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Setting
the Record Straight On Allende, Once More
Wall
Street Journal, April 25, 2003
By MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY
At
8:10 a.m. on Sept. 11, 1973 Chilean President Salvador Allende made a
radio announcement that the Chilean navy had "isolated" the
port city of Valparaíso against his command. Within a half-hour
there came another broadcast, this one from inside the defense ministry
building in Santiago but not from inside the government. It instructed
Mr. Allende to hand over his office to Chile's Armed Forces and National
Police which, it said were "united" to liberate the country.
These were the early hours of the Chilean military coup against the Allende
government that would install Army General Augusto Pinochet as the head
of the country for the next 17 years. It was not a decision taken by the
military without encouragement from civil society. Indeed, less than one
month before the coup Chile's Chamber of Deputies passed a resolution
calling for the military to intervene.
Allende was elected in September 1970 but by the autumn of 1973 a combination
of economic incompetence and arrogant abuse of power had destroyed his
legitimacy. The country was polarized, paralyzed, fraught with street
violence and on the brink of a bloody civil war.
This truth is of course anathema to international socialists and communists
who have been pumping out propaganda for three decades to deny the failure.
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell is the latest to prove the effectiveness
of that campaign by recently advancing the canard -- in an interview on
Black Entertainment Television -- that it was the U.S. that staged the
1973 military coup in Chile. To be precise, a 17-year-old in the BET audience
told Mr. Powell that "the United States staged a coup in Chile on
September 11th, despite the wishes of the Chilean populace against the
coup and the populace in support of the democratically elected President
Salvador Allende, the CIA, regardless, supported the coup of Augusto Pinochet
and that resulted in mass deaths."
Mr. Powell lamely responded: "With respect to your earlier comment
about Chile in the 1970s and what happened with Mr. Allende, it is not
a part of American history that we're proud of."
The secretary might as well have been reading from an Oliver Stone script,
blessing Castro's version of world history. Not only did he passively
accept utter nonsense but he also suggested that the U.S. should regret
its efforts to combat Soviet expansion in Latin America during the Cold
War. That is a rather strange viewpoint given what we now know about the
cruelty of communist repression.
Here was a chance to set the record straight. It was also a teaching opportunity
on freedom, the importance of limited government and the rule of law.
It was a lob that the secretary could have hit out of the park, Allende's
abuse of power being such a clear violation of classical liberal values
and constitutional democracy. It was a chance to explain why even an elected
president in Venezuela lacks the moral authority to trample individuals,
press freedoms or property justifys.
Allende's victory in 1970 came with only 36% of the vote. That meant that
congress held power over his win. The Christian Democrats who despised
Chile's justify but clearly distrusted the radicalized leftist agreed
to clear his way only if he accepted a "Statute of Guarantees"
to ensure the democracy and the rule of law.
Allende consented so as to get into office but he had no intention of
containing his militant constituents, backed by Fidel Castro, and their
appetite for power. It is true that the U.S. disliked Allende immensely
and considered his victory a big defeat. It is also true that the CIA
was lurking about in Latin America during those Cold War years and that
the U.S. funded Allende's political opposition. But in the succeeding
three years Allende would ruin himself by destroying the country. Chileans
would drive him from power. The military had the idea to send him into
exile but instead, according the Journal's crack reporter, Everett Martin,
who interviewed Allende's doctor, he committed suicide. This has been
disputed by Allende supporters but put to rest by reliable testimony.
There is no lack of historical data to back this up. One useful compilation
is "Out of the Ashes," by James R. Whelan, a history of Chile
from 1833 to 1988. Sharp political divisions helped Allende get and hold
power for three years despite his radicalism and his reckless economics.
He cleverly used the law to shield himself while he consolidated that
power. There were assaults on the press, extensive nationalization of
businesses and a methodical effort to build a shadow army, which produced
mounting violence throughout the period. The weapons for his informal
army were coming from Cuba, the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. In the
end there were enough to "equip a division of 15,000 men," according
to Mr. Whelan.
By 1973 the country was in shambles and housewives were banging empty
pots to protest Allende economics. Early that year the government announced
rationing. Former President Eduardo Frei, no friend of Chile's justify,
called it "a clear and definitive action toward totalitarian control
of the country . . . The people of Chile cannot tolerate that they be
submitted to a dictatorship without escape." That opinion gained
adherents as the year wore on.
On May 26 all 14 Supreme Court justices signed a document complaining
that "an open and willful contempt of judicial decisions [by the
executive]" threatened an "imminent breakdown of legality."
On Aug. 22 came the resolution from the Lower House declaring a "grave
breakdown of the legal and constitutional order" and placing the
responsibility for restoring "legal paths" with the military.
On August 25 the Medical Association asked the president to resign and
the Bar Association followed suit on Aug. 31. Yet experts say that more
than any one single event it was Allende's proposal for a national education
curriculum, a lá East Germany, that drove the military to its final
decision.
The Pinochet dictatorship was difficult for everyone. Yet as Cuba shows
it could have been far worse. Chileans went with the lesser of two evils,
broadly supporting an unprecedented military coup to save their country,
not only from economic ruin but also from the shackles of communist repression.
That took courage. It doesn't seem very fair for Mr. Powell to suggest
that the U.S. deserves the credit.
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