fished any more; too many corpses were caught in
the nets ... decapitated corpses, or castrated, or
pins stuck in the eyes ... a village rounded up,
suspected of supplying the guerrillas with men or
food or information, all adult males taken away in
front of their families, never to be seen again
... or everyone massacred, the village bulldozed
over to cover the traces ... seldom were the
victims actual members of a guerrilla band. One
method of torture consisted of putting a hood
filled with insecticide over the head of the
victim; there was also electric shock - to the
genital area is the most effective.133
William Blum quotes a statement by a female
native Guatemalan. Taken for questioning, along
with her family, on charges of being an "opponent
of the regime," Rigoberta Menchú Tum described
what happened to her on December 9, 1979:
 SOUTH AFRICAN FASCISM The
"apartheid" regime in South Africa followed a
racist policy as harsh as that found in Nazi
Germany. The native black population, which made
up the majority, was oppressed and brutalized
for years by the white
minority. |
On 9 December 1979, my 16-year-old brother
Patrocino was captured and tortured for several
days and then taken with twenty other young men to
the square in Chajul ... An officer of [President]
Lucas Garcia's army of murderers ordered the
prisoners to be paraded in a line.... I was with
my mother, and we saw Patrocino; he had had his
tongue cut out and his toes cut off. The officer
jackal made a speech. Every time he paused the
soldiers beat the Indian prisoners. When he
finished his ranting, the bodies of my brother and
the other prisoners were swollen, bloody,
unrecognizable. It was monstrous, but they were
still alive. They were thrown on the ground and
drenched with gasoline. The soldiers set fire to
the wretched bodies with torches and the captain
laughed like a hyena and forced the inhabitants of
Chajul to watch.134
These are but a few examples. The fascist
regime in Guatemala, run first by General Romeo
Lucas Garcia, and then by General Efrain Rios
Montt, by similar methods, killed more than
100,000 people. William Blum speaks of victims
"having their eyes put out, their testicles cut
off and stuffed in their mouths, and their hands
and feet cut off" by the security forces, as well
as women "having their breasts cut off."
Similar fascist regimes held power in African
countries, such as Zaire, Uganda and South Africa,
for long periods of time. The regime of South
Africa adopted a fiercely racist ideology,
reminiscent of Nazi Germany. The black majority in
South Africa, the original inhabitants of the
land, were exploited by the white minority for
years.
In short, the second half of the
20th century was as much the brunt of
fascist violence as the first. Fascist regimes,
similar to those overthrown in Europe, emerged in
Latin America and Africa, who again led to the
world becoming'a battlefield where "the strong
survive and the weak are eliminated."
A MIDDLE EASTERN FASCIST: SADDAM
HUSSEIN
At this point in time, being the beginning of
the 21th century, many of the fascist
dictators of the 1960s and 70s have disappeared.
However, fascism may rear its head at any time, in
various places and under different conditions. The
Middle East in particular has suffered from the
violence of fascist regimes and organizations. One
such fascist dictator is at this very moment
threatening the region: Saddam Hussein.
It will be useful to examine Saddam Hussein's
past in order to better recognize his fascist
character.
The events that brought him to power in Iraq
began with a military coup. In February 1963, a
group of officers and street militants, calling
themselves the Baath (Resurgence) Party, overthrew
General Kassem who was then in power. Among these
militants was one young member of the six-man team
charged with killing Kassem: Saddam Hussein
al-Takriti, or Saddam Hussein from Takrit.
Although he was not a soldier, Saddam usually wore
a military uniform, and after the coup, he was
brought in by the Baath administration to head a
group responsible for terrorism and murder. The
first thing he did was to develop new and
effective methods of torture with which to
interrogate opponents of the coup. When the
administration that followed the Baath's palace
coup collapsed, in November of that same year,
Saddam's torture facility was exposed, which was
equipped with various implements of torture that
Saddam had invented himself.
The Baath government lasted less than ten
months, and was brought down by another coup. But
the party carried out a second coup on July 17,
1968. This time the plotters remained in
power.
The leader of this second Baath coup was
"torture expert" Saddam Hussein. He brought in his
personal relatives into key positions in the
regime, and eventually gathered complete power by
eliminating his rivals. The merciless torturer had
become the dictator of Iraq.
After coming to power, Saddam pursued war and
conflict constantly. In 1980 he engaged in a
surprise and totally unjustified attack on Iran,
occupying part of the country. The war lasted for
eight years and cost the lives of hundreds of
thousands of Iraqis and Iranians. Two years after
the war had ended, he invaded Kuwait, again
without justification, leading to the Gulf War.
Like Hitler, who carried out savage attacks for
four years to enlarge German territory, Saddam
terrorized those around him.
Furthermore, he had no qualms about using the
most oppressive methods against his own people.
Throughout his rule, those regarded as opponents
of the regime, and various political and ethnic
groups, have suffered all kinds of repression. An
edition of Newsweek described Saddam's fascistic
character in the following manner:
His detractors call him a bloodthirsty
tyrant-the Butcher of Baghdad. Saddam Hussein
rules Iraq with an iron hand inside a steel glove,
backed by a million-man Army and a legion of
informers, assasins and torturers. Saddam, as he
is known throughout the Middle East, is utterly
ruthless in the pursuit of glory for himself and
his country. He has not hesitated to use poison
gas on enemies both foreign and domestic.135
Saddam has spilt the blood of numberless
Iraqis. At the end of the war against Iran, 1
million out of Iraq's population of 17 million had
either been killed or injured. More than 1 million
people left the country for political and economic
reasons. The human rights organization Middle East
Watch states that many people were relocated or
deported, arrested and punished for no reason, and
that the use of torture was widespread, together
with political executions and unsolved killings in
Iraq. According to Amnesty International, torture,
even of children, includes such methods as
roasting victims over flames, amputating noses,
limbs, breasts and sexual organs, and hammering
nails into bodies.136
SADDAM'S COMPLEX  While the people of Iraq are
living in poverty and hunger, Saddam lives in
great pomp in the 50 palaces he had built. (To
the side is a plan of one of these palaces.)
Saddam's son Uday shares his father's paranoia.
Fascism in Iraq passes from "father to
son." |
The atrocities carried out by Saddam at Halabja
in 1988 demonstrate his fascistic treatment of
people of different ethnic origins. Nerve gas was
used against the Kurdish settlers, causing the
death of many innocent men and women, including
babies and the elderly. Amnesty International
reported that 5,000 Kurds were killed in a single
Iraqi gas attack on the village of Halabja, and
many more thousands perished in similar attacks
elsewhere in the country. 137
The torture inflicted on the political
opponents of fascist Saddam was still worse. A
doctor who fled from Iraq described: "I was an
intern in a hospital in the South. Only doctors
were allowed to see the people brought from
prison. Most of them were no more than lumps of
meat, and most of them died. No political detainee
lived through the torture. I fled when I realised
that I was about to be detained."138
Even Saddam's own family and closest associates
were victims of his cruelty. His step-brother
Barzan Takriti fled to the United Arab Emirates
out of fear that Saddam and his son Uday were
going to kill him. Two of Saddam's son-in-laws,
Hussein and Saddam Kamel fled to Jordan out of
fear of him. Saddam then guaranteed them that
their lives would not be in danger, but as soon as
the brothers returned to Baghdad, they and their
father were killed. Later, their mother's body was
found cut to pieces, all which happened before the
eyes of the world.
The Iraqi leader also uses cruel methods as
well to intimidate opponents who have fled the
country. For instance, General Najib Salihi, who
escaped to Jordan in 1995, reported that his close
family were raped and that tapes of the act were
sent to him. He also said that the same has been
done to many other opponents of the regime.
As we can see from these numerous examples,
Saddam's authority in Iraq is entirely based on
intimidation, terror and torture, while the people
within his fascist regime are hungry, unemployed
and living in poverty. Little children are dying
of hunger and lack of medicine, while the rest of
the nation is doomed for either death or
extinction. Despite all of this, the people will
say nothing against Saddam, whether out of fear or
from the effects of mass-hypnosis, but instead
blame "them," Saddam's enemies, for the poverty
they are suffering.
 Saddam compares himself
to Nebuchadnezar, the pagan ruler from ancient
Babylon. (Above. A coin Saddam had minted to
that end.) Like all fascists, Saddam is
nostalgic for the savagery of ancient
paganism.
|
In Saddam, we can also discern several other
fascist characteristics. Of these is the way he
compares himself to pagan dictators of the past,
just as the Nazis and other fascists had done. The
"Sparta" that Saddam selected was Babylon, a pagan
empire of the ancient Middle East. He sees and
portrays himself as heir to the Babylonian King
Nebuchadnezzar, who had "no opponents from horizon
to sky."139
In Iraq, ceremonies are held symbolizing the
resurrection of the Babylonian Empire, in a manner
that recalls the pagan ceremonies of the Nazis.
Nebuchadnezzar, who destroyed the temple of
Solomon and carried the People of Israel to
captivity in Babylon, is known to history for two
characteristics, that of a ruthless commander, and
a great architect. He was also filled with a pride
bordering on the psychopathic. He had his name
written on every one of the bricks used in the
construction of the buildings he had erected. In
direct imitation, and despite all the poverty and
misery he inflicts on his people, Saddam has his
name written on the bricks used to build the
palaces he constructs so ostentatiously.
A great portion of the Iraqi people, however,
have been so psychologically deformed by Saddam's
fascism, that they do not see the construction of
such palaces as a wrong or as an injustice to
them. On the contrary, they regard these palaces,
where Saddam lives in great luxury, as a matter of
national honor, and something Iraq can display
proudly to foreigners.
Another example of Saddam's fascist character
is that, although he has no religious belief, he
sometimes puts on a false facade of religion to
use religion for his own political ends.
However, it is clear that the use of religious
symbols for improper ends (such as to keep Saddam
in power and spreading evil) is tremendous
hypocrisy. The duty of the Iraqi people, and
indeed of everyone, when faced with fascism, is
not to be deceived by its propaganda methods, but
to distinguish between the truly devout and the
fascists who just pretend to be so, and to then
act accordingly. It is not difficult to make out
the difference between the two, because a fascist
can never be truly devout.
In the Koran, God has this to say about these
two-faced leaders who, through their power and
ill-earned respect, deceive their people into
complacency:
Among the people there is
someone whose words about the life of the world
excite your admiration, and he calls God to
witness what is in his heart, while he is in fact
the most hostile of adversaries. Whenever he holds
the upper hand, he goes about the earth corrupting
it, destroying crops and animals. God does not
love corruption. When he is told to have fear of
God, he is seized by pride which drives him to
wrongdoing. Hell will be enough for him! What an
evil resting-place! (Koran, 2:204-206) |