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The Secret History of the American Empire
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John Perkins on "The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth About Global Corruption"
Interview With Amy Goodman
Democracy Now! Go to Original
Tuesday 05 June 2007
Transcript: John Perkins joins me now in the firehouse
studio.
Amy Goodman: Hundreds of thousands of
protesters are gathering in Germany ahead of tomorrow's G8 meeting of the
world's richest nations. The three-day summit is being held in the coastal
resort of Heiligendamm. German police have spent $18 million to erect an
eight-mile-long, two-meter-high fence around the meeting
site.
Global
warming will be high on the agenda. Going into the meeting, President Bush has
proposed to sideline the UN-backed Kyoto Accords and set voluntary targets on
reducing emissions of greenhouse gas. Other top issues will include foreign
aid and new trade deals.
Today, we
spend the hour with a man who claims to have worked deep inside the forces
driving corporate globalization. In his first book, Confessions of an Economic
Hit Man, John Perkins told the story of his work as a highly paid consultant
hired to strong-arm leaders into creating policy favorable to the US
government and corporations, what he calls the "corporatocracy." John Perkins
says he helped the US cheat poor countries around the globe out of trillions
of dollars by lending them more money than they could possibly repay and then
taking over their economies. John Perkins has just come out with his second
book on this issue. It's called The Secret History of the American Empire:
Economic Hit Men, Jackals and the Truth about Global Corruption. John Perkins
joins us now in the firehouse studio. Welcome to Democracy
Now!
John Perkins: Thank you, Amy. It's great
to be here.
Amy Goodman: Well, before we go further,
"economic hit men" - for those who haven't heard you describe this, let alone
describe yourself as this, what do you mean?
John Perkins: Well, really, I think it's
fair to say that since World War II, we economic hit men have managed to
create the world's first truly global empire, and we've done it primarily
without the military, unlike other empires in history. We've done it through
economics very subtly.
We work
many different ways, but perhaps the most common one is that we will identify
a third world country that has resources our corporations covet, such as oil,
and then we arrange a huge loan to that country from the World Bank or one of
its sister organizations. The money never actually goes to the country. It
goes instead to US corporations, who build big infrastructure projects - power
grids, industrial parks, harbors, highways - things that benefit a few very
rich people but do not reach the poor at all. The poor aren't connected to the
power grids. They don't have the skills to get jobs in industrial parks. But
they and the whole country are left holding this huge debt, and it's such a
big bet that the country can't possibly repay it. So at some point in time, we
economic hit men go back to the country and say, "Look, you know, you owe us a lot of money. You can't pay your debt, so you've got to give us a pound of flesh."
Amy Goodman: And explain your history.
What made you an economic hit man?
John Perkins: Well, when I graduated from
business school at Boston University, I was recruited by the National Security
Agency, the nation's largest and perhaps most secretive spy
organization.
Amy Goodman: People sometimes think the
CIA is that, but the NSA, many times larger.
John Perkins: Yeah, it is larger. It's
much larger. At least it was in those days. And it's very, very secretive. We
all - there's a lot of rumors. We know quite a lot about the CIA, I think, but
we know very, very little about the NSA. It claims to only work in a
cryptography, you know, encoding and decoding messages, but in fact we all
know that they're the people who have been listening in on our telephone
conversations. That's come out recently. And they're a very, very secretive
organization.
They put
me through a series of tests, very extensive tests, lie detector tests,
psychological tests, during my last year in college. And I think it's fair to
say that they identified me as a good potential economic hit man. They also
identified a number of weaknesses in my character that would make it
relatively easy for them to hook me, to bring me in. And I think those
weaknesses, I [inaudible] might call, the three big drugs of our culture:
money, power and sex. Who amongst us doesn't have one of them? I had all three
at the time.
And then I
joined the Peace Corps. I was encouraged to do that by the National Security
Agency. I spent three years in Ecuador living with indigenous people in the
Amazon and the Andes, people who today and at that time were beginning to
fight the oil companies. In fact, the largest environmental lawsuit in the
history of the world has just been brought by these people against Texaco,
Chevron. And that was incredibly good training for what I was to
do.
And then,
while I was still in the Peace Corps, I was brought in and recruited into a US
private corporation called Charles T. Main, a consulting firm out of Boston of
about 2,000 employees, very low-profile firm that did a tremendous amount of
work of what I came to understand was the work of economic hit men, as I
described it earlier, and that's the role I began to fulfill and eventually
kind of rose to the top of that organization as its chief
economist.
Amy Goodman: And how did that tie to the
NSA? Was there a connection?
John Perkins: You know, that's what's
very interesting about this whole system, Amy, is that there's no direct
connection. The NSA had interviewed me, identified me and then essentially
turned me over to this private corporation. It's a very subtle and very smart
system, whereby it's the private industry that goes out and does this work. So
if we're caught doing something, if we're caught bribing or corrupting local
officials in some country, it's blamed on private industry, not on the US
government.
And it's
interesting that in the few instances when economic hit men fail, what we call
"the jackals," who are people who come in to overthrow governments or
assassinate their leaders, also come out of private industry. These are not
CIA employees. We all have this image of the 007, the government agent hired
to kill, you know, with license to kill, but these days the government agents,
in my experience, don't do that. It's done by private consultants that are
brought in to do this work. And I've known a number of these individuals
personally and still do.
Amy Goodman: In your book, The Secret
History of the American Empire, you talk about taking on global power at every
level. Right now, we're seeing these mass protests taking place in Germany
ahead of the G8 meeting. Talk about the significance of
these.
John Perkins: Well, I think it's
extremely significant. Something is happening in the world today, which is
very, very important. Yeah, as we watched the headlines this morning, you
know, what we can absolutely say is we live in a very dangerous world. It's
also a very small world, where we're able to immediately know what's going on
in Germany or in the middle of the Amazon or anywhere else. And we're
beginning to finally understand around the world, I think, that the only way
my children or grandchildren or any child or grandchild anywhere on this
planet is going to be able to have a peaceful, stable and sustainable world is
if every child has that. The G8 hasn't got that
yet.
Amy Goodman: Explain what the Group of
Eight are.
John Perkins: Well, the Group of Eight
are the wealthiest countries in the world, and basically they run the world.
And the leader is the United States, and it's actually the corporations within
these companies - countries, excuse me - that run it. It's not the
governments, because, after all, the governments serve at the pleasure of the
corporations. In our own country, we know that the next two final presidential
candidates, Republican and Democrat alike, are going to each have to raise
something like half a billion dollars. And that's not going to come from me
and you. Primarily that's going to come from the people who own and run our
big corporations. They're totally beholden to the government. So the G8 really
is this group of countries that represent the biggest multinational
corporations in the world and really serve at their
behest.
And what
we're seeing now in Europe - and we're seeing it very strongly in Latin
America, we're seeing it in the Middle East - we're seeing this huge
undercurrent of resistance, of protest, against this empire that's been built
out of this. And it's been such a subtle empire that people haven't been aware
of it, because it wasn't built by the military. It was built by economic hit
men. Most of us aren't aware of it. Most Americans have no idea that these
incredible lifestyles that we all lead are because we're part of a very
vicious empire that literally enslaves people around the world, misuses
people. But we're beginning to understand this. And the Europeans and the
Latin Americans are at the forefront of this
understanding.
Amy Goodman: Well, we're going to talk to
you about Congo, about Lebanon, about the Middle East, about Latin America,
much of what you cover in The Secret History of the American Empire, when we
come back.
[break]
Amy Goodman: Our guest is John Perkins.
From 1971 to '81, he worked for the international consulting firm of Charles
T. Main, where he was a self-described "economic hit man." His new book is
called The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals
and the Truth about Global Corruption. Let's talk back, going to Latin
America, about this ChevronTexaco lawsuit.
John Perkins: Well, that's extremely
significant. When I was sent to Ecuador as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1968,
Texaco had just gone into Ecuador, and the promise to the Ecuadorian people at
that time from Texaco and their own politicians and the World Bank was oil is
going to pull this country out of poverty. And people believed it. I believed
it at the time. The exact opposite has happened. Oil has made the country much
more impoverished, while Texaco has made fortunes off this. It's also
destroyed vast areas of the Amazon rainforest.
So the
lawsuit today that's being brought by a New York lawyer and some Ecuadorian
lawyers - Steve Donziger here in New York - is for $6 billion, the largest
environmental lawsuit in the history of the world, in the name of 30,000
Ecuadorian people against Texaco, which is now owned by Chevron, for dumping
over eighteen billion gallons of toxic waste into the Ecuadorian rainforest.
That's thirty times more than the Exxon Valdez. And dozens and dozens of
people have died and are continuing to die of cancer and other
pollution-related diseases in this area of the Amazon. So all this oil has
come out of this area, and it's the poorest area of one of the poorest
countries in the hemisphere. And the irony of that is just so
amazing.
But what I
think - one of the really significant things about this, Amy, is that this law
firm has taken this on, not pro bono, but they expect if they win the case,
which they expect to do, to make a lot of money off of it, which is a
philosophical decision. It isn't because they wanted to get rich off this.
It's because they want to encourage other law firms to do similar things in
Nigeria and in Indonesia and in Bolivia, in Venezuela and many other places.
So they want to see a business grow out of this, of law firms going in and
defending poor people, knowing that they can get a payoff from the big
companies who have acted so terribly, terribly, terribly irresponsibly in the
past.
And Steve
Donziger, the attorney - I was in Ecuador with him just two weeks ago - and
one of the very touching things he said is - he's an American attorney with,
you know, very good credentials, and he says, "You know, I've seen a lot of companies make mistakes and then try to defend themselves in law courts." And he said, "That's one thing. But in this case, Texaco didn't make mistakes. This was done with intent. They knew what they were doing. To save a few bucks, they killed a lot of people." And now they're going to be forced to pay for that, to take responsibility for that, and hopefully open the door to make
many companies take responsibility for the wanton destruction that's
occurred.
Amy Goodman: Let's talk about Latin
America and its leaders, like Jaime Roldos. Talk about him and his
significance. You wrote about him in your first book, Confessions of an
Economic Hit Man.
John Perkins: Yeah, Jaime Roldos was an
amazing man. After many years of military dictators in Ecuador, US puppet
dictators, there was a democratic election, and one man, Jaime Roldos, ran on
a platform that said Ecuadorian resources ought to be used to help the
Ecuadorian people, and specifically oil, which at that time was just coming
in. This was in the late '70s. And I was sent to Ecuador, and I was also sent
at the same time to Panama to work with Omar Torrijos, to bring these men
around, to corrupt them, basically, to change their
minds.
You know,
in the case of Jaime Roldos, he won the election by a landslide, and now he
started to put into action his policy, his promises, and was going to tax the
oil companies. If they weren't willing to give much more of their profits back
to the Ecuadorian people, then he threatened to nationalize them. So I was
sent down, along with other economic hit men - I played a fairly minor role in
that case and a major one in Panama with Torrijos - but we were sent into
these countries to get these men to change their policies, to go against their
own campaign promises. And basically what you do is you tell them, "Look, you know, if you play our game, I can make you and your family very healthy. I can make sure that you get very rich. If you don't play our game, if you follow your campaign promises, you may go the way of Allende in Chile or Arbenz in Guatemala or Lumumba in the Congo." On and on, we can list all these presidents that we've either overthrown or assassinated because they didn't play our game. But Jaime would not come around, Jaime Roldos. He stayed uncorruptible, as did Omar Torrijos.
And both
of these - and from an economic hit man perspective, this was very disturbing,
because not only did I know I was likely to fail at my job, but I knew that if
I failed, something dire was going to happen: the jackals would come in, and
they would either overthrow these men or assassinate them. And in both cases,
these men were assassinated, I have no doubt. They died in airplane crashes
two months apart from each other in 1981 - single plane; their own private
planes crashed.
Amy Goodman: Explain more what happened
with Omar Torrijos.
John Perkins: Well, Omar, again, was very
stalwartly standing up to the United States, demanding that the Panama Canal
should be owned by Panamanians. And I spent a lot of time with Torrijos, and I
liked him very, very much as an individual. He was extremely charismatic,
extremely courageous and very nationalistic about wanting to get the best for
his people. And I couldn't corrupt him. I tried everything I could possibly do
to bring him around. And as I was failing, I was also very concerned that
something would happen to him. And sure enough - it was interesting that Jaime
Roldos's plane crashed in May, and Torrijos said - got his family together and
said, "I'm probably next, but I'm ready to go. We've now got the Canal turned over." He had signed a treaty with Jimmy Carter to get the Canal in Panamanian
hands. He said, "I've accomplished my job, and I'm ready to go now." And he
had a dream about being in a plane that hit a mountain. And within two months
after it happened to Roldos, it happened to Torrijos
also.
Amy Goodman: And you met with both these
men?
John Perkins: Yes, I'd met with both of
them.
Amy Goodman: What were your conversations
like?
John Perkins: Well, especially with
Torrijos, I spent a lot of time with him in some formal meetings and also at
cocktail parties and barbecues - he was big on things like that - and was
constantly trying to get him to come around to our side and letting him know
that if he did, he and his family would get some very lucrative contracts,
would become very wealthy, and, you know, warning him. And he didn't really
need much warning, because he knew what would be likely to happen if he
didn't. And his attitude was, "I want to get done what I can in my lifetime, and then so be it." And it's
been interesting, Amy, that since I wrote the book Confessions, Marta Roldos,
who's Jaime's daughter, has come to the United States to meet with me, and I
just spent time with her in Ecuador. She is now a member of parliament in
Ecuador, just elected, and she married Omar Torrijos's nephew. And it's really
interesting to hear their stories about what was going on - she was seventeen
at the time her parents - her mother was also in the plane that her father
died in; the two of them died in that plane - and then to hear her talk about
how her husband, Omar's nephew, was in that meeting when the family was called
together and Omar said, "I'm probably next, but I'm ready to go. I've done my job. I've done what I could do for my people. So I'm ready to go, if that's what has to happen."
Amy Goodman: So what were your
conversations at the time with other so-called economic hit men? I mean, you
became the chief consultant at Charles Main.
John Perkins: Chief
economist.
Amy Goodman: Chief
economist.
John Perkins: Right. Well, you know, when
I was with other people that - we could be sitting at a table, say, in the
Hotel Panama, knowing that we're both here to win these guys over, but we also
had our official jobs, which were to do studies on the economy, to show how if
the country accepted the loan, it was going to improve its gross national
product. We would talk about those kinds of things. It's, I suspect, a little
bit like if two CIA agents, spies, get together or have a beer together, they
don't really talk about what they're really doing beneath the surface, but
they've got an official job, too, and that's what you focus on. And, in fact,
the two, in my case, are very closely linked.
So we were
producing these economic reports that would prove to the World Bank and would
prove to Omar Torrijos that if he accepted these huge loans, then his
country's gross national product would just mushroom and pull his people out
of poverty. And we produced these reports, which made sense from a
mathematical econometric standpoint. And, in fact, it often happened that with
these loans, the GNP, the gross national product, did
increase.
But what
also was true, and what Omar knew and Jaime Roldos knew and I was coming to
know very strongly, was that even if the general economy increased, the poor
people with these loans would get poorer. The rich would make all the money,
because most of the poor people weren't even tied into the gross national
product. A lot of them didn't even make income. They were living off
subsistence farming. They benefited nothing, but they were left holding the
debt, and because of these huge debts, their country in the long term would
not be able to provide them with healthcare, education and other social
services.
Amy Goodman: Talk about
Congo.
John Perkins: Oh, boy. The whole story of
Africa and the Congo is such a devastating and sad one. And it's the hidden
story, really. We in the United States don't even talk about Africa. We don't
think about Africa. You know, Congo has something called coltan, which
probably most of your listeners may not have even heard of, but every cell
phone and laptop computer has coltan in it. And several million people in the
last few years in the Congo have been killed over coltan, because you and I
and all of us in the G8 countries demand low - or at least we want to see our
computers inexpensive and our cell phones inexpensive. And, of course, the
companies that make these sell them on that basis, that "Oh, here, mine's $200 less than the other company." But in order to do that, these people in the Congo are being enslaved. The miners, the people mining coltan, they're being
killed. There's these vast wars going on to provide us with cheap
coltan.
And I have
to say, you know, if we want to live in a safe world, we need to be - we must
be willing, and, in fact, we must demand that we pay higher prices for things
like laptop computers and cell phones and that a good share of that money go
back to the people who are mining the coltan. And that's true of oil. It's
true of so many resources that we are not paying the true cost, and there's
millions of people around the world suffering from that. Roughly 50,000 people
die every single day from hunger or hunger-related diseases and curable
diseases that they don't get the medicines for, simply because they're part of
a system that demands that they put in long hours, and they get very, very low
pay, so we can have things cheaper in this country. And the Congo is an
incredibly potent example of that.
Amy Goodman: You talk about the so-called
defeats in Vietnam and Iraq and what they mean for
corporations.
John Perkins: Yeah, well, that's - yeah,
we, you and I, look at them as defeats, perhaps, and certainly anybody who
lost a child or a sibling or a spouse in these countries look at them as
disasters, as defeats, but the corporations made a huge amount of money off
Vietnam, the military industry, huge corporations, the construction companies.
And, of course, they're doing it in a very, very big way in Iraq. So the
corporatocracy, the people that are in fact insisting that our young men and
women continue to go to Iraq and fight, they're making a tremendous amount of
money. These are not failures for them; they're successes from a very strong
economic standpoint. And I know that sounds cynical. I am cynical about these
things. I've been there. I've seen it. And, you know, we must learn not to put
up with that anymore. All of us.
Amy Goodman: We're talking to John
Perkins. His book is The Secret History of the American Empire. It's the
fortieth anniversary of the 1967 Israeli-Arab war. You talk about Israel being
a Fortress America in the Middle East.
John Perkins: I think it's very sad and
very telling, once again, that the Israeli people, for the most part, are led
to believe that they've been given this land as a payoff, basically, for the
Holocaust, because they deserve to be recompensed. And, of course, the
Holocaust was terrible, and they do deserve to be taken care of and
recompensed and have stability.
But why
would we locate that place in the middle of the Arab world, their traditional
enemies? Why would we locate that place in such an unstable area? It's because
it is serving as a huge fortress for us in the biggest oil fields known in the
world today, and we knew this when Israel was located there. And I think the
Israeli people have been terribly exploited in this
process.
So, in
fact, we built this vast military base, armed camp, in the middle of the
Middle Eastern oil fields that are surrounded by the Arab communities, and in
the process, we've obviously created a tremendous amount of resentment and
anger and a situation that it's very difficult to see any positive outcome
there. But the fact of the matter is, our having this military base in Israel
has been a huge defense for us. It's been a place where we could really launch
attacks, rely on. It's been our equivalent of the Crusaders' castles in the
Middle East. And it's very, very sad. I think it's extremely sad for the
Israeli people that they're caught up in all of this. I think it's extremely
sad for the American people. It's extremely sad for the world that this is
going on.
Amy Goodman: As we crisscross the globe,
John Perkins, which is exactly what you did in your years as an international
consultant, having been groomed by the National Security Agency, but then
becoming a top economist in an international consulting firm, you have also
written books about Shamanism. You also write about Tibet. Where does Tibet
fit into this picture?
John Perkins: Well, you know, I was just
in Tibet a couple of years ago, and it was an interesting thing, because I
took a group of about thirty people into Tibet with me as part of a non-profit
organization. I was leading the trip. And some of these people had been in the
Amazon with me, been to other places. And, of course, Tibet right now is -
it's very depressing, because the Chinese presence is extremely strong, and
you see how the Tibetan culture has been put down. And you're always aware
that there's Chinese soldiers and spies all around you. And many of the people
on the trip came to the realization, yeah, this terrible here. "Free Tibet,"
we all know about that, but the ones who had been with me on a trip to the
Amazon, where the oil companies and our own military are doing the same
things, said, "But doesn't this remind us of what we're doing in so much of the world?" And it's something we tend to forget.
We can all
wave banners about "Free Tibet," which we should, but how about freeing the
countries that are under our thumb, too? And certainly Tibet is not nearly -
well, I hate to say it this way, because some people might disagree with me,
but I think Iraq is in worse shape than Tibet is these days, although both of
them are in pretty bad shape. But so, what we saw in Tibet is that same kind
of model that we're implementing around the world. And yet, most Americans are
not aware that we're doing it. They're aware that the Chinese are doing it,
but not aware that we're doing it on actually a much bigger level than the
Chinese are.
Amy Goodman: John Perkins, talk about
your transformation. You were making a lot of money. You were traveling the
world. You were in a position where you were meeting presidents and prime
ministers of countries, bringing them to their knees. What made you change,
and then, ultimately, the decision to write about
it?
John Perkins: You know, Amy, when I first
got started - I grew up - three, four hundred years of Yankee Calvinism - in
New Hampshire and Vermont, with very strong moral principles, came from a
pretty conservative Republican family. And all during the ten years that I was
an economic hit man, from '71 to '81, I was pretty young, but it bothered my
conscience. And yet, everybody was telling me I was doing the right thing.
Like you said, presidents of countries, the president of the World Bank,
Robert McNamara, patted me on the back. And I was asked to lecture at Harvard
and many other places about what I was doing. And what I was doing was not
illegal - should be, but it isn't. And yet, in my heart, it always tore at my
conscience. I'd been a Peace Corps volunteer. I saw. And as time went by and I
began to understand more and more, it got to be more and more difficult for me
to continue doing this. I had a staff of about four dozen people working for
me. Things were building up.
And then,
one day I was on vacation, sailing in the Virgin Islands, and I anchored my
little boat off the St. John Island, and I took the dinghy in, and I climbed
this mountain on St. John Island in the Virgin Islands up to this old sugar
cane plantation in ruins. And it was beautiful. Bougainville. The sun was
setting. I sat there and felt very peaceful. And then suddenly, I realized
that this plantation had been built on the bones of thousands of slaves. And
then I realized that the whole hemisphere had been built on the bones of
millions of the slaves. And I got very angry and sad. And then, it suddenly
struck me that I was continuing that same process and that I was a slaver,
that I was making the same thing happen in a slightly - in a different way,
more subtle way, but just as bad in terms of its outcome. And at that point, I
made the decision I would never do it again. And I went back to Boston a
couple of days later and quit.
Amy Goodman: We're talking to John
Perkins, worked for Chas Main International Consulting Firm, self-described
"economic hit man," now has written a new book called The Secret History of
the American Empire. When we come back from break, we'll talk about - well,
from quitting the American empire to taking it on. Stay with
us.
[break]
Amy Goodman: We're talking to John
Perkins. His second book on the issue of economic hit men is called The Secret
History of the American Empire. John Perkins is a New York Times bestselling
author. His book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man took this country by
storm.
So, you
quit, but that was one step. Writing about it was another. Talk about your
attempts over time.
John Perkins: Oh, yes. After I quit, I
tried several times to write the book that became Confessions of an Economic
Hit Man, and each time I reached out to other economic hit men I had worked
with or jackals to try to get their stories, word got out and I was
threatened. I had a young daughter at the time. She's now twenty-five. And I
also was offered some bribe. In fact, I accepted a bribe of about a half a
million dollars. It's what's called a legal bribe, but it's a bribe, and it
was given to me with the condition that I not write the book. There was no
question about that. I describe it in detail.
And I
assuaged my guilt by putting a lot of that money into nonprofits I had formed
- Dream Change and Pachamama Alliance - that are helping Amazonian people
fight oil companies, so to assuage my guilt some. But I didn't write the
story. And this happened a number of times, and I would find one excuse or
another, and I wrote other books about indigenous people. I worked with these
people. I wrote the books you mentioned earlier about Shamanism and so forth,
and so I kind of, you know, distracted myself and assuaged my guilt and went
on with this.
And then,
on 9/11, I was in the Amazon with the Shuar people, had taken a group of
nonprofit people in to learn from indigenous people in the Amazon. But shortly
after that, I came up to New York to Ground Zero, and as I stood there looking
down into that terrible pit, that smoldering - and it still smelled of burning
flesh - I realized that I had to write the book, I could no longer defer, that
the American people had no understanding of why so many people around the
world are angry and frustrated and terrified, and that I had to take
responsibility for what happened at 9/11. In fact, we all have to take a
certain responsibility, which is not in any way to condone mass murder by
anybody ever - I'm not condoning that in any way - but I did realize that the
American people needed to understand why there's so much anger around the
world. I had to write the book.
So this
time I didn't tell anyone I was writing it, and even my wife and daughter,
they knew I was writing something, but they didn't know what. I didn't reach
out to other people. It made it a little more difficult to write it. But
finally I got it in the hands of a very good New York agent, and he sent it
out to publishers. At that point, this manuscript becomes my best insurance
policy, as at that point if something strange happens to me, including now,
suddenly the book will sell. Even though it's been a bestseller for a long
time, it will sell a lot more copies, if something - people sometimes laugh
and say, "Do you worry that your publisher may be trying to assassinate you, because it would certainly help book sales?" I don't worry about it. But, you know, so at that point, once I got the manuscript there, it became my
insurance policy.
Amy Goodman: You write "A jackal is born," about Jack Corbin. Who is he? John Perkins: Well, Jack Corbin - and
that's not his real name, but he's a real person - he's alive and well today,
working for us in Iraq. But he is a jackal, he is an assassin. And one of the
most fascinating stories, I think, involves Seychelles, which is a small
county, an island country, off the coast of Africa. And it happens to be
located where Diego Garcia, one of the United States' most strategic air
bases, is located.
There's a
long history behind Diego Garcia. But in the late '70s, Seychelles had a
president that was very friendly to us, James Mancham, and he was overthrown
in a bloodless coup by [France-Albert] Rene, a socialist. And [France-Albert]
Rene threatened to get us out of Diego Garcia, to expose the real facts behind
the terrible things that went on to put us in Diego Garcia. There's a lot of
details that I won't get into now.
In any
case, I was called down to Washington to meet with a bunch of retired generals
and admirals, who were trying - who were all working as economic hit men for
consulting firms, and they were prepping me to go in and corrupt
[France-Albert] Rene and bring him around to our side. But before doing that,
they wanted to find out whether he was really corruptible or not. And it was
sort of interesting that they - one of these generals had a young protégé, a
young man, and the general had noticed that a high diplomat from Seychelles in
Washington had a young wife who was not very happy. So this young man was sent
in to seduce the wife and compromise her and get information from her, which
is a fairly common tactic. Sex is a big thing in this game of diplomacy and
economic hit people. And sort of an interesting bi-story here is that one time
at lunch this general came back, and he said, "You know, I think you economic hit men have a much tougher job than you women counterpart, because," he said, "now this woman, the diplomat's wife, is buying into this with the young man, but she wants to be convinced that he loves her. So, you know, my god, you know, I'd give the keys to the Pentagon to a young lady just for some good sex. I don't need to be convinced that she loves me. But I guess that's the
difference between men and women." That's what he said. Kind of interesting. Anyway, in the end, the young man did get the information from the wife, and the information was that [France-Albert] René was not corruptible. There was no point in even trying.
Amy Goodman: Also, Diego Garcia is very
significant as a military base.
John Perkins: Extremely significant. And
it was used - it's being used in Afghanistan and Iraq and sorties that we fly
in to Africa or any part of that world. In any case, I was called off the job,
and a little while later a team of assassins were sent in from South Africa -
forty-five, forty-six, I can't remember the exact number - were sent in as a
rugby team to bring in Christmas gifts to children of the Seychelles, but
their real job was to overthrow the government and assassinate Rene. At the
time, I didn't know these individuals. Now, I know Jack Corbin. I know him
very well, personally. I've met him since. Our paths crossed back then, but we
didn't know each other.
Amy Goodman: What exactly did he
do?
John Perkins: Well, the team went in, and
they were apprehended at the airport. A security guard discovered a hidden
weapon on one of them. A huge gun battle broke out at the Mahi airport, and
these mercenaries were surrounded by perhaps a thousand soldiers on the
outside. Jack told me it was one of the few times in his life where he figured
he was going to die and had time to think about it. Many times he could have
died, but he just reacted quickly. And they didn't know what to do, but
eventually an Air India 707 came into view and asked permission to land, and
they gave it permission to land. As soon as it landed, they hijacked it, and
they flew it back to Durban, South Africa.
And I'm
now watching this on the national news. This was now on US national news, and
I'm knowing that this is - I didn't know what was going to happen when I was
called off the case, but now I'm seeing it unfold. And to the world, what we
saw is this plane, Air India 707, flies into Durban, South Africa, surrounded
by South African security guards. The men on the plane give themselves up.
They march off. They're sent to court and then sentenced to prison, and some,
I think, to execution, and that's the end of the story, as far as we
know.
Now that I
know Jack, what actually happened was when the plane was surrounded, the
security forces got on the telephone with the plane and discovered there was
their good friends, their teachers in fact, on the plane. They worked out a
deal. The men gave themselves up. They did spend three months in prison. They
had their own wing with television, etc., and then were quietly released after
three months. A lot of those same men, that team, a lot of them today are in
Iraq working for us there, doing things that, you know, our soldiers are
forbidden from doing. And they're making very good money doing
it.
Amy Goodman: Who is this man, so-called
Jack Corbin, working for today in Iraq?
John Perkins: Well, he works for a
private company in Iraq that has a contract, you know, that comes through the
Pentagon, CIA, one of those organizations. So, like so much of this work,
there's a tremendous, as you've reported on this program, a tremendous number
of these mercenaries there. Jack Corbin and his people are at the very top of
that level. They're the extremely skilled ones who do the really delicate
work. We've also got a lot of people working for Blackwater and others that,
you know, are not quite as skilled and are just out there doing kind of the
grunt work. But there's all kinds at that level.
Amy Goodman: Bechtel, Bolivia, the water
wars. You're based in the Bay Area, where Bechtel is based, and the continent
you know best, South America.
John Perkins: Yeah, well, you know,
Bechtel was given the franchise to own and operate the water system of
Cochabamba, Bolivia, third largest city in that country. And the World Bank
forced this to happen. It's so sad. When it happened, suddenly the price of
water quadrupled for some people, went up by tremendous amounts. People could
no longer afford water. Cochabamba is a pretty poor city. There's sections of
it that are extremely poor.
And so,
the people took to the streets. They rebelled against this. There were riots.
And Bechtel dug in its heels, but eventually they threw Bechtel out of
Bolivia. Bechtel then sued Bolivia for $50 million in a European court,
because they couldn't sue in a US court, because of the laws between Bolivia
and the US. And then Evo Morales was elected president of Bolivia, and very
shortly after that, Bechtel dropped its lawsuit. But it was interesting that
the lawsuit was for lost profits that they hadn't been able to realize because
they had been thrown out for doing things that were so onerous to the people
there.
Amy Goodman: John Perkins, what do you
see as the solutions right now?
John Perkins: Well, you know, Amy, this
empire that we've created really has an emperor, and it's not the president of
this country. The President serves, you know, for a short period of time. But
it doesn't really matter whether we have a Democrat or a Republican in the
White House or running Congress; the empire goes on, because it's really run
by what I call the corporatocracy, which is a group of men who run our biggest
corporations. This isn't a conspiracy theory. They don't need to conspire.
They all know what serves their best interest. But they really are the
equivalent of the emperor, because they do not serve at the wish of the
people, they're not democratically elected, they don't serve any limited term.
They essentially answer to no one, except their own boards, and most corporate
CEOs actually run their boards, rather than the other way around. And they are
the power behind this.
And so, if
we want to turn this around, we have to impact them very strongly, which means
that we have to change the corporations, which is their power base. And what I
feel very strongly is that today corporations exists for the primary purpose
of making large profits, making a few very rich people a lot richer on a
quarterly basis, on a daily basis, on a very short-term basis. That shouldn't
be. There is no reason for that to be.
Corporations
have been defined as individuals. Individuals have to be good citizens.
Corporations need to be good citizens. They need to take - their primary goal
must be to take care of their employees, their customers and all the people
around the world who provide the resources that go into making this world run,
and to take care of the environments and the communities where those people
live.
We must
get the corporations to redefine themselves, and I think it's very realistic
that we can do so. Every corporate executive out there is smart enough to
realize that he's running a very failed system. As an economist, as a rational
person, nobody can conclude anything otherwise. If you look at the fact that
less than 5% of the world's population live in the United States and we
consume more than 25% of the world's resources and create over 30% of its
major pollution, you can only conclude that we've created a very flawed and
failed system. This is not a model that can be sold to the Chinese or the
Indians or the Africans or the Middle Easterners or the Latin Americans. We
can't even continue with it ourselves. It has to change. And corporate
executives know that. They're smart individuals. I believe that they want to
see change.
And when
we have really pushed them to change, we've been extremely successful. For
example, we've got them to clean up rivers that were terribly polluted in the
1970s in this country. We got them to get rid of the aerosol cans that were
destroying the ozone layer. We got them to change their policies toward hiring
and promoting minorities and women. We've gotten them to put seatbelts in cars
and airbags, against their initial resistance. We've got them to change
tremendously in any specific area where we've set out to do
that.
Now, it
behooves us, we must convince them that their corporations need to be
institutions to make this a better world, rather than institutions that serve
a few very rich people and their goal is to make those people even richer. We
need to turn this around. We must.
Amy Goodman: I want to ask one last quick
question on Ecuador, and that is the death of Ecuador's Defense Minister
Guadalupe Larriva, who died in a helicopter crash last year near the Manta US
Air Base installation. Do you know anything about
that?
John Perkins: Well, yeah. I just came
from Ecuador, and everybody is talking about it, because the same thing
happened to Jaime Roldos's minister of defense before he was assassinated. And
the fact that it happened next to the US air base in Manta and it was a freak
crash, two helicopters colliding, the similarities between what happened to
Jaime Roldos, people all through Ecuador are saying this was a warning to
Rafael Correa, the new president of Ecuador.
Amy Goodman: We're going to have to leave
it there. John Perkins, thanks for joining us. John Perkins's new book is
called The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals
and the Truth about Global Corruption.
A copy of John Perkins first book, Confessions of an Economic
Hit Man, is available at headquarters.
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(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Martin County Democratic Executive Committee has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is Martin County Democratic Executive Committee endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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