The Phnom Penh Post

Ex-Panama dictator Noriega dies

- Juan José Rodríguez

THE late Manuel Antonio Noriega’s public persona was extinguish­ed nearly three decades ago, when the United States toppled him in an invasion that spoke volumes about Cold War tensions at the time.

Noriega, 83, died in a hospital late on Monday as he was recovering from surgery to remove a brain tumor. He was dictator of Panama from 1983 to 1989.

Noriega’s ignominiou­s ouster by US troops in December 1989 was a dramatic fall from power for a man who had risen through the ranks of Panama’s military while working for the CIA, to become de facto ruler of a country that hosts the strategic Panama Canal.

The ex-strongman was captured and imprisoned in the United States, France and later Panama under a variety of charges, ranging from drug traffickin­g, money laundering and forced disappeara­nces.

Short in stature and with a pockmarked face, Noriega was considered an unscrupulo­us and opportunis­tic officer who juggled relationsh­ips with Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar, Cuba’s Fidel Castro and several foreign intelligen­ce services.

“The most surprising thing in the life of Manuel Antonio Noriega was what he did to the [military] institutio­n, mak- ing it an instrument, a macabre combinatio­n of crime and drug traffickin­g,” said a former National Guard general, Ruben Dario Paredes, who used to be Noriega’s commanding officer and who is now a critic.

‘Pineapple face’

Born to a poor family in Panama City on February 11, 1934, Noriega started his military career at a young age.

Reportedly recruited into the CIA payroll in 1967, his rise through the ranks began when he took part in a 1968 coup against then-President Arnulfo Arias. A year later, one of the coup’s leaders, General Omar Torrijos, promoted him to head the feared G-2 military intelligen­ce unit.

In 1983, two years after Torrijos’ death in a mysterious plane crash, Noriega took charge of the now-defunct National Guard, giving him de facto power over the country.

Noriega lived a life of luxury with his wife Felicidad and their three daughters Sandra, Lorena and Thays. They lived in a sumptuous estate that included a mini-zoo, a private casino and a ballroom.

The mansion was the scene of extravagan­t parties, and in the main bedroom there was a giant safe that rumours said contained millions of dollars’ worth of various currencies – a fortune that supposedly vanished when the US troops invaded.

“Pineapple Face” – as Noriega was known due to his facial acne scars – played various sides off each other to stay in power while civil wars fuelled by US-Soviet Cold War rivalry raged across much of the rest of Central America.

In time Noriega’s brutal tactics to stay in power set the foundation for his eventual ouster – especially his defiance of then US President Ronald Reagan, who wanted him removed from office.

In 1986, a US intelligen­ce leak to the New York Times revealed Noriega was involved in the torture and decapitati­on a year earlier of a guerrilla and opposition critic, Hugo Spadafora.

Roberto Diaz Herrera, a colonel who was second-in-charge in the regime, then accused Noriega of electoral fraud, corruption and being behind the plane crash that killed the popular Torrijos.

Those and other accusation­s triggered public protests and unrest that sharpened Washington’s determinat­ion to remove him from office.

US invasion

It was Reagan’s successor, former CIA Chief George HW Bush, who ordered the Panama invasion – code name Operation Just Cause – on December 20, 1989.

Thousands of Panamanian civilians died in the US attack. Noriega fled to the Vatican embassy, where he bunkered down for days as US soldiers outside blasted rock music in an attempt to smoke him out.

Noriega surrendere­d to the US forces on January 3, 1990, and was flown to the United States, where he was sentenced to 40 years in prison on drug traffickin­g charges. He ended up serving 21 years of that term, which was reduced for “good behaviour”.

In 2010, however, Noriega was sent to France, where he was sentenced to seven years for laundering $3 million in cash from the Medellin drug cartel through French banks.

One year later, France extradited him back to Panama, where the now broken down exdictator arrived in a wheelchair. Noriega had been sentenced in absentia to three 20-year prison terms for the forced disappeara­nces of opposition figures, including Spadafora.

Panama’s authoritie­s rejected multiple requests for Noriega to serve out his sentence under house arrest based on ill health, said to include strokes, respirator­y problems, prostate cancer and depression.

The former dictator likely went to his grave without divulging many secrets built up over a lifetime of shady dealings.

“In the name of God, I swear I had nothing to do with the deaths of any of these people,” Noriega said shortly before his death, referring to the many victims attributed to him.

“There was always a permanent conspiracy against me. But I am here, standing straight, with no cowardice.”

 ?? MANOOCHER DEGATHI/AFP ?? Then-Panamian leader General Manuel Antonio Noriega (right) fakes a punch to a supporter (left) in Panama City on May 2, 1989.
MANOOCHER DEGATHI/AFP Then-Panamian leader General Manuel Antonio Noriega (right) fakes a punch to a supporter (left) in Panama City on May 2, 1989.

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