-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.reconcile-chile.co.uk/more_information_7.html
<A HREF="http://www.reconcile-chile.co.uk/more_information_7.html">The end of
Allende</A>
-----
The official line. No mention of CIA at all.
Om
K
-----
The end of Allende
15 September 1973
The Economist Editorial.

The temporary death of democracy in Chile will be regrettable, but the
blame lies clearly with Dr. Allende and those of his followers who
persistently overrode the constitution.

President Allende did not become a martyr, even if it is true that he
took his own life on Tuesday. The bombing and storming of his
presidential palace and the seizure of power by the commanders of
Chile's armed forces put a bitter end to the first freely-elected
marxist government in the west.

And the fighting may have barely begun. With most of Chile's links with
the outside world still severed, it was difficult to take the full
measure of the apparently continuing violence. But if a bloody civil war
does ensue, or if the generals who have now seized power decide not to
hold new elections, there must be no confusion about where the
responsibility for Chile's tragedy lies. It lies with Dr. Allende and
those in the marxist parties who pursued a strategy for the seizure of
total power to the point at which the opposition despaired of being able
to restrain them by constitutional means.

What happened in Santiago is not an everyday Latin American coup. The
armed forces had tolerated Dr. Allende for nearly three years. In that
time, he managed to plunge the country into the worst social and
economic crisis in its modern history. The confiscation of private farms
and factories caused an alarming slump in production, and the losses in
state-run industries were officially admitted to have exceeded $1
billion last year. Inflation rose to 350 per cent over the past twelve
months. Small businessmen were bankrupted; civil servants and skilled
workers saw their salaries whittled away by inflation; housewives had to
queue endlessly for basic foods, when they were available at all. The
mounting desperation caused the major strike movement that the truck-d
rivers started six weeks ago.

But the Allende government did more than wreck the economy. It violated
both the letter and the spirit of the constitution. The way it rode
roughshod over congress and the courts eroded faith in the country's
democratic institutions.

A resolution passed by the opposition majority in congress last month
declared that "the government is not merely responsible for isolated
violations of the law and the constitution; it has made them into a
permanent system of conduct." The feeling that parliament had been made
irrelevant was increased by violence in the streets (almost on a Belfast
scale) and by the way the government tolerated the growth of armed
groups on the far left that were openly preparing for civil war.

The armed forces moved only when it had long been clear that there was a
popular mandate for military intervention. They had to move in the end
because all constitutional means had failed to restrain a government
that was behaving unconstitutionally.

The trigger for the coup was provided by the efforts of left-wing
extremists to promote subversion within the armed forces. Two leaders of
Dr. Allende's Popular Unity coalition, Sir Carlos Altamirano, the former
Socialist party secretary-general, and Sir Oscar Garreton of the
Movement of United Popular Action, were named by the navy as the
"intellectual authors" of plans for mutiny among the sailors at
Valparaiso. The Valparaiso naval commanders were the first to move this
week. But the rapid success of the coup and the participation in it of
all the armed forces (including the paramilitary carabineros) suggest
that the plans for it had been carefully laid. It remains to be seen
whether the armed forces are now solid in their opposition to the ousted
government. The disappearance of two commanders, Admiral Raul Montero
and General Sepulveda, the carabineros' chief, who were replaced by
their anti-marxist subordinates on the day of the coup, shows that not
all senior officers were in favor of it.

The real danger of bloodshed will come if the armed forces split, or if
there are serious mutinies among the lower ranks. That could produce a
messy civil war. Strong resistance can be expected from the workers'
committees and paramilitary brigades that the Socialist party and the
movement of the Revolutionary Left are running in Santiago and from
guerilla groups in the south. But if they fail to get significant
military backing, they can probably be contained.

Whatever government emerges from the coup cannot expect an easy time.
There will also be a temptation now for those who have suffered from the
Allende government to settle their accounts with the defeated side. Few
people believe that Chile can now return to its old way of doing things.


The work of reconstruction will involve considerable sacrifice, just as
it did in Brazil when Senhor Roberto Campos was responsible for economic
planning in the years after the 1964 coup. This does not mean that Chile
will become another Brazil; for one thing, it's probably a less violent
place even now, and for another its generals have a rather different
conception of the role from the soldiers behind Senhor Campos. They
accept that it is too late to reverse many of the changes brought about
by Dr. Allende; in trying to rebuild the private sector, for instance,
they will lay more stress on coaxing back foreign investors and on
creating new industries than on handing back what was taken away.

General Pinochet and his fellow officers are no one's pawns. Their coup
was home-grown, and attempts to make out that the Americans were
involved are absurd to those who know how wary they have been in their
recent dealings with Chile.

The military-technocratic government that is apparently emerging will
try to knit together the social fabric that the Allende government tore
apart.

It will mean the temporary death of democracy in Chile, and that is to
be deplored. But it must not be forgotten who made it inevitable.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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