CHILE'S SALVADOR ALLENDE YEARS IN ELEVEN TRUTHS
(The Santiago Times, October 22, 2006)
Editor Note: The extraordinary letter that follows
appeared in Chile's leading newspaper, El Mercurio,
on September 12, 2006. It is a series of quotations demonstrating that
the common view in Europe and North America of the Salvador Allende
years in Chile is quite wrong, and that Allende was removed from
power -in a military coup led by Gen. Augosto Pinochet on September 11,
1973- for reasons that most Chileans considered more than sufficient.
The letter's author is economist and public intellectual José
Piñera, who has a doctorate in Economics from Harvard, was
both Minister of Labor & Social Security, and Minister of Mining, under President Pinochet, and devised Chile's current privatized pension system.
In 1981, José Piñera resigned from Pinochet's cabinet to fight for the return
of democracy to Chile and, to that end, started up again his irregular
magazine of free opinion, Economia y Sociedad. In 1990, with democracy
re-established, he founded "Proyecto Chile 2010," whose goal was to
make Chile a developed country by its bicentenary, now four years
away.
The next year he founded the International Center for Pension Reform
to promote around the world the Chilean pension model. "José Piñera is the pension
world's equivalent of Placido Domingo," wrote the economics editor of
the London Sunday Telegraph. "Grab, beg, borrow, or steal a ticket to
hear him speak."
To read a charming article Piñera wrote about a visit
he paid the poet Pablo Neruda, go to his website
(www.josepinera.com/pag/pag_tex_carteroneruda_en.htm.)
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ELEVEN TRUTHS
Letter to the Editor of El Mercurio
By José Piñera
1. "The Allende government, from its very start, has been striving to obtain total power and use it to exert rigid economic and political control, thereby creating a totalitarian
system." [Resolution of the Chilean Chamber of Deputies, August 22, 1973]
2. "Today I can say it is fortunate that we didn't achieve victory,
for if we had, taking into account our training and our dependence on
Cuba, we would have drowned the continent in blood. One of our orders
was to turn the Andes into Latin America's Sierra Maestra (Fidel
Castro's home base in his rebellion), where we would first execute
military officers, then the opposition, and then those who opposed our
iron rule." [Jorge Masetti, former head of the Argentine guerrillas,
in "El Furor y el Delirio", The Fury and the Delirium, 1999]
3. "The truth is that what the Armed Forces and the Police did (in
staging the coup) turned out to be a preventative measure before the
Government itself staged a coup. With the armed militants, who had the
enormous firepower of the (Allende's) government at their disposal and
the support of no less than 10,000 foreign radicals in the country,
the Left aimed to create a communist dictatorship and probably would
have succeeded." [Patricio Aylwin, President of the Christian Democrat
Party, La Prensa, October 19, 1973]
4. "There's nothing I can do, nor Congress, nor any civilian.
Unfortunately, this problem can only be solved with guns... I advise all of you to express your fears to the commanders of the Armed Forces, fears which I share
completely, in the plainest terms -and hopefully this very day." [Eduardo
Frei, former President of Chile and then President of the Senate, "Acta Rivera",
July 6, 1973]
5. "What happened in Santiago is not a typical Latin American coup.
The armed forces tolerated Allende for almost three years. In this period he figured out how to drown the country in the worst economic and social crisis in its modern history. But the Allende government
went even further than destroying the economy -- it violated the
letter and the spirit of the Constitution. The form in which he
crudely bypassed Congress and the judiciary weakened faith in the
country's democratic institutions.... The temporary death of democracy
in Chile will be lamented, but the responsibility clearly lies with
Dr. Allende and those of his followers who constantly rode roughshod
over the Constitution." [The Economist, September 15, 1973]
6. "We are in a crisis that has no equal in our national history, not
in 173 years of independence.... The state of illegality has been
manifested through repeated violations of Congressional resolutions,
repeated violations of judicial power, repeated violations of the
services of the Comptroller General of the Republic, repeated
violations of the rights of citizens, of the Chilean media, and even
in some cases of individual liberty." [Claudio Orrego, Christian
Democrat Deputy, August 22, 1973]
7. "The violation of these constitutional guarantees with regard to
the agricultural sector is just the start of the collapse of our
democratic system. What is done today against this type of wealth can
as well be extended to urban property, mining, business, and all
private goods. Let's tell the truth: the Constitutional Reform is a
trial run for the abolition of property rights. Having inserted this
wedge, which some view so dismissively, the gap will become an immense
gulf into which all private property will disappear." [Recaredo Ossa,
President of the National Agriculture Society, El Mercurio, January 6,
1962]
8. "The heart of the problem is that (Allende's) minority government,
presenting itself as a legal and peaceful path to socialism, had
utterly resolved to install a totalitarian dictatorship. They were
taking successive steps toward this end, leaving no doubt that in the
year 1973 we were experiencing an absolutely abnormal form of
government, just a few steps away from a full totalitarian
dictatorship.... The Chamber of Deputies approved a Resolution warning the country that its Constitution and laws were being violated, and presenting an overwhelming list of cases that proved it.... We must therefore ask ourselves what is the cause and who
is responsible for this break. In our opinion the entire
responsibility lies with (Allende's) Unidad Popular regime." [Eduardo
Frei, former Christian Democrat President of Chile, Letter to
Mariano Rumor, President of the International Christian Democrats, November 8, 1973]
9. "During his three years in power, Allende effectively transformed
his country into a Cuban satellite, and therefore a potential addition
to the Soviet empire.... From a strategic point of view, he had
transformed the country into an important base for subversive Soviet
and Cuban operations, including terrorism throughout Latin America....
The Soviet KGB was recruiting people for its terrorist training
courses.... Specialists from North Korea were teaching young members of
Allende's Socialist Party." [Brian Crozier, founder of the London
Institute for the Study of Conflict, "The Rise and Fall of the Soviet
Empire," 1999]
10. "After seeing the Cuban example, Allende thought he could take a
shortcut. But the truth is he distanced himself from Chilean
tradition.... There is no doubt that the Unidad Popular government was a
disaster that led our country into civil war." [Claudio Véliz,
historian and former close friend of Allende, El Mercurio, November 28, 1999]
11. "When a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably
the same Object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute
Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such
Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security." [The
Declaration of Independence of the United States of America, July 4,
1776]
(Translated by Renata Stepanov and Bill Stott, ditor@santiagotimes.cl)