50 years ago: Henry Kissinger and the death of democracy in Chile [View all]
(This article was shared by a terrific journalist who found it a couple of days ago.)
Kissinger is still alive and should be held accountable for his war crimes
ROBERT REICH
SEP 10, 2023
As Chile marks the 50th anniversary tomorrow of the coup that brought strongman Augusto Pinochet to power for almost 17 years toppling Chiles democratically elected socialist government and resulting in the murders and disappearances of thousands of Pinochets political opponents its important to recall the central role played by Richard Nixon and Nixons national security adviser, Henry Kissinger, in this atrocity.
Kissinger now 100 years old, and who in my humble opinion should be considered a war criminal urged Nixon to overthrow Chiles democratically elected government of Salvador Allende because Allendes model effect can be insidious, according to declassified documents posted by the U.S. National Security Archive.
On September 12, 1970, eight days after Allendes election, Kissinger initiated discussion on the telephone with CIA Director Richard Helms about a preemptive coup in Chile. We will not let Chile go down the drain, Kissinger declared. I am with you, Helms responded. Three days later, Nixon, in a 15-minute meeting that included Kissinger, ordered the CIA to make the [Chilean] economy scream, and named Kissinger as the supervisor of the covert efforts to keep Allende from being inaugurated.
Kissinger ignored a recommendation from his top deputy on the NSC, Viron Vaky, who strongly advised against covert action to undermine Allende. On September 14, 1970, Vaky wrote a memo to Kissinger arguing that coup plotting would lead to widespread violence and even insurrection. He also argued that such a policy was immoral: What we propose is patently a violation of our own principles and policy tenets .
If these principles have any meaning, we normally depart from them only to meet the gravest threat to us, e.g. to our survival. Is Allende a mortal threat to the U.S.? It is hard to argue this.
After U.S. covert operations, which led to the assassination of Chilean Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces General Rene Schneider, failed to stop Allendes inauguration on November 4, 1970, Kissinger lobbied President Nixon to reject the State Departments recommendation that the U.S. seek a modus vivendi with Allende. While Schneider was dying in the Military Hospital in Santiago on October 22, 1970, Kissinger told Nixon that the Chilean military turned out to be a pretty incompetent bunch. Nixon replied: They are out of practice, according to documents released in early August by the U.S. National Security Archive.
More:
https://robertreich.substack.com/p/today-50-years-ago-henry-kissinger