Conscious Africans Must Neutralize The CIA's New Propaganda
By Mark P. Fancher
TBWT Contributor
Article Dated 9/29/2001
When he wasn't busy trying on a new dress, or prying into Dr. Martin Luther
King's sex life, J. Edgar Hoover spent a great deal of time shaping the public's
perception of his beloved criminal enterprise, the FBI.
Even though the agency routinely engaged in residential break-ins, mail tampering,
frameups, illegal wiretapping, and in some cases, outright assassinations, Hoover
sought to portray the FBI as a by-the-book, squeaky-clean law enforcement agency.
One of his more successful public relations tools was a 1960s television series
about the FBI. Those who studied the agency learned that Hoover and his colleagues
personally reviewed and approved all of the scripts. Each program featured square-jawed,
darksuited white men who brought criminals to justice. This series was an extremely
effective propaganda device.
While the FBI has committed crimes to protect the interests of capitalism on
the domestic front, the Central Intelligence Agency has done the same thing
abroad. In 1961, the CIA was responsible for the assassination of Patrice Lumumba,
Congo's first democratically elected leader. Lumumba was a charismatic, progressive
Pan-Africanist who was quite serious about making the idea of "Africa for
the Africans" a reality. His nationalization of certain industries and
plans to use Congo's enormous natural wealth for the benefit of the country's
people caused the U.S. to conclude that Lumumba would not be an ally in the
Cold War, and he would otherwise be a major obstacle to corporate plans to maintain
access to Congo's indispensable natural resources.
The British press has reported that the order to kill Lumumba came from the
top. President Dwight Eisenhower instructed CIA director Allen Dulles to eliminate
the African leader, whereupon Dulles termed Lumumba's removal "an urgent
and prime objective." Journalist Alexander Cockburn has reported that Sidney
Gottlieb, a CIA technician was instructed to work out the details of the assassination.
Gottlieb's work involved brainwashing, biological warfare, electro-shock torture,
etc. He developed a special poison for Lumumba that would cause symptoms comparable
to those resulting from a disease found in central Africa.
Cockburn reported that the poison, a hypodermic syringe and other implements
were smuggled into the Congo by a CIA agent in a diplomatic pouch. Gottlieb
had provided instructions to CIA agents about how to apply the poison to Lumumba's
toothpaste and food. When the agents were unable to get close enough to Lumumba
to carry out the operation, the CIA resorted to Plan B, which involved having
Lumumba captured, tortured and murdered by cooperating Africans. Lumumba's body
was then placed in the trunk of a CIA agent's car.
The CIA's crimes against the African World did not end with the Lumumba assassination.
A long series of bad acts reached a crashing crescendo when it was reported
in 1996 that the agency was significantly responsible for the explosion of crack
cocaine distribution in America's African communities.
This Fall, network television is broadcasting a new series about the CIA called
"The Agency." While it is possible that the series will dramatize
the CIA's criminal conduct, the advertisements suggest that the program will
attempt to sanitize the CIA's image in much the same way that the old FBI television
show did years ago. The series even features a couple of Africans in leading
roles.
As conscious Africans, we have a choice about how to respond if this series
turns out to be offensive propaganda. We can sit back and allow our children
to watch this program and develop undeserved admiration for the CIA. As an alternative,
we can meet this propaganda assault and re-direct it in a way that will move
our liberation struggle forward.
One useful approach involves taking advantage of the groundbreaking film "Lumumba"
which is scheduled for showing in numerous U.S. cities this Fall. Much goodwill
result from assembling small groups of Black high school students in our respective
communities, and engaging in collective reading and discussion of Lumumba and
the CIA. If the groups then watch the Lumumba film together, there is certain
to be inspired discussion in the aftermath, and the birth of a fierce hatred
of the CIA by these budding warriors.
As a people, we Africans have endured far too much suffering, and experienced
far too many setbacks in our struggle for liberation as a result of the CIA's
crimes. It is critical that we not allow the agency to win yet another victory
by capturing the admiration and allegiance of our children with a stupid television
program.
(Copyright 2001 Mark P. Fancher)
Mark P. Fancher is a writer, lawyer and activist. He can be contacted at: fancher@tbwt.com
for information about books he has written, and his availability for speaking
engagements.