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A Model Operation - Covert Action in Chile: 1963-1973
8 January 1999
United States ran covert actions in Chile between 1963 and 1973 leading to the ascension of General Pinochet. The U.S. Government's official report of this covert action said this operation epitomizes CIA covert actions (worldwide).
The operation to destroy democracy and install the dictator, Pinochet, is relevant not only to the current potential punishment of Pinochet, but more importantly demonstrates CIA's operations in the past and the present. As such it begs careful study.
One curiosity to me is that the killings associated with CIA operations raise no domestic condemnation, only condemnation of those who expose them. I often wonder how my neighbors -- if they saw men, women and children being abused, tortured, and murdered -- would react -- presumably with shocked anger. How then do these same people ignore the murderous consequences of CIA operations? Out of mind and out of cognizant sight, we champion the destruction of peoples and societies? What governmental and mental processes are employed to justify or deny such? How are those terrible actions justified to win public support? Possibly some of these questions are answered in the Church Committee's study of CIA operations in Chile.
The Congressional Investigations of the Mid-1970s
After the revelations of illegal CIA domestic operations in 1974-1975, both the Senate and the House established committees to examine the activities of the CIA and some other elements of the national security state. The Senate Committee was popularly known as the Church Committee, with the House's called the Pike Committee. The Church Committee studied the activities of our intelligence services and published 14 books and volumes of testimony and its conclusions (one publication served as both a volume and a book). The Church Committee also published separately a study on CIA assassination operations and one on the CIA covert operation in Chile. This study was "allowed" by the CIA as a sop to the Church Committee -- to serve to represent general CIA operations. So this study, even though censored by the CIA, is the most authoritative and comprehensive available.
It is important to note that the Church Committee report cites the impact of CIA's covert operation on its intelligence. Since this operation epitomizes worldwide CIA covert actions, what can be deduced from it about the CIA's overall intelligence?
The report states that as all of the CIA's numerous anti-democratic operations progressed, the Intelligence Directorate (DI) of the CIA was not informed. The DI wrote intelligence based on false assumptions and information.
THE STUDY COVERT ACTION IN CHILE 1963-1973 -- STAFF REPORT of the SELECT COMMITTEE TO STUDY GOVERNMENTAL OPERATIONS with respect to INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES: UNITED STATES SENATE; was published by the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington: 1975.
Covert activity was a factor in almost every major election between 1963 and 1973 and United States intervention was massive. "The scale of CIA involvement in Chile was unusual but by no means unprecedented."
From 1953 through 1970, the CIA subsidized wire services, magazines and a right-wing weekly newspaper. In the 1964 election, CIA supported the Christian Democratic (CD) candidate. (CIA support to CD candidates around the globe followed and preceded this operation). CIA funded an array of pro-Christian Democratic student, women's, professional and peasant groups and helped the CD party with polling, voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives.
In the 1964 Election -- the U.S. massively intervened in the election -- via fifteen covert action projects ranging from organizing slum dwellers, to passing funds to political parties. Specifically the Christian Democratic Party, the Democratic Front (a coalition of rightist parties), and a variety of propaganda and organizing activities. It also employed projects conducted since the 1950's among peasants, slum dwellers, organized labor, students and the media.
The CIA also conducted a massive anti-Communist propaganda campaign using the press, radio, films, pamphlets, posters, leaflets, direct mailings, paper streamers, and wall paintings. The Agency directed a scare campaign at women using images of Soviet tanks and Cuban firing squads. Christian Democratic organizations distributed hundreds of thousands of copies of a pastoral letter from Pope Pious XI. The CIA also concocted disinformation and black propaganda -- material attributed falsely to the Chilean Communist Party.
The propaganda campaign was enormous -- one group produced twenty radio spots a day in Santiago and on 44 provincial stations; twelve-minute news broadcasts five times daily on three Santiago stations and 24 provincial outlets, 26 weekly "commentary" programs, and distributed 300 posters daily. CIA rated this anti-Communist scare campaign as the deciding factor in the election of 1964 that enabled Eduardo Frei to win over Salvador Allende -- a liberal opposed by the CIA.
The Agency also ran an international propaganda campaign. It replayed contrived articles in and from abroad. These included endorsement of Frei by the sister of a Latin American leader, a "message from the women of Venezuela," and dire warnings about an Allende victory from various military governments in Latin America.
The CIA used some of the propaganda and polling mechanisms of 1964 repeatedly thereafter, in local, congressional and presidential campaigns.
COVERT ACTION 1964-1969
After its candidate Eduardo Frei was elected the CIA employed a number of covert operations with different sectors of society and ran twenty covert projects. It supported 22 candidates in the March 1965 election defeating 13 opposition candidates.
In the March 1969 congressional election ten of twelve supported candidates won. CIA also supported a splinter Socialist Party to attract votes away from Allende.
In this period the CIA ran covert operations to develop various sectors of Chilean society. One earlier project to strengthen Christian Democratic support among peasants and slum dwellers continued to help train and organize "anti-Communists" and other sectors until public exposure of CIA funding forced its termination. In the mid-1960's, the CIA supported an anti-Communist women's group active in Chilean political and intellectual life.
Two projects worked within organized labor. One combated the communist-dominated labor organization and another supported labor groups.
Various CIA projects supported media groups. One, begun in the 1950's, operated wire services. Another distributed wall posters attributed to fictitious groups, others conducted leaflet campaigns and public heckling.
COVERT ACTION AND MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
In the period 1963-1973 CIA maintained a relationship with International Telephone and Telegraph (ITT). During the 1964 elections ITT offered to use CIA as an intermediary for passing money to the Christian Democratic Party.
In Chile between 1970 and 1973, CIA and American military attache contacts with the Chilean military enabled the United States to sustain "communication" with the group most likely to wrest power from President Salvador Allende.
CIA financed a broad spectrum of activity, from simple propaganda manipulation of the press to large-scale support for political parties, from public opinion polls to direct attempts to foment a military coup. The CIA station in Santiago placed Station-dictated material through propaganda assets, directed support of publications and opposed student, peasant and labor organizations.
(The Station literally purchased the number one newspaper for Latin America, El Mercurio, and turned this respected "New York Times" into a screaming scandal sheet. Using El Mercurio's radio stations it attacked Allende daily.)
In 1970, the CIA under Nixon's injunction did not tell other elements of the U.S. government as it attempted to foment a military coup and passed weapons to coup plotters who attempted to kidnap the very constitutionally-minded General Rene Schneider. General Schneider was killed in the "kidnap" attempt.
After Allende won the election -- the CIA spent massive funds between 1970 and 1973 until Allende was murdered in September 1973. The Agency sponsored media organizations, political parties and private sector organizations. The CIA also funded at least one right-wing terrorist organization.
1. Propaganda
CIA's most extensive operation was propaganda. With recruited media assets CIA provided direct editorial guidance. One CIA project supported five media assets between 1965-1971. Most assets worked for [El Mercurio]. They wrote articles criticizing the Soviet Union; suppressed news harmful to the United States about Vietnam, and others.
Covert propaganda included "black propaganda" -- material falsely attributed to innocent individuals or groups. The Station financed wall posters, passed out leaflets and conducted other street activities. Of thirty plus covert operations, approximately half were propaganda. Each press placement had a multiplier effect -- picked up and relayed around Chile and (in some cases - the world).
The largest propaganda operation was El Mercurio. In 1971 the Station said El Mercurio and other media assets supported by CIA set the stage for the September 11, 1973, military coup.
Projects wrested control of university student organizations; supported a women's group (who conducted the CIA universal "Pots and Pans" marches to protest high prices), fought in the labor unions, and exploited a civic action front group.
CIA also funded local elections giving support to candidates selected by the American ambassador and the Station. Most funding of political parties occurred on a massive scale during the Allende years 1970-1973.
CIA funded an anti-Allende businessmen's organization.
Direct Efforts to foment a military Coup -- On September 15, 1970 -- after Allende finished first in the election of 1970 but before chosen by the Congress -- Nixon met with DCI Helms, Henry Kissinger, and Attorney General Mitchell. Neither the State Department nor the Ambassador were made privy.
CIA worked toward fomenting a military coup -- CIA knew that plans began with the abduction of the constitutionalist Chief of Staff of the Chilean Army, General Rene Schneider. On October 22, plotters attempted to kidnap Schneider who was shot and killed. Coup plotting collapsed and Allende was inaugurated.
In 1970, the U.S. and several multi-national corporations opposed Allende in a linked operation. In 1964 John McCone, former DCI of CIA and a member of ITT's board, offered assistance by American companies. In 1970, multinational corporations contacted the CIA but their offer of millions of dollars was "rejected." But CIA advised ITT on reliable funding channels utilizing two CIA assets in Chile.
After Allende was elected in 1970 the U.S. enlisted the multinational corporations to apply economic pressure.
1970 ELECION COVERT OPERATIONS
Covert action in the 1970 elections focused on a spoiling campaign against the Popular Unity coalition supporting Allende. Allende's platform included nationalization of the copper mines, accelerated agrarian reform, socialization of major sectors of the economy, wage increases, and improved relations with socialist and communist countries.
CIA officials met with officials from ITT and advised how to pass money to Allende's opponent, Alessandri. ITT and other U.S. businesses gave money to Alessandri and the National Party.
Spoiling Operations. These had two objectives (1) undermining (Allende); and, (2) strengthening opposition forces.
To do this the CIA used six covert action projects -- an intensive propaganda campaign which made use of virtually all media within Chile and which placed and replayed items in the international press. The CIA placed propaganda through subsidized right-wing women's and "civic action" groups. A scare campaign, equated Allende's victory with violence and Stalinist repression. The Agency also ran black propaganda to sow dissent between political parties and labor organizations.
One propaganda group produced hundreds of thousands of high-quality printed pieces, posters, leaflets, and picture books while conducting propaganda through radio and press outlets. One used an editorial support group that provided political features, editorials and news articles for radio and press placement; and three different news services.
Others were a newsletter mailed to two thousand journalists, academicians, politicians and others; a booklet showing what life would be like under an Allende presidency; distribution of chronicles of opposition to the Soviet regime; posters and sign-painting teams. The latter painted "su paredon" (your wall) evoking an image of communist firing squads. It used the violence of Czechoslovakia with large photos of Prague and of tanks in downtown Santiago. Other posters showed Cuban prisoners before the firing squad, and warned that an Allende victory would mean the end of religion and family life in Chile.
One project funded press assets -- who made regular nationwide radio commentary. Others, all employees of El Mercurio, produced more than one editorial a day. These had a multiplier effect, its editorial read throughout the country via radio networks. El Mecurio was one of the most influential Latin American newspapers, particularly in business circles abroad and reached well over five million people.
One September 4, 1970, Allende won a plurality -- but no candidate received a majority. The constitution required a joint session to decide between the first- and second-placed finishers. On 15 September, Nixon told DCI Helms that an Allende regime was not acceptable and instructed the CIA to play a direct role in organizing a military coup.
After the spoiling operation to defeat Allende at the polls failed, the CIA tried to prevent him from being inaugurated. First, it used a scare campaign causing political polarization and financial panic to goad President Frei or the military into action.
U.S. efforts took two tracks. Track I comprised all approved efforts -- political, economic and propaganda to prevent Allende's ascension to power. Track II actively promoted a military coup.
Track I aimed at the "Frei Gambit" wherein the CIA tried to get President Frei to consent with this approach or better yet to help. In Europe and Latin America, influential members of the Christian Democratic movement and the Catholic Church visited or contacted Frei. Frei refused and the gambit died.
At this time the CIA ran propaganda operations with several components. Predictions of economic collapse under Allende were replayed in CIA-generated articles in European and Latin American newspapers. In response to Allende's criticism of El Mercurio, the CIA orchestrated cables of support and protest from newspapers and an international press association, and world press coverage of the association's protest. (In a process repeated often around the world) journalists -- agents and otherwise -- traveled to Chile for on-the-scene reporting. By September 28, the CIA had agents/journalists from ten countries in or enroute to Chile. This group supplemented eight more journalists under the direction of high-level agents who were media managers.
The CIA itself generated anti-Allende propaganda: support for an underground press; placement of news items through agents; financing a small newspaper; a subsidy to Patria y Libertad a right-wing group fervently anti-Allende, and its radio program, political ads, and political rallies; and the direct mailing of foreign news articles to Frei, his wife, selected leaders, and the Chilean domestic press.
The CIA gave special intelligence and "inside" briefings to United States journalists. One "Time" cover story was radically changed from pro-Allende to anti-Allende.
The CIA's six-weeks media blitz in the Latin American and European media produced 726 articles, broadcasts, editorials, and similar items. There was no way to measure the multiplier effect of all this material.
Concurrently the CIA ran an economic offensive. Cutting off of all credits, pressuring firms to curtail investment in Chile and approaching other nations to cooperate. The operations caused a major financial panic. Yet Allende was named President and no coup was implemented.
nder Track II urgings, the military did not conduct a coup even through CIA made 21 contacts with key military and police officials to whom the Agency gave assurances of strong support at the highest levels of the U.S. Government. The Ambassador advised Chileans that if Allende was seated, the military would not receive further military assistance (MAP) and that all MAP and military sales were being held in abeyance pending the congressional election on 24 October.
A rather disorganized coup attempt aborted following the shooting of General Schneider -- a shooting that succeeded probably as part of CIA plan to "kidnap" this strict constitutionalist military leader.
Covert Action During the Allende Years, 1970-1973
After Allende ascended to the presidency, U.S. policy sought to maximize pressures on the government. Besides funding political parties, the CIA supported El Mercurio, the country's largest newspaper and the most important channel for anti-Allende propaganda. Per the CIA, these efforts played a significant role in setting the stage for the military coup of September 11, 1973.
While all of these operations progressed, testimony before the Senate by an administration spokesman denied any efforts against Allende. Kissinger in September 9, 1970 said that Allende would probably establish (a Communist government).
Alarmist "intelligence" railed about (ill-founded) threats: of Soviet military presence; the "export" of Allende's revolution and others. Those exaggerated intelligence fears activated government policy.
Two-thirds of the actions of this period were covert, the third was economic pressure to hurt Chile's economy. The U.S cut off economic aid, denied credits and enlisted the cooperation of international financial institutions and private firms. This squeeze was exacerbated by crippling strikes.
The U.S. maintained contacts with the military to "assess" the possibility of a coup. By September 1971, the Station had built a new network of agents in the Chilean military and received almost daily reports of coup plotting.
The Station provided information, some fabricated by the CIA -- to convince senior Army officers that the one group, with the approval of Allende was acting with Cuban intelligence (DGI) in a plot to kill those officers. In December 1971 the CIA gave a packet of material, including a fabricated letter, to a Chilean military officer.
During late 1971 and early 1972, the CIA became more active and subsidized an anti-government news pamphlet, compiled arrest lists and ran its deception operation.
The Techniques of Covert Action:
The CIA funded the Christian Democratic Party (PDC), the National Party (PN), and several splinter groups. The PDC and PN used some of those funds to purchase their own newspapers and radio stations. All of these groups urged citizens to demonstrate their opposition to Allende.
CIA field reporting in 1971 and 1972 claimed the government was trying to close the El Mercurio chain. In fact the press remained free. The alarming field reports were at odds with intelligence analyses. Yet the freedom of press issue was the single most important theme in the international propaganda campaign against Allende. A major opposition research organization produced books and pamphlets. One of these appeared in October 1972 at the Inter-American Press Association meeting -- it listed the Chilean Government as a threat to the freedom of the press.
The Agency's main propaganda project funded several magazines and a large number of books and special studies. It placed material in the El Mercurio chain; opposition party newspapers; two weekly newspapers; all radio stations controlled by opposition parties; and on several TV shows on three channels. The CIA also funded an opposition research organization that wrote many of the legislative bills of parliamentarians.
Support For Private Sector Organizations The CIA supported a "powerful businessmen's organization," and associations of large and small businessmen and other groups. Some of those funds went for voter registration drives and a get-out-the-vote campaign.
Given the turbulent conditions in Chile, the interconnections among CIA-supported political parties, and the various militant trade associations and paramilitary groups prone to terrorism and violent disruption were many.
The most prominent of the right-wind paramilitary groups was Patria y Libertad (Fatherland and Liberty). The CIA funded this PM group to create tension and a pretext for intervention by the Chilean military. Patria y Libertad marched at opposition rallies dressed in full riot gear. During the national truckers strike, it strew "miguelitos" (three-pronged steel tacks) on highways to bring transportation to a halt. On July 13, 1973 Patria y Libertad openly claimed responsibility for an abortive coup. Its leader announced that his group would unleash a total armed offensive to overthrow the government.
Make the Economy Scream!
DCI Helms at a September 1970 meeting with Nixon recorded that his instructions included "Make the economy scream." Later Ambassador Korry told Frei that "not a nut or bolt would be allowed to reach Chile under Allende."
The U.S. used its predominant position in international financial institutions to dry up the flow of credit. The U.S. Export-Import Bank loans dropped to zero in 1971. The bank dropped Chile's credit rating from "B," to "D." Loans from the Inter-American Development Bank almost ceased. The World Bank made no new loans to Chile between 1970 and 1973.
Post-1973
Following the September 11, 1973, coup the military Junta led by General Augusto Pinochet, moved quickly to consolidate power. Pinochet banned political parties, put Congress in indefinite recess, instituted press censorship, jailed opponents and canceled elections as the CIA assisted the Junta in gaining a more positive image at home and a broad. Its research organization helped the government implement new policies. Two CIA collaborators assisted the Junta in preparing a "White Book of the Change of Government in Chile" -- to justify the overthrow of Allende. It was distributed widely in Washington and foreign capitals.
Intelligence Estimates and Covert Action
Between 1969 and 1973, the CIA wrote five National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) on Chile, plus several Intelligence Memoranda and (joint) Intelligence Notes. None mentioned CIA operations in Chile -- the determinant political reality.
The July 1970 NIE, prepared a little over a month before the September election, raised the question of what an Allende victory would mean. The NIE stated, in strong terms, that an Allende administration would be a Marxist-Socialist State. A Chilean version of a Soviet-style East European Communist State. This NIE stated that if Allende was elected, he would take harsh measures against U.S. business interests and challenge U.S. policies in the hemisphere. The NIE expressed concern about the expansion of Soviet military presence in Chile.
The next NIE of August 1971, was less shrill. As was the NIE of June 1972 and September 1973.
Estimates and Covert Action
The Chilean NIEs were either, at best selectively used or, at worst, disregarded by policy makers re U.S. covert actions in Chile. As the Chilean NIEs became less shrill, policy makers authorized greater covert actions.
Policy Versus Intelligence
Analysts on Chilean NIEs were not privy to information concerning covert operations of the CIA. Analysts and operators exist in two separate worlds. Information in the Operations Directorate is not available to the Intelligence Directorate. Those preparing estimates on Chile did not have access to information which would have altered their estimates. That flaw was telling. It meant, for example, that the 1972 assessment of the durability of opposition sectors was written without knowledge of CIA funding of precisely those sectors.
The Committee report concludes: "Given the costs of covert action, it should be resorted to only to counter severe threats to the national security of the United States. It is far from clear that this was the case in Chile." CONCLUSION
"The CIA is not now nor has it ever been a central intelligence agency. It is the covert action arm of the President's foreign policy advisers. In that capacity it overthrows or supports foreign governments while reporting "intelligence" justifying those activities. It shapes its intelligence, even in such critical areas as Soviet nuclear weapons capability, to support presidential policy. Disinformation is a large part of its covert action responsibility, and the American people are the primary target of its lies." � Ralph McGehee, Deadly Deceits
The Pinochet files
A series of declassified US documents have revealed the extent of America's role in the Chilean coup, says Jonathan Franklin
Wednesday September 10, 2003
September 11 1973 was a day of terror and bloodshed in Chile. After months of rising tension, army troops stormed the presidential palace, leaving President Salvador Allende dead and thousands prisoners throughout this previously democratic nation.Now, on the 30th anniversary of the coup, professors, journalists and citizen activists around the world are continuing to expose the full role of the US government in financing and promoting this bloody coup, which ushered in the 17-year military dictatorship headed by General Augusto Pinochet.
Thousands of top secret documents which were declassified over the past five years have now been synthesized in a new book, The Pinochet File, by investigative reporter Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archives, a Washington-based investigative centre. "The US created a climate of a coup in Chile, a situation of chaos and agitation," said Kornbluh. "The CIA and state department were worried that the [Chilean] military ... were not ready for a coup."
The top secret documents accumulatively detail the crude workings of Washington during the Cold War. "It is firm and continuing policy that Allende be overthrown by a coup," reads a CIA document from October 1970. "It is imperative that these actions be implemented clandestinely and securely so that the USG [US government] and American hand be well hidden."
Two days after this document was written, top CIA officials proposed a terrorist campaign to stun the Chilean people into accepting a military regime.
"Concur giving tear gas cannisters and gas masks ... working on obtaining machine guns," reads a CIA memo dated October 18 1970.
"Use good officers ... Some low-level overflights of Santiago and bomb drops in areas not likely to cause casualties could have great psychological effect and might swing balance as they have so many times in past in similar circumstances."
While conservative Chileans argue that the coup was a home-grown affair, the current Chilean minister of education, Sergio Bitar, says: "That internal crisis was activated by the North American policies against it. We see how they energetically obstructed all types of credit from the World Bank and the InterAmerican Bank ... these were decisive actions. This were political and financial pressures that were very relevant [to the ensuing coup.]"
The US effort to destabilise Chile was led by a policy of massively funding and bribing non-leftwing Chilean politicians.
Throughout the 1960s, the US secretly spent millions funding political parties of their choosing - usually the moderate Christian Democrats led by Eduardo Frei Montalva. By the early 1970s, Chilean society had become so leftwing that Washington decided to change tactics. First, President Nixon authorised $10m to be spent "to make the economy scream".
He also authorised pro-coup initiatives designed to destroy the traditional reluctance of Chilean military men to take over civilian government.
"Pinochet will not be a stumbling block to coup plans", reads one memo written six months before the coup, in which the American government looks to build a veritable Dream Team of coup plotters. "The navy and air force are ready ... the military is getting ready to move."
As part of a particularly crude effort to remove army officers who supported democratic rule, the CIA organised to kidnap Rene Schneider, a Chilean army general.
That plot was botched; Schneider died, and today his family is suing the US government and Henry Kissinger in particular for playing a role in his murder.
Citing documents declassified in the past few years, the lawsuit alleges that the US government paid $35,000 to the men who plotted the actions against Schneider.
"I don't want revenge, I want the truth to be established," said a son of the murdered general, also named Rene, who now lives in Santiago and works for a television station.
Immediately after the coup, US officials worked hard to ease international criticism of the human rights record of the Pinochet regime. Rather than fear Washington�s reproach, the military regime repeatedly sought help and advice.
Just weeks after the coup, the US ambassador in Chile sent a memo to Henry Kissinger noting that "the military government of Chile requires adviser assistance of a person qualified in establishing a detention centre for the detainees ... adviser must have knowledge in the establishment and operation of a detention centre".
Even when the full extent of the torture and executions in Chile were well known, the US government sought to integrate the Pinochet regime into international business circles.
Probably no figure more personalised the cruelty of the Pinochet regime than the head of its secret DINA police force, Manuel Contreras.
Previously classified documents now confirm that, not only was Contreras on the CIA payroll, but that when he came to Washington during the height of human rights abuses, the US state department had specific tasks for him.
"Contreras was also asked to check in with Anaconda [Copper] and General Motors to encourage them to resume operations in Chile."
NIXON OKAYED ACTION AGAINST ALLENDE, TAPES SHOW
Feb. 5, 2004
http://www.nsarchive.orgNATIONAL SECURITY ARCHIVES - President Richard Nixon acknowledged that he had given instructions to "do anything short of a Dominican-type action" to keep the democratically elected president of Chile from assuming office, according to a White House audio tape posted by the National Security Archive today. A phone conversation captured by his secret Oval Office taping system reveals Nixon telling his press secretary, Ron Zeigler, that he had given such instructions to then U.S. Ambassador Edward Korry, "but he just failed, the son of a bitch... He should have kept Allende from getting in."
A transcript of the president's comments on March 23, 1972, made after the leak of corporate papers revealing collaboration between ITT and the CIA to rollback the election of socialist leader Salvador Allende, was recently published in the National Security Archive book, The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability by Peter Kornbluh; the tape marks the first time Nixon can be heard discussing his orders to undermine Chilean democracy. The conversation took place as Zeigler briefed the President on a State Department press conference to contain the growing ITT/CIA scandal which included one ITT document stating that Korry had been "given the green light to move in the name of President Nixon...to do all possible short of a Dominican Republic-type action to keep Allende from taking power."
Other declassified records show that Nixon secretly ordered maximum CIA covert operations to "prevent Allende from coming to power or unseat him" in the fall of 1970 but that Ambassador Korry was deliberately not informed of covert efforts to instigate a military coup.
When the White House-ordered covert operations failed to prevent Allende's November 3, 1970, inauguration, Nixon's national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, lobbied vigorously for a hard-line U.S. policy "to prevent [Allende] from consolidating himself now when we know he is weaker than he will ever be and when he obviously fears our pressure and hostility," according to a previously unknown eight-page briefing paper prepared for the President on November 5, 1970.
In the secret/sensitive "memorandum for the president" Kissinger claimed that Allende's election posed "one of the most serious challenges ever faced in the hemisphere" and that Nixon's "decision as to what to do about it may be the most historic and difficult foreign affairs decision you will have to make this year."
This briefing paper, found among thousands of NSC papers recently declassified by the Nixon Presidential Materials Project at NARA, reveals Kissinger's forceful attempts to influence Nixon's policy toward an Allende government prior to a pivotal National Security Council meeting on Chile. Written two days after Allende's inauguration, Kissinger emphasizes to Nixon that his election "poses for us one of the most serious challenges ever faced in this hemisphere." Nixon's decisions on what to do about it, he informs the President, "may be the most historic and difficult foreign affairs decision you will have to make this year." Kissinger lists the "serious threats" he perceives Allende to pose to U.S. interests in the region and the world, among them $1 billion in investments that could be lost, and the precedent-setting "example of a successful elected Marxist government." The memo notes that Allende will seek to be: "internationally respectable; move cautiously and pragmatically; avoid immediate confrontations with us." But Kissinger attributes this to Allende's "gameplan" to "neutralize" his political opponents in Chile. Nixon's national security advisor urges him to overrule the State Department position that the U.S. does "not have the capability of preventing Allende from consolidating himself or forcing his failure" and that U.S. influence was best gained by "maintain[ing] our relationship and our presence in Chile." Instead Kissinger forcefully recommends a hostile policy of pressure and opposition, but implemented "quietly and covertly" for maximum effectiveness. "Contrary to your usual practice of not making a decision at NSC meetings," the memo concludes, "it is essential that you make it crystal clear where you stand on this issue�.If all concerned do not understand that you want Allende opposed as strongly as we can, the result will be a steady drift toward the modus vivendi approach."
Pepsi demands a US coup. Goodbye Allende. Hello Pinochet
Greg Palast
The Observer, London
Sunday, November 8, 1998'It is the firm and continuing policy that Allende be overthrown by a coup... Please review all your present and possibly new activities to include propaganda, black operations, surfacing of intelligence or disinformation, personal contacts, or anything else your imagination can conjure...'
'Eyes only, restricted handling, secret' message. To US station chief, Santiago. From CIA headquarters. 16 October 1970.
You would be wrong to assume this plan for mayhem was another manifestation of the Cold War between the 'free world' and communism. Much more was at stake: Pepsi-Cola's market share and other matters closer to the heart of corporate America.
In exclusive interviews with The Observer last week, the former US Ambassador to Chile, Edward Korry, told the story in - and behind - these and other top secret CIA, State Department and White House cables recently released by the National Security Archives. Korry filled in gaps in the story by describing cables still classified, and disclosing information censored in papers now available under the US Freedom of Information Act.
Korry, who served Presidents Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon, told how US companies, from cola to copper, using the CIA as an international debt collection agency and investment security force.
Indeed, the October 1970 plot against Chile's President-elect Salvador Allende, using CIA 'sub-machine guns and ammo', was the direct result of a plea for action a month earlier by Donald Kendall, chairman of PepsiCo, in two telephone calls to the company's former lawyer, President Richard Nixon.
Kendall arranged for the owner of the company's Chilean bottling operation to meet National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger on September 15. Hours later, Nixon called in his CIA chief, Richard Helms, and, according to Helms's handwritten notes, ordered the CIA to prevent Allende's inauguration. - Entire article
Common Sense Almanac Letter of recommendation from Ralph McGehee