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Guatemalan Revolution

The period in the history of Guatemala between the coups against Jorge Ubico in 1944 and Jacobo Árbenz in 1954 is known locally as the Revolution (Spanish: La Revolución). It has also been called the Ten Years of Spring, highlighting the peak years of representative democracy in Guatemala from 1930 until the end of the civil war in 1996. It saw the implementation of social, political, and especially agrarian reforms that were influential across Latin America.[1]

Guatemalan Revolution
DateOctober 1944 – June 1954
LocationGuatemala
Also known asThe Ten Years of Spring
Cause
MotiveLiberal democracy
Land reform
Outcome
  • Ruling junta resigns
  • First largely free presidential and parliamentary elections held in 1944. Juan José Arévalo elected president
  • Progressive social and agrarian/land reforms initiated, including Decree 900
  • Labor laws passed to increase worker rights, including a set of health and safety standards in workplaces, a standardized an eight-hour working day and 45-hour working week for non-plantation laborers, and bans on discrimination in salaries, and required plantation owners to construct primary schools for the children of their workers
  • Foreign policy shift to support anti-authoritarian movements such as the Caribbean Legion in other countries
  • Military coup attempt against the government in 1949 fails
  • Jacobo Árbenz elected president in 1950
  • CIA supports 1954 coup d'état via Operation PBFortune, which is successful
  • Guatemalan Civil War begins in 1960
    • Free and fair elections not held for roughly three decades

From the late 19th century until 1944, Guatemala was governed by a series of authoritarian rulers who sought to strengthen the economy by supporting the export of coffee. Between 1898 and 1920, Manuel Estrada Cabrera granted significant concessions to the United Fruit Company, an American corporation that traded in tropical fruit, and dispossessed many indigenous people of their communal lands. Under Jorge Ubico, who ruled as a dictator between 1931 and 1944, this process was intensified, with the institution of harsh labor regulations and a police state.[2]

In June 1944, a popular pro-democracy movement led by university students and labor organizations forced Ubico to resign. He appointed a three-person military junta to take his place, led by Federico Ponce Vaides. This junta continued Ubico's oppressive policies, until it was toppled in a military coup led by Jacobo Árbenz in October 1944, an event also known as the "October Revolution". The coup leaders formed a junta which swiftly called for open elections. These elections were won in a landslide by Juan José Arévalo, a progressive professor of philosophy who had become the face of the popular movement. He implemented a moderate program of social reform, including a widely successful literacy campaign and a largely free election process, although illiterate women were not given the vote and communist parties were banned.

Following the end of Arévalo's presidency in 1951, Jacobo Árbenz was elected to the presidency in a landslide. The progressive military leader of 1944 continued Arévalo's reforms, and began an ambitious land-reform program, known as Decree 900. Under it, the uncultivated portions of large land-holdings were expropriated in return for compensation, and redistributed to poverty-stricken agricultural laborers. Approximately 500,000 people benefited from the decree. The majority of them were indigenous people, whose forebears had been dispossessed after the Spanish invasion. Árbenz's policies ran afoul of the United Fruit Company, which lost some of its uncultivated land. The company lobbied the US government for the overthrow of Árbenz, and the US State Department responded by engineering a coup under the pretext that Árbenz was a communist. Carlos Castillo Armas took power at the head of a military junta, provoking the Guatemalan Civil War. The war lasted from 1960 to 1996, and saw the military commit genocide against the indigenous Maya peoples and widespread human rights violations against civilians.

Background Edit

Early 20th Century Edit

 
Manuel Estrada Cabrera, President of Guatemala from 1898 to 1920. Cabrera granted large concessions to the American United Fruit Company

Prior to the Spanish invasion in 1524, the population of Guatemala was almost exclusively Maya.[3] The Spanish conquest created a system of wealthy European landowners overseeing a labor force composed of slaves and bonded laborers. However, the community lands of the indigenous population remained in their control until the late 19th century.[3] At this point, rising global demand for coffee made its export a significant source of income for the government. As a result, the state supported the coffee growers by passing legislation that took land away from the Indian population, as well as relaxing labor laws so that bonded labor could be used on the plantations.[3][4]

The US-based United Fruit Company (UFC) was one of many foreign companies that acquired large tracts of both state land and indigenous land.[4] Manuel Estrada Cabrera, who was president of Guatemala from 1898 to 1920, permitted limited unionization in rural Guatemala, but also made further concessions to the UFC.[3][5] In 1922, the Communist Party of Guatemala was created, and became a significant influence among urban laborers; however, it had little reach among the rural and Indian populations.[4] In 1929, the Great Depression led to the collapse of the economy and a rise in unemployment, leading to unrest among workers and labourers. Fearing the possibility of a revolution, the landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico y Castañeda, who had built a reputation for ruthlessness and efficiency as a provincial governor. Ubico won the election that followed in 1931, in which he was the only candidate.[3][4]

Dictatorship of Jorge Ubico Edit

 
Jorge Ubico, the dictator of Guatemala from 1931 to 1944. He passed laws allowing landowners to use lethal force to defend their property

Ubico had made statements supporting the labor movement when campaigning for the presidency, but after his election his policy quickly became authoritarian. He abolished the system of debt peonage, and replaced it with a vagrancy law, which required all men of working age who did not own land to perform a minimum of 100 days of hard labor.[6] In addition, the state made use of unpaid Indian labor to work on public infrastructure like roads and railroads. Ubico also froze wages at very low levels, and passed a law allowing land-owners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property,[6] an action described by historians as legalizing murder.[7] He greatly strengthened the police force, turning it into one of the most efficient and ruthless in Latin America.[8] The police were given greater authority to shoot and imprison people suspected of breaking the labor laws. The result of these laws was to create tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers.[2] Ubico was highly contemptuous of the country's indigenous people, once stating that they resembled donkeys.[9]

Ubico had great admiration for the fascist leaders of Europe, such as Francisco Franco and Benito Mussolini.[10] However, he saw the United States as an ally against the supposed communist threat of Mexico. He made a concerted effort to gain American support; when the US declared war on Germany and Japan in 1941, Ubico followed suit, and acting on American instructions arrested all people of German descent in Guatemala.[11] He permitted the US to establish an air base in Guatemala, with the stated aim of protecting the Panama Canal.[12] Like his predecessors, he made large concessions to the United Fruit Company, granting it 200,000 hectares (490,000 acres) hectares of public land in exchange for a promise to build a port. He later released the company from this obligation as well, citing the economic crisis.[13] Since its entry into Guatemala, the UFC had expanded its land-holdings by displacing the peasantry and converting their farmland into banana plantations. This process accelerated under Ubico, whose government did nothing to stop it.[14]

June 1944 general strike Edit

The onset of World War II increased economic unrest in Guatemala. Ubico responded by cracking down more fiercely on any form of protest or dissent.[15] In 1944, popular revolt broke out in neighboring El Salvador, which briefly toppled dictator Maximiliano Hernández Martínez. However, he quickly returned to power, leading to a flood of exiled El Salvadorian revolutionaries moving to Guatemala.[16] This coincided with a series of protests at the university in Guatemala City. Ubico responded by suspending the constitution on 22 June 1944.[15][16][17] The protesters, who by this point included many middle-class members in addition to students and workers, called for a general strike,[18] and presented an ultimatum to Ubico the next day, demanding the reinstatement of the constitution. They also presented him a petition signed by 311 of the most prominent Guatemalan citizens. Ubico sent the police to disrupt the protests by firing on them, and declared martial law.[19][20][17]

Ubico resigns and appoints an interim government Edit

Clashes between protesters and the military continued for a week, during which the revolt gained momentum. At the end of June, Ubico submitted his resignation to the National Assembly, leading to huge celebrations in the streets.[21]

The resignation of Ubico did not restore democracy. Ubico appointed three generals, Federico Ponce Vaides, Eduardo Villagrán Ariza, and Buenaventura Pineda, to a junta which would lead the provisional government. A few days later, Ponce Vaides persuaded the congress to appoint him interim president.[22][23] Ponce pledged to hold free elections soon, while at the same time suppressing the protests.[24] Press freedom was suspended,[24] arbitrary detentions continued, and memorial services for slain revolutionaries were prohibited.[23] However, the protests had grown to the point where the government could not stamp them out, and rural areas also began organizing against the dictatorship. The government began using the police to intimidate the indigenous population to keep the junta in power through the forthcoming election. This resulted in growing support for an armed revolution among some sections of the populace.[23] By now, the army was disillusioned with the junta, and progressives within it had begun to plot a coup.[25]

On 1 October 1944, Alejandro Cordova, the editor of El Imparcial, the main opposition newspaper, was assassinated. This led to the military coup plotters reaching out to the leaders of the protests, in an attempt to turn the coup into a popular uprising. Ponce Vaides announced elections, but the pro-democracy forces denounced them as a fraud, citing his attempts to rig them.[25] Ponce Vaides sought to stabilize his regime by playing on inter-racial tension within the Guatemalan population. The most vocal support for the revolution had come from the Ladinos, or people of mixed racial or Spanish descent. Ponce Vaides sought to exploit their fear of the Indians by paying thousands of indigenous peasants to march in Guatemala City in his support, and promising them land if they supported the Liberal party that Ubico had begun as a front for the dictatorship.[26]

October revolution Edit

By mid-October, several different plans to overthrow the junta had been set in motion by various factions of the pro-democracy movement, including teachers, students, and progressive factions of the army. On 19 October, the government learned of one of these conspiracies.[25]

That same day, a small group of army officers launched a coup, led by Francisco Javier Arana and Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán.[27] Although the coup had initially been plotted by Árbenz and Major Aldana Sandoval, Sandoval had prevailed upon Arana to join them;[28] however, Sandoval himself did not participate in the coup attempt, and was described as having "lost his nerve".[28] They were joined the next day by other factions of the army and the civilian population. Initially, the battle went against the revolutionaries, but after an appeal for support their ranks were swelled by unionists and students, and they eventually subdued the police and army factions loyal to Ponce Vaides. On October 20, the next day, Ponce Vaides surrendered unconditionally.[25]

 
Jacobo Árbenz, Jorge Toriello, and Francisco Arana, who oversaw the transition to a civilian government after the October Revolution

Ponce Vaides was allowed to leave the country safely, as was Ubico himself. The military junta was replaced by another three-person junta consisting of Árbenz, Arana, and an upper-class youth named Jorge Toriello, who had played a significant role in the protests. Although Arana had come to the military conspiracy relatively late, his defection had brought the powerful Guardia de Honor (Honor Guard) over to the revolutionaries, and for this crucial role he was rewarded with a place on the junta. The junta promised free and open elections to the presidency and the congress, as well as for a constituent assembly.[29]

The resignation of Ponce Vaides and the creation of the junta has been considered by scholars to be the beginning of the Guatemalan Revolution.[29] However, the revolutionary junta did not immediately threaten the interests of the landed elite. Two days after Ponce Vaides' resignation, a violent protest erupted at Patzicía, a small Indian hamlet. The junta responded with swift brutality, silencing the protest. The dead civilians included women and children.[30]

Election of Arévalo Edit

Juan José Arévalo Bermejo was born into a middle-class family in 1904. He became a primary school teacher for a brief while, and then earned a scholarship to a university in Argentina, where he earned a doctorate in the philosophy of education. He returned to Guatemala in 1934, and sought a position in the Ministry of Education.[31][32] However, he was denied the position he wished for, and felt uncomfortable under the dictatorship of Ubico. He left the country and held a faculty position in Argentina until 1944, when he returned to Guatemala.[31] In July 1944 the Renovación Nacional, the teachers' party, had been formed, and Arévalo was named its candidate. In an unexpected surge of support, his candidacy was endorsed by many of the leading organizations among the protesters, including the student federation. His lack of connection to the dictatorship and his academic background both worked in his favor among the students and teachers. At the same time, the fact that he had chosen to go into exile in conservative Argentina rather than revolutionary Mexico reassured landowners worried about socialist or communist reform.[33]

The subsequent elections took place in December 1944, and were broadly considered free and fair,[34] although only literate men were given the vote.[35] Unlike in similar historical situations, none of the junta members stood for election.[34] Arévalo's closest challenger was Adrián Recinos, whose campaign included a number of individuals identified with the Ubico regime.[34] The ballots were tallied on 19 December 1944, and Arévalo won in a landslide, receiving more than four times as many ballots as the other candidates combined.[34]

Presidency of Arévalo Edit

Arévalo took office on 15 March 1945, inheriting a country with numerous social and economic issues. Despite Ubico's policy of using unpaid labor to build public roads, internal transport was severely inadequate. 70% of the population was illiterate, and malnutrition and poor health were widespread. The wealthiest 2% of landowners owned nearly three quarters of agricultural land, and as a result less than 1% was cultivated. The indigenous peasants either had no land, or had far too little to sustain themselves. Three quarters of the labor force were in agriculture, and industry was essentially nonexistent.[36]

Ideology Edit

Arévalo identified his ideology as "spiritual socialism". He held the belief that the only way to alleviate the backwardness of most Guatemalans was through a paternalistic government. He was strongly opposed to classical Marxism, and believed in a capitalist society that was regulated to ensure that its benefits went to the entire population.[37] Arévalo's ideology was reflected in the new constitution that the Guatemalan assembly ratified soon after his inauguration, which was one of the most progressive in Latin America. It mandated suffrage for all but illiterate women, a decentralization of power, and provisions for a multiparty system. Communist parties were, however, forbidden.[37] The constitution and Arévalo's socialist ideology became the basis for much of the reform enacted under Arévalo and (later) Jacobo Árbenz. Although the US government would later portray the ideology of the revolution as radical communist, it did not in fact represent a major shift leftward, and was staunchly anti-communist.[37] Arévalo's economic vision for the country was centered around private enterprise.[38]

Labor movement Edit

The revolution in 1944 left many of the biggest opponents of organized labor unaffected, such as the landed elite and the United Fruit Company. The revolution, and election of Arévalo, nonetheless marked a significant shift in the fortunes of labor unions.[39] The protests of 1944 strengthened the labor movement to the point where Ponce Vaides stopped enforcing the repressive vagrancy law, which was abolished in the 1945 constitution. On 1 May 1945, Arévalo made a speech celebrating organized labor, to a tremendously positive reception. The freedom of press guaranteed in the new constitution also drew much attention to the brutal working conditions in Guatemala City.[39] From the beginning, the new unions that were formed fell into two camps, those that were communist and those that were not. The repressive policies of the Ubico government had driven both factions underground, but they re-emerged after the revolution.[40]

The communist movement was also strengthened by the release of those of its leaders who had been imprisoned by Ubico. Among them were Miguel Mármol, Víctor Manuel Gutiérrez, and Graciela García, the latter unusual for being a woman in a movement that women were discouraged from participating in. The communists began to organize in the capital, and established a school for workers, known as the Escuela Claridad, or the Clarity School, which taught reading, writing, and also helped organize unions. Six months after the school was established, President Arévalo closed the school down, and deported all the leaders of the movement who were not Guatemalan. However, the communist movement survived, mostly by its dominance of the teacher's union.[41]

Arévalo's response toward the non-communist unions was mixed. In 1945, he criminalized all rural labor unions in workplaces with fewer than 500 workers, which included most plantations.[41] One of the few unions big enough to survive this law was of the banana workers employed by the UFC. In 1946 this union organized a strike, which provoked Arévalo into outlawing all strikes until a new labor code was passed. This led to efforts on the part of employers to stall the labor code, as well as to exploit workers as far as possible before it was passed.[41] The unions were also damaged when the US government persuaded the American Federation of Labor to found the Organización Regional Internacional del Trabajo (ORIT), a union that took a strongly anti-communist stance.[41]

Despite the powerful opposition, by 1947 the labor unions had managed to organize enough support to force the congress to pass a new labor code. This law was revolutionary in many ways; it forbade discrimination in salary levels on the basis of "age, race, sex, nationality, religious beliefs, or political affiliation".[42] It created a set of health and safety standards in the workplace, and standardized an eight-hour working day and a 45-hour working week, although the congress succumbed to pressure from the plantation lobby and exempted plantations from this provision. The code also required plantation owners to construct primary schools for the children of their workers, and expressed a general commitment to "dignifying" the position of workers.[42] Although many of these provisions were never enforced, the creation of administrative mechanisms for this law in 1948 allowed several of its provisions to be systematically enforced.[42] The law as a whole had a huge positive impact on worker rights in the country, including raising the average wages by a factor of three or more.[43][42]

Foreign relations Edit

The Arévalo government attempted to support democratic ideals abroad as well. One of Arévalo's first actions was to break diplomatic relations with the government of Spain under dictator Francisco Franco. At two inter-American conferences in the year after his election, Arévalo recommended that the republics in Latin America not recognize and support authoritarian regimes. This initiative was defeated by the dictatorships supported by the United States, such as the Somoza regime in Nicaragua. In response, Arévalo broke off diplomatic ties with the Nicaraguan government and with the government of Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic.[44] Frustrated by the lack of results from working with the other Latin American governments, Arévalo began to support the Caribbean Legion, which sought to replace dictatorships with democracies across Latin America, by force if necessary. This led to the administration being labelled as communist by the dictatorial governments in the region.[45]

The Arévalo government also floated the idea of a Central American Federation, as being the only way that a democratic government could survive in the region. He approached several leaders of democratic Central American countries, but was rejected by all except Castañeda Castro, the president of El Salvador. The two leaders began talks to build a union, and set up several commissions to look into the issue. In late 1945 they announced the formation of the union, but the formalization of the process got delayed by internal troubles in both countries, and in 1948 the Castro government was toppled in a military coup led by Óscar Osorio.[46]

1949 coup attempt Edit

As the highest-ranking military officer in the October Revolution, Francisco Arana had led the three-man junta that formed the interim government after the coup. He was opposed to handing over power to a civilian government, first seeking to postpone the 1944 election, and then to annul it. In return for allowing Arévalo to become president, Arana was granted the newly created position of "chief of the armed forces", ranked above the minister of defense. The position had a six-year term, and controlled all military appointments. In December 1945, Arévalo was involved in a motoring accident which left him seriously injured. Fearing a military coup, the leaders of the Revolutionary Action Party (PAR) made a pact with Arana, in which the party agreed to support his candidacy in the 1950 elections in return for a promise to refrain from a coup.[47]

Arana's support began to be solicited by the landed elite, who felt threatened by Arévalo's reforms. Arana, who was not initially inclined to get involved with politics, began to make occasional statements against the government. In the 1948 parliamentary election, he backed a number of opposition candidates, all of whom were defeated. By 1949 the National Renovation Party and the PAR were both openly hostile to Arana, while a small fragment of the Popular Liberation Front split off to support him. The leftist parties decided to back Árbenz instead, as they believed that only a military officer could defeat Arana.[48]

On 16 July 1949, Arana delivered an ultimatum to Arévalo, demanding the expulsion of all of Árbenz's supporters from the cabinet and the military; he threatened a coup if his demands were not met. Arévalo informed Árbenz and other progressive leaders of the ultimatum, who all agreed that Arana should be exiled. Two days later, Arévalo and Arana had another meeting; on the way back, Arana's convoy was intercepted by a small force led by Árbenz. A shootout ensued, killing three men, including Arana. Arana's supporters in the military rose up in revolt, but they were leaderless, and by the next day the rebels asked for negotiations. The coup attempt left approximately 150 dead and 200 wounded. Many of Arana's supporters, including Carlos Castillo Armas, were exiled. The details of the incident were not made public.[49]

Presidency of Árbenz Edit

Election Edit

Árbenz's role as defense minister had already made him a strong candidate for the presidency, and his firm support of the government during the 1949 uprising further increased his prestige. In 1950, the economically moderate Partido de Integridad Nacional (PIN) announced that Árbenz would be its presidential candidate in the upcoming election. This announcement was quickly followed by endorsements from most parties on the left, including the influential PAR, as well as from labor unions.[50] Árbenz had only a couple of significant challengers in the election, in a field of ten candidates.[50] One of these was Jorge García Granados, who was supported by some members of the upper-middle class who felt the revolution had gone too far. Another was Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, who had been a general under Ubico, and who had the support of the hardline opponents of the revolution. During his campaign, Árbenz promised to continue and expand the reforms begun under Arévalo.[51] The election was held on 15 November 1950, and Árbenz won more than 60% of the vote, in elections that were free and fair with the exception of the disenfranchisement of illiterate female voters. Árbenz was inaugurated as president on 15 March 1951.[50]

Árbenz's personal background Edit

Árbenz was born in 1913 into a middle-class family of Swiss heritage.[52] In 1935 he had graduated from the Escuela Politécnica, Guatemala's national military academy, with excellent grades, and had subsequently become an officer in the Guatemalan army under Ubico.[53] As an officer, Árbenz himself had been required to escort chain-gangs of prisoners. This process had radicalized him, and he had begun to form links to the labor movement. In 1938 he had met and married María Villanova, who was also interested in social reform, and who became a significant influence on him and a national figure in her own right. Another strong influence on him was José Manuel Fortuny, a well-known Guatemalan communist, who was one of his main advisers during his government.[52][53] In 1944, disgusted with Ubico's authoritarian regime, he and his fellow officers had begun plotting against the government. When Ubico resigned in 1944, Árbenz had witnessed Ponce Vaides intimidate the congress into naming him president. Highly offended by this, Árbenz plotted against Ponce Vaides, and was one of the military leaders of the coup that toppled him, in addition to having been one of the few officers in the revolution who had formed and maintained connections to the popular civilian movement.[52]

Agrarian reform Edit

The biggest component of Árbenz's project of modernization was his agrarian reform bill.[54] Árbenz drafted the bill himself with the help of advisers that included some leaders of the communist party as well as non-communist economists.[55] He also sought advice from numerous economists from across Latin America.[54] The bill was passed by the National Assembly on 17 June 1952, and the program went into effect immediately. The focus of the program was on transferring uncultivated land from large landowners to their poverty stricken laborers, who would then be able to begin a viable farm of their own.[54] Árbenz was also motivated to pass the bill because he needed to generate capital for his public infrastructure projects within the country. At the behest of the United States, the World Bank had refused to grant Guatemala a loan in 1951, which made the shortage of capital more acute.[56]

The official title of the agrarian reform bill was Decree 900. It expropriated all uncultivated land from landholdings that were larger than 673 acres (272 ha). If the estates were between 672 acres (272 ha) and 224 acres (91 ha) in size, uncultivated land was expropriated only if less than two-thirds of it was in use.[56] The owners were compensated with government bonds, the value of which was equal to that of the land expropriated. The value of the land itself was the value that the owners had declared in their tax returns in 1952.[56] The redistribution was organized by local committees that included representatives from the landowners, the laborers, and the government.[56] Of the nearly 350,000 private land-holdings, only 1710 were affected by expropriation. The law itself was cast in a moderate capitalist framework; however, it was implemented with great speed, which resulted in occasional arbitrary land seizures. There was also some violence, directed at land-owners, as well as at peasants that had minor landholdings of their own.[56]

By June 1954, 1.4 million acres of land had been expropriated and distributed. Approximately 500,000 individuals, or one-sixth of the population, had received land by this point.[56] The decree also included provision of financial credit to the people who received the land. The National Agrarian Bank (Banco Nacional Agrario, or BNA) was created on 7 July 1953, and by June 1954 it had disbursed more than $9 million in small loans. 53,829 applicants received an average of 225 US dollars, which was twice as much as the Guatemalan per capita income.[56] The BNA developed a reputation for being a highly efficient government bureaucracy, and the United States government, Árbenz's biggest detractor, did not have anything negative to say about it.[56] The loans had a high repayment rate, and of the $3,371,185 handed out between March and November 1953, $3,049,092 had been repaid by June 1954.[56] The law also included provisions for nationalization of roads that passed through redistributed land, which greatly increased the connectivity of rural communities.[56]

Contrary to the predictions made by the detractors of the government, the law resulted in a slight increase in Guatemalan agricultural productivity, and to an increase in cultivated area. Purchases of farm machinery also increased.[56] Overall, the law resulted in a significant improvement in living standards for many thousands of peasant families, the majority of whom were indigenous people.[56] Historian Piero Gleijeses stated that the injustices corrected by the law were far greater than the injustice of the relatively few arbitrary land seizures.[56] Historian Greg Grandin stated that the law was flawed in many respects; among other things, it was too cautious and deferential to the planters, and it created communal divisions among peasants. Nonetheless, it represented a fundamental power shift in favor of those that had been marginalized before then.[57]

United Fruit Company Edit

History Edit

The United Fruit Company had been formed in 1899 by the merger of two large American corporations.[58] The new company had major holdings of land and railroads across Central America, which it used to support its business of exporting bananas.[59] In 1900 it was already the world's largest exporter of bananas.[60] By 1930 it had an operating capital of US$215 million and had been the largest landowner and employer in Guatemala for several years.[61] Under Manuel Estrada Cabrera and other Guatemalan presidents, the company obtained a series of concessions in the country that allowed it to massively expand its business. These concessions frequently came at the cost of tax revenue for the Guatemalan government.[60] The company supported Jorge Ubico in the leadership struggle that occurred from 1930 to 1932, and upon assuming power, Ubico expressed willingness to create a new contract with it. This new contract was immensely favorable to the company. It included a 99-year lease to massive tracts of land, exemptions from virtually all taxes, and a guarantee that no other company would receive any competing contract. Under Ubico, the company paid virtually no taxes, which hurt the Guatemalan government's ability to deal with the effects of the Great Depression.[60] Ubico asked the company to pay its workers only 50 cents a day, to prevent other workers from demanding higher wages.[61] The company also virtually owned Puerto Barrios, Guatemala's only port to the Atlantic Ocean, allowing the company to make profits from the flow of goods through the port.[61] By 1950, the company's annual profits were US$65 million, twice the revenue of the Guatemalan government.[62]

Impact of the revolution Edit

Due to its long association with Ubico's government, the United Fruit Company (UFC) was seen as an impediment to progress by Guatemalan revolutionaries after 1944. This image was worsened by the company's discriminatory policies towards its colored workers.[62][63] Thanks to its position as the country's largest landowner and employer, the reforms of Arévalo's government affected the UFC more than other companies. Among other things, the labor code passed by the government allowed its workers to strike when their demands for higher wages and job security were not met. The company saw itself as being specifically targeted by the reforms, and refused to negotiate with the numerous sets of strikers, despite frequently being in violation of the new laws.[64] The company's labor troubles were compounded in 1952 when Jacobo Árbenz passed Decree 900, the agrarian reform law. Of the 550,000 acres (220,000 ha) that the company owned, 15% were being cultivated; the rest of the land, which was idle, came under the scope of the agrarian reform law.[64]

Lobbying efforts Edit

The United Fruit Company responded with intensive lobbying of members of the United States government, leading many US congressmen and senators to criticize the Guatemalan government for not protecting the interests of the company.[65] The Guatemalan government responded by saying that the company was the main obstacle to progress in the country. American historians observed that "To the Guatemalans it appeared that their country was being mercilessly exploited by foreign interests which took huge profits without making any contributions to the nation's welfare."[65] In 1953, 200,000 acres (81,000 ha) of uncultivated land was expropriated by the government, which offered the company compensation at the rate of 2.99 US dollars to the acre, twice what the company had paid when it bought the property.[65] More expropriation occurred soon after, bringing the total to over 400,000 acres (160,000 ha); the government offered compensation to the company at the rate at which the UFC had valued its own property for tax purposes.[64] This resulted in further lobbying in Washington, particularly through Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who had close ties to the company.[65] The company had begun a public relations campaign to discredit the Guatemalan government; it hired public relations expert Edward Bernays, who ran a concerted effort to portray the company as the victim of the Guatemalan government for several years.[66] The company stepped up its efforts after Dwight Eisenhower had been elected in 1952. These included commissioning a research study on Guatemala from a firm known to be hawkish, which produced a 235-page report that was highly critical of the Guatemalan government.[67] Historians have stated that the report was full of "exaggerations, scurrilous descriptions and bizarre historical theories".[67] The report nonetheless had a significant impact on the Congressmen that it was sent to. Overall, the company spent over a half-million dollars to influence both lawmakers and members of the public in the US that the Guatemalan government needed to be overthrown.[67]

CIA instigated coup d'état Edit

Political motivations Edit

In addition to the lobbying of the United Fruit Company, several other factors also led the United States to launch the coup that toppled Árbenz in 1954. During the years of the Guatemalan Revolution, military coups occurred in several other Central American countries that brought firmly anti-communist governments to power. Army officer Major Oscar Osorio won staged elections in El Salvador in 1950, Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista took power in 1952.[68] Honduras, where the land-holdings of the United Fruit Company were the most extensive, had been ruled by an anti-communist government sympathetic to the United States since 1932. These developments created tension between the other governments and Árbenz, which was exacerbated by Arévalo's support for the Caribbean Legion.[68] This support also worried the United States and the newly formed Central Intelligence Agency. According to US historian Richard Immerman, during the beginning of the Cold War, the US and the CIA tended to assume that everybody who opposed it was a communist. Thus, despite Arévalo's ban of the communist party, important figures in the US government were already predisposed to believe that the revolutionary government had been infiltrated by communists, and was a danger to the US.[69] During the years of the revolution, several reports and memoranda were circulated amongst US government agencies that furthered this belief.[69]

Operation PBFortune Edit

Although the administration of Harry Truman had become convinced that the Guatemalan government had been penetrated by communists, it relied on purely diplomatic and economic means to try and reduce the communist influence, at least until the end of its term.[70] The United States had refused to sell arms to the Guatemalan government after 1944; in 1951 it began to block weapons purchases by Guatemala from other countries. In 1952 Truman became sufficiently convinced of the threat posed by Árbenz to start planning a covert overthrow, titled Operation PBFortune.[71]

The plan had originally been suggested by the US-supported dictator of Nicaragua, Anastasio Somoza García, who said that if he were given weapons, he could overthrow the Guatemalan government. Truman gave the CIA permission to go ahead with the plan, without informing the state department.[71] The CIA placed a shipment of weapons on a vessel owned by the United Fruit Company, and the operation was paid for by Rafael Trujillo and Marcos Pérez Jiménez, the right-wing anti-communist dictators of the Dominican Republic and Venezuela, respectively.[71][72] The operation was to be led by Carlos Castillo Armas.[72] However, the US state department discovered the conspiracy, and secretary of state Dean Acheson persuaded Truman to abort the plan.[71][72]

Operation PBSuccess Edit

 
John Foster Dulles and US President Dwight Eisenhower

In November 1952, Dwight Eisenhower was elected president of the US. Eisenhower's campaign had included a pledge for a more active anti-communist policy. Several figures in his administration, including Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother and CIA director Allen Dulles had close ties to the United Fruit Company. Both of these factors made Eisenhower predisposed to supporting the overthrow of Árbenz.[73]

The CIA operation to overthrow Jacobo Árbenz, code-named Operation PBSuccess, was authorized by Eisenhower in August 1953.[74] The operation was granted a budget of 2.7 million dollars for "psychological warfare and political action".[74] The total budget has been estimated at between 5 and 7 million dollars, and the planning employed over 100 CIA agents.[75] The CIA planning included drawing up lists of people within Árbenz's government to be assassinated if the coup were to be carried out. Manuals of assassination techniques were compiled, and lists were also made of people whom the junta would dispose of.[74] After considering several candidates to lead the coup, including Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, the CIA settled on Carlos Castillo Armas.[75] The US state department also embarked on a campaign to ensure that other countries would not sympathize with the Guatemalan government, by linking it to communism and the Soviet Union.[76] By 1954 Árbenz had become desperate for weapons, and decided to acquire them secretly from Czechoslovakia, which would have been the first time that a Soviet bloc country shipped weapons to the Americas.[77][78] The shipment of these weapons acted as the final spur for the CIA to launch its coup.[78]

Invasion Edit

On 18 June 1954, Castillo Armas led a convoy of trucks carrying 480 men across the border from Honduras into Guatemala. The weapons had come from the CIA, which had also trained the men in camps in Nicaragua and Honduras.[79][80]

Since his army was badly outnumbered by the Guatemalan army, the CIA plan required Castillo Armas to camp within the Guatemalan border, while it mounted a psychological campaign to convince the Guatemalan people and government that Castillo's victory was a fait accompli. This campaign included using Catholic priests to give anti-communist sermons, strafing several towns using CIA aircraft, and placing a naval blockade around the country.[79][80] It also involved dropping leaflets by airplane through the country, and carrying out a radio broadcast entitled "The Voice of Liberation" which announced that Guatemalan exiles led by Castillo Armas were shortly about to liberate the country.[79]

The military force led by Castillo Armas attempted to make forays towards the towns of Zacapa and Puerto Barrios; however, these were beaten back by the Guatemalan army.[80] The propaganda broadcast by the CIA had far more effect; it succeeded in leading a Guatemalan pilot to defect, which led to Árbenz grounding the entire air force, fearing its defection.[79] The CIA also used its planes, flown by American pilots, to bomb Guatemalan towns for psychological effect.[79] When the old planes used by the invasion force were found to be inadequate, the CIA persuaded Eisenhower to authorize the use of two additional planes.[80]

Guatemala made an appeal to the United Nations, but the US vetoed an investigation into the incident by the Security Council, stating that it was an internal matter in Guatemala.[81][82] On 25 June, a CIA plane bombed Guatemala City, destroying the government's main oil reserves. Frightened by this, Árbenz ordered the army to distribute weapons to local peasants and workers.[83] The army refused to do this, instead demanding that Árbenz either resign or come to terms with Castillo Armas.[83][82]

Knowing that he could not fight on without the support of the army, Jacobo Árbenz resigned on 27 June 1954, handing over power to Colonel Carlos Enrique Diaz.[83][82] US ambassador John Peurifoy then mediated negotiations held in El Salvador between the army leadership and Castillo Armas which led to Castillo being included in the ruling military junta on 7 July 1954, and was named provisional president a few days later.[83] The US recognized the new government on 13 July.[84] Elections were held in early October, from which all political parties were barred from participating, and Castillo Armas was the only candidate, winning the election with 99% of the vote.[83][85] Among the outcomes of the meeting in El Salvador was a planned new constitution, which would roll back most of the progressive reform brought by the revolution.[82]

Aftermath Edit

 
Ixil Maya carrying exhumed bodies of their relatives killed in the Guatemalan Civil War

Following the coup, hundreds of peasant leaders were rounded up and executed. Historian Greg Grandin has stated that "There is general consensus today among academics and Guatemalan intellectuals that 1954 signaled the beginning of what would become the most repressive state in the hemisphere".[86] Following the coup and the establishment of the military dictatorship, a series of leftist insurgencies began in the countryside, frequently with a large degree of popular support, which triggered the Guatemalan Civil War that lasted until 1996. The largest of these movements was led by the Guerrilla Army of the Poor, which at its largest point had 270,000 members.[87] Two-hundred thousand (200,000) civilians were killed in the war, and numerous human rights violations committed, including massacres of civilian populations, rape, aerial bombardment, and forced disappearances.[87] Historians estimate that 93% of these violations were committed by the United States-backed military,[87] which included a genocidal scorched-earth campaign against the indigenous Maya population in the 1980s.[87]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 3.
  2. ^ a b Forster 2001, pp. 29–32.
  3. ^ a b c d e Forster 2001, pp. 12–15.
  4. ^ a b c d Gleijeses 1991, pp. 10–11.
  5. ^ Chapman 2007, p. 83.
  6. ^ a b Forster 2001, p. 29.
  7. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 13.
  8. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 17.
  9. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 15.
  10. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 19.
  11. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 20.
  12. ^ Immerman 1982, p. 37.
  13. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 22.
  14. ^ Forster 2001, p. 19.
  15. ^ a b Immerman 1982, pp. 36–37.
  16. ^ a b Forster 2001, p. 84.
  17. ^ a b Gleijeses 1991, pp. 24–25.
  18. ^ Voionmaa 2022, p. 195.
  19. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 38–39.
  20. ^ Forster 2001, pp. 84–85.
  21. ^ Forster 2001, p. 86.
  22. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 27.
  23. ^ a b c Forster 2001, pp. 86–89.
  24. ^ a b Immerman 1982, p. 40.
  25. ^ a b c d Forster 2001, pp. 89–91.
  26. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 27–28.
  27. ^ Immerman 1982, p. 42.
  28. ^ a b Gleijeses 1991, p. 50.
  29. ^ a b Gleijeses 1991, pp. 28–29.
  30. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 30–31.
  31. ^ a b Gleijeses 1991, pp. 32–33.
  32. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 44–45.
  33. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 33–35.
  34. ^ a b c d Immerman 1982, pp. 45–45.
  35. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 36.
  36. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 36–37.
  37. ^ a b c Immerman 1982, pp. 46–49.
  38. ^ Immerman 1982, p. 52.
  39. ^ a b Forster 2001, p. 97.
  40. ^ Forster 2001, p. 98.
  41. ^ a b c d Forster 2001, pp. 98–99.
  42. ^ a b c d Forster 2001, pp. 99–101.
  43. ^ Immerman 1982, p. 54.
  44. ^ Immerman 1982, p. 49.
  45. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 49–50.
  46. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 50–51.
  47. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 50–54.
  48. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 55–59.
  49. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 59–69.
  50. ^ a b c Gleijeses 1991, pp. 73–84.
  51. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 60–61.
  52. ^ a b c Gleijeses 1991, pp. 134–148.
  53. ^ a b Immerman 1982, pp. 61–67.
  54. ^ a b c Immerman 1982, pp. 64–67.
  55. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 144–146.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gleijeses 1991, pp. 149–164.
  57. ^ Grandin 2000, pp. 200–201.
  58. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 68–70.
  59. ^ Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 65–68.
  60. ^ a b c Immerman 1982, pp. 68–72.
  61. ^ a b c Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 67–71.
  62. ^ a b Immerman 1982, p. 73-76.
  63. ^ Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, p. 71.
  64. ^ a b c Immerman 1982, pp. 75–82.
  65. ^ a b c d Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 72–77.
  66. ^ Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 78–90.
  67. ^ a b c Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 90–97.
  68. ^ a b Gleijeses 1991, pp. 222–225.
  69. ^ a b Immerman 1982, pp. 82–100.
  70. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 109–110.
  71. ^ a b c d Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, p. 102.
  72. ^ a b c Gleijeses 1991, pp. 228–231.
  73. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 122–127.
  74. ^ a b c Cullather 1997.
  75. ^ a b Immerman 1982, pp. 138–143.
  76. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 144–150.
  77. ^ Gleijeses 1991, pp. 280–285.
  78. ^ a b Immerman 1982, pp. 155–160.
  79. ^ a b c d e Immerman 1982, pp. 161–170.
  80. ^ a b c d Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 171–175.
  81. ^ Immerman 1982, pp. 168–173.
  82. ^ a b c d Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 190–204.
  83. ^ a b c d e Immerman 1982, pp. 173–178.
  84. ^ Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, p. 216.
  85. ^ Schlesinger & Kinzer 1999, pp. 224–225.
  86. ^ Grandin 2000, p. 198.
  87. ^ a b c d McAllister 2010.

References Edit

  • Chapman, Peter (2007). Bananas: How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World. New York, New York, USA: Canongate. ISBN 978-1-84767-194-3.
  • Cullather, Nicholas (23 May 1997) [1994], Kornbluh, Peter; Doyle, Kate (eds.), "CIA and Assassinations: The Guatemala 1954 Documents", National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 4, Washington, D.C., USA: National Security Archive
  • Forster, Cindy (2001). The Time of Freedom: Campesino Workers in Guatemala's October Revolution. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-4162-0.
  • Gleijeses, Piero (1991). Shattered Hope: The Guatemalan Revolution and the United States, 1944–1954. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02556-8.
  • Grandin, Greg (2000). The Blood of Guatemala: a History of Race and Nation. Durham, North Carolina, USA: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-2495-9.
  • Immerman, Richard H. (1982). The CIA in Guatemala: The Foreign Policy of Intervention. Austin, Texas, USA: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71083-2.
  • McAllister, Carlota (2010). "A Headlong Rush into the Future". In Grandin, Greg; Joseph, Gilbert (eds.). A Century of Revolution. Durham, North Carolina, USA: Duke University Press. pp. 276–309. ISBN 978-0-8223-9285-9. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  • Schlesinger, Stephen; Kinzer, Stephen (1999). Bitter Fruit: The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala. Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: David Rockefeller Center series on Latin American studies, Harvard University. ISBN 978-0-674-01930-0.
  • Voionmaa, Daniel Noemi (18 August 2022). Surveillance, the Cold War, and Latin American Literature. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-19122-7.

Further reading Edit

  • Cullather, Nicholas (2006). Secret History: The CIA's Classified Account of its Operations in Guatemala 1952–54 (2nd ed.). Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-5468-2.
  • Gleijeses, Piero (October 1989). "The Agrarian Reform of Jacobo Arbenz". Journal of Latin American Studies. Cambridge University Press. 21 (3): 453–480. doi:10.1017/S0022216X00018514. JSTOR 156959. S2CID 145201357. (subscription required)
  • Handy, Jim (1994). Revolution in the countryside: rural conflict and agrarian reform in Guatemala, 1944–1954. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4438-0.
  • Jonas, Susanne (1991). The battle for Guatemala: rebels, death squads, and U.S. power (5th ed.). Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-0614-8.
  • Krehm, William (1999). Democracies and Tyrannies of the Caribbean in the 1940s. COMER Publications. ISBN 978-1-896266-81-7.
  • Loveman, Brian; Davies, Thomas M. (1997). The Politics of antipolitics: the military in Latin America (3rd, revised ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8420-2611-6.
  • Rabe, Stephen G. (1988). Eisenhower and Latin America: The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4204-1.
  • Streeter, Stephen M. (2000). Managing the counterrevolution: the United States and Guatemala, 1954–1961. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-89680-215-5.
  • Striffler, Steve; Moberg, Mark (2003). Banana wars: power, production, and history in the Americas. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-3196-4.
  • Trefzger, Douglas W. (2002). "Guatemala's 1952 Agrarian Reform Law: A Critical Reassessment". International Social Science Review. Pi Gamma Mu, International Honor Society in Social Sciences. 77 (1/2): 32–46. JSTOR 41887088. (subscription required)

guatemalan, revolution, period, history, guatemala, between, coups, against, jorge, ubico, 1944, jacobo, Árbenz, 1954, known, locally, revolution, spanish, revolución, also, been, called, years, spring, highlighting, peak, years, representative, democracy, gua. The period in the history of Guatemala between the coups against Jorge Ubico in 1944 and Jacobo Arbenz in 1954 is known locally as the Revolution Spanish La Revolucion It has also been called the Ten Years of Spring highlighting the peak years of representative democracy in Guatemala from 1930 until the end of the civil war in 1996 It saw the implementation of social political and especially agrarian reforms that were influential across Latin America 1 Guatemalan RevolutionDateOctober 1944 June 1954LocationGuatemalaAlso known asThe Ten Years of SpringCauseAuthoritarianism and police state Dispossession of communal lands of indigenous people by the administrations of Manuel Estrada Cabrera and Jorge Ubico in favor of the United Fruit Company Large reduction in labor rightsMotiveLiberal democracyLand reformOutcomeRuling junta resigns First largely free presidential and parliamentary elections held in 1944 Juan Jose Arevalo elected president Progressive social and agrarian land reforms initiated including Decree 900 Labor laws passed to increase worker rights including a set of health and safety standards in workplaces a standardized an eight hour working day and 45 hour working week for non plantation laborers and bans on discrimination in salaries and required plantation owners to construct primary schools for the children of their workers Foreign policy shift to support anti authoritarian movements such as the Caribbean Legion in other countries Military coup attempt against the government in 1949 fails Jacobo Arbenz elected president in 1950 CIA supports 1954 coup d etat via Operation PBFortune which is successful Guatemalan Civil War begins in 1960 Free and fair elections not held for roughly three decadesFrom the late 19th century until 1944 Guatemala was governed by a series of authoritarian rulers who sought to strengthen the economy by supporting the export of coffee Between 1898 and 1920 Manuel Estrada Cabrera granted significant concessions to the United Fruit Company an American corporation that traded in tropical fruit and dispossessed many indigenous people of their communal lands Under Jorge Ubico who ruled as a dictator between 1931 and 1944 this process was intensified with the institution of harsh labor regulations and a police state 2 In June 1944 a popular pro democracy movement led by university students and labor organizations forced Ubico to resign He appointed a three person military junta to take his place led by Federico Ponce Vaides This junta continued Ubico s oppressive policies until it was toppled in a military coup led by Jacobo Arbenz in October 1944 an event also known as the October Revolution The coup leaders formed a junta which swiftly called for open elections These elections were won in a landslide by Juan Jose Arevalo a progressive professor of philosophy who had become the face of the popular movement He implemented a moderate program of social reform including a widely successful literacy campaign and a largely free election process although illiterate women were not given the vote and communist parties were banned Following the end of Arevalo s presidency in 1951 Jacobo Arbenz was elected to the presidency in a landslide The progressive military leader of 1944 continued Arevalo s reforms and began an ambitious land reform program known as Decree 900 Under it the uncultivated portions of large land holdings were expropriated in return for compensation and redistributed to poverty stricken agricultural laborers Approximately 500 000 people benefited from the decree The majority of them were indigenous people whose forebears had been dispossessed after the Spanish invasion Arbenz s policies ran afoul of the United Fruit Company which lost some of its uncultivated land The company lobbied the US government for the overthrow of Arbenz and the US State Department responded by engineering a coup under the pretext that Arbenz was a communist Carlos Castillo Armas took power at the head of a military junta provoking the Guatemalan Civil War The war lasted from 1960 to 1996 and saw the military commit genocide against the indigenous Maya peoples and widespread human rights violations against civilians Contents 1 Background 1 1 Early 20th Century 1 2 Dictatorship of Jorge Ubico 1 3 June 1944 general strike 1 4 Ubico resigns and appoints an interim government 2 October revolution 2 1 Election of Arevalo 3 Presidency of Arevalo 3 1 Ideology 3 2 Labor movement 3 3 Foreign relations 3 4 1949 coup attempt 4 Presidency of Arbenz 4 1 Election 4 2 Arbenz s personal background 4 3 Agrarian reform 5 United Fruit Company 5 1 History 5 2 Impact of the revolution 5 3 Lobbying efforts 6 CIA instigated coup d etat 6 1 Political motivations 6 2 Operation PBFortune 6 3 Operation PBSuccess 6 4 Invasion 6 5 Aftermath 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingBackground EditEarly 20th Century Edit nbsp Manuel Estrada Cabrera President of Guatemala from 1898 to 1920 Cabrera granted large concessions to the American United Fruit CompanyPrior to the Spanish invasion in 1524 the population of Guatemala was almost exclusively Maya 3 The Spanish conquest created a system of wealthy European landowners overseeing a labor force composed of slaves and bonded laborers However the community lands of the indigenous population remained in their control until the late 19th century 3 At this point rising global demand for coffee made its export a significant source of income for the government As a result the state supported the coffee growers by passing legislation that took land away from the Indian population as well as relaxing labor laws so that bonded labor could be used on the plantations 3 4 The US based United Fruit Company UFC was one of many foreign companies that acquired large tracts of both state land and indigenous land 4 Manuel Estrada Cabrera who was president of Guatemala from 1898 to 1920 permitted limited unionization in rural Guatemala but also made further concessions to the UFC 3 5 In 1922 the Communist Party of Guatemala was created and became a significant influence among urban laborers however it had little reach among the rural and Indian populations 4 In 1929 the Great Depression led to the collapse of the economy and a rise in unemployment leading to unrest among workers and labourers Fearing the possibility of a revolution the landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico y Castaneda who had built a reputation for ruthlessness and efficiency as a provincial governor Ubico won the election that followed in 1931 in which he was the only candidate 3 4 Dictatorship of Jorge Ubico Edit nbsp Jorge Ubico the dictator of Guatemala from 1931 to 1944 He passed laws allowing landowners to use lethal force to defend their propertyUbico had made statements supporting the labor movement when campaigning for the presidency but after his election his policy quickly became authoritarian He abolished the system of debt peonage and replaced it with a vagrancy law which required all men of working age who did not own land to perform a minimum of 100 days of hard labor 6 In addition the state made use of unpaid Indian labor to work on public infrastructure like roads and railroads Ubico also froze wages at very low levels and passed a law allowing land owners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property 6 an action described by historians as legalizing murder 7 He greatly strengthened the police force turning it into one of the most efficient and ruthless in Latin America 8 The police were given greater authority to shoot and imprison people suspected of breaking the labor laws The result of these laws was to create tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers 2 Ubico was highly contemptuous of the country s indigenous people once stating that they resembled donkeys 9 Ubico had great admiration for the fascist leaders of Europe such as Francisco Franco and Benito Mussolini 10 However he saw the United States as an ally against the supposed communist threat of Mexico He made a concerted effort to gain American support when the US declared war on Germany and Japan in 1941 Ubico followed suit and acting on American instructions arrested all people of German descent in Guatemala 11 He permitted the US to establish an air base in Guatemala with the stated aim of protecting the Panama Canal 12 Like his predecessors he made large concessions to the United Fruit Company granting it 200 000 hectares 490 000 acres hectares of public land in exchange for a promise to build a port He later released the company from this obligation as well citing the economic crisis 13 Since its entry into Guatemala the UFC had expanded its land holdings by displacing the peasantry and converting their farmland into banana plantations This process accelerated under Ubico whose government did nothing to stop it 14 June 1944 general strike Edit The onset of World War II increased economic unrest in Guatemala Ubico responded by cracking down more fiercely on any form of protest or dissent 15 In 1944 popular revolt broke out in neighboring El Salvador which briefly toppled dictator Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez However he quickly returned to power leading to a flood of exiled El Salvadorian revolutionaries moving to Guatemala 16 This coincided with a series of protests at the university in Guatemala City Ubico responded by suspending the constitution on 22 June 1944 15 16 17 The protesters who by this point included many middle class members in addition to students and workers called for a general strike 18 and presented an ultimatum to Ubico the next day demanding the reinstatement of the constitution They also presented him a petition signed by 311 of the most prominent Guatemalan citizens Ubico sent the police to disrupt the protests by firing on them and declared martial law 19 20 17 Ubico resigns and appoints an interim government Edit Clashes between protesters and the military continued for a week during which the revolt gained momentum At the end of June Ubico submitted his resignation to the National Assembly leading to huge celebrations in the streets 21 The resignation of Ubico did not restore democracy Ubico appointed three generals Federico Ponce Vaides Eduardo Villagran Ariza and Buenaventura Pineda to a junta which would lead the provisional government A few days later Ponce Vaides persuaded the congress to appoint him interim president 22 23 Ponce pledged to hold free elections soon while at the same time suppressing the protests 24 Press freedom was suspended 24 arbitrary detentions continued and memorial services for slain revolutionaries were prohibited 23 However the protests had grown to the point where the government could not stamp them out and rural areas also began organizing against the dictatorship The government began using the police to intimidate the indigenous population to keep the junta in power through the forthcoming election This resulted in growing support for an armed revolution among some sections of the populace 23 By now the army was disillusioned with the junta and progressives within it had begun to plot a coup 25 On 1 October 1944 Alejandro Cordova the editor of El Imparcial the main opposition newspaper was assassinated This led to the military coup plotters reaching out to the leaders of the protests in an attempt to turn the coup into a popular uprising Ponce Vaides announced elections but the pro democracy forces denounced them as a fraud citing his attempts to rig them 25 Ponce Vaides sought to stabilize his regime by playing on inter racial tension within the Guatemalan population The most vocal support for the revolution had come from the Ladinos or people of mixed racial or Spanish descent Ponce Vaides sought to exploit their fear of the Indians by paying thousands of indigenous peasants to march in Guatemala City in his support and promising them land if they supported the Liberal party that Ubico had begun as a front for the dictatorship 26 October revolution EditBy mid October several different plans to overthrow the junta had been set in motion by various factions of the pro democracy movement including teachers students and progressive factions of the army On 19 October the government learned of one of these conspiracies 25 That same day a small group of army officers launched a coup led by Francisco Javier Arana and Jacobo Arbenz Guzman 27 Although the coup had initially been plotted by Arbenz and Major Aldana Sandoval Sandoval had prevailed upon Arana to join them 28 however Sandoval himself did not participate in the coup attempt and was described as having lost his nerve 28 They were joined the next day by other factions of the army and the civilian population Initially the battle went against the revolutionaries but after an appeal for support their ranks were swelled by unionists and students and they eventually subdued the police and army factions loyal to Ponce Vaides On October 20 the next day Ponce Vaides surrendered unconditionally 25 nbsp Jacobo Arbenz Jorge Toriello and Francisco Arana who oversaw the transition to a civilian government after the October RevolutionPonce Vaides was allowed to leave the country safely as was Ubico himself The military junta was replaced by another three person junta consisting of Arbenz Arana and an upper class youth named Jorge Toriello who had played a significant role in the protests Although Arana had come to the military conspiracy relatively late his defection had brought the powerful Guardia de Honor Honor Guard over to the revolutionaries and for this crucial role he was rewarded with a place on the junta The junta promised free and open elections to the presidency and the congress as well as for a constituent assembly 29 The resignation of Ponce Vaides and the creation of the junta has been considered by scholars to be the beginning of the Guatemalan Revolution 29 However the revolutionary junta did not immediately threaten the interests of the landed elite Two days after Ponce Vaides resignation a violent protest erupted at Patzicia a small Indian hamlet The junta responded with swift brutality silencing the protest The dead civilians included women and children 30 Election of Arevalo Edit Further information Juan Jose Arevalo Juan Jose Arevalo Bermejo was born into a middle class family in 1904 He became a primary school teacher for a brief while and then earned a scholarship to a university in Argentina where he earned a doctorate in the philosophy of education He returned to Guatemala in 1934 and sought a position in the Ministry of Education 31 32 However he was denied the position he wished for and felt uncomfortable under the dictatorship of Ubico He left the country and held a faculty position in Argentina until 1944 when he returned to Guatemala 31 In July 1944 the Renovacion Nacional the teachers party had been formed and Arevalo was named its candidate In an unexpected surge of support his candidacy was endorsed by many of the leading organizations among the protesters including the student federation His lack of connection to the dictatorship and his academic background both worked in his favor among the students and teachers At the same time the fact that he had chosen to go into exile in conservative Argentina rather than revolutionary Mexico reassured landowners worried about socialist or communist reform 33 The subsequent elections took place in December 1944 and were broadly considered free and fair 34 although only literate men were given the vote 35 Unlike in similar historical situations none of the junta members stood for election 34 Arevalo s closest challenger was Adrian Recinos whose campaign included a number of individuals identified with the Ubico regime 34 The ballots were tallied on 19 December 1944 and Arevalo won in a landslide receiving more than four times as many ballots as the other candidates combined 34 Presidency of Arevalo EditArevalo took office on 15 March 1945 inheriting a country with numerous social and economic issues Despite Ubico s policy of using unpaid labor to build public roads internal transport was severely inadequate 70 of the population was illiterate and malnutrition and poor health were widespread The wealthiest 2 of landowners owned nearly three quarters of agricultural land and as a result less than 1 was cultivated The indigenous peasants either had no land or had far too little to sustain themselves Three quarters of the labor force were in agriculture and industry was essentially nonexistent 36 Ideology Edit Arevalo identified his ideology as spiritual socialism He held the belief that the only way to alleviate the backwardness of most Guatemalans was through a paternalistic government He was strongly opposed to classical Marxism and believed in a capitalist society that was regulated to ensure that its benefits went to the entire population 37 Arevalo s ideology was reflected in the new constitution that the Guatemalan assembly ratified soon after his inauguration which was one of the most progressive in Latin America It mandated suffrage for all but illiterate women a decentralization of power and provisions for a multiparty system Communist parties were however forbidden 37 The constitution and Arevalo s socialist ideology became the basis for much of the reform enacted under Arevalo and later Jacobo Arbenz Although the US government would later portray the ideology of the revolution as radical communist it did not in fact represent a major shift leftward and was staunchly anti communist 37 Arevalo s economic vision for the country was centered around private enterprise 38 Labor movement Edit The revolution in 1944 left many of the biggest opponents of organized labor unaffected such as the landed elite and the United Fruit Company The revolution and election of Arevalo nonetheless marked a significant shift in the fortunes of labor unions 39 The protests of 1944 strengthened the labor movement to the point where Ponce Vaides stopped enforcing the repressive vagrancy law which was abolished in the 1945 constitution On 1 May 1945 Arevalo made a speech celebrating organized labor to a tremendously positive reception The freedom of press guaranteed in the new constitution also drew much attention to the brutal working conditions in Guatemala City 39 From the beginning the new unions that were formed fell into two camps those that were communist and those that were not The repressive policies of the Ubico government had driven both factions underground but they re emerged after the revolution 40 The communist movement was also strengthened by the release of those of its leaders who had been imprisoned by Ubico Among them were Miguel Marmol Victor Manuel Gutierrez and Graciela Garcia the latter unusual for being a woman in a movement that women were discouraged from participating in The communists began to organize in the capital and established a school for workers known as the Escuela Claridad or the Clarity School which taught reading writing and also helped organize unions Six months after the school was established President Arevalo closed the school down and deported all the leaders of the movement who were not Guatemalan However the communist movement survived mostly by its dominance of the teacher s union 41 Arevalo s response toward the non communist unions was mixed In 1945 he criminalized all rural labor unions in workplaces with fewer than 500 workers which included most plantations 41 One of the few unions big enough to survive this law was of the banana workers employed by the UFC In 1946 this union organized a strike which provoked Arevalo into outlawing all strikes until a new labor code was passed This led to efforts on the part of employers to stall the labor code as well as to exploit workers as far as possible before it was passed 41 The unions were also damaged when the US government persuaded the American Federation of Labor to found the Organizacion Regional Internacional del Trabajo ORIT a union that took a strongly anti communist stance 41 Despite the powerful opposition by 1947 the labor unions had managed to organize enough support to force the congress to pass a new labor code This law was revolutionary in many ways it forbade discrimination in salary levels on the basis of age race sex nationality religious beliefs or political affiliation 42 It created a set of health and safety standards in the workplace and standardized an eight hour working day and a 45 hour working week although the congress succumbed to pressure from the plantation lobby and exempted plantations from this provision The code also required plantation owners to construct primary schools for the children of their workers and expressed a general commitment to dignifying the position of workers 42 Although many of these provisions were never enforced the creation of administrative mechanisms for this law in 1948 allowed several of its provisions to be systematically enforced 42 The law as a whole had a huge positive impact on worker rights in the country including raising the average wages by a factor of three or more 43 42 Foreign relations Edit The Arevalo government attempted to support democratic ideals abroad as well One of Arevalo s first actions was to break diplomatic relations with the government of Spain under dictator Francisco Franco At two inter American conferences in the year after his election Arevalo recommended that the republics in Latin America not recognize and support authoritarian regimes This initiative was defeated by the dictatorships supported by the United States such as the Somoza regime in Nicaragua In response Arevalo broke off diplomatic ties with the Nicaraguan government and with the government of Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic 44 Frustrated by the lack of results from working with the other Latin American governments Arevalo began to support the Caribbean Legion which sought to replace dictatorships with democracies across Latin America by force if necessary This led to the administration being labelled as communist by the dictatorial governments in the region 45 The Arevalo government also floated the idea of a Central American Federation as being the only way that a democratic government could survive in the region He approached several leaders of democratic Central American countries but was rejected by all except Castaneda Castro the president of El Salvador The two leaders began talks to build a union and set up several commissions to look into the issue In late 1945 they announced the formation of the union but the formalization of the process got delayed by internal troubles in both countries and in 1948 the Castro government was toppled in a military coup led by oscar Osorio 46 1949 coup attempt Edit As the highest ranking military officer in the October Revolution Francisco Arana had led the three man junta that formed the interim government after the coup He was opposed to handing over power to a civilian government first seeking to postpone the 1944 election and then to annul it In return for allowing Arevalo to become president Arana was granted the newly created position of chief of the armed forces ranked above the minister of defense The position had a six year term and controlled all military appointments In December 1945 Arevalo was involved in a motoring accident which left him seriously injured Fearing a military coup the leaders of the Revolutionary Action Party PAR made a pact with Arana in which the party agreed to support his candidacy in the 1950 elections in return for a promise to refrain from a coup 47 Arana s support began to be solicited by the landed elite who felt threatened by Arevalo s reforms Arana who was not initially inclined to get involved with politics began to make occasional statements against the government In the 1948 parliamentary election he backed a number of opposition candidates all of whom were defeated By 1949 the National Renovation Party and the PAR were both openly hostile to Arana while a small fragment of the Popular Liberation Front split off to support him The leftist parties decided to back Arbenz instead as they believed that only a military officer could defeat Arana 48 On 16 July 1949 Arana delivered an ultimatum to Arevalo demanding the expulsion of all of Arbenz s supporters from the cabinet and the military he threatened a coup if his demands were not met Arevalo informed Arbenz and other progressive leaders of the ultimatum who all agreed that Arana should be exiled Two days later Arevalo and Arana had another meeting on the way back Arana s convoy was intercepted by a small force led by Arbenz A shootout ensued killing three men including Arana Arana s supporters in the military rose up in revolt but they were leaderless and by the next day the rebels asked for negotiations The coup attempt left approximately 150 dead and 200 wounded Many of Arana s supporters including Carlos Castillo Armas were exiled The details of the incident were not made public 49 Presidency of Arbenz EditFurther information Jacobo Arbenz Election Edit Arbenz s role as defense minister had already made him a strong candidate for the presidency and his firm support of the government during the 1949 uprising further increased his prestige In 1950 the economically moderate Partido de Integridad Nacional PIN announced that Arbenz would be its presidential candidate in the upcoming election This announcement was quickly followed by endorsements from most parties on the left including the influential PAR as well as from labor unions 50 Arbenz had only a couple of significant challengers in the election in a field of ten candidates 50 One of these was Jorge Garcia Granados who was supported by some members of the upper middle class who felt the revolution had gone too far Another was Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes who had been a general under Ubico and who had the support of the hardline opponents of the revolution During his campaign Arbenz promised to continue and expand the reforms begun under Arevalo 51 The election was held on 15 November 1950 and Arbenz won more than 60 of the vote in elections that were free and fair with the exception of the disenfranchisement of illiterate female voters Arbenz was inaugurated as president on 15 March 1951 50 Arbenz s personal background Edit Main article Jacobo Arbenz Arbenz was born in 1913 into a middle class family of Swiss heritage 52 In 1935 he had graduated from the Escuela Politecnica Guatemala s national military academy with excellent grades and had subsequently become an officer in the Guatemalan army under Ubico 53 As an officer Arbenz himself had been required to escort chain gangs of prisoners This process had radicalized him and he had begun to form links to the labor movement In 1938 he had met and married Maria Villanova who was also interested in social reform and who became a significant influence on him and a national figure in her own right Another strong influence on him was Jose Manuel Fortuny a well known Guatemalan communist who was one of his main advisers during his government 52 53 In 1944 disgusted with Ubico s authoritarian regime he and his fellow officers had begun plotting against the government When Ubico resigned in 1944 Arbenz had witnessed Ponce Vaides intimidate the congress into naming him president Highly offended by this Arbenz plotted against Ponce Vaides and was one of the military leaders of the coup that toppled him in addition to having been one of the few officers in the revolution who had formed and maintained connections to the popular civilian movement 52 Agrarian reform Edit Main article Decree 900 The biggest component of Arbenz s project of modernization was his agrarian reform bill 54 Arbenz drafted the bill himself with the help of advisers that included some leaders of the communist party as well as non communist economists 55 He also sought advice from numerous economists from across Latin America 54 The bill was passed by the National Assembly on 17 June 1952 and the program went into effect immediately The focus of the program was on transferring uncultivated land from large landowners to their poverty stricken laborers who would then be able to begin a viable farm of their own 54 Arbenz was also motivated to pass the bill because he needed to generate capital for his public infrastructure projects within the country At the behest of the United States the World Bank had refused to grant Guatemala a loan in 1951 which made the shortage of capital more acute 56 The official title of the agrarian reform bill was Decree 900 It expropriated all uncultivated land from landholdings that were larger than 673 acres 272 ha If the estates were between 672 acres 272 ha and 224 acres 91 ha in size uncultivated land was expropriated only if less than two thirds of it was in use 56 The owners were compensated with government bonds the value of which was equal to that of the land expropriated The value of the land itself was the value that the owners had declared in their tax returns in 1952 56 The redistribution was organized by local committees that included representatives from the landowners the laborers and the government 56 Of the nearly 350 000 private land holdings only 1710 were affected by expropriation The law itself was cast in a moderate capitalist framework however it was implemented with great speed which resulted in occasional arbitrary land seizures There was also some violence directed at land owners as well as at peasants that had minor landholdings of their own 56 By June 1954 1 4 million acres of land had been expropriated and distributed Approximately 500 000 individuals or one sixth of the population had received land by this point 56 The decree also included provision of financial credit to the people who received the land The National Agrarian Bank Banco Nacional Agrario or BNA was created on 7 July 1953 and by June 1954 it had disbursed more than 9 million in small loans 53 829 applicants received an average of 225 US dollars which was twice as much as the Guatemalan per capita income 56 The BNA developed a reputation for being a highly efficient government bureaucracy and the United States government Arbenz s biggest detractor did not have anything negative to say about it 56 The loans had a high repayment rate and of the 3 371 185 handed out between March and November 1953 3 049 092 had been repaid by June 1954 56 The law also included provisions for nationalization of roads that passed through redistributed land which greatly increased the connectivity of rural communities 56 Contrary to the predictions made by the detractors of the government the law resulted in a slight increase in Guatemalan agricultural productivity and to an increase in cultivated area Purchases of farm machinery also increased 56 Overall the law resulted in a significant improvement in living standards for many thousands of peasant families the majority of whom were indigenous people 56 Historian Piero Gleijeses stated that the injustices corrected by the law were far greater than the injustice of the relatively few arbitrary land seizures 56 Historian Greg Grandin stated that the law was flawed in many respects among other things it was too cautious and deferential to the planters and it created communal divisions among peasants Nonetheless it represented a fundamental power shift in favor of those that had been marginalized before then 57 United Fruit Company EditMain article United Fruit Company History Edit The United Fruit Company had been formed in 1899 by the merger of two large American corporations 58 The new company had major holdings of land and railroads across Central America which it used to support its business of exporting bananas 59 In 1900 it was already the world s largest exporter of bananas 60 By 1930 it had an operating capital of US 215 million and had been the largest landowner and employer in Guatemala for several years 61 Under Manuel Estrada Cabrera and other Guatemalan presidents the company obtained a series of concessions in the country that allowed it to massively expand its business These concessions frequently came at the cost of tax revenue for the Guatemalan government 60 The company supported Jorge Ubico in the leadership struggle that occurred from 1930 to 1932 and upon assuming power Ubico expressed willingness to create a new contract with it This new contract was immensely favorable to the company It included a 99 year lease to massive tracts of land exemptions from virtually all taxes and a guarantee that no other company would receive any competing contract Under Ubico the company paid virtually no taxes which hurt the Guatemalan government s ability to deal with the effects of the Great Depression 60 Ubico asked the company to pay its workers only 50 cents a day to prevent other workers from demanding higher wages 61 The company also virtually owned Puerto Barrios Guatemala s only port to the Atlantic Ocean allowing the company to make profits from the flow of goods through the port 61 By 1950 the company s annual profits were US 65 million twice the revenue of the Guatemalan government 62 Impact of the revolution Edit Due to its long association with Ubico s government the United Fruit Company UFC was seen as an impediment to progress by Guatemalan revolutionaries after 1944 This image was worsened by the company s discriminatory policies towards its colored workers 62 63 Thanks to its position as the country s largest landowner and employer the reforms of Arevalo s government affected the UFC more than other companies Among other things the labor code passed by the government allowed its workers to strike when their demands for higher wages and job security were not met The company saw itself as being specifically targeted by the reforms and refused to negotiate with the numerous sets of strikers despite frequently being in violation of the new laws 64 The company s labor troubles were compounded in 1952 when Jacobo Arbenz passed Decree 900 the agrarian reform law Of the 550 000 acres 220 000 ha that the company owned 15 were being cultivated the rest of the land which was idle came under the scope of the agrarian reform law 64 Lobbying efforts Edit The United Fruit Company responded with intensive lobbying of members of the United States government leading many US congressmen and senators to criticize the Guatemalan government for not protecting the interests of the company 65 The Guatemalan government responded by saying that the company was the main obstacle to progress in the country American historians observed that To the Guatemalans it appeared that their country was being mercilessly exploited by foreign interests which took huge profits without making any contributions to the nation s welfare 65 In 1953 200 000 acres 81 000 ha of uncultivated land was expropriated by the government which offered the company compensation at the rate of 2 99 US dollars to the acre twice what the company had paid when it bought the property 65 More expropriation occurred soon after bringing the total to over 400 000 acres 160 000 ha the government offered compensation to the company at the rate at which the UFC had valued its own property for tax purposes 64 This resulted in further lobbying in Washington particularly through Secretary of State John Foster Dulles who had close ties to the company 65 The company had begun a public relations campaign to discredit the Guatemalan government it hired public relations expert Edward Bernays who ran a concerted effort to portray the company as the victim of the Guatemalan government for several years 66 The company stepped up its efforts after Dwight Eisenhower had been elected in 1952 These included commissioning a research study on Guatemala from a firm known to be hawkish which produced a 235 page report that was highly critical of the Guatemalan government 67 Historians have stated that the report was full of exaggerations scurrilous descriptions and bizarre historical theories 67 The report nonetheless had a significant impact on the Congressmen that it was sent to Overall the company spent over a half million dollars to influence both lawmakers and members of the public in the US that the Guatemalan government needed to be overthrown 67 CIA instigated coup d etat EditMain article 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat Political motivations Edit In addition to the lobbying of the United Fruit Company several other factors also led the United States to launch the coup that toppled Arbenz in 1954 During the years of the Guatemalan Revolution military coups occurred in several other Central American countries that brought firmly anti communist governments to power Army officer Major Oscar Osorio won staged elections in El Salvador in 1950 Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista took power in 1952 68 Honduras where the land holdings of the United Fruit Company were the most extensive had been ruled by an anti communist government sympathetic to the United States since 1932 These developments created tension between the other governments and Arbenz which was exacerbated by Arevalo s support for the Caribbean Legion 68 This support also worried the United States and the newly formed Central Intelligence Agency According to US historian Richard Immerman during the beginning of the Cold War the US and the CIA tended to assume that everybody who opposed it was a communist Thus despite Arevalo s ban of the communist party important figures in the US government were already predisposed to believe that the revolutionary government had been infiltrated by communists and was a danger to the US 69 During the years of the revolution several reports and memoranda were circulated amongst US government agencies that furthered this belief 69 Operation PBFortune Edit Further information Operation PBFortune Although the administration of Harry Truman had become convinced that the Guatemalan government had been penetrated by communists it relied on purely diplomatic and economic means to try and reduce the communist influence at least until the end of its term 70 The United States had refused to sell arms to the Guatemalan government after 1944 in 1951 it began to block weapons purchases by Guatemala from other countries In 1952 Truman became sufficiently convinced of the threat posed by Arbenz to start planning a covert overthrow titled Operation PBFortune 71 The plan had originally been suggested by the US supported dictator of Nicaragua Anastasio Somoza Garcia who said that if he were given weapons he could overthrow the Guatemalan government Truman gave the CIA permission to go ahead with the plan without informing the state department 71 The CIA placed a shipment of weapons on a vessel owned by the United Fruit Company and the operation was paid for by Rafael Trujillo and Marcos Perez Jimenez the right wing anti communist dictators of the Dominican Republic and Venezuela respectively 71 72 The operation was to be led by Carlos Castillo Armas 72 However the US state department discovered the conspiracy and secretary of state Dean Acheson persuaded Truman to abort the plan 71 72 Operation PBSuccess Edit Further information Operation PBSuccess nbsp John Foster Dulles and US President Dwight EisenhowerIn November 1952 Dwight Eisenhower was elected president of the US Eisenhower s campaign had included a pledge for a more active anti communist policy Several figures in his administration including Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother and CIA director Allen Dulles had close ties to the United Fruit Company Both of these factors made Eisenhower predisposed to supporting the overthrow of Arbenz 73 The CIA operation to overthrow Jacobo Arbenz code named Operation PBSuccess was authorized by Eisenhower in August 1953 74 The operation was granted a budget of 2 7 million dollars for psychological warfare and political action 74 The total budget has been estimated at between 5 and 7 million dollars and the planning employed over 100 CIA agents 75 The CIA planning included drawing up lists of people within Arbenz s government to be assassinated if the coup were to be carried out Manuals of assassination techniques were compiled and lists were also made of people whom the junta would dispose of 74 After considering several candidates to lead the coup including Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes the CIA settled on Carlos Castillo Armas 75 The US state department also embarked on a campaign to ensure that other countries would not sympathize with the Guatemalan government by linking it to communism and the Soviet Union 76 By 1954 Arbenz had become desperate for weapons and decided to acquire them secretly from Czechoslovakia which would have been the first time that a Soviet bloc country shipped weapons to the Americas 77 78 The shipment of these weapons acted as the final spur for the CIA to launch its coup 78 Invasion Edit On 18 June 1954 Castillo Armas led a convoy of trucks carrying 480 men across the border from Honduras into Guatemala The weapons had come from the CIA which had also trained the men in camps in Nicaragua and Honduras 79 80 Since his army was badly outnumbered by the Guatemalan army the CIA plan required Castillo Armas to camp within the Guatemalan border while it mounted a psychological campaign to convince the Guatemalan people and government that Castillo s victory was a fait accompli This campaign included using Catholic priests to give anti communist sermons strafing several towns using CIA aircraft and placing a naval blockade around the country 79 80 It also involved dropping leaflets by airplane through the country and carrying out a radio broadcast entitled The Voice of Liberation which announced that Guatemalan exiles led by Castillo Armas were shortly about to liberate the country 79 The military force led by Castillo Armas attempted to make forays towards the towns of Zacapa and Puerto Barrios however these were beaten back by the Guatemalan army 80 The propaganda broadcast by the CIA had far more effect it succeeded in leading a Guatemalan pilot to defect which led to Arbenz grounding the entire air force fearing its defection 79 The CIA also used its planes flown by American pilots to bomb Guatemalan towns for psychological effect 79 When the old planes used by the invasion force were found to be inadequate the CIA persuaded Eisenhower to authorize the use of two additional planes 80 Guatemala made an appeal to the United Nations but the US vetoed an investigation into the incident by the Security Council stating that it was an internal matter in Guatemala 81 82 On 25 June a CIA plane bombed Guatemala City destroying the government s main oil reserves Frightened by this Arbenz ordered the army to distribute weapons to local peasants and workers 83 The army refused to do this instead demanding that Arbenz either resign or come to terms with Castillo Armas 83 82 Knowing that he could not fight on without the support of the army Jacobo Arbenz resigned on 27 June 1954 handing over power to Colonel Carlos Enrique Diaz 83 82 US ambassador John Peurifoy then mediated negotiations held in El Salvador between the army leadership and Castillo Armas which led to Castillo being included in the ruling military junta on 7 July 1954 and was named provisional president a few days later 83 The US recognized the new government on 13 July 84 Elections were held in early October from which all political parties were barred from participating and Castillo Armas was the only candidate winning the election with 99 of the vote 83 85 Among the outcomes of the meeting in El Salvador was a planned new constitution which would roll back most of the progressive reform brought by the revolution 82 Aftermath Edit Further information Guatemalan Civil War nbsp Ixil Maya carrying exhumed bodies of their relatives killed in the Guatemalan Civil WarFollowing the coup hundreds of peasant leaders were rounded up and executed Historian Greg Grandin has stated that There is general consensus today among academics and Guatemalan intellectuals that 1954 signaled the beginning of what would become the most repressive state in the hemisphere 86 Following the coup and the establishment of the military dictatorship a series of leftist insurgencies began in the countryside frequently with a large degree of popular support which triggered the Guatemalan Civil War that lasted until 1996 The largest of these movements was led by the Guerrilla Army of the Poor which at its largest point had 270 000 members 87 Two hundred thousand 200 000 civilians were killed in the war and numerous human rights violations committed including massacres of civilian populations rape aerial bombardment and forced disappearances 87 Historians estimate that 93 of these violations were committed by the United States backed military 87 which included a genocidal scorched earth campaign against the indigenous Maya population in the 1980s 87 See also EditBanana republicNotes Edit Gleijeses 1991 p 3 a b Forster 2001 pp 29 32 a b c d e Forster 2001 pp 12 15 a b c d Gleijeses 1991 pp 10 11 Chapman 2007 p 83 a b Forster 2001 p 29 Gleijeses 1991 p 13 Gleijeses 1991 p 17 Gleijeses 1991 p 15 Gleijeses 1991 p 19 Gleijeses 1991 p 20 Immerman 1982 p 37 Gleijeses 1991 p 22 Forster 2001 p 19 a b Immerman 1982 pp 36 37 a b Forster 2001 p 84 a b Gleijeses 1991 pp 24 25 Voionmaa 2022 p 195 Immerman 1982 pp 38 39 Forster 2001 pp 84 85 Forster 2001 p 86 Gleijeses 1991 p 27 a b c Forster 2001 pp 86 89 a b Immerman 1982 p 40 a b c d Forster 2001 pp 89 91 Gleijeses 1991 pp 27 28 Immerman 1982 p 42 a b Gleijeses 1991 p 50 a b Gleijeses 1991 pp 28 29 Gleijeses 1991 pp 30 31 a b Gleijeses 1991 pp 32 33 Immerman 1982 pp 44 45 Gleijeses 1991 pp 33 35 a b c d Immerman 1982 pp 45 45 Gleijeses 1991 p 36 Gleijeses 1991 pp 36 37 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 46 49 Immerman 1982 p 52 a b Forster 2001 p 97 Forster 2001 p 98 a b c d Forster 2001 pp 98 99 a b c d Forster 2001 pp 99 101 Immerman 1982 p 54 Immerman 1982 p 49 Immerman 1982 pp 49 50 Immerman 1982 pp 50 51 Gleijeses 1991 pp 50 54 Gleijeses 1991 pp 55 59 Gleijeses 1991 pp 59 69 a b c Gleijeses 1991 pp 73 84 Immerman 1982 pp 60 61 a b c Gleijeses 1991 pp 134 148 a b Immerman 1982 pp 61 67 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 64 67 Gleijeses 1991 pp 144 146 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gleijeses 1991 pp 149 164 Grandin 2000 pp 200 201 Immerman 1982 pp 68 70 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 65 68 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 68 72 a b c Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 67 71 a b Immerman 1982 p 73 76 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 71 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 75 82 a b c d Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 72 77 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 78 90 a b c Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 90 97 a b Gleijeses 1991 pp 222 225 a b Immerman 1982 pp 82 100 Immerman 1982 pp 109 110 a b c d Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 102 a b c Gleijeses 1991 pp 228 231 Immerman 1982 pp 122 127 a b c Cullather 1997 a b Immerman 1982 pp 138 143 Immerman 1982 pp 144 150 Gleijeses 1991 pp 280 285 a b Immerman 1982 pp 155 160 a b c d e Immerman 1982 pp 161 170 a b c d Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 171 175 Immerman 1982 pp 168 173 a b c d Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 190 204 a b c d e Immerman 1982 pp 173 178 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 216 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 224 225 Grandin 2000 p 198 a b c d McAllister 2010 References EditChapman Peter 2007 Bananas How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World New York New York USA Canongate ISBN 978 1 84767 194 3 Cullather Nicholas 23 May 1997 1994 Kornbluh Peter Doyle Kate eds CIA and Assassinations The Guatemala 1954 Documents National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No 4 Washington D C USA National Security Archive Forster Cindy 2001 The Time of Freedom Campesino Workers in Guatemala s October Revolution Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 4162 0 Gleijeses Piero 1991 Shattered Hope The Guatemalan Revolution and the United States 1944 1954 Princeton New Jersey USA Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02556 8 Grandin Greg 2000 The Blood of Guatemala a History of Race and Nation Durham North Carolina USA Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 2495 9 Immerman Richard H 1982 The CIA in Guatemala The Foreign Policy of Intervention Austin Texas USA University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71083 2 McAllister Carlota 2010 A Headlong Rush into the Future In Grandin Greg Joseph Gilbert eds A Century of Revolution Durham North Carolina USA Duke University Press pp 276 309 ISBN 978 0 8223 9285 9 Retrieved 14 January 2014 Schlesinger Stephen Kinzer Stephen 1999 Bitter Fruit The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala Cambridge Massachusetts USA David Rockefeller Center series on Latin American studies Harvard University ISBN 978 0 674 01930 0 Voionmaa Daniel Noemi 18 August 2022 Surveillance the Cold War and Latin American Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 009 19122 7 Further reading EditCullather Nicholas 2006 Secret History The CIA s Classified Account of its Operations in Guatemala 1952 54 2nd ed Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 5468 2 Gleijeses Piero October 1989 The Agrarian Reform of Jacobo Arbenz Journal of Latin American Studies Cambridge University Press 21 3 453 480 doi 10 1017 S0022216X00018514 JSTOR 156959 S2CID 145201357 subscription required Handy Jim 1994 Revolution in the countryside rural conflict and agrarian reform in Guatemala 1944 1954 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4438 0 Jonas Susanne 1991 The battle for Guatemala rebels death squads and U S power 5th ed Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 0614 8 Krehm William 1999 Democracies and Tyrannies of the Caribbean in the 1940s COMER Publications ISBN 978 1 896266 81 7 Loveman Brian Davies Thomas M 1997 The Politics of antipolitics the military in Latin America 3rd revised ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 2611 6 Rabe Stephen G 1988 Eisenhower and Latin America The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4204 1 Streeter Stephen M 2000 Managing the counterrevolution the United States and Guatemala 1954 1961 Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 89680 215 5 Striffler Steve Moberg Mark 2003 Banana wars power production and history in the Americas Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 3196 4 Trefzger Douglas W 2002 Guatemala s 1952 Agrarian Reform Law A Critical Reassessment International Social Science Review Pi Gamma Mu International Honor Society in Social Sciences 77 1 2 32 46 JSTOR 41887088 subscription required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guatemalan Revolution amp oldid 1171445569, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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