The Oppressive Dictators Supported by the US

April 15th, 2020 - by David Swanson / Book Excerpt / World BEYOND War

Erdogan and Trump

50 Dictators Currently Supported by the US 

David Swanson / Book Excerpt

A dictator is a single individual who possesses such extreme power over a government that some people refer to it as “absolute power.” There are degrees of dictatorship, or — if you prefer — individuals who are partially dictators or somewhat dictatorial. Oppressive governments that restrict liberties, deny participation, and abuse human rights overlap considerably, but not entirely, with dictatorships.

Because there are more studies and rankings of oppressive governments than of dictatorships, and because the problem is the oppression, not who does it, I’m going to look for a moment at some lists of oppressive governments, before turning to the subject of the dictators who run many of them.

In 2017, Rich Whitney wrote an article for Truthout.org called “US Provides Military Assistance to 73 Percent of World’s Dictatorships.”

Whitney was using the word “dictatorships” as a rough approximation of “oppressive governments.” His source for a list of the oppressive governments of the world was Freedom House. He intentionally chose this US-based and US-government-funded organization despite the clear US-government bias in some of its decisions.

Freedom House has been widely criticized, not merely for being funded by one government (plus funding from a few allied governments) while producing rankings of governments, and not merely for slanting its criticism against US-designated enemies and in favor of US-designated allies, but also for taking US funding to engage in secretive activities in Iran and to support a chosen candidate in Ukraine.

These are all good reasons to look at Freedom House’s list of the nations that it labels “not free.” This is as nearly as possible the United States government’s own view of other countries, even as it includes very restrained criticism of the United States’ own domestic policies.

 A list from Freedom House can be augmented, and is below, with the US State Department’s own description of each country’s human rights abuses.

Freedom House ranks nations as “free,” “partly free,” and “not free.” These rankings are supposedly based on civil liberties and political rights within a country, with apparently no consideration of a country’s impact on the rest of the world. That is to say, a country could be spreading freedom across the globe and score very low, or be spreading oppression around the globe and score very high, based purely on its domestic policies.

Freedom House does not, however, limit itself to dictatorships. Some of the factors it considers involve the legitimacy and power of a national leader, but if a government fully controlled by a large body severely oppresses the public, then that government ought to be labeled “Not Free” by Freedom House despite not being a dictatorship in the sense of being dominated by a single person.

Freedom House deems the following 50 countries (taking from Freedom House’s list only countries and not territories) to be “not free”: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Brunei, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa), Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), Cuba, Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Gabon, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Laos, Libya, Mauritania, Nicaragua, North Korea, Oman, Qatar, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen.

The US government allows, arranges for, or in some cases even provides the funding for, US weapons sales to 41 of these countries. That’s 82 percent. To produce this figure, I have looked at US weapons sales between 2010 and 2019 as documented by either the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Arms Trade Database, or by the US military in a document titled “Foreign Military Sales, Foreign Military Construction Sales And Other Security Cooperation Historical Facts: As of September 30, 2017.” 


US Secretary of State Donald Rumsfield and Saddam Hussein

Here are the 41: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Brunei, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa), Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Ethiopia, Gabon, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Libya, Mauritania, Nicaragua, Oman, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen.

Remember, this is a list of nations that an organization funded by the US government designates “not free” but to which the United States is shipping deadly weapons. And this is 82% of the “not free” nations, which hardly looks like a case of a few “bad apples.” On the contrary, it almost looks like a consistent policy.

One is more inclined to look for an explanation of why the 82% is not 100% than why it’s not 0%. In fact, of the nine “not free” nations to which the United States is not shipping weapons, the majority of them (Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Russia, and Venezuela) are nations commonly designated as enemies by the US government, offered as justifications for budget increases by the Pentagon, demonized by the US media, and targeted with significant sanctions (and in some cases attempted coups and threats of war). These countries’ status as designated enemies also, in the view of some critics of Freedom House, has a lot to do with how some of them got onto the list of “not free” rather than “partly free” nations.

Beyond selling and giving weapons to oppressive governments, the US government also shares with them advanced weapons technology. This includes such extreme examples as the CIA giving nuclear bomb plans to Iran, the Trump Administration seeking to share nuclear technology with Saudi Arabia, and the US military basing nuclear weapons in Turkey even as Turkey fights against US-backed fighters in Syria and threatens to close NATO bases, as well as spreading drone technology around the world.

Now, let’s take the list of 50 oppressive governments and check which ones the United States government provides military training to. There are varying levels of such support, ranging from teaching a single course for four students to providing numerous courses for thousands of trainees. The United States provides military training of one sort or another to 44 out of 50, or 88 percent.

I base this on finding such trainings listed in either 2017 or 2018 in one or both of these sources: The US State Department’s Foreign Military Training Report: Fiscal Years 2017 and 2018: Joint Report to Congress Volumes I and II, and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)’s Congressional Budget Justification: FOREIGN ASSISTANCE: SUPPLEMENTARY TABLES: Fiscal Year 2018.

Here are the 44: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Brunei, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa), Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), Djibouti, Egypt, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Ethiopia, Gabon, Iran, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Laos, Libya, Mauritania, Nicaragua, Oman, Qatar, Russia, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Sudan, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Vietnam, Yemen.

Once again, this list does not seem like a few statistical oddities, but more like an established policy. The handful of exceptions again include Cuba and North Korea for obvious reasons. The reason they include Syria in this case and not in the case of weapons sales is because of the dates I restricted this search to. The United States went from arming and working with the Syrian government to trying to overthrow it (by arming and working with rebels in Syria rather than with the government).

I suspect that many in the United States did not know that in 2019, these many years after September 11, 2001, the US military was training Saudi fighters to fly airplanes in Florida until one of them made the news by shooting up a classroom.

In addition, the history of US-provided military training to foreign soldiers, through facilities like the School of the Americas (renamed Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation) provides an established pattern of not just supporting oppressive governments, but of helping to bring them into being through coups.

Now let’s take one more run through the list of 50 oppressive governments, because in addition to selling (or giving) them weapons and training them, the US government also provides funding directly to foreign militaries. Of the 50 oppressive governments, as listed by Freedom House, 32 receive “foreign military financing” or other funding for military activities from the US government, with — it’s extremely safe to say — less outrage in the US media or from US tax payers than we hear over providing food to people in the United States who are hungry.

I base this list on the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)’s Congressional Budget Justification: FOREIGN ASSISTANCE: SUMMARY TABLES: Fiscal Year 2017, and Congressional Budget Justification: FOREIGN ASSISTANCE: SUPPLEMENTARY TABLES: Fiscal Year 2018.

Here are the 33: Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Cambodia, Central African Republic, China, Democratic Republic of Congo (Kinshasa), Djibouti, Egypt, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Ethiopia, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Laos, Libya, Mauritania, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen.

Out of 50 oppressive governments, the United States militarily supports (in at least one of the three ways discussed above) 48 of them or 96 percent — all but the tiny designated enemies of Cuba and North Korea. With some of them, the US military goes further than we have yet discussed in its relations and support for these oppressive regimes.

In these countries, the United States bases a significant number of its own troops (i.e. over 100): Afghanistan, Bahrain, Cuba*, Egypt, Iraq, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Thailand, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates.

Technically Cuba is in this list, but it is a different case from the others. The United States keeps troops in Cuba in defiance of Cuban opposition and decidedly not in support of the Cuban government. Of course, Iraq has now asked the US troops to leave, putting it in a position closer to Cuba’s.

In some cases, the military engagement goes further. The US military is fighting a war in partnership with Saudi Arabia against the people of Yemen, and fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in support of oppressive governments (as described by Freedom House and by the US State Department) that were created by US-led wars.

Governments created by foreign occupations are oppressive and corrupt and tend to have an interest in keeping wars going in order to keep arms and dollars and troops flowing their way from the United States. Yet, the Iraqi government has asked the US military to get out, and talks of a possible peace agreement in Afghanistan continue to percolate.

At the same time, the United States enacts Trump’s Muslim ban, restricting travel from numerous nations that the United States arms, including Eritrea, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen. One wouldn’t want any dangerously armed people traveling.

Another source for a list of dictatorships is the CIA-funded Political Instability Task Force. As of 2018, this group identified 21 nations as autocracies, 23 as closed anocracies (anocracies being mixtures of autocracy and democracy), and the rest as open anocracies, democracies, or full democracies.

The 21 autocracies are: Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belarus, China, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Laos, North Korea, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland), Syria, Turkmenistan, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Vietnam. This adds Bangladesh and Kuwait to the list of nations we are looking at. The US military supports those two and all of the others listed here, except North Korea.

So we’re looking at a list of 50 oppressive governments. Is it the right list? Should some nations be removed and others added? And which are dictatorships, and who are the dictators? . . . .

Continued in 20 Dictators Currently Supported by the US

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A duo of dictators: Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte and US president Donald Trump

Praise for the Book

As documented here, the US government arms, trains, and funds all variety of oppressive governments, not just dictatorships. The choice to focus on dictatorships in this book was not made merely to shorten the list. Rather, that choice was made because the US government so often claims to be opposing dictators through the promotion of democracy. Frequently, the atrocious conduct of a dictator is a central selling point for a new war or coup or program of sanctions.

Yet neither Saddam Hussein’s horrific (though fictional) removal of babies from incubators nor Manuel Noriega’s cavorting in red underwear with prostitutes while snorting cocaine and praying to voodoo gods (as the New York Timessolemnly informed us on December 26, 1989) rivals the moral horror or the glorious goofiness of the 20 tyrants described in this book.

No one will be able to read this and believe that a primary purpose of US foreign policy is to oppose dictatorships or to promote democracy.

“Swanson’s book of dictators contains names of heads of governments that few have ever heard, much less their brutal treatment of their citizens. Swanson exposes the abject duplicity of the US administrations of both political parties that champion human rights, then sell weapons to the abusers of those rights.” — Ann Wright, co-author of Dissent: Voices of Conscience.

“David Swanson succinctly describes how the United States uses military aid, training and arms sales to promote and reward autocracy and suppress democracy throughout the Global South.” — Nicolas Davies, author of Blood On Our Hands: The American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.

“David Swanson provides a shattering expose of United States empowerment of unsavory dictators around the globe, describing how the US often sells arms to both sides in foreign wars and supplies military training and support to the armies of many dictator-led nations. Swanson’s important fact-filled book provides a stunning and detailed rebuke of the military-industrial-academic- media complex that is strangling our democracy, entwined and invested in the profits to be made by inciting perpetual wars. A must-read wake up call for the nation and the world to come to grips with these undemocratic and self-defeating policies!” — Alice Slater, Member of Board of Directors of World BEYOND War, UN NGO Representative of Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.

“David Swanson’s research illustrates the pattern of US tyranny through propping up dictators around the world. This book calls the bluff on the hubris of some of the US’ most common excuses for invasion and war. The clarity of the track record is shocking. Fortunately, Swanson offers a glimmer of hope in the form of one solution in the works.” — Rivera Sun, author of The Dandelion Insurrection.

“This book methodically exposes what US foreign policy is supporting around the world (hint: it isn’t democracy) and offers an opportunity for course correction to get America moving in the direction of peace and human rights.”  — Stacy Bannerman, author of Homefront 911: How Families of Veterans Are Wounded By Our Wars.

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