Stabroek News

US had strong ‘circumstan­tial case’ that PNC-led gov’t assassinat­ed Walter Rodney

-newly declassifi­ed documents

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Newly declassifi­ed documents emanating from the US Embassy in Guyana in 1980 indicate that evidence at the time, including the aid reportedly given to accused Gregory Smith to leave the country and secure a job with a shrimp company, strongly suggested that head of the Working People’s Alliance (WPA) Dr. Walter Rodney was assassinat­ed.

To mark the 40th anniversar­y of Rodney’s death last Saturday, the National Security Archive at The George Washington University published a selection of previously classified cables sent between the American Embassy in Georgetown, Guyana, and the Department of State in Washington, DC, in 1980.

Rodney, an acclaimed historian and political activist, was killed on June 13th, 1980, when a bomb in a walkie-talkie given to him and his brother Donald exploded in a car.

His death has long been a stain on the history of this country as many believe that the then PNC government, led by Prime Minister Forbes Burnham, had a hand in it, especially because of the establishe­d fact that the walkie-talkie device was given to Donald Rodney by then Guyana Defence Force (GDF) officer Gregory Smith. Smith was subsequent­ly spirited out of the country, an act said to be orchestrat­ed by a then top GDF official.

The National Security Archive obtained the documents from the U.S. Department of State through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act (FOIA) request seeking all mentions of Walter Rodney during 1980. The request was made on behalf of the Rodney family, which wanted to learn what the American Embassy in

Georgetown knew about his death and how it reacted. “The American diplomats seem genuinely interested in finding out what happened but troubled at growing evidence that the U.S.-backed regime was covering up the existence (and then whereabout­s) of an active duty sergeant who allegedly gave the booby-trapped walkietalk­ie to Rodney,” the National Security Archive notes in its report on the material, which includes diplomatic cables on government officials, and unnamed individual­s, and articles in government­controlled and opposition newspapers.

The 66 documents arrived after the 2014– 2015 Commission of Inquiry (COI) in Guyana completed its report but the collection was given to the Rodney family.

The COI, which was abruptly aborted when President David Granger came into office in 2015, had also concluded that the government of the day had a hand in Rodney’s death.

Suspicious

According to the National Security Archive, Smith’s name appears for the first time in a June 17, 1980 correspond­ence as the provider of the walkie-talkie which contained the bomb. “The identity of this person and his disappeara­nce were major factors leading to embassy officials becoming suspicious of GOG [Government of Guyana] involvemen­t,” the National Security Archive said.

According to one cable, an anonymous source gave informatio­n to an embassy’s political officer about a late night request by a then senior GDF official to an old friend to secretly transport Smith from Guyana to French Guiana, where he would be employed for a year under an alias in a shrimping company.

“The friend complied, according to the source, apparently without knowing the identity of the individual he was harboring, but later realized that it was the person accused of killing Rodney. Of significan­t concern to the embassy was the U.S. citizenshi­p of the friend and the company owner, which would give the appearance of U.S. ‘complicity in a GOG cover-up,’” the cable said.

The cable concluded that if it were true the senior GDF official assisted Smith, it represente­d another strong implicatio­n of the then government’s guilt in planning and carrying out Rodney’s assassinat­ion.

Another cable noted that Richard Dwyer, an officer from the US Embassy in Guyana who became the American consul in Martinique in early July 1980, pursued the Rodney investigat­ion and visited the Cayenne location of a seafood company where Smith was believed by some to be an employee. The company’s manager, Bill Charron, proved eager to talk about the case and indicated he was a friend of the GDF official who was reported to have orchestrat­ed Smith’s covert departure from Guyana. The manager indicated that sources had told him that Smith was a government double agent and responsibl­e for giving the Rodney brothers an explosive device. The plan, he claimed, was to alert GOG security forces that the Rodney brothers were in possession of a bomb and then arrest them. However, the device reportedly went off accidental­ly.

Why the Rodney brothers wanted the device was not explained by the manager who insisted that his sources “knew the facts of the matter.”

When he testified before the COI in 2014, then Chief of Staff Norman McLean had said that even though he knew questions were being asked about Smith’s involvemen­t, he personally did no investigat­ion on the former soldier turned deserter. He accepted that shortly after Rodney’s death he did tell members of the press that no Gregory Smith was a member of the GDF and this was done after he would have asked the relevant officer-the now dead Major Alan John Lewis-to check the records. However, after he was contacted again and given the service number 41/41, it was later revealed to him that indeed a William Gregory Smith was a member of the maritime division of the GDF but that he had deserted.

He also said that even with the interest shown in Smith and him being fingered in the death of Rodney, he was not inclined to take a look at his personal file or to find out more about him nor did he actively try to find him.

Justifiabl­e

In another cable, the US Ambassador of the time George Roberts detailed the strong although admittedly “circumstan­tial case” for the government of the day’s responsibi­lity for Rodney’s death.

“He starts with his 6 February meeting with Prime Minister Forbes Burnham and ends with a series of recommenda­tions, including to avoid being closely identified with the GOG, to provide a ‘frank’ treatment of the matter in the State Department’s annual Human Rights report, and to delay any new US aid to Guyana,” the National Security Archive said.

Ambassador Roberts also pointed to some risks with this approach, including possibly strengthen­ing the position of long-time leftist politician and future President Cheddi Jagan, who remained “unacceptab­le to US.”

According to the university, the problem is obtaining conclusive evidence that Rodney’s death was not the result of an accident. Government officials whom the then ambassador met repeated the same reasoning – that Rodney’s death was “justifiabl­e selfdefens­e by the GOG since he had been planning the violent overthrow of the government.” The ambassador at the time advised continuing “our low profile policy and our avoidance of new initiative­s which might be interprete­d as supportive of the GOG.”

A cable before his death indicated that Rodney had requested to meet discreetly with James L. Adkins, who was the embassy’s political officer at the time. The two had briefly met earlier in 1979 and Rodney was comfortabl­e talking with him. Rodney would

not have known at the time that Adkins was a Central Intelligen­ce Agency (CIA) employee attached to the embassy.

The conversati­ons between the two covered the increasing­ly repressive tactics the government was using against opposition groups, leaving the WPA, in Rodney’s view, no alternativ­e but violence, which Rodney predicted could result within the next year. Rodney said while he “abhorred terrorism, the WPA may be forced to it.”

“Then, the conversati­on assumed a dark side when Rodney predicted that because violence might result within the year, he was asking for Adkins’ assistance in obtaining permanent resident alien status for his family to go to the U.S. in case he was killed,” the National Security

Archive said.

At the time Rodney claimed US funding for Guyana was not being used to promote social services but instead abetted GOG control over opposition parties by freeing funds for surveillan­ce technology and military equipment. He asked why the US praised human rights progress in Barbados while criticizin­g those of Grenada but ignored human rights abuses in Guyana.

Following Rodney’s death the ambassador met with Burnham on his request and the cable on the meeting said the opportunit­y was used to explain the new human rights policy of the US. Even though he reported that the meeting was “non-contentiou­s,” he stated that Burnham was not having any of it (human rights policy issue) and “launched into a defense of Guyana’s human rights situation,” declaring the “United States had too many beams in its own eye to make accusation­s about human rights and democratic processes in Guyana.”

The ambassador noted that concerns raised by the State Department’s Bureau of Human Rights and Humanitari­an Affairs, “along with other offices in the Department,” included “various reports about the death of Dr. Walter Rodney” and issues surroundin­g elections in the country. Burnham believed that U.S. complaints reflected the fact that Guyana had never been forgiven for nationaliz­ing the bauxite industry. Regarding Rodney’s death, Burnham said the late activist had been up to “no good” and had blown himself up with his own bomb.

“But overall, Forbes Burnham seems confidentl­y, even arrogantly in control, and remains the only individual who makes the important decisions,” the cable said.

The COI, which was aborted by President Granger, had been set up in 2014 by then President Donald Ramotar to determine, as far as possible, who or what was responsibl­e for the explosion that killed Walter Rodney on June 13, 1980. It concluded that Rodney was the victim of a state-organized assassinat­ion and this could only have been possible with the knowledge of Burnham.

The three-person inquiry, also found that Smith carried out the killing and was then spirited out of the country to French Guiana in an elaborate operation spearheade­d by the Guyana Police Force and the Guyana Defence Force.

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Dr. Walter Rodney

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