In its December 2003 cover story Hispanic magazine featured
an article about Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez titled "Soldier
of Fortune: Far from Home, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez Leads the Effort
to Stabilize Postwar Iraq." Sanchez was the top U.S. commander
in Iraq during the first year of the occupation.
Rick Sanchez, as he was known growing up, spent his childhood two
miles from the Mexican border in Rio Grande City in Starr County, Texas.
Today, Starr County remains the poorest county in the United States.
The son of a single-parent family, his uneducated mother once made
him spend the day picking cotton as she had done so that he would learn
the value of hard work.
In 1973, he defied the odds and graduated from Texas A&I University
with a double major in history and mathematics, entered the Army, and
quickly rose through the ranks. He also holds a master's degree in
operations research and systems analysis engineering from the Naval
Postgraduate School.
According to 2002 Department of Defense statistics, only 4.1% of all
active duty officers in the U.S. armed forces are of “Hispanic descent” (compared
to 8.5% for African Americans). As the highest-ranking Latino in the
U.S. Army and only the ninth Latino general in the history of the Army,
Sanchez believes he is a role model for young Latinos. He told Hispanic magazine: “Whether
you like it or not, once you are honored with these kind of responsibilities,
and more importantly blessed by all those great people over the years
who allowed you to succeed, it’s inevitable that you will be looked
at as a role model.”
It is true that role models are often drawn from those few who seem
to defy expectations. But the recent history of Ricardo Sanchez exposes
a more pressing area of concern for Latino families – the ways in which
military culture contradicts the basic values of decency and service
to others that are taught in the majority of Latino working-class homes
and communities.
Sanchez’s assertions in the Hispanic interview deserve our
scrutiny. He said: “When I became a soldier the ethics and the value
system of the military profession fit almost perfectly with my own
heritage. It made it very easy for me to adapt to the military value
system.” In light of recent revelations about Sanchez’s role in the
abuse of prisoners carried out by U.S. personnel at the Abu Ghraib
prison, one can only wonder what Sanchez understands to be the “ethics
and the value system of the military profession” and the values of
his “heritage.”
Official documents obtained by the Washington Post in June
revealed that Sanchez had a direct connection to the inhumane interrogation
methods employed against Iraqi prisoners. Although in October
of 2003 he slightly reduced the number of extreme practices, he authorized
the continued application of methods such as the use of sentry dogs
to incite fear, solitary confinement for more than 30 days, and the
manipulation of a prisoner’s diet. Sanchez did not eliminate these
methods until media revelations broke concerning the torture scandal.
As the investigation of the Abu Ghraib scandal proceeded, it was learned
that the International Committee for the Red Cross had filed numerous
complaints about the treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and other
U.S.-run prison facilities in Iraq. Although those reports were handed
over to U.S. authorities, Sanchez told the Senate Armed Services Committee
he had never seen them and that he was unaware of the abuses.
But one military officer cited in the Washington Post article
claimed that Sanchez was actually present at the prison and on several
occasions witnessed the abuse as it was taking place. According to
one report, the uncropped version of a widely circulated photo of a
U.S. guard holding a dog on a crouching and naked Iraqi prisoner reveals
Lt. General Sanchez off to the right observing the scene.
The Pentagon continues to deny these allegations and, as one might
expect, Sanchez’s family has rushed to his defense. On the local NBC
affiliate in South Texas, his sister Diane Sanchez stated: "I
know my brother and I know what he is made of and he's a man of very
high morals and standards."
Despite his sister’s protestations, young Latinos and Latinas hungry
for role models need to ask about the extent to which Sanchez was willing
to abandon his “very high morals and standards” in the service of raw
imperial power. To what extent did the process of assimilation and “Hispanic
success” transform a poor Mexican American boy into an overseer of
the Bush/Rumsfeld torture regime? If the great labor organizer Cesar
Chavez taught us that the greatest contribution we can make is to serve
the poor and the oppressed, must we not view Lt. General Sanchez’s
actions as a gross corruption of “Latino values”?
When the Pentagon announced Lt. General Sanchez’s departure from Iraq
in May, it was widely assumed that he would be promoted to a four star
general and given the top post in the U.S. Southern Command in charge
of Latin America. But it was not long before NBC news reported that
although Sanchez might still be nominated for a fourth star the prisoner
abuse scandal could “complicate that process.” In an interview with
the BBC, Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, who was in charge of U.S.
military police units in Iraqi prisons, suggested that Sanchez was
fully aware of the abuses.
This Hispanic Horatio Alger, who believes his cultural values coincide
with those of the military, may continue to serve as a role model for
some young people. But like Colin Powell before him, he now must be
viewed as an anti-model whose purported ethics and values were overwhelmed
too easily by the military’s fundamental culture of violence and racism,
a culture laid bare especially in times of war. Latinos and Latinas
must reject the example of Lt. General Sanchez in order to illuminate
the place where ethnic pride gives way to a commitment to universal
social justice.
Whatever his future assignments may be, Rick Sanchez will go down
in history as the Mexican American general who approved the use of
attack dogs against naked Iraqi prisoners. In the future perceptive
students will point out that dogs were one of the most effective weapons
used by the Spanish invaders and colonizers of Mexico to incite terror
in the indigenous population. They will note the disturbing irony of
Lt. General Sanchez, the "Hispanic of the Year" with Mexican
roots, turning loose the dogs of war against another colonized people.
Jorge Mariscal is Director of the Chicano/a~Latino/a Arts and Humanities
Program at the University of California, San Diego. He was
drafted into the U.S. Army in 1968 and served in Viet Nam the following
year. His new book is Brown-eyed Children of the Sun: Lessons
from the Chicano Movement, 1965-75.