
Posthumous
Pinochet note justifies coup
By
Eduardo
Gallardo
AP
SANTIAGO, CHILE
Petroleumworld.com 12 26 06
In a letter to Chileans written to be published after his death, Gen.
Augusto Pinochet said he wished he hadn't had to stage the bloody 1973
coup that put him in power, and called the abuses under his long regime
inevitable.
His fate was public shunning and unimagined loneliness, he said in the
message made public Sunday.
The former dictator,
who died Dec. 10 of heart failure at age 91, insisted the military takeover
avoided civil war and a Marxist dictatorship, and said his 1973-90 regime
never had "an institutional plan" to abuse human rights.
"But it was
necessary to act with maximum rigor to avoid a widening of the conflict,"
Pinochet wrote.
According to an
official report, 3,197 people were killed for political reasons in the
17 years after Pinochet overthrew elected Marxist President Salvador
Allende on Sept. 11, 1973. Tens of thousands were illegally imprisoned,
tortured and forced into exile after the coup, during which Allende
committed suicide rather than surrender.
Pinochet's "message
to all my compatriots to be published after my death" was made
public by the Pinochet Foundation, a group of former aides and followers.
Its president, Hernan Guiloff, said he received the text from Pinochet
in 2004 and decided to make it public "on this day of peace"
— Christmas Eve.
In the six-page
text, Pinochet wrote that "I have left no room for hatred in my
heart."
"My destiny
is a kind of banishment and loneliness that I would have never imagined,
much less wanted," he added.
When he died, Pinochet
was under indictment charging him with human rights abuses under his
dictatorship and tax evasion in connection with secret multimillion-dollar
foreign bank accounts.
Many people who
endorsed the dictatorship's firm hand against communists and other leftists
turned against Pinochet after hearing allegations that his family spirited
$28 million into overseas accounts.
Pinochet noted the
coup occurred in the context of the Cold War and said the military felt
duty bound to overthrow Allende, because the alternatives were "a
civil war ... the imposition of a so-called dictatorship of the proletariat,
Marxist-Leninist, with total loss of political freedom and of the state
of law."
"How I wish
the Sept. 11, 1973, military action had not been necessary!" Pinochet
wrote. "How I wish the Marxist-Leninist ideology had not entered
our fatherland!"
He insisted the
rights violations under his regime were inevitable because "as
part of the characteristics of our rivals, it was necessary to implement
certain procedures of military control, such as temporary imprisonment,
authorized exile, executions by firing squad after military trials."
"As long as
ideological and armed fanaticism continued to endanger stability, we
could not lower our arms," he said.
The remains of more
than 1,000 of the people killed for political reasons under the dictatorship
have never been found, and Pinochet wrote that the circumstances of
many of the deaths and disappearances will never be known.
"I state that
I am proud of the huge action that we had to undertake to prevent Marxism-Leninism
from reaching total power," he said.
But
he added: "If the experience was to repeat itself, I wish I had
a greater wisdom."
-AP
December 24, 2006
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