How US Trade Unionists Opposed the Dirty War in El Salvador

This is an extract from Blue-Collar Empire: The Untold Story of US Labor’s Global Anticommunist Crusade by Jeff Schuhrke, now available from Verso Books.

Working in close coordination, the State Department and the AFL-CIO’s American Institute for Free Labor Development (AIFLD) stepped up their presence in El Salvador after a group of reformist military officers seized control of the government in October 1979. Supported by the United States, the new junta aimed to keep El Salvador from going the way of revolutionary Nicaragua.

Both the State Department and AIFLD endorsed a counterinsurgency strategy that hinged upon propping up political centrists in El Salvador, a venture doomed to fail as the country’s Left and Right became ever more polarized. Resenting even token attempts at social and economic reform, the Salvadoran right mobilized death squads that murdered with impunity, while the Left — faced with escalating repression — became convinced that armed struggle was the only way to topple the country’s elites.

By late 1980, El Salvador was in the grip of a bloody civil war. Determined to deny victory to the leftist guerillas, the incoming Reagan administration resolved to increase military assistance to the Salvadoran government, ensuring that the conflict would drag on throughout the ’80s and ultimately leave some eighty thousand people dead.

In the late 1960s, the AIFLD’s Agrarian Union Development Department used training programs and small-scale community development projects in El…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Jeff Schuhrke

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