The
Original 9/11: 45 Years After Pinochet’s Coup
by
YVES ENGLER
Photo
Source Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores de Chile | CC
BY 2.0
11
September, 2018
On
this day in 1973 the democratically elected president of Chile,
Salvador Allende, was overthrown by General Augusto Pinochet. In the
aftermath, 3000 leftists
were murdered, tens of thousands tortured and hundreds
of thousands
driven from the country.
Since
it doesn’t serve to justify further domination by the powerful few
in the Canadian media will commemorate the ‘original 9/11’. Even
fewer will recognize Canada’s role in the US backed coup.
The
Pierre Trudeau government was hostile to Allende’s elected
government. In 1964 Eduardo Frei defeated the openly Marxist Allende
in presidential elections. Worried about growing support for
socialism, Ottawa gave $8.6
million to
Frei’s Chile, its first aid to a South American country.When
Allende won the next election Canadian assistance disappeared. Export
Development Canada (EDC) also refused to finance Canadian exports to
Chile, which contributed to a reduction in trade between the two
countries.This suspension of EDC credits led Chile’s Minister of
Finance to criticize Canada’s “banker’s
attitude”.But
suspending bilateral assistance and export insurance was not enough.
In 1972 Ottawa joined Washington in voting to cut off all money from
the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to the Chilean government.(When
Allende was first elected western banks, including Canada’s,
withdrew from Chile.)
From
economic asphyxiation to diplomatic isolation Ottawa’s policy
towards Allende’s Chile was clear. After he won office in 1970
Allende invited Pierre Trudeau to visit Santiago. Ottawa refused “for
fear of
alienating rightist elements in Chile and elsewhere.”
Days
after Pinochetousted Allende, Andrew Ross, Canada’s ambassador to
Chile cabled External Affairs: “Reprisals and searches have created
panic atmosphere affecting particularly expatriates including
the riffraff
of the Latin American Left to
whom Allende gave asylum … the country has been on a prolonged
political binge under the elected Allende government and the junta
has assumed the probably thankless task of sobering
Chile up.”
Thousands were incarcerated, tortured and killed in “sobering Chile
up”.
Within
three weeks of the coup, Canada recognized Pinochet’s military
junta. Ross stated: “I
can see no useful
purpose to withholding recognition unduly. Indeed, such action might
even tend to delay Chile’s eventual return to the democratic
process.” Pinochet stepped down 17 years later.
Diplomatic
support for Pinochet led to economic assistance. Just after the coup
Canada voted for a $22 million ($100 million in today’s money)
Inter American Development Bank loan “rushed through the bank with
embarrassing haste.” Ottawa immediately endorsed sending $95
million from the International Monetary Fund to Chile and supported
renegotiating the country’s debt held by the Paris Club. After
refusing to provide credits to the elected government, on October
2nd, 1973, EDC announced it was granting $5 million in credit to
Chile’s central bank to purchase six Twin Otter aircraft from De
Havilland, which could carry troops to and from short makeshift
strips.
By
1978, Canadian support for the coup d’etat was significant. It
included:
+ Support for $810 million in multilateral loans with Canada’s share amounting to about $40 million.
+ Five EDC facilities worth between $15 and $30 million.
+ Two Canadian debt re-schedulings for Chile, equivalent to additional loans of approximately $5 million.
+ Twenty loans by Canadian chartered banks worth more than $100 million, including a 1977 loan by Toronto Dominion to DINA (Pinochet’s secret police) to purchase equipment.
+ Direct investments by Canadian companies valued at nearly $1 billion.
A
1976 Latin America Working Group Letter noted that “Canadian
economic relations, in the form of bank loans, investments and
government supported financial assistance have helped consolidate the
Chilean dictatorship and, by granting it a mantle of respectability
and financial endorsation, have encouraged its continued violation of
human rights.”
Canadian
leftists were outraged at Ottawa’s support for the coup and its
unwillingness to accept refugees hunted by the military regime. Many
denounced the federal government’s policy and some (my mother among
them) occupied various Chilean and Canadian government offices in
protest. The Federal government was surprised at the scope of the
opposition, which curtailed some support for the junta. A 1974
cabinet document lamented that “the
attention…
focused on the Chilean Government’s use of repression against its
opponents has led to an unfavourable reaction among the Canadian
public–a reaction which will not permit any significant increase in
Canadian aid to this country.”
The
Pierre Trudeau government sought to placate protesters
by allowing 7000
refugees from
Pinochet’s regime asylum in Canada. But, they continued to support
the dictatorship directly responsible for the refugee problem.
We
should commemorate Canada’s role in the ‘original 9/11’.
Yves
Engler’s latest
book is Canada in Africa: 300 years of Aid and Exploitation.
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