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Argentine Revolution

Argentine Revolution (Spanish: Revolución Argentina) was the name given by its leaders to a military coup d'état which head the government of Argentina in June 1966 and began a period of military dictatorship by a junta from then until 1973.

1966 Argentine coup d'état
Part of the Cold War

Generals Juan Carlos Onganía, Roberto Marcelo Levingston and Alejandro Agustín Lanusse, the three successive dictators of the "Revolución Argentina".
Date28 June 1966
Location
Result Overthrow of the government of Arturo Umberto Illia. Suspension of the liberal democracy and establishment of military dictatorship.
Belligerents
Argentine Armed Forces Government of Argentina
Commanders and leaders
Arturo Umberto Illia

The Revolución Argentina and the "authoritarian-bureaucratic state" edit

The June 1966 coup established General Juan Carlos Onganía as de facto president, supported by several leaders of the General Confederation of Labour (CGT), including the general secretary Augusto Vandor.

This was followed by a series of military-appointed presidents and the implementation of liberal economic policies, supported by multinational companies, employers' federations, part of the more-or-less corrupt workers' movement, and the press.

While preceding military coups were aimed at establishing temporary, transitional juntas, the Revolución Argentina headed by Onganía aimed at establishing a new political and social order, opposed both to liberal democracy and to Communism, which would give the Armed Forces of Argentina a leading political and economic role. Political scientist Guillermo O'Donnell named this type of regime "authoritarian-bureaucratic state",[1] in reference to the Revolución Argentina, the 1964–1985 Brazilian military regime and Augusto Pinochet's regime (starting in 1973).

Onganía's rule (1966–70) edit

Onganía implemented corporatist policies, experimenting in particular in Córdoba under the governance of Carlos Caballero. The new Minister of Economy, Adalbert Krieger Vasena, decreed a wage freeze and a 40% devaluation, which weakened the economy – in particular the agricultural sector – and favored foreign capital. Vasena suspended collective labour conventions, reformed the "hydrocarbons law" which had established a partial monopoly of the Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales (YPF) state firm, and passed a law facilitating the eviction of tenants over their non-payment of domestic rent. Finally, the right to strike was suspended (Law 16,936) and several other laws passed reversing previous progressive labor legislation (reducing retirement age, etc.).

The workers' movement divided itself between Vandoristas, who supported a "Peronism without Perón" line (Augusto Vandor, leader of the General Confederation of Labour, declared that "to save Perón, one has to be against Perón") and advocated negotiation with the junta, alongside "Participationists" headed by José Alonso, and Peronists, who formed the General Confederation of Labour of the Argentines (CGTA) in 1968 and were opposed to any kind of participation with the military junta. Perón himself, from his exile in Francoist Spain, maintained a cautious and ambiguous line of opposition to the regime, rejecting both the endorsement and open confrontation.

Cultural and education policies edit

 
The Night of the Long Batons, an Onganía police action against University of Buenos Aires students and faculty came to be known.

Onganía ended university autonomy, which had been achieved by the University of 1918.[2]

He was responsible for the July 1966 La Noche de los bastones Largos ("The Night of the Long Truncheons"), where university autonomy was violated, in which he ordered police to invade the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires. They beat up and arrested students and professors. The university repression led to the exile of 301 university professors, among whom were Manuel Sadosky, Tulio Halperín Donghi, Sergio Bagú, and Risieri Frondizi.[3]

Onganía also ordered repression on all forms of "immoralism", proscribing miniskirts, long hair for young men, and all avant-garde artistic movements.[2] This moral campaign alienated the middle classes, who were massively present in universities.[2]

Change of direction of the Armed Forces edit

Towards the end of May 1968, General Julio Alsogaray dissented from Onganía, and rumors spread about a possible coup d'état, with Algosaray leading the opposition to Onganía. At the end of the month Onganía dismissed the leaders of the Armed Forces: Alejandro Lanusse replaced Julio Alsogaray, Pedro Gnavi replaced Benigno Varela, and Jorge Martínez Zuviría replaced Adolfo Alvarez.

Increasing protests edit

On 19 September 1968, two important events affected Revolutionary Peronism. John William Cooke, former personal delegate of Perón, an ideologist of the Peronist Left and friend of Fidel Castro, died from natural causes. On the same day a group of 13 men and one woman who aimed at establishing a foco in Tucumán Province, in order to head the resistance against the junta, was captured;[4] among them was Envar El Kadre, then a leader of the Peronist Youth.[4]

 
Images of the Cordobazo, May–June 1969

In 1969, the CGT de los Argentinos (led by Raimundo Ongaro) headed protest movements, in particular the Cordobazo, as well as other movements in Tucumán, Santa Fe and Rosario (Rosariazo). While Perón managed a reconciliation with Augusto Vandor, he followed, in particular through the voice of his delegate Jorge Paladino, a cautious line of opposition to the military junta, criticizing with moderation the neoliberal policies of the junta but waiting for discontent inside the government ("hay que desensillar hasta que aclare", said Perón, advocating patience). Thus, Onganía had an interview with 46 CGT delegates, among them Vandor, who agreed on "participationism" with the military junta, thus uniting themselves with the Nueva Corriente de Opinión headed by José Alonso and Rogelio Coria.

In December 1969, more than 20 priests, members of the Movement of Priests for the Third World (MSTM), marched on the Casa Rosada to present to Onganía a petition pleading him to abandon the eradication plan of villas miserias (shanty towns).[5]

The same year, the MSTM issued a declaration supporting Socialist revolutionary movements, which led the Catholic hierarchy, by the voice of Juan Carlos Aramburu, coadjutor archbishop of Buenos Aires, to proscribe priests from making political or social declarations.[6]

Various armed actions, headed by the Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación (FAL), composed by former members of the Revolutionary Communist Party, occurred in April 1969, leading to several arrests among FAL members. These were the first left-wing urban guerrilla actions in Argentina. Beside these isolated actions, the Cordobazo uprising of 1969, called forth by the CGT de los Argentinos, and its Cordobese leader, Agustín Tosco, prompted demonstrations in the entire country. The same year, the People's Revolutionary Army (ERP) was formed as the military branch of the Trotskyist Workers' Revolutionary Party, leading an armed struggle against the dictatorship.

Levingston's rule (1970–71) edit

Faced with increasing opposition, in particular following the Cordobazo, General Onganía was forced to resign by the military junta, composed of the chiefs of the Army, the Navy and the Air Force. He was replaced by General Roberto M. Levingston, who, far from calling free elections, decided to deepen the Revolución Argentina. Levingston expressed the nationalist-developmentist sector of the Armed Forces, and was supported by the most intransigent military elements. He named the radical economist Aldo Ferrer as Minister of Economy.

A coalition of political parties issued the statement known as La Hora del Pueblo, calling for free and democratic elections which would include the Justicialist Party. Under this pressure, Levingston was ousted by an internal coup headed by the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and strongman of the Revolución Argentina, General Alejandro Agustín Lanusse.

Lanusse's rule (1971–73) edit

The last of the military presidents de facto of this period, Alejandro Lanusse, was appointed in March 1971. He was as unpopular as his predecessors. His administration started building infrastructure projects (roads, bridges, etc.) necessary for the development of the country, without responding to popular demands concerning social and economic policies.

General Lanusse tried to respond to the Hora del Pueblo declaration by calling elections but excluding Peronists from them, in the so-called Gran Acuerdo Nacional (Great National Agreement). He nominated Arturo Mor Roig (Radical Civic Union) as Minister of Interior, who enjoyed the support of the Hora del pueblo coalition of parties, to supervise the coming elections.

There had been no elections since 1966, and armed struggle groups came into existence, such as the Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo (ERP, the armed wing of the Workers' Revolutionary Party, PRT), the Catholic nationalist Peronists Montoneros and the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias (FAR).

In August 1972, an attempt by several revolutionary members to escape from prison, headed by Mario Roberto Santucho (PRT), was followed by what became known as the Trelew massacre. Fernando Vaca Narvaja, Roberto Quieto, Enrique Gorriarán Merlo and Domingo Menna managed to complete their escape, but 19 others were re-captured. 16 of them, members of the Montoneros, the FAR, and the ERP, were killed, and 3 managed to survive. On the same night of August 22, 1972, the junta approved law 19,797, which proscribed any information concerning guerrilla organizations. The massacre led to demonstrations in various cities.

Finally, Lanusse lifted the proscription of the Justicialist Party, although he maintained it concerning Juan Perón by increasing the number of years of residency required of presidential candidates, thus excluding de facto Perón from the elections since he had been in exile since the 1955 Revolución Libertadora.

Henceforth, Perón decided to appoint as his candidate his personal secretary Héctor José Cámpora, a leftist Peronist, as representative of the FreJuLi (Frente Justicialista de Liberación, Justicialist Liberation Front), composed of the Justicialist Party and minor, allied parties. The FreJuLi's electoral slogan was "Cámpora in Government, Perón in power" (Cámpora al Gobierno, Perón al poder).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Guillermo O'Donnell, El Estado Burocrático Autoritario, (1982)
  2. ^ a b c Carmen Bernand, « D’une rive à l’autre », Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos, Materiales de seminarios, 2008 (Latin-Americanist Review published by the EHESS), Put on line on 15 June 2008. URL: http://nuevomundo.revues.org//index35983.html Accessed on 28 July 2008. (in French)
  3. ^ Marta Slemenson et al., Emigración de científicos argentinos. Organización de un éxodo a América Latina (?, Buenos Aires, 1970:118)
  4. ^ a b Oscar R. Anzorena, Tiempo de violencia y utopía (1966-1976), Editorial Contrapunto, 1987, p.48 (in Spanish)
  5. ^ Oscar Anzorena, 1987, p.49
  6. ^ Oscar Anzorena, 1987, p.53

References edit

  • Oscar R. Anzorena, Tiempo de violencia y utopía (1966-1976), Editorial Contrapunto, 1987

argentine, revolution, 1810, revolution, revolution, 1905, revolution, 1905, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, . For the 1810 revolution see May Revolution For the 1905 revolution see Argentine Revolution of 1905 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Argentine Revolution news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Argentine Revolution Spanish Revolucion Argentina was the name given by its leaders to a military coup d etat which head the government of Argentina in June 1966 and began a period of military dictatorship by a junta from then until 1973 1966 Argentine coup d etatPart of the Cold WarGenerals Juan Carlos Ongania Roberto Marcelo Levingston and Alejandro Agustin Lanusse the three successive dictators of the Revolucion Argentina Date28 June 1966LocationBuenos Aires ArgentinaResultOverthrow of the government of Arturo Umberto Illia Suspension of the liberal democracy and establishment of military dictatorship BelligerentsArgentine Armed ForcesGovernment of ArgentinaCommanders and leadersPascual Pistarini Adolfo Alvarez Benigno VarelaArturo Umberto Illia Contents 1 The Revolucion Argentina and the authoritarian bureaucratic state 2 Ongania s rule 1966 70 2 1 Cultural and education policies 2 2 Change of direction of the Armed Forces 2 3 Increasing protests 3 Levingston s rule 1970 71 4 Lanusse s rule 1971 73 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesThe Revolucion Argentina and the authoritarian bureaucratic state editThe June 1966 coup established General Juan Carlos Ongania as de facto president supported by several leaders of the General Confederation of Labour CGT including the general secretary Augusto Vandor This was followed by a series of military appointed presidents and the implementation of liberal economic policies supported by multinational companies employers federations part of the more or less corrupt workers movement and the press While preceding military coups were aimed at establishing temporary transitional juntas the Revolucion Argentina headed by Ongania aimed at establishing a new political and social order opposed both to liberal democracy and to Communism which would give the Armed Forces of Argentina a leading political and economic role Political scientist Guillermo O Donnell named this type of regime authoritarian bureaucratic state 1 in reference to the Revolucion Argentina the 1964 1985 Brazilian military regime and Augusto Pinochet s regime starting in 1973 Ongania s rule 1966 70 editOngania implemented corporatist policies experimenting in particular in Cordoba under the governance of Carlos Caballero The new Minister of Economy Adalbert Krieger Vasena decreed a wage freeze and a 40 devaluation which weakened the economy in particular the agricultural sector and favored foreign capital Vasena suspended collective labour conventions reformed the hydrocarbons law which had established a partial monopoly of the Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales YPF state firm and passed a law facilitating the eviction of tenants over their non payment of domestic rent Finally the right to strike was suspended Law 16 936 and several other laws passed reversing previous progressive labor legislation reducing retirement age etc The workers movement divided itself between Vandoristas who supported a Peronism without Peron line Augusto Vandor leader of the General Confederation of Labour declared that to save Peron one has to be against Peron and advocated negotiation with the junta alongside Participationists headed by Jose Alonso and Peronists who formed the General Confederation of Labour of the Argentines CGTA in 1968 and were opposed to any kind of participation with the military junta Peron himself from his exile in Francoist Spain maintained a cautious and ambiguous line of opposition to the regime rejecting both the endorsement and open confrontation Cultural and education policies edit nbsp The Night of the Long Batons an Ongania police action against University of Buenos Aires students and faculty came to be known Ongania ended university autonomy which had been achieved by the University of 1918 2 He was responsible for the July 1966 La Noche de los bastones Largos The Night of the Long Truncheons where university autonomy was violated in which he ordered police to invade the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Buenos Aires They beat up and arrested students and professors The university repression led to the exile of 301 university professors among whom were Manuel Sadosky Tulio Halperin Donghi Sergio Bagu and Risieri Frondizi 3 Ongania also ordered repression on all forms of immoralism proscribing miniskirts long hair for young men and all avant garde artistic movements 2 This moral campaign alienated the middle classes who were massively present in universities 2 Change of direction of the Armed Forces edit Towards the end of May 1968 General Julio Alsogaray dissented from Ongania and rumors spread about a possible coup d etat with Algosaray leading the opposition to Ongania At the end of the month Ongania dismissed the leaders of the Armed Forces Alejandro Lanusse replaced Julio Alsogaray Pedro Gnavi replaced Benigno Varela and Jorge Martinez Zuviria replaced Adolfo Alvarez Increasing protests edit On 19 September 1968 two important events affected Revolutionary Peronism John William Cooke former personal delegate of Peron an ideologist of the Peronist Left and friend of Fidel Castro died from natural causes On the same day a group of 13 men and one woman who aimed at establishing a foco in Tucuman Province in order to head the resistance against the junta was captured 4 among them was Envar El Kadre then a leader of the Peronist Youth 4 nbsp Images of the Cordobazo May June 1969In 1969 the CGT de los Argentinos led by Raimundo Ongaro headed protest movements in particular the Cordobazo as well as other movements in Tucuman Santa Fe and Rosario Rosariazo While Peron managed a reconciliation with Augusto Vandor he followed in particular through the voice of his delegate Jorge Paladino a cautious line of opposition to the military junta criticizing with moderation the neoliberal policies of the junta but waiting for discontent inside the government hay que desensillar hasta que aclare said Peron advocating patience Thus Ongania had an interview with 46 CGT delegates among them Vandor who agreed on participationism with the military junta thus uniting themselves with the Nueva Corriente de Opinion headed by Jose Alonso and Rogelio Coria In December 1969 more than 20 priests members of the Movement of Priests for the Third World MSTM marched on the Casa Rosada to present to Ongania a petition pleading him to abandon the eradication plan of villas miserias shanty towns 5 The same year the MSTM issued a declaration supporting Socialist revolutionary movements which led the Catholic hierarchy by the voice of Juan Carlos Aramburu coadjutor archbishop of Buenos Aires to proscribe priests from making political or social declarations 6 Various armed actions headed by the Fuerzas Armadas de Liberacion FAL composed by former members of the Revolutionary Communist Party occurred in April 1969 leading to several arrests among FAL members These were the first left wing urban guerrilla actions in Argentina Beside these isolated actions the Cordobazo uprising of 1969 called forth by the CGT de los Argentinos and its Cordobese leader Agustin Tosco prompted demonstrations in the entire country The same year the People s Revolutionary Army ERP was formed as the military branch of the Trotskyist Workers Revolutionary Party leading an armed struggle against the dictatorship Levingston s rule 1970 71 editFaced with increasing opposition in particular following the Cordobazo General Ongania was forced to resign by the military junta composed of the chiefs of the Army the Navy and the Air Force He was replaced by General Roberto M Levingston who far from calling free elections decided to deepen the Revolucion Argentina Levingston expressed the nationalist developmentist sector of the Armed Forces and was supported by the most intransigent military elements He named the radical economist Aldo Ferrer as Minister of Economy A coalition of political parties issued the statement known as La Hora del Pueblo calling for free and democratic elections which would include the Justicialist Party Under this pressure Levingston was ousted by an internal coup headed by the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces and strongman of the Revolucion Argentina General Alejandro Agustin Lanusse Lanusse s rule 1971 73 editThe last of the military presidents de facto of this period Alejandro Lanusse was appointed in March 1971 He was as unpopular as his predecessors His administration started building infrastructure projects roads bridges etc necessary for the development of the country without responding to popular demands concerning social and economic policies General Lanusse tried to respond to the Hora del Pueblo declaration by calling elections but excluding Peronists from them in the so called Gran Acuerdo Nacional Great National Agreement He nominated Arturo Mor Roig Radical Civic Union as Minister of Interior who enjoyed the support of the Hora del pueblo coalition of parties to supervise the coming elections There had been no elections since 1966 and armed struggle groups came into existence such as the Ejercito Revolucionario del Pueblo ERP the armed wing of the Workers Revolutionary Party PRT the Catholic nationalist Peronists Montoneros and the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias FAR In August 1972 an attempt by several revolutionary members to escape from prison headed by Mario Roberto Santucho PRT was followed by what became known as the Trelew massacre Fernando Vaca Narvaja Roberto Quieto Enrique Gorriaran Merlo and Domingo Menna managed to complete their escape but 19 others were re captured 16 of them members of the Montoneros the FAR and the ERP were killed and 3 managed to survive On the same night of August 22 1972 the junta approved law 19 797 which proscribed any information concerning guerrilla organizations The massacre led to demonstrations in various cities Finally Lanusse lifted the proscription of the Justicialist Party although he maintained it concerning Juan Peron by increasing the number of years of residency required of presidential candidates thus excluding de facto Peron from the elections since he had been in exile since the 1955 Revolucion Libertadora Henceforth Peron decided to appoint as his candidate his personal secretary Hector Jose Campora a leftist Peronist as representative of the FreJuLi Frente Justicialista de Liberacion Justicialist Liberation Front composed of the Justicialist Party and minor allied parties The FreJuLi s electoral slogan was Campora in Government Peron in power Campora al Gobierno Peron al poder See also editHistory of ArgentinaNotes edit Guillermo O Donnell El Estado Burocratico Autoritario 1982 a b c Carmen Bernand D une rive a l autre Nuevo Mundo Mundos Nuevos Materiales de seminarios 2008 Latin Americanist Review published by the EHESS Put on line on 15 June 2008 URL http nuevomundo revues org index35983 html Accessed on 28 July 2008 in French Marta Slemenson et al Emigracion de cientificos argentinos Organizacion de un exodo a America Latina Buenos Aires 1970 118 a b Oscar R Anzorena Tiempo de violencia y utopia 1966 1976 Editorial Contrapunto 1987 p 48 in Spanish Oscar Anzorena 1987 p 49 Oscar Anzorena 1987 p 53References editOscar R Anzorena Tiempo de violencia y utopia 1966 1976 Editorial Contrapunto 1987 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Argentine Revolution amp oldid 1191462249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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