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Chile: CIA Big Business PDF

255 Pages·1981·21.027 MB·English
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Senge itt, & GRR: Sp Sacea c=a=s. &.T fwam ed-a a ee keel ts | Ly = n P mm ROT « a d 7 ospa e Roe 2. see Ms oh ater " ae Fe arn al al : : he ee x 3 er ee : ; c a e - b s 5 lh, a e hatte a tor i 7 eh a “toy rat . 2 fe “-- eee te aie Peees + oP HENS Cot Leb e ea are h= be $grt SOs wk feeeasS t een at maCaf fags. al a etote! ee e deada ee Al so A owse eto o - aa z Css te os i e e e- ae * 2 e : aeane “3 eWP : ae M . Sp4 eset : sacar ies AaA hiii a eeayt: - ; iia: ! : S EGai L 2 as qo _ 1 l 1 - i ' a 1 “oie,r — h1a a ae: s t . : ¥ yo uea “ : pie# d ce7cear| t&o s E eGeanr 3 ea byeee e ya r eee aesea ra: |ryc g e ei1 eaaieea.h BveGeegl oaieie eyareeae o ea eSyine ot re Ra e isaaoScE . t m egesaehsiiiias os ,r " is' p.oW ehwe:.5o e.eo ee“uat<eao.n! "s caeen mieceee oL eyeao F aen ee eao t“y 1 b3pawt?ya esa = l a t “a es4 = b: oySise s =.5 ' . . ‘“i4 , a : sha Teas 1 — F, Sergeye’ Ce C I A | Progress Publishers Moscow Translated from the Russian by Lev Bobrov Designed by V. 4. Korolkov ®. Ceprees Uwan, PY, Gonbwor 6u3HeC Ha qu2zauucKkoM AsviKe | I © Manatenscrpo “Tporpece”’, 1981 : 4 English translation © Progress Publishers 1981 Printed in the Union : of Soviet Socialist Republics | 10604—080 77-81 014 (01) -81 | : 0604040000 CONTENTS Foreword Introduction ChapterI. U.S. Infiltration of Chile Chapter II. Brasilian Experiment Chapter III. Bridiing the Army and Grooming the Junta Chapter [V. Centaur Plan 119 Chapter V. Those in the Shadow 142 Chapter VI. The Coup Staged 167 Chapter VII. Evolution of Confessions 190 Chapter VIH.Who Stands to Gain? 212 Chapter IX. Chile, a Concentration Camp 234 Afterword me P i e r c aryen y a r N E S a e s : FOREWORD Some would still pass off the monstrous crimes of Augu- sto Pinochet’s tyranny, his regime’s unmatched corruption, the destruction of what has been created by generations of Chileans, rampant obscurantism and many other barbar- ities as a simple consequence of the bestiality of the self-styled dictator and the avidity and limitations of his cabal. To do so is to ignore the responsibility of those who had promoted and financed the fascist putsch m September 11, 1973, those who rule the rulers, the actual beneficiaries of this despotic system. That was also the argument of those who, in earlier days, sought to reduce the interpretation and analysis of Nazism to exposing the unbalanced mentality of Hitler and his lieutenants. Fascism, however, has quite definite forces of imperialism behind it, and it is these forces that resort to an outright terrorist dictatorship, while using the Hitlers, the Mussolinis, the Francos, and Pino- chets, as thei tools. One important thing is to unmask the godfathers of fascism, the trué masters of these barbarian caudillos intent on arresting the march of history and drowning the people’s aspirations in a bloodbath, . Everything horrible and negative that fascism has meant is in the list of imperialism’s shameful misdeeds—the sutter- ing, evil and irreparable damage that it visits on mankind. The fate that befell Chile in 1973 threw in relief the role of world policeman that U.S. imperialism plays, trying to 5 oltation of peoples by fire and sword and maintain the exp forces everywhere, regardless of fron. to crush democra F dotecied a2& ‘ers. und itse eleated at the me Chile's —- oligarc 4s domination. Big landowners time and ot The same happened to imperialism’s lost_ their a ‘nside the country which were elimi- traditional “o nationalisation by the Popular vatty Gov- oi See by Salvador Allende. It was, t a the oo centres of imperialhst power BRE COOK ‘the command of the reactionary bloc into their own hands and set an antii--CChhii lean conspiraaccyy In motipon. hInl Wias s hoisng tonN, .a th e ters of most aggressive mu nmad yee n U.Sh.a tcghoevde rnbmye ntt hea ctPeedn taing ocno,n cetrhte. CTheI ctAonhspe,iSr at cayt t and other federal agencies which had Jjoine Department an rganising, financing and controlling it, poem pen ‘ie defeated reactionaries and hired having galvanise . certain military chiefs, bnbibiingn g them to betray the units under their command, their people and their country. This is all the substance of the book, scrupulously truth- ful, based on a wealth of documentary evidence, as a —a. thorough study. For this reason, this is an instructive book, for it brings the tragic Chilean experience to everybody’s iz ire knowledge. A lack of clear understanding of the danger of lyahcarn iY abeFae iee hm imperialism, connivance at its machinery of interference and tolerance of its military missions have to be paid for dearly. It is most noteworthy that this book has as its source of information the confessions of imperialists themselves, their official statements and the facts they have been unable to deny. It is not the things they have said because of any love for the truth or because of some irrepressible bragging Instinct. Chapter VII, “Evolution of Confessions’’, is most aCaonnese P laiEaietheeEmlnaeeeandr t c t illustrative in this respect. U.S. spokesmen were saying what had already transpired and had nothing to make a mystery of. In Some cases they did so in order to intimidate other Nations or in an attempt to justify their own action or else to cast aspersions on others in a scramble for economic and political power; some sought to cash in on sensation seeking publicity; but in most cases they ai from newborn med to divert attention things in the mak ing. One purpose behind these confessions was to present the foul action against 6 Chile as a product of past developments. A current practice is to put the blame on individual members of the cabinet or officials, or common criminals, to cover up or hide the responsibility of the system itself, the regime itself and its main pillars. Moreover, by means of these half-confessions, the CIA and the Pentagon have been trying to float all kinds of legends, trivial explanations, unfounded charges and allegations with the obvious aim of covering up the true, still more serious scheming. From time to time these ind)- 54ot viduals get as cynical as to admit that they are protecting their spy networks and secret criminal organisations so as to C—r: . keep them effective... . So, some of the material which the author of this book had at his disposal came from those whose confessions need no evidence to prove them guilty. These are the confessions of enemies of the humankind, sworn criminals, cornered by international public opinion. There may be some ull intent or inaccuracy in one statement or another, in some detauls, but the general picture, the staggering accumulation of evidence incontestably demonstrate a shocking practice of exporting counter-revolution, shameless intervention, the SAReiieaaeSe ellE e O basest imaginable international conspiracies and constant resort to crime. Therefore, the author of the book, while consistently presenting the imperialists’ own confessions, brings his impeccable, well-argued, conclusive and unchallengeable charge based on what has been proved, not presumed. The author does not limit himself to the outward aspect of the matter, nor to spotlighting the actual wrongdoers, but levels his indictment against “‘those who always remain invisible”, the bosses of imperialist multinationals, big business and the most predatory groups of the U.S. financial oligarchy. The Chileans will never forget one episode which revealed the general course towards promoting fascism in Chile. On September 14, 1970, the President of the multinational Pepsi-Cola company, Donald K. Kendall got Henry Kissin- —_FS7O —hPF U ger to agree to meet one of the company’s vice-presidents, a Chilean magnate Augustin Edwards who, being the chief of one of the clans of Chile’s financial oligarchy, owned a bank and a whole newspaper empire, El Mercurio de Santiago, and was in charge, along with many other thriving industrial undertakings, of Cervecerfas Unidas, a company Closely associated with Pepsi-Cola. On the following day Kissinger, 7

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