Speaking ill of the dead

It’s not supposed to be very nice, but then again, neither is being
complicit in the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people.

Gerald Ford was, by all accounts, a nice guy.  A fine athlete in his youth.  A good friend to those around him.  People liked Ford.  They really did.  So that counts for a lot.

And
in 1975, Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger gave Indonesia’s dictator,
Suharto (who was primarily armed by the US, and who had risen to power
in a massive bloodbath), the green light to invade East Timor
According to the existing records, once this small matter was settled,
they then discussed how Indonesia could make more money from oil.

The very next day, Indonesia invaded.

Of
the estimated population of 700,000, up to 100,000 people were killed
in the first year.  Amnesty International put the eventual death toll
from the
Indonesian occupation at about 200,000.

The Ford administration
and the US media simply looked the other way.  And today, almost
everyone involved, including former presidents Clinton and Carter, are
looking the other way again.

Of course, playing ball with dictators is something every US president has done
since long before any of us were born.  And sometimes it may well have
been a forced choice between two evils, one any decent person would have
made.  (Where would the US have been in WWII, if not
allied with Stalin?)  But you’d hope this stuff would be a last resort, not a first. 

But
in the records of Ford’s meeting with Suharto, no alternative to
invasion and mass killing — negotiations with the East Timor
socialists, say, aiming at peaceful integration of the island; or maybe
US aid to East Timor as a means of co-opting the nation into looking
West, say — was even suggested.

There’s one more thing missing from the pre-packaged Two Minutes Grief prepared long in advance of the death of any powerful figure (see Cheney’s here; Castro’s is here), which is of course completely different from the authentic grief felt by families and friends of any lost loved one — even the faraway dead who are reduced to mere statistics by their sheer number:

Prosecution of Bush,
Cheney,
and the rest of the gang for any of the obvious — illegal war,
lying to Congress, domestic surveillance, etc. — is nearly impossible
to imagine partly because of Ford’s pardon of Nixon, which in turn
served as a debating-point precedent for Bush 41’s mass pardon of
Iran-Contra figures.  The culture of impunity around the
executive branch owes a lot to the man being lionized today.

See no evil, speak no evil, hear no evil

To the good, Gerry Ford was faithful to his wife, liked to ski, enjoyed smoking a pipe, and occasionally golfed with Bob Hope.