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Posts Tagged ‘Henry Kissinger’

Allende, the Third World, and Neoliberal Imperialism

Chris Dietrich

Imperial & Global Forum June 18, 2014

allende“Allende was assassinated for nationalizing the . . . wealth of Chilean subsoil,” Pablo Neruda wrote on September 14, 1973. Neruda was lamenting the overthrow and death of his friend, Chilean President Salvador Allende, a week before he himself succumbed to cancer.  “From the salt-peter deserts, the underwater coal mines, and the terrible heights where copper is extracted through inhuman work by the hands of my people, a liberating movement of great magnitude arose,” he continued.  “This movement led a man named Salvador Allende to the presidency of Chile, to undertake reforms and measures of justice that could not be postponed, to rescue our national wealth from foreign clutches.”  Unfortunately, Allende’s flirtation with economic nationalization ran up against the country’s multinational business interests, particularly those that had support from the U.S. government. His socialist reforms were also ill timed; the U.S. government’s ideological view towards the global economy tended towards the Manichean.

So what was the American role in Allende’s overthrow?

The Chilean coup, as such a vivid moment of crisis, continues to occupy a murky and ambiguous position on the moving line that divides the past and the present. And owing to the release of new material, the episode has received a good deal of renewed coverage in the past half-decade. In particular, the recent publication of volumes on U.S. foreign policy toward Chile between 1969 and 1973 by the Historian’s Office of the U.S. State Department and the National Security Archive at George Washington University have led to a flurry of new studies.

CIA2Earlier this month, self-described CIA “spymaster” Jack Devine stirred the pot again with a Foreign Affairs article entitled “What Really Happened in Chile.” Based on his personal experience in Chile at the time, Devine explains “how the U.S. government learned of the coup in Chile” only two days before it happened. Although admitting that the CIA supported an earlier coup attempt against Allende in 1970, Devine takes great pains to shift the blame away from Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon. He instead argues that the U.S. government did not plot with the Chilean military in the successful overthrow of Allende; what the U.S. government did do was attempt to reduce support for Allende and exacerbate the political opposition he already faced “from not only the wealthy but the middle and working classes as well.” Accusations that the Nixon administration played a greater role, Devine concludes, do little more than “muddy the waters.”

In this interpretation, Devine follows the likes of historian Mark Falcoff, Nixon’s secretary of state, William Rogers, and Kissinger himself, who have sought to exculpate the Nixon administration. Duke University professor Hal Brands controversially expanded upon this line of argument in Latin America’s Cold War in 2012. If a major historical trend in the past generation has been an emphasis on agency from below, Brands asks, why haven’t historians sought interpretations of Latin American insecurity and violence that move U.S. foreign policy from the center to the periphery of analysis? In other words, shouldn’t Latin American leaders be held accountable for their own actions in their own nations? In this reading, left-wing extremism led to right-wing extremism, or vice-versa, in a vicious circle. Both were part of “a larger cycle of radicalism and reaction” that was largely indigenous.

But others have found damning evidence that points to a more important role for the Nixon administration.   Most vocal among them is Peter Kornbluh, who in 2013 released a revised edition of his award-winning book, The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability. Kornbluh has long held that the policies of Henry Kissinger made a singular contribution “to the denouement of democracy and rise of dictatorship in Chile.”  In particular, Kissinger spearheaded a Nixon administration campaign that fed money to opposition groups in politics and civil society, escalated aid to the military, financed dissenting journals and newspapers, and advocated other policies designed to weaken the government. In making these claims about immorality and interventionism, Kornbluh is joined by historians Stephen Rabe, Jonathan Haslam, Kristian Gustafson, Lubna Qureshi, the journalist Stephen Kinzer, and most famously, the late leftist intellectual Christopher Hitchens.

harmer allendeNevertheless, the story is more complicated than what London School of Economics historian Tanya Harmer calls “the blame-game.”   In her authoritative 2012 international history of the coup, Allende’s Chile and the Inter-American Cold War, she asks the crucial question: If not directly responsible for the events of September 1973, what role did the United States play? The answer Harmer provides suggests that the Nixon administration decided to undertake close consultation with like-minded governments in South America, in particular Brazil, to coordinate efforts to not only oppose Allende but also to improve the relations with friendly military leaders in the hemisphere. Like Kornbluh, Harmer argues that the United States helped frame and apply a campaign to subvert Allende’s government from the moment of his election. But Kissinger and Nixon did not direct events. Rather, they worked closely with the military regime of General Emílio Garrastazu Médici in Brazil, who became the most powerful campaigner for regime change in Chile. At the same time, disagreements between Allende and Cuban president Fidel Castro pointed to a great degree of variation in leftist policies in the region.

Transforming the Third World Economic Order

Harmer thus explores what New York University historian Greg Grandin has called “a metaphysics of Allende-hating” in terms of an inter-American Cold War of many itineraries. For Grandin, though, the driving cause of the Nixon administration’s concern about Chile built upon, and went beyond, standard Cold War arguments of “national security and economics.”  He is right, but divergent understandings of the past and future of the global economy drove that metaphysics.  In other words, the problem was not that Allende was an avowed Marxist or even that he pushed through a constitutional amendment nationalizing the huge copper investments of Cerro, Anaconda, and Kennecott on July 16, 1971.  Nor was it the threat that a socialist Chile, along with new nationalist governments in Bolivia and Peru, would provide a toe-hold for Cuba and the Soviet Union in the region.  (In fact, the intransigence the White House felt towards Chile contrasted markedly with the easing of relations with the Soviet Union and the opening up of China at the same time.)

Nixon and Kissinger were less concerned about those problems than about the example Allende would set in Latin America and beyond. “Everyone agrees,” Kissinger wrote in 1969, that Allende would seek a socialist and Marxist state that would line up ideologically and politically with the USSR and Cuba.  The consolidation of Allende in power would thus “pose some very serious threats to our interests and position in the hemisphere and . . . elsewhere in the world.”  Nixon felt the same way. “Our main concern,” he told the National Security Council on November 5, 1970, “is the prospect that he can consolidate himself and the picture projected to the world will be his success.”

More than anything, these quotes remind us that the stakes of Allende’s success or failure were global.  Actors in Chile certainly took on a perspective that looked beyond their borders.  One of Allende’s spokesmen recalled the recent “liquidation of the left in Indonesia” to dramatize the danger of counterrevolution.  Allende himself became a vocal proponent of the Third World’s broader challenge to the international economy, which was directed through the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, the Group of 77, and the Non-Aligned Movement.  Since the end of the Second World War, groups from Latin America, the Middle East, Asia, and Africa had discussed the problem of imperial continuity in the international economy.

Theirs was a widely shared moral and political stance of concise logic; decolonization entailed more than political independence from a colonial master, and nowhere did imperial power exert itself with greater vigor than in the material worlds of law and economics.  This Third World challenge also held a particular policy prescription designed to end economic domination — if the “poor lands” remained ensconced in the shadow of empire, the use of national legal power offered an escape. In this context, the CIA reported in January 1969, “further steps toward greater government participation in or even outright nationalization of” the holdings of multinational corporations in Chile were “inevitable.”

Based on the guiding principal of permanent sovereignty, advanced in the previous two decades as part of a new international law in the UN General Assembly and Economic and Social Council, developing nations held the right to “rebalance” the international economy. Upon nationalizing the major copper mines in Chile, Allende pushed to host the third ministerial meeting of the UN Conference on Trade and Development in 1972.  When he gave a stirring address welcoming the diplomats to Santiago, he was followed to the podium by Raúl Prebisch, who by that time was considered the father of the Third World critique of global economic inequality.  Prebisch thanked Allende for hosting the conference, and began his speech.  The joint problem of the poor nations was “above all to achieve sovereignty in a full sense,” he said.  The poor nations needed “to establish it on solid foundations and then pass from the present relationship of dependence—which is unacceptable in the light of the political maturity of our peoples—to interdependent relationships which involve new forms of cooperation.”

One can see the thrust of this position in any number of the meetings that preceded the 1974 UN Declaration of a New International Economic Order, which was the culmination of the Third Worldist program of “economic emancipation.”  For example, the 59 foreign ministers of the Non-Aligned Movement regrouped in Guyana months after the Santiago meeting.   There, they signed the 1972 Georgetown Declaration, which gave  “full support” to Allende and other leaders that “in the exercise of their sovereign rights over the natural resources of their countries [had] nationalized the interests of powerful foreign monopolies.”  As in Santiago, the ministers turned directly to the expression of sovereignty as a legitimate and moral international stance.  “[I]t is fundamentally important to stress that the full exercise of their sovereignty over natural resources is essential for economic independence,” the foreign ministers wrote.  Moreover, economic emancipation was “closely linked to political independence, and that the latter is consolidated by strengthening the former.”

If the imperial past required correction, there was clearly space within that argument for more nuanced, less dialectical national policies.  For example, Allende did not see the July 16, 1971 constitutional amendment nationalizing Chilean copper investments as contradictory to his stated policy of utilizing access to investment capital in the “Western financial system” to develop the national economy.

In fact, U.S. Ambassador Edward M. Korry had negotiated with Allende and other government leaders a compromise by which the Constitutional Amendment was modified to provide compensation to the affected multinational companies.  (To the great ire of Korry, the Nixon administration, and corporate executives, Allende deftly used the compromise to insist that “excess profits” from the past be deducted from the settlement.)

At the same time, Allende had already concluded sales agreements for nationalized copper with other multinational corporations, including RCA, Bethlehem Steel, and Bank of America.  What the State Department called the “Chilean propaganda attack” on two firms, Anaconda and Kennecott, was thus more of an attempt to isolate the larger and more controversial businesses from other U.S. investors than to attack foreign capital investment writ large.

Linking Neoliberalism to Its Imperial Past

But the position linking global capitalism to the imperial past remained widespread, and not only among Allende, Prebisch, and other leaders of the developing world.  In 1973, two special subcommittees of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, both headed by Idaho senator Frank Church, began investigations of multinational corporations, intelligence activities, and U.S. foreign policy.  Although U.S. involvement in Chile was only one subject of the investigations, the reports condemned the Nixon administration for using the powerful position of U.S. firms in Chile to “make the economy scream” during Allende’s period as president.

Such outbursts of outrage were relatively scarce, though.  Most actors in the United States and Western Europe recoiled at the Third World demands for a New International Economic Order in 1974 and after, and warned that “economic emancipation” would further disrupt a fragile global economy, which already stood on shaky foundations in the early 1970s because of skyrocketing oil prices, runaway inflation, and the collapse of the Bretton Woods monetary system.  Above all, nationalization programs like Chile’s were viewed as serious hindrances to private capital flows.

The gravitas of that ideological battle was dramatized in a 1972 conversation between Allende and the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, George Herbert Walker Bush, who sought to set Allende straight regarding recent public statements in which he labelled U.S. foreign policy imperialist.  “I told him that we did not consider ourselves “imperialists,” Bush reported.

[T]hat we did not recognize that people were correctly identifying us when we were termed imperialists, and that we still had a deep conviction that our free enterprise system was not selfish but was the best system—certainly for us, though we had no intention to insist on it for others. And when it went abroad it did not “bleed” other people.”

When Allende responded that his speeches had clearly differentiated “between the government of the United States, the people of the United States, and multinational corporations,” Bush had an easy answer: “because of our deep conviction in the free enterprise system, the people, the government, and the system were all interlocked.” 

That was exactly the implication that Neruda and a generation of Third World intellectuals were left with after the 1973 coup.  A month later, an “energy crisis” gave multinational companies and their supporters in the U.S. government an opening to exploit the convergence that Bush described.  When the oil producers also invoked the international law of sovereignty as a means to legitimize their four-fold increase in the global price of oil, the response was ready-made. 

Neoliberal diplomacy, in particular U.S. government protection of foreign investments, became the basis of a new foreign policy for the 1970s and beyond.  

Nowhere was that neoliberal policy more evident than in Chile, where Milton Friedman’s “Los Chicago Boys” applied a series of policies designed to “open up” the Chilean market.  At the same time, the United States strengthened the new military regime of Augusto Pinochet, providing both economic and military support.

General Pinochet meeting with Milton Friedman.

General Pinochet meeting with Milton Friedman.

Whether or not the neoliberal policies of Chile promoted development or, more broadly, societal well-being is an open question.  It is certain, though, that the Chilean trajectory gave credence to a generation of critics who would link U.S. foreign policy and the “free-market” basis of contemporary globalization to the concept of imperialism.

The World Peace Council, meeting in the newly independent nation of Guinea Bissau, saw the connection in 1975.  Not only had the U.S. Gulf Oil Corporation financed the founding of a separatist organization that challenged the government.  It was also “significant” that members of the Brazilian “Death Squad,” who the Peace Council believed were involved in the “CIA-engineered overthrow of the Allende Government,” have been spotted in Pinochet’s Chile.  Algerian president Houari Boumedienne called the rise of Pinochet “a tragic scene,” part of a longer-running “imperialist plot…stirred up through the multinational companies.”

For the Algerian jurist Mohammed Bedjaoui, a long-time civil servant at the United Nations and the International Court of Justice, the lesson was more optimistic, but only slightly so.  The acts of men like Allende, and the broad movement they represented, had deprived imperialism of legitimacy for all time.  “[T]he major revolution of our time that began with decolonization” had not ended, he wrote in a 1976 tract on the Non-Aligned Movement and international law, funded by the Carnegie Foundation. The process of self-assertion, begun in the United Nations and continued in the Non-Aligned Movement and elsewhere, instead was a first step that “enriched the content of cardinal notions like that of sovereignty.” Yet he dedicated the work to Salvador Allende.  The dedication used a phrase coined by Régis Debray in his martyr’s tribute—mort dans sa loi, or “dead by his own law.”  The fall of Allende came not just at the hand of military traitors or multinational corporations, but because of a system of western interests that had a greater meaning.

Voices across the world joined Neruda, Bedjaoui, and Boumedienne in celebrating the sovereignty of Chile, decrying the fall of Allende, and blaming the United States for his overthrow and death. Months later, Gabriel García Márquez wrote that the overthrow may have taken place in Chile “to the greater woe of Chileans, but it will pass into history as something that has happened to us all, children of this age, and it will remain in our lives forever.”

The role of the United States in the coup, as well as its bloody aftermath, remains an important one.  But the findings will do little to overthrow Allende’s global Third World legacy, especially in an era in which market-based national economic policies remain prominent in the global economic system.

Chris Dietrich is Assistant Professor of History at Fordham University. His first book monograph analyzes the rise and fall of anti-colonial law and economics in the twentieth century. His second project is a psychoanalysis of American neoliberalism in the 1970s and 1980s.

Follow on Twitter @C_R_W_Dietrich

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arbannsmU.S. Covert Intervention in Chile: Planning to Block Allende Began Long before September 1970 Election

National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 470

May 23, 2014

For more information contact:
Peter Kornbluh 202/374-7281 or peter.kornbluh@gmail.com

 

battleOfChileWashington, DC, May 23, 2014 – Covert U.S. planning to block the democratic election of Salvador Allende in Chile began weeks before his September 4, 1970, victory, according to just declassified minutes of an August 19, 1970, meeting of the high-level interagency committee known as the Special Review Group, chaired by National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger. «Kissinger asked that the plan be as precise as possible and include what orders would be given September 5, to whom, and in what way,» as the summary recorded Kissinger’s instructions to CIA Director Richard Helms. «Kissinger said we should present to the President an action plan to prevent [the Chilean Congress from ratifying] an Allende victory…and noted that the President may decide to move even if we do not recommend it.»

The document is one of a compendium of some 366 records released by the State Department as part of its Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS) series. The much-delayed collection, titled «Chile: 1969-1973,» addresses Richard Nixon’s and Kissinger’s efforts to destabilize the democratically elected Socialist government of Salvador Allende, and the U.S.-supported coup that brought General Augusto Pinochet to power in 1973. The controversial volume was edited by two former officials of the State Department’s Office of the Historian, James Siekmeier and James McElveen.

«This collection represents a substantive step forward in opening the historical record on U.S. intervention in Chile,» said Peter Kornbluh, who directs the Chile documentation project at the National Security Archive, and is the author of The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability. Kornbluh called on the State Department to continue to pursue the declassification of all relevant records on the U.S. role in Chile, including all records of CIA contacts with the Chilean military leading up to the September 11, 1973, coup; CIA funding for the truckers’ strike as part of the «destabilization» campaign, and CIA intelligence on the executions of two U.S. citizens in the wake of the military takeover, Charles Horman and Frank Teruggi.

The FRUS series is scheduled to release an electronic supplement of additional records in the fall, and to publish another volume,Chile, 1973-1976, next year. «The next volume could advance the historical record on CIA support for the Chilean secret police, DINA, CIA knowledge of Operation Condor, and Pinochet’s act of international terrorism in Washington D.C. that killed Orlando Letelier and Ronni Karpen Moffitt,» Kornbluh suggested.

In the aftermath of General Augusto Pinochet’s arrest in October 1998, the National Security Archive, along with victims of the Pinochet regime, led a campaign to press the Clinton administration to declassify the still-secret documents on Chile, the coup and the repression that followed. Some 23,000 NSC, State Department, Defense Department and CIA records were released. Some of those have been included in the new FRUS collection which contains a set of meeting memoranda of the «40 Committee» — an interagency group chaired by Henry Kissinger which oversaw covert operations in Chile, as well as dozens of formerly secret cables, including CIA communications.

The release of the records comes amidst renewed debate over the CIA role in supporting the military coup in Chile. The forthcoming issue of Foreign Affairs contains an article by former CIA operative Jack Devine, «What Really Happened in Chile: the CIA, the Coup Against Allende, and the Rise of Pinochet,» which reveals that intelligence he obtained on September 9, 1973, alerted President Nixon in advance to the timing of the coup. «I sent CIA headquarters in Langley a special type of top-secret cable known as a CRITIC, which takes priority over all other cables and goes directly to the highest levels of government. President Richard Nixon and other top U.S. policymakers received it immediately. ‘A coup attempt will be initiated on 11 September,’ the cable read.»

Nevertheless, Devine asserts that the CIA «did not plot with the Chilean military to overthrow Allende in 1973.»

However, according to a transcript of the first phone conversation between Kissinger and Nixon following the coup, when the President asked if «our hand» showed in the coup, Kissinger explained that «we didn’t do it,» in terms of direct participation in the military actions: «I mean we helped them,» Kissinger continued. «[deleted word] created the conditions as great as possible.»

The Kissinger-Nixon transcript is reproduced in the 2013 edition of The Pinochet File.

Read the FRUS volume here

 

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A finales de septiembre de 2010,  la Oficina del Historiador del Departamento de Estado de los Estados Unidos llevó a cabo una conferencia titulada The American Experience in Southeast Asia, 1946–1975. Esta conferencia contó con la participación de la Secretaria de Estado Hillary Clinton, del Embajador John Negroponte,  de Henry Kissinger y de un grupo de investigadores norteamericanos y vietnamitas que examinaron el tema de la guerra de Vietnam.  Una de las mesas estuvo dedicada a analizar cómo ven  la guerra los historiadores vietnamitas. Presidida por Ronald Spector (George Washington University), esta mesa contó con la participación el Embajador Tran Van Tung, Director del Centro de Investigación Histórica del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores de la República Socialista de Vietnam, quien presentó una ponencia titulada  “Vietnam – US Relations during the Vietnam War with Special Reference to the Role of Diplomacy and the Insights of some Turning Points”. El tercer miembro de la mesa lo fue  el Dr. Nguyen Manh Ha, Vicedirector,  del Instituto de Historia Militar del Ministerio de Defensa de la República Socialista de Vietnam, quien presentó un ponencia titualda “Early Identification and Knowledge of the Opponent: An Important Advantage for Securing Victory in the Vietnam War”. Los comentarios estuvieron a cargo del profesor Lien-Hang Nguyen de la Universidad de Kentucky.

Me pareció muy valioso que esta conferencia diera voz a los vietnamitas en el análisis de un conflicto que les costó muy caro, y por ello comparto aquí el video de la misma. Los interesados en la transcripción de las ponencias pueden ir aquí.

Norberto Barreto Velázquez, PhD

Lima, 7 de enero de 2012

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En 1971 fue fundado el equipo Cosmos de Nueva York con el objetivo de promover el fútbol en los Estados Unidos.  Con el apoyo económico de la Warner Bros,   los directivos del Cosmos buscaron contratar estrellas del fútbol internacional.  Una de esas figuras fue el astro brasileño Pelé, quien en 1975 rechazó una oferta del Cosmos de $4 millones por considerarla insuficiente y porque estaba preocupado por la posible  reacción de sus compatriotas.  En este momento entró en escena un personaje muy particular: Henry Kissinger. El entonces Secretario de Estado de los Estados Unidos  –un fanático de fútbol– le pidió al Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores de Brasil, Antônio Francisco Azeredo da Silveira,  que interviniera a favor del equipo norteamericano. Kissinger fue claro con los brasileños: la presencia de Pelé en el Cosmos   sería “un activo enorme para Brasil” que adelantaría las relaciones entre ambas naciones. Los funcionarios brasileños llevaron el mensaje de Kissinger  a Pelé, quien terminó firmando con el Cosmos, donde permaneció hasta 1977.

Este episodio de diplomacia futbolística forma parte del excelente libro Kissinger e o Brasil (Rio de Janeiro, Zahar) publicado por Matias Spektor en el año 2009.  Spektor posee un Doctorado en Relaciones Internacionales de la Universidad de Oxford y se desempeña como Coordinador del Centro  de Estudios sobre Relações Internacionais da Fundação Getulio Vargas (Rio de Janeiro).

El libro de Spektor examina el desarrollo, a partir de 1969, de un proceso de acercamiento entre los Estados Unidos y Brasil que buscaba “construir una sociedad diplomática”. De acuerdo con el autor, este acercamiento no funcionó, pues tomó diez años superar las diferencias profundas que separaban a norteamericanos y brasileños.

Los dos artífices de este proceso lo fueron Kissinger y  Silveira. El estadounidense buscaba socios  que tomaran parte de la carga y de la responsabilidad internacional de los Estados Unidos en el marco de la guerra fría. La idea de Kissinger partía de su visión realista de la política internacional y de sus cálculos del costo para su país de mantener el orden internacional. Entre los países que Kissinger consideraba potenciales socios regionales de los Estados Unidos estaban Irán, Indonesia, África del Sur y el Brasil. Estos socios regionales deberían ayudar a los norteamericanos a mantener el orden y limitar así el intervencionismo estadounidense en el Tercer Mundo. Claro está, ello no significaba que Kissinger renunciara al “derecho” de su país a defender sus intereses. Se trataba de un gesto simbólico, gestual, psicológico y semántico que no pretendía ni aspiraba a alterar el balance geopolítico.

Silveira y Kissinger

Los brasileños aceptaron con recelo la propuesta norteamericana de “parceria” y ello no significó un alineamiento con la política exterior estadounidense como el que, según Spektor, ocurrió después del golpe de 1964. Éstos querían aprovechar  la oferta de Kissinger para “fortalecer el régimen, acelerar el proyecto conservador de modernización y conseguir concesiones comerciales”. Sin embargo, el gobierno militar brasileño no dejo de desconfiar de la intenciones norteamericanas y buscó mantener su independencia  diplomática a toda costa.  A partir de 1974, los militares brasileños buscaron utilizar la retórica de los norteamericanos para “mitigar el poder norteamericano sobre el Brasil y convencer a las grandes potencias de que Brasil merecía  un estatus especial en las relaciones internacionales”. En otras palabras, los brasileños tenían su propia agenda y no estaban dispuesto a “representar los intereses americanos”. De esta forma quedan claros los límites del poder estadounidense y la capacidad  de negociación de algunos países periféricos. Países como Brasil, Indonesia e Irán estaban dispuestos a aceptar la sociedad que les fue propuesta sólo si los Estados Unidos aceptaban limitar sus ambiciones, concretaban alianzas estratégicas y, sobre todo, enfatizaban la igualdad y el respeto entre los socios. Según Spektor, Kissinger estuvo dispuesto a ello, pero chocó con otros sectores del “establishment” diplomático norteamericano y, en especial, con el Departamento de Estado.

Spektor comienza enfocando a los  padres del programa de asociación: Kissinger y Silveira, enfatizando sus grandes diferencias. Kissinger era un hombre importante, famoso, poderoso  y responsable de la política exterior de la principal potencia mundial. Durante su gestión como Asesor de Seguridad Nacional y luego como Secretario de Estado, Kissinger fue protagonista de las negociaciones que permitieron el “fin” de la guerra de Vietnam, del acercamiento histórico a China, de la aproximación a la Unión Soviética  que facilitó el detente, de la expulsión de los soviéticos del Medio Oriente y de la preeminencia norteamericana en esa zona, del apoyo a sangrientas dictaduras anticomunistas en América Latina, África y Asia, etc.

Silveira era un diplomático de carrera sin la fama y el glamour de Kissinger que como los demás miembros de su generación, buscaba una mayor participación de su país en el escenario mundial. Un admirador de los Estados Unidos, donde había vivido por una temporada, Silveira creía que el papel principal de la diplomacia  brasileña debía ser preservar su autonomía frente al poderos vecino del norte. Éste veía a los posibles designios estadounidense como una amenaza para la soberanía económica y política de Brasil.

Silveira llevó a cabo una diplomacia agresiva alterando la posición brasileña en varios asuntos: acabó con el apoyo a Israel para apoyar a los países árabes y reconoció gobiernos marxistas en el Tercer Mundo, a pesar de formar parte de un gobierno controlado por militares anticomunistas.

Matias Spektor

Spektor es muy claro: lo que permitió el acercamiento norteamericano-brasileño de la década de 1970 fue la relación que desarrollaron Kissinger y Silveira. Ellos  moldearon exitosamente la actitud de sus respectivos presidentes en temas de relaciones exteriores. Fueron ellos quienes en tiempos de crisis salieron al rescate del proyecto de acercamiento bilateral. El objetivo del libro es explicar por qué éstos escogieron ese camino, dejando claro que contrario a lo que se ha pensado, los años 1970 no fueron un periodo  “de distanciamiento natural y progresivo entre Brasil y los Estados Unidos.”

El libro también busca llenar un vacío historiográfico. Para Spektor, es claro que en la primera mitad de la década de 1970 hubo un “ambicioso proyecto de aproximación” que la historiografía brasileña ha ignorado.  Además, el autor está convencido de que el fin de ese proyecto no fue no natural, ni inevitable. Su estudio, definitivamente, arroja luz sobre el desarrollo de las relaciones brasileño-norteamericana en un periodo en que éstas se han visto afectadas por eventos como el golpe de estado en Honduras y el tema de la energía nuclear en Irán.

Dos comentarios finales. En primer lugar, destaca el trabajo de archivo realizado por Spektor. Su investigación es realmente impresionante, pues combina fuentes brasileñas y norteamericanas de forma magistral. Entre sus fuentes destacan: el Arquivo Histórico do Ministerio das Relações Exteriores, el General Records of the Deapratment of State, los National Archives and Record Administration (NARA), Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS), el Arquivo Azeredo da Silveira, el Centro de Pesquisa e Documentação de História Contemporânea do Brasil da Fundação Getulio Vargas, etc. Es necesario destacar que el autor no se limitó a consultar fuentes escritas, sino que también recurrió a la historia oral, entrevistando a personajes relacionados a su investigación, entre ellos, al propio Kissinger.

En segundo lugar, el trabajo de Spektor rescata la importancia del individuo en el estudios de las relaciones diplomáticas. Ante la importante influencia de nuevas corrientes como la historia cultural sobre los estudios diplomáticos, se tiende a pasar por alto el papel crucial que juegan los individuos en el juego de la diplomacia.  Si algo queda claro en el libro de Spektor es que el acercamiento brasileño-norteamericano de los años 1970 fue posible por la presencia de Kissinger en la Casa Blanca y de Silveira en el Palacio de Itamaraty. La relación directa y personal entre  ambos, su interés y apoyo, fue lo que posibilitó la “parceria”.

Norberto Barreto Velázquez, PhD

Lima, Perú, 25 de julio de 2010

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