- "State of Siege" is also the name of a thriller by Eric
Ambler.
State of Siege (French title:
État de Siège) is a 1972 French film
directed by
Costa Gavras and starred by
Yves Montand and
Renato Salvatori.
Summary
In
Uruguay
in the early 1970s, before the military
dictatorship, an official of the US Agency for International
Development (a group used as a front for training foreign police in
counterinsurgency methods) played
by Montand, is kidnapped by a group of urban guerrillas.
Using his interrogation as a backdrop, the film explores the often
brutal consequences of the struggle between Uruguay's government
and the leftist
Tupamaro guerrillas and
expose the American intervention in Latin America Dictatorships and
her central role in the violation of human rights on those dark
times.
This is a true story based in real events that took place in 1970,
though the real name of the American agent was
Dan Mitrione.
From 1960 to 1967 Dan Mitrione worked with the Brazilian police,
during a time in which political opponents were systematically
tortured, imprisoned without trial and killed. He returned to the
US in 1967 to share his experiences and expertise on
"counterguerilla warfare" at the Agency for International
Development (AID), in Washington D.C.. In 1969, Mitrione moved to
Uruguay, again under the AID, to oversee the Office of Public
Safety.
In this period the Uruguayan government, lead by the conservative
Colorado Party, had its hands full with a collapsing economy, labor
and student strikes, and the Tupamaros, a left-wing urban guerilla
group. On the other hand, Washington feared a possible victory
during the elections of the Frente Amplio, a left-wing coalition,
on the model of the victory of the Unidad Popular government in
Chile, led by Salvador Allende, in 1970. The OPS had been helping
the local police since 1965, providing them with weapons and
training. It is alleged that torture was already practiced since
the 60s, but Dan Mitrione is reportedly the man who made it
routine. He is quoted as having said once: "The precise pain, in
the precise place, in the precise amount, for the desired effect.".
He also helped train foreign police agents in the United States in
the context of the Cold War. In his torture teaching experiments he
used homeless wanderers.
As the use of torture grew and the tensions in Uruguay escalated,
the Tupamaros kidnapped Mitrione on July 31, 1970. They proceeded
to interrogate him about his past and the illegal intervention of
U.S. government in Latin American affairs. Besides, they demanded
the release of 150 political prisoners. The Uruguayan government,
with US backing, refused, and Mitrione was later found dead in a
car, with two shots in the head and no signs of any maltreatment
(in fact, during the kidnapping, Mitrione had been shot in one
shoulder and healed afterwards in the "Cárcel del Pueblo",
"People's Prison").
Mitrione was married and he had 9 children. His funeral was largely
publicized by the US media, and it was attended by, amongst others,
David Eisenhower and Richard Nixon's secretary of state William
Rogers. Frank Sinatra and Jerry Lewis held a benefit concert for
his family in Richmond, Indiana. Though he was characterized at his
death as a man whose "devoted service to the cause of peaceful
progress in an orderly world will remain as an example for free men
everywhere" by White House spokesperson Ron Ziegler, and as a "a
great humanitarian" by his daughter Linda, evidence of his secret
activities would later emerge, mostly through Cuban double agent
Manuel Hevia Cosculluela. One of his sons, Dan Mitrione Jr., also
joined the FBI and later got involved in a scandal involving bribes
in an FBI drug investigation. Today, although recalled by few
Americans, Dan Mitrione Sr. is still a controversial Cold War
character.
Awards
The film was nominated to the
Golden
Globes as
Best Foreign
Language Film and won the
UN Award at
BAFTA Awards.
External links