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REMEMBERING THE DEAD
Democracy Now! Special Coverage of Reagan's Presidency
On June 5, 2004, former President Ronald Reagan died after
suffering
for more than a decade from the mind-destroying illness of Alzheimer's
disease. He was 93 years old.
Ronald Reagan served as president through
much of the nuclear race between the United States and the Soviet
Union, as well as the Cold War. He defeated President Jimmy Carter in a
1980 election that was marked by the secret arms-for-hostages deal.
Reagan left office on a high note on Jan. 20, 1989. The last Gallup
Poll of his presidency gave him a 63 percent approval rating, the
highest for any departing president since FDR.
Among Republicans and
other conservatives, Reagan's presidency is remembered as a revolution.
Current president George Bush has evoked his name consistently
throughout his time in power. The network and newspaper coverage of his
death has brought forth a chorus of praise from Democrats and
Republicans.
Much of the reporting and commentary has represented a
dramatic revision of the history of the Reagan years in office. We
spend the week focusing on the policies of Reagan's administration.
Central America and the Iran-Contra Scandal
The 8 years Reagan was in office represented one of the most bloody
eras in the history of the Western hemisphere, as Washington funneled
money, weapons and other supplies to right wing death squads. And the
death toll was staggering - more than 70,000 political killings in El
Salvador, more than 100,000 in Guatemala, 30,000 killed in the contra
war in Nicaragua. In Washington, the forces carrying out the violence
were called "freedom fighters." Reagan described the
Contras in Nicaragua as, "our brothers, these freedom fighters
and we owe them our help. They are the moral equal of our founding
fathers."
The Middle East
The policies of the Reagan administration in the Middle East,
specifically during the Iran-Iraq war, fueled one of the bloodiest
conflicts in modern
times in which more than a million people were killed. Chemical weapons
were used and two of the most ancient societies on earth were
devastated. During Reagan's years in power, the U.S.armed Iran and
normalized relations with
Iraq, selling weapons to both sides of the conflict.
FLASHBACK:
The Reagan-Saddam Connection
Afghanistan and the Roots of 9/11
During Reagan's 8 years in power, the CIA secretly sent billions of
dollars of
military aid to Afghanistan to support the mujahedeen - or holy
warriors - against the Soviet Union, which had invaded in 1979. The
U.S.-supported jihad succeeded in driving out the Soviets but the
Afghan factions allied to the US gave rise to the oppressive Taliban
and Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.
The U.S. Invasion of Grenada
On October 25, 1983, the United States invaded the small Caribbean
nation of Grenada. The fiery leftist
President Maurice Bishop had been assassinated days earlier. When
U.S. forces moved in they landed at the airport, and killed more than a
dozen Cubans and more than 40 Grenadian soldiers. The U.S. quickly
consolidated its occupation of the island and expanded its force to
more than 7,000. By December a pro-American government was established.
South Africa
The dominant view is that the US was on the right side in South Africa,
that it opposed apartheid. But nothing could be further from the truth,
particularly when Reagan was president. Reagan labeled Mandela's
African National Congress a notorious terrorist organization, while
continuing Washington's support for the apartheid regime.
AIDS
Following the discovery of the first cases of AIDS in 1981, it soon
became clear a national health crisis was developing. Scientists,
researchers and health care professionals at every level expressed the
need for funding but the Reagan White House remained silent on the
subject for years while thousands of Americans were dying from the
disease.
Race
After
taking office in 1981, Reagan began a
sustained attack on the government's civil rights apparatus, opened an
assault on affirmative action and social welfare programs, embraced the
White racist leaders of then-apartheid South Africa and waged war on
the tiny, Black Caribbean nation of Grenada.
Homelessness
Under Reagan, the number of
homeless people went from
something so little it wasn't even written about widely in the late
1970s to more than 2 million when Reagan left office. Homeless rights
activists say the single most devastating thing Reagan
did to create homelessness was when he cut the budget for the
Department of Housing and Urban Development and overhaul tax codes to
reduce incentives for private
developers and low-income homes creating a major crisis for
low-income families and individuals.
Class and Organized Labor
Many critics view Reagan's administration as
one of the worst in
history for organized labor. After a prohibited strike by the
Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, Reagan fired more
than eleven thousand air traffic controllers, jailed
strike leaders and ultimately abolished the union, paving the way for a
crackdown on organized labor.