
Death Squads in El Salvador:
A Pattern of U.S. Complicity
by David Kirsch
Covert Action Quarterly, Summer 1990

In 1963, the U.S. government sent 10 Special Forces personnel
to El Salvador to help General Jose Alberto Medrano set up the
Organizacion Democratica Nacionalista (ORDEN)-the first paramilitary
death squad in that country. These Green Berets assisted in the
organization and indoctrination of rural "civic" squads
which gathered intelligence and carried out political assassinations
in coordination with the Salvadoran military.
Now, there is compelling evidence to show that for over 30
years, members of the U.S. military and the CIA have helped organize,
train, and fund death squad activity in El Salvador.
In the last eight years, six Salvadoran military deserters
have publicly acknowledged their participation in the death squads.
Their stories are notable because they not only confirm suspicions
that the death squads are made up of members of the Salvadoran
military, but also because each one implicates U.S. personnel
in death squad activity.
The term "death squad" while appropriately vivid,
can be misleading because it obscures their fundamental identity.
Evidence shows that "death squads" are primarily military
or paramilitary units carrying out political assassinations and
intimidation as part of the Salvadoran government's counterinsurgency
strategy. Civilian death squads do exist but have often been comprised
of off-duty soldiers financed by wealthy Salvadoran businessmen.
It is important to point out that the use of death squads
has been a strategy of U.S. counterinsurgency doctrine. For example,
the CIA's "Phoenix Program" was responsible for the
"neutralization" of over 40,000 Vietnamese suspected
of working with the National Liberation Front.
Part of the U.S. counterinsurgency program was run from the
Office of Public Safety (OPS). OPS was part of U.S. AID, and worked
with the Defense Department and the CIA to modernize and centralize
the repressive capabilities of client state police forces, including
those in El Salvador. In 1974 Congress ordered the discontinuation
of OPS.
In spite of the official suspension of police assistance between
1974 and 1985, CIA and other U.S . officials worked with Salvadoran
security forces throughout the restricted period to centralize
and modernize surveillance, to continue training, and to fund
key players in the death squad network.
Even though the U.S. government's police training program
had been thoroughly discredited, the Reagan administration found
other channels through which to reinstate police assistance for
El Salvador and Honduras. Attached to this assistance is the requirement
that the president certify that aid recipients do not engage in
torture, political persecution, or assassination. Even so, certain
members of Congress showed concern over the reinstatement of police
aid to repressive regimes. In a Senate Foreign Relations Committee
hearing, Senator Claiborne Pell (Dem.-Rhode Island) asked, "I
was talking about cattle prods specifically. Would they be included
or not?"
Undersecretary of State for Latin American Affair Elliott
Abrams replied, "Well, I would say that in my view if the
police of Costa Rica, with their democratic tradition, say that
for crowd control purposes they would like to have 50 shot [sic]
batons, as they are called in a nonagricultural context, I would
personally want to give it to them. I think that government has
earned enough trust, as I think we have earned enough trust, not
to be questioned, frankly, about exporting torture equipment.
But I would certainly be in favor of giving it to them if they
want it."
Death Squad Members, Testimony
Cesar Vielman Joya Martinez, a soldier in the First Infantry
Brigade's Department 2 (Intelligence), is the most recent Salvadoran
to admit his involvement in death squad activity. At a November
1, 1989 press conference Joya Martinez stated that certain military
units in Department 2 carried out "heavy interrogation"
(a euphemism for torture) after which the victims were killed.
The job of his unit was to execute people by strangulation, slitting
their throats, or injecting them with poison. He admitted killing
eight people and participating in many more executions. He stated
that the Brigade Commander had sent written orders to carry out
the killings and that the use of bullets was forbidden because
they might be traced to the military.
Joya Martinez also claims that one of the U.S. advisers working
with the First Brigade sat at a desk next to his and received
"all the reports from our agents on clandestine captures,
interrogations...but we did not provide them with reports on the
executions. They did not want to hear of the actual killings."
U.S. advisers authorized expenses for such extras as black glass
on squad vans to allow executions to take place unobserved; provided
$4,000 for the monthly budget; and conducted classes in recruiting
informants and conducting intelligence reconnaissance.
Another Salvadoran soldier, Ricardo Castro, is the first officer
to come forward with information about death squad activity. Castro
graduated from West Point in 1973 and was a company commander
in the Salvadoran Army. He translated for several U.S. advisers
who taught, among other subjects, interrogation techniques. Castro
claims that one U.S. instructor worked out of the Sheraton Hotel
(taken over briefly during the November 1989 FMLN offensive) and
emphasized psychological techniques. Castro recalled a class where
Salvadoran soldiers asked the adviser about an impasse in their
torture sessions:
He was obviously against torture a lot of the time. He favored
selective torture.... When they learned some thing in class, they
might go back to their fort that night and practice.... I remember
very distinctly some students talking about the fact that people
were conking out on them...as they were administering electric
shock. 'We keep giving him the electric shock, and he just doesn't
respond. What can we do?'.... The American gave a broad smile
and said, 'You've got to surprise him. We know this from experience.
Give him a jolt. Do something that will just completely amaze
him, and that should bring him out of it."
Castro revealed that he held monthly briefings with then deputy
CIA chief of station in El Salvador Frederic Brugger who had recruited
him for intelligence work after meeting at an interrogation class.
Castro also claimed to have knowledge of the perpetration of large
massacres of civilians by Army Department 5.
In December 1981, he met in Morazan Province with one of the
officers that the U.S. instructor had advised. "They had
two towns of about 300 people each, and they were interrogating
them to see what they knew. Since I...knew something about interrogations,
he said he might want me to help. The Major told me that after
the interrogation, they were going to kill them all." Castro
was, however, reassigned and did not participate. Later, his pro-government
mother told him, "You know, son, these guerrillas, they invent
the wildest lies. They say that in December, 600 civilians were
killed in Morazan." "Oh, shit, I was hoping I'd been
dreaming it," he thought. "I later found out, they did
go in and kill them after all."
Rene Hurtado worked as intelligence agent for the Treasury
Police, one of the three Salvadoran paramilitary forces. After
a falling out with an officer, he fled to Minnesota, took refuge
with a Presbyterian Church congregation, and began describing
routine torture methods used by paramilitary forces. These included
beatings, electric shock, suffocation, and mutilation. He described
techniques such as tearing the skin from " interrogation"
subjects, sticking needles into them, or beating them in such
a manner that lasting internal injuries but no telltale external
marks would be sustained. According to Hurtado, CIA employees
and Green Berets taught some of these torture techniques to the
Treasury Police in Army staff headquarters.
General John Vessey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
was particularly disturbed by the implication of the Green Berets
and initiated an investigation. The investigator from the Army
Criminal Investigation Division stated, "My job was to clear
the Army's name and I was going to do whatever [was] necessary
to do that." Hurtado refused to cooperate with the investigator
on the advice of a member of Congress whom the church parishioners
had called upon. When the investigator was told this by the minister,
he responded, "Tell Mr. Hurtado that the Congressman has
given him very costly advice. When I went to El Salvador to investigate
his allegations, at the advice of the U.S. Ambassador, I did not
talk to members of the Salvadoran military. If I go again and
talk to the military, we don't know who will be hurt, do we?''
Following revelations of U.S. involvement in death squad activities,
the House and Senate Intelligence Committees reported on allegations
of U.S. complicity in death squad activity. The Republican-dominated
Senate panel confirmed that Salvadoran officials were involved,
but denied any direct U.S. role, keeping certain portions of its
report classified. The House Committee stated that, "U.S.
intelligence agencies have not conducted any of their activities
in such a way as to directly encourage or support death-squad
activities." Rep. James Shannon (Dem.-Mass.), who requested
the inquiry, commented that the report was "certainly not
as conclusive as the committee makes it sound.''
Varelli, Carranza, Montano, and others
Frank Varelli is the son of a former Salvadoran Minister of
Defense and National Police commander. When Varelli's family came
to the U.S. in 1980, Varelli started working as an FBI informant.
Years later, he publicly revealed his role in FBI covert operations
against domestic organizations opposing Reagan's Central American
policy. He has also asserted that the Salvadoran National Guard
gave him death lists which he compared to lists of Salvadorans
in the U.S. awaiting deportation back to El Salvador. Varelli
believes some may have been killed on their return to El Salvador.
He reported these contacts with the National Guard to the FBI.
Former Colonel Roberto Santivanez claimed that the then chief
of the Salvadoran Treasury Police, Nicolas Carranza, was the officer
most active with the death squads. Colonel Carranza is also alleged
to have received $90,000 annually from the CIA. Carranza has confirmed
the close working relationship of the paramilitary forces with
U.S. intelligence. "[They] have collaborated with us in a
certain technical manner, providing us with advice. They receive
information from everywhere in the world, and they have sophisticated
equipment that enables them to better inform or at least confirm
the information we have. It's very helpful.''
Carlos Antonio Gomez Montano was a paratrooper stationed at
Ilopango Air Force Base. He claimed to have seen eight Green Beret
advisers watching two "torture classes" during which
a 17-year-old boy and a 13-year-old girl were tortured. Montano
claimed that his unit and the Green Berets were joined by Salvadoran
Air Force Commander Rafael Bustillo and other Salvadoran officers
during these two sessions in January 1981. A Salvadoran officer
told the assembled soldiers, "[watching] will make you feel
more like a man.''
Above are the accounts of the death squad deserters. Non military
sources have also reported the participation of U.S. personnel.
For example, another (highly placed anonymous civilian) source
maintained that Armed Forces General Staff Departments 2 and 5
(organized with help from U.S. Army Colonel David Rodriguez, a
Cuban-American) used tortures such as beating, burning and electric
shock. U.S. involvement has also been asserted in sworn accounts
by some victims of torture. Jose Ruben Carrillo Cubas, a student,
gave testimony that during his detention by the Long Distance
Reconnaissance Patrol (PRAL) in 1986, a U.S. Army Major tortured
him by applying electric shocks to his back and ears.
Various sources have reported the use of U.S.-manufactured
torture equipment. Rene Hurtado, for example, explained, "There
re some very sophisticated methods...of torture..[like the machine]
that looks like a radio, like a transformer; it s about 15 centimeters
across, with connecting wires. It says General Electric on it...."
Many other documented accounts of brutality by U.S. trained
and advised military units exist. Indeed, the elite Atlacatl Battalion
has been implicated in several massacres over the past ten years
and members of the battalion have been indicted for the November
slayings of the six Jesuit priests and two women.
It is widely accepted, in the mainstream media and among human
rights organizations, that the Salvadoran government is responsible
for most of the 70,000 deaths which are the result of ten years
of civil war. The debate, however, has dwelled on whether the
death squads are strictly renegade military factions or a part
of the larger apparatus. The evidence indicates that the death
squads are simply components of the Salvadoran military. And that
their activities are not only common knowledge to U.S. agencies,
but that U.S. personnel have been integral in organizing these
units and continue to support their dally functioning.
David Kirsh is author of the booklet, "Central America
Without Crying Uncle." It is available from Primer Project,
107 Mosswood Court, Chapel Hill, NC 27516.
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