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Jacobo Árbenz

Juan Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán (Spanish: [xwaŋ xaˈkoβo ˈaɾβens ɣusˈman]; 14 September 1913 – 27 January 1971) was a Guatemalan military officer and politician who served as the 25th President of Guatemala. He was Minister of National Defense from 1944 to 1950, before he became the second democratically elected President of Guatemala, from 1951 to 1954. He was a major figure in the ten-year Guatemalan Revolution, which represented some of the few years of representative democracy in Guatemalan history. The landmark program of agrarian reform Árbenz enacted as president was very influential across Latin America.[2]

Jacobo Árbenz
Árbenz in the 1950s
25th President of Guatemala
In office
15 March 1951 – 27 June 1954
Preceded byJuan José Arévalo
Succeeded byCarlos Enrique Díaz de León
Minister of National Defense
In office
15 March 1945 – 20 February 1950[1]
PresidentJuan José Arévalo
Chief
  • Francisco Javier Arana
  • Carlos Paz Tejada
Preceded byPosition established;
Francisco Javier Arana as Secretary of Defense
Succeeded byRafael O'Meany
Head of State and Government of Guatemala
In office
20 October 1944 – 15 March 1945
Serving with Francisco Javier Arana and Jorge Toriello
Preceded byFederico Ponce Vaides
Succeeded byJuan José Arévalo
Personal details
Born
Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán

(1913-09-14)14 September 1913
Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
Died27 January 1971(1971-01-27) (aged 57)
Mexico City, Mexico
Resting placeGuatemala City General Cemetery
Political partyRevolutionary Action
Spouse
(m. 1939)
Children3, including Arabella
Alma materPolytechnic School of Guatemala
Signature
Website (tribute)
Military service
Branch/serviceGuatemalan Army
Years of service1932–1954
RankColonel
UnitGuardia de Honor
Battles/wars

Árbenz was born in 1913 to a wealthy family, son of a Swiss German father and a Guatemalan mother. He graduated with high honors from a military academy in 1935, and served in the army until 1944, quickly rising through the ranks. During this period, he witnessed the violent repression of agrarian laborers by the United States-backed dictator Jorge Ubico, and was personally required to escort chain-gangs of prisoners, an experience that contributed to his progressive views. In 1938, he met and married María Vilanova, who was a great ideological influence on him, as was José Manuel Fortuny, a Guatemalan communist. In October 1944, several civilian groups and progressive military factions led by Árbenz and Francisco Arana rebelled against Ubico's repressive policies. In the elections that followed, Juan José Arévalo was elected president, and began a highly popular program of social reform. Árbenz was appointed Minister of Defense, and played a crucial role in putting down a military coup in 1949.[3][4][5][6]

After the death of Arana, Árbenz contested the presidential elections that were held in 1950 and without significant opposition defeated Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes, his nearest challenger, by a margin of over 50%. He took office on 15 March 1951, and continued the social reform policies of his predecessor. These reforms included an expanded right to vote, the ability of workers to organize, legitimizing political parties, and allowing public debate.[7] The centerpiece of his policy was an agrarian reform law under which 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.

His policies ran afoul of the United Fruit Company, which lobbied the United States government to have him overthrown. The US was also concerned by the presence of communists in the Guatemalan government, and Árbenz was ousted in the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état engineered by the government of US president Dwight Eisenhower through the US Department of State and the Central Intelligence Agency. Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas replaced him as president. Árbenz went into exile through several countries, where his family gradually fell apart, and his daughter committed suicide. He died in Mexico in 1971. In October 2011, the Guatemalan government issued an apology for Árbenz's overthrow.

Early life edit

 
Árbenz's parents, Hans Jakob Arbenz and Octavia Guzmán Caballeros

Árbenz was born in Quetzaltenango, the second-largest city in Guatemala, in 1913. He was the son of a Swiss German pharmacist, Hans Jakob Arbenz Gröbli,[8][9] who immigrated to Guatemala in 1901. His mother, Octavia Guzmán Caballeros, was a Ladino woman from a middle-class family who worked as a primary school teacher.[9] His family was relatively wealthy and upper-class; his childhood has been described as "comfortable".[10] At some point during his childhood, his father became addicted to morphine and began to neglect the family business. He eventually went bankrupt, forcing the family to move to a rural estate that a wealthy friend had set aside for them "out of charity". Jacobo had originally desired to be an economist or an engineer, but since the family was now impoverished, he could not afford to go to a university. He initially did not want to join the military, but there was a scholarship available through the Polytechnic School of Guatemala for military cadets. He applied, passed all of the entrance exams, and became a cadet in 1932. His father committed suicide two years after Árbenz entered the academy.[10]

Military career and marriage edit

 
Árbenz seated next to his wife Maria Cristina Vilanova in 1944. His wife was a great ideological influence upon him, and they shared a desire for social reform.

Árbenz excelled in the academy, and was deemed "an exceptional student". He became "first sergeant", the highest honor bestowed upon cadets; only six people received the honor from 1924 to 1944. His abilities earned him an unusual level of respect among the officers at the school, including Major John Considine, the US director of the school, and of other US officers who served at the school. A fellow officer later said that "his abilities were such that the officers treated him with a respect that was rarely granted to a cadet."[10] Árbenz graduated in 1935.[10]

After graduating, he served a stint as a junior officer at Fort San José in Guatemala City and later another under "an illiterate Colonel" in a small garrison in the village of San Juan Sacatepéquez. While at San José, Árbenz had to lead squads of soldiers who were escorting chain gangs of prisoners (including political prisoners) to perform forced labor. The experience traumatized Árbenz, who said he felt like a capataz (i.e., a "foreman").[10] During this period he first met Francisco Arana.[10]

Árbenz was asked to fill a vacant teaching position at the academy in 1937. Árbenz taught a wide range of subjects, including military matters, history, and physics. He was promoted to captain six years later, and placed in charge of the entire corps of cadets. His position was the third highest in the academy and was considered one of the most prestigious positions a young officer could hold.[10]

In 1938 he met his future wife María Vilanova, the daughter of a wealthy Salvadoran landowner and a Guatemalan mother from a wealthy family. They were married a few months later, without the approval of María's parents, who felt she should not marry an army lieutenant who was not wealthy.[10] María was 24 at the time of the wedding, and Jacobo was 26. María later wrote that, while the two were very different in many ways, their desire for political change drew them together. Árbenz stated that his wife had a great influence on him.[10] It was through her that Árbenz was exposed to Marxism. María had received a copy of The Communist Manifesto at a women's congress and left a copy of it on Jacobo's bedside table when she left for a vacation. Jacobo was "moved" by the Manifesto, and he and María discussed it with each other. Both felt that it explained many things they had been feeling. Afterwards, Jacobo began reading more works by Marx, Lenin, and Stalin and by the late 1940s was regularly interacting with a group of Guatemalan communists.[11]

October revolution and defense ministership edit

 
President Jorge Ubico in the 1930s. Like his predecessors, he gave a number of concessions to the United Fruit Company and supported their harsh labor practices. He was forced out of power by a popular uprising in 1944.

Historical background edit

In 1871 the government of Justo Rufino Barrios passed laws confiscating the lands of the native Mayan people and compelling them to work in coffee plantations for minimal compensation.[3] Several United States-based companies, including the United Fruit Company, received this public land, and were exempted from paying taxes.[12][13] In 1929 the Great Depression led to the collapse of the economy and a rise in unemployment, leading to unrest among workers and laborers. Fearing the possibility of a revolution, the landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico, who won the election that followed in 1931, an election in which he was the only candidate.[14][13] With the support of the United States, Ubico soon became one of Latin America's most brutal dictators.[15] Ubico abolished the system of debt peonage introduced by Barrios 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.[16][3] In addition, the state made use of unpaid Indian labor to work on public infrastructure such as roads and railroads. Ubico also froze wages at very low levels, and passed a law allowing landowners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property,[16] including allowing them to execute workers as a "disciplinary" measure.[17][18][19][20] The result of these laws was a tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers.[21] Ubico was highly contemptuous of the country's indigenous people, once stating that they resembled donkeys.[22] He gave away 200,000 hectares (490,000 acres) of public land to the United Fruit Company, and allowed the US military to establish bases in Guatemala.[17][18][19][20][23][24]

October revolution edit

 
Árbenz, Jorge Toriello (center), and Francisco Arana (right) in 1944. The three men formed the junta that ruled Guatemala from the October Revolution until the election of Arévalo.

In May 1944 a series of protests against Ubico broke out at the university in Guatemala City. Ubico responded by suspending the constitution on 22 June 1944.[25][26][27] The protests, which by this point included many middle-class members and junior army officers in addition to students and workers, gained momentum, eventually forcing Ubico's resignation at the end of June.[28][17][29] Ubico appointed a three-person junta led by General Federico Ponce Vaides to succeed him. Although Ponce Vaides initially promised to hold free elections, when the congress met on 3 July soldiers held everyone at gunpoint and forced them to appoint Ponce Vaides interim president.[29] The repressive policies of the Ubico administration were continued.[17][29] Opposition groups began organizing again, this time joined by many prominent political and military leaders, who deemed the Ponce regime unconstitutional. Árbenz had been one of the few officers in the military to protest the actions of Ponce Vaides.[30] Ubico had fired Árbenz from his teaching post at the Escuela Politécnica, and since then Árbenz had been living in El Salvador, organizing a band of revolutionary exiles.[31] Árbenz was one of the leaders of the plot within the army, along with Major Aldana Sandoval. Árbenz insisted that civilians also be included in the coup, over the protests of the other military men involved. Sandoval later said that all contact with the civilians during the coup was through Árbenz.[30]

On 19 October 1944, a small group of soldiers and students led by Árbenz and Francisco Javier Arana attacked the National Palace in what later became known as the "October Revolution".[31] Arana had not initially been a party to the coup, but his position of authority within the army meant that he was key to its success.[32] 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 20 October, the next day, Ponce Vaides surrendered unconditionally.[33] Árbenz and Arana both fought with distinction during the revolt,[32] and despite the idealistic rhetoric of the revolution, both were also offered material rewards: Árbenz was promoted from captain to lieutenant colonel, and Arana from major to full colonel.[34] The junta promised free and open elections to the presidency and the congress, as well as for a constituent assembly.[35] The resignation of Ponce Vaides and the creation of the junta has been considered by scholars to be the beginning of the Guatemalan Revolution.[35] 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.[36]

Elections subsequently took place in December 1944. Although only literate men were allowed to vote, the elections were broadly considered free and fair.[37][38][39] Unlike in similar historical situations, none of the junta members stood for election.[37] The winner of the 1944 elections was a teacher named Juan José Arévalo, who ran under a coalition of leftist parties known as the "Partido Acción Revolucionaria'" ("Revolutionary Action Party", PAR), and won 85% of the vote.[38] Arana did not wish to turn over power to a civilian administration.[32] He initially tried to persuade Árbenz and Toriello to postpone the election, and after Arévalo was elected, he asked them to declare the results invalid.[32] Árbenz and Toriello insisted that Arévalo be allowed to take power, which Arana reluctantly agreed to, on the condition that Arana's position as the commander of the military be unchallenged. Arévalo had no choice but to agree to this, and so the new Guatemalan constitution, adopted in 1945, created a new position of "Commander of the Armed Forces", a position that was more powerful than that of the defense minister. He could only be removed by Congress, and even then only if he was found to have broken the law.[40] When Arévalo was inaugurated as president, Arana stepped into this new position, and Árbenz was sworn in as defense minister.[32]

Government of Juan José Arévalo edit

Arévalo described his ideology as "spiritual socialism". He was anti-communism and believed in a capitalist society regulated to ensure that its benefits went to the entire population.[41] Arévalo's ideology was reflected in the new constitution that was ratified by the Guatemalan assembly 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 forbidden.[41] Once in office, Arévalo implemented these and other reforms, including minimum wage laws, increased educational funding, and labor reforms. The benefits of these reforms were largely restricted to the upper-middle classes and did little for the peasant agricultural laborers who made up the majority of the population.[42][43] Although his reforms were based on liberalism and capitalism, he was viewed with suspicion by the United States government, which would later portray him as a communist.[42][43]

When Árbenz was sworn in as defense minister under President Arévalo, he became the first to hold the portfolio, since it had previously been known as the Ministry of War. In the fall of 1947, Árbenz, as defense minister, objected to the deportation of several workers after they had been accused of being communists. Well-known communist José Manuel Fortuny was intrigued by this action and decided to visit him, and found Árbenz to be different from the stereotypical Central American military officer. That first meeting was followed by others until Árbenz invited Fortuny to his house for discussions that usually extended for hours. Like Árbenz, Fortuny was inspired by a fierce nationalism and a burning desire to improve the conditions of the Guatemalan people, and, like Árbenz, he sought answers in Marxist theory. This relationship would strongly influence Árbenz in the future.[44]

On 16 December 1945, Arévalo was incapacitated for a while after a car accident.[45] The leaders of the Revolutionary Action Party (PAR), which was the party that supported the government, were afraid that Arana would take the opportunity to launch a coup and so struck a deal with him, which later came to be known as the Pacto del Barranco (Pact of the Ravine).[45] Under the terms of this pact, Arana agreed to refrain from seizing power with the military; in return, the PAR agreed to support Arana's candidacy in the next presidential election, scheduled for November 1950.[45] Arévalo himself recovered swiftly, but was forced to support the agreement.[45] However, by 1949 the National Renovation Party and the PAR were both openly hostile to Arana due to his lack of support for labor rights. The leftist parties decided to back Árbenz instead, as they believed that only a military officer could defeat Arana.[46] In 1947 Arana had demanded that certain labor leaders be expelled from the country; Árbenz vocally disagreed with Arana, and the former's intervention limited the number of deportees.[46]

The land reforms brought about by the Arévalo administration threatened the interests of the landed elite, who sought a candidate who would be more amenable to their terms. They began to prop up Arana as a figure of resistance to Arévalo's reforms.[47] The summer of 1949 saw intense political conflict in the councils of the Guatemalan military between supporters of Arana and those of Árbenz, over the choice of Arana's successor.[a] 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; all agreed that Arana should be exiled.[48] 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. Historian Piero Gleijeses stated that Árbenz probably had orders to capture, rather than to kill, Arana.[48] 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.[48] Árbenz and a few other ministers suggested that the entire truth be made public; however, they were overruled by the majority of the cabinet, and Arévalo made a speech suggesting that Arana had been killed for refusing to lead a coup against the government.[48] Árbenz kept his silence over the death of Arana until 1968, refusing to speak out without first obtaining Arévalo's consent. He tried to persuade Arévalo to tell the entire story when the two met in Montevideo in the 1950s, during their exile: however, Arévalo was unwilling, and Árbenz did not press his case.[49]

1950 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.[50] In 1950 the economically moderate Partido de Integridad Nacional (PIN) announced that Árbenz would be its presidential candidate in the upcoming election. The announcement was quickly followed by endorsements from most parties on the left, including the influential PAR, as well as from labor unions.[50] Árbenz carefully chose the PIN as the party to nominate him. Based on the advice of his friends and colleagues, he believed it would make his candidacy appear more moderate.[50] Árbenz himself resigned his position as Defense Minister on 20 February and declared his candidacy for the presidency. Arévalo wrote him an enthusiastic personal letter in response but publicly only reluctantly endorsed him, preferring, it is thought, his friend Víctor Manuel Giordani, who was then Health Minister. It was only the support Árbenz had, and the impossibility of Giordani being elected, that led to Arévalo deciding to support Árbenz.[51]

Prior to his death, Arana had planned to run in the 1950 presidential elections. His death left Árbenz without any serious opposition in the elections (leading some, including the CIA and US military intelligence, to speculate that Árbenz personally had him eliminated for this reason).[52] 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, 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 had the support of the hardline opponents of the revolution. During his campaign, Árbenz promised to continue and expand the reforms begun under Arévalo.[53] Árbenz was expected to win the election comfortably because he had the support of both major political parties of the country, as well as that of the labor unions, which campaigned heavily on his behalf.[54] In addition to political support, Árbenz had great personal appeal. He was described as having "an engaging personality and a vibrant voice".[55] Árbenz's wife María also campaigned with him; despite her wealthy upbringing she had made an effort to speak for the interests of the Mayan peasantry and had become a national figure in her own right. Árbenz's two daughters also occasionally made public appearances with him.[56]

The election was held on 15 November 1950, with Árbenz winning more than 60% of the vote, in elections that were largely free and fair with the exception of the disenfranchisement of illiterate female voters.[50] Árbenz got more than three times as many votes as the runner-up, Ydígoras Fuentes. Fuentes claimed electoral fraud had benefited Árbenz, but scholars have pointed out that while fraud may possibly have given Árbenz some of his votes, it was not the reason that he won the election.[57] Árbenz's promise of land reform played a large role in ensuring his victory.[58] The election of Árbenz alarmed US State Department officials, who stated that Arana "has always represented the only positive conservative element in the Arévalo administration" and that his death would "strengthen Leftist [sic] materially", and that "developments forecast sharp leftist trend within the government."[59] Árbenz was inaugurated as president on 15 March 1951.[50]

Presidency edit

 
Colonel Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán addressing the crowd at his inauguration as the President of Guatemala in 1951

Inauguration and ideology edit

In his inaugural address, Árbenz promised to convert Guatemala from "a backward country with a predominantly feudal economy into a modern capitalist state".[60] He declared that he intended to reduce dependency on foreign markets and dampen the influence of foreign corporations over Guatemalan politics.[61] He said that he would modernize Guatemala's infrastructure without the aid of foreign capital.[62] Based on advice from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, he set out to build more houses, ports, and roads.[60] Árbenz also set out to reform Guatemala's economic institutions; he planned to construct factories, increase mining, expand transportation infrastructure, and expand the banking system.[63] Land reform was the centerpiece of Árbenz's election campaign.[64][65] The revolutionary organizations that had helped put Árbenz in power kept constant pressure on him to live up to his campaign promises regarding land reform.[66] Agrarian reform was one of the areas of policy which the Arévalo administration had not ventured into;[63] when Árbenz took office, only 2% of the population owned 70% of the land.[67]

Historian Jim Handy described Árbenz's economic and political ideals as "decidedly pragmatic and capitalist in temper".[68] According to historian Stephen Schlesinger, while Árbenz did have a few communists in lower-level positions in his administration, he "was not a dictator, he was not a crypto-communist". Schlesinger described him as a democratic socialist.[69] Nevertheless, some of his policies, particularly those involving agrarian reform, would be branded as "communist" by the Guatemalan upper class and the United Fruit Company.[70][71] Historian Piero Gleijeses has argued that although Árbenz's policies were intentionally capitalist in nature, his personal views gradually shifted towards communism.[72][73] His goal was to increase Guatemala's economic and political independence, and he believed that to do this Guatemala needed to build a strong domestic economy.[74] He made an effort to reach out to the indigenous Mayan people, and sent government representatives to confer with them. From this effort he learned that the Maya held strongly to their ideals of dignity and self-determination; inspired in part by this, he stated in 1951 that "If the independence and prosperity of our people were incompatible, which for certain they are not, I am sure that the great majority of Guatemalans would prefer to be a poor nation, but free, and not a rich colony, but enslaved."[75]

Although the policies of the Árbenz government were based on a moderate form of capitalism,[76] the communist movement did grow stronger during his presidency, partly because Arévalo released its imprisoned leaders in 1944, and also through the strength of its teachers' union.[77] Although the Communist party was banned for much of the Guatemalan Revolution,[50] the Guatemalan government welcomed large numbers of communist and socialist refugees fleeing the dictatorial governments of neighboring countries, and this influx strengthened the domestic movement.[77] In addition, Árbenz had personal ties to some members of the communist Guatemalan Party of Labour, which was legalized during his government.[50] The most prominent of these was José Manuel Fortuny. Fortuny played the role of friend and adviser to Árbenz through the three years of his government, from 1951 to 1954.[78] Fortuny wrote several speeches for Árbenz, and in his role as agricultural secretary[79] helped craft the landmark agrarian reform bill. Despite his position in Árbenz's government, however, Fortuny never became a popular figure in Guatemala, and did not have a large popular following like some other communist leaders.[80] The communist party remained numerically weak, without any representation in Árbenz's cabinet of ministers.[80] A handful of communists were appointed to lower-level positions in the government.[69] Árbenz read and admired the works of Marx, Lenin, and Stalin (before Khrushchev's report); officials in his government eulogized Stalin as a "great statesman and leader ... whose passing is mourned by all progressive men".[81] The Guatemalan Congress paid tribute to Joseph Stalin with a "minute of silence" when Stalin died in 1953, a fact that was remarked upon by later observers.[82] Árbenz had several supporters among the communist members of the legislature, but they were only a small part of the government coalition.[69]

Land reform edit

 
Farmland in the Quetzaltenango Department, in western Guatemala

The biggest component of Árbenz's project of modernization was his agrarian reform bill.[83] Árbenz drafted the bill himself with the help of advisers that included some leaders of the communist party as well as non-communist economists.[84] He also sought advice from numerous economists from across Latin America.[83] The bill was passed by the National Assembly on 17 June 1952, and the program went into effect immediately. It transferred uncultivated land from large landowners to their poverty-stricken laborers, who would then be able to begin a viable farm of their own.[83] 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.[85]

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.[85] 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.[85] The redistribution was organized by local committees that included representatives from the landowners, the laborers, and the government.[85] Of the nearly 350,000 private land-holdings, only 1,710 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 landowners as well as at peasants who had minor landholdings of their own.[85] Árbenz himself, a landowner through his wife, gave up 1,700 acres (7 km2) of his own land in the land reform program.[86]

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.[85] 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 1951 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.[85] 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.[85] 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.[85] The law also included provisions for nationalization of roads that passed through redistributed land, which greatly increased the connectivity of rural communities.[85]

Contrary to the predictions made by 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.[85] Overall, the law resulted in a significant improvement in living standards for many thousands of farmer families, the majority of whom were indigenous people.[85] Gleijeses stated that the injustices corrected by the law were far greater than the injustice of the relatively few arbitrary land seizures.[85] 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 farmers. Nonetheless, it represented a fundamental power shift in favor of those that had been marginalized before then.[87] In 1953 the reform was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court, but the Guatemalan Congress later impeached four judges associated with the ruling.[88]

Relationship with the United Fruit Company edit

 
Route Map of the Great White Fleet of the United Fruit Company. The company had held the monopoly of freight and passenger maritime transportation to and from Puerto Barrios in Guatemala since 1903.
 
Map of railway lines in Guatemala and El Salvador. The lines were owned by the IRCA, the subsidiary of the United Fruit Company that controlled the railroad in both countries; the only Atlantic port was controlled by the Great White Fleet, also a UFC subsidiary.

The relationship between Árbenz and the United Fruit Company has been described by historians as a "critical turning point in US dominance in the hemisphere".[89] The United Fruit Company, formed in 1899,[90] had major holdings of land and railroads across Central America, which it used to support its business of exporting bananas.[91] By 1930, it had been the largest landowner and employer in Guatemala for several years.[92] In return for the company's support, Ubico signed a contract with it that included a 99-year lease to massive tracts of land, and exemptions from virtually all taxes.[93] Ubico asked the company to pay its workers only 50 cents a day, to prevent other workers from demanding higher wages.[92] The company also virtually owned Puerto Barrios, Guatemala's only port to the Atlantic Ocean.[92] By 1950, the company's annual profits were 65 million US dollars, twice the revenue of the Guatemalan government.[94]

As a result, the company was seen as an impediment to progress by the revolutionary movement after 1944.[94][95] 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, which led to a perception by the company that it was being specifically targeted by the reforms.[96] The company's labor troubles were compounded in 1952 when 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.[96] Additionally, Árbenz supported a strike of UFC workers in 1951, which eventually compelled the company to rehire a number of laid-off workers.[97]

The United Fruit Company responded with an intensive lobbying campaign against Árbenz in the United States.[98] The Guatemalan government reacted 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."[98] In 1953 200,000 acres (81,000 ha) of uncultivated land was expropriated under Árbenz's agrarian reform law, and the company was offered compensation at the rate of 2.99 US dollars to the acre, twice what it had paid when buying the property.[98] This resulted in further lobbying in Washington, particularly through Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who had close ties to the company.[98] The company had begun a public relations campaign to discredit the Guatemalan government; 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 of Jacobo Árbenz needed to be overthrown.[99]

Coup d'état edit

 
A CIA memorandum dated May 1975 which describes the role of the Agency in deposing the Guatemalan government of President Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán in June 1954 (1–5)

Political motives edit

Several factors besides the lobbying campaign of the United Fruit Company led the United States to launch the coup that toppled Árbenz in 1954. The US government had grown more suspicious of the Guatemalan Revolution as the Cold War developed and the Guatemalan government clashed with US corporations on an increasing number of issues.[100] The US was also concerned that it had been infiltrated by communists[101] although historian Richard H. Immerman argued that during the early part of the Cold War, the US and the CIA were predisposed to see the revolutionary government as communist, despite Arévalo's ban of the communist party during his 1945–1951 presidency.[100] Additionally, the US government was concerned that the success of Árbenz's reforms would inspire similar movements elsewhere.[102] Until the end of its term, the Truman administration relied on purely diplomatic and economic means to attempt to reduce communist influences.[103]

Árbenz's enactment of Decree 900 in 1952 provoked Truman to authorize Operation PBFortune, a covert operation to overthrow Árbenz.[104] The plan had originally been suggested by the US-backed dictator of Nicaragua, Anastasio Somoza García, who said that if he were given weapons, he could overthrow the Guatemalan government.[104] The operation was to be led by Carlos Castillo Armas.[105] However, the US state department discovered the conspiracy, and secretary of state Dean Acheson persuaded Truman to abort the plan.[104][105] After being elected president of the US in November 1952, Dwight Eisenhower was more willing than Truman to use military tactics to remove regimes he disliked.[106][107] 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.[108][109] John Foster Dulles had previously represented United Fruit Company as a lawyer, and his brother, then-CIA director Allen Dulles was on the company's board of directors. Thomas Dudley Cabot, a former CEO of United Fruit, held the position of director of International Security Affairs in the State Department.[110] Undersecretary of State Bedell Smith later became a director of the UFC, while the wife of the UFC public relations director was Eisenhower's personal assistant. These connections made the Eisenhower administration more willing to overthrow the Guatemalan government.[108][109]

Operation PBSuccess edit

 
Gloriosa victoria (in english, Glorious victory) by Diego Rivera, circa 1954. It shows General Castillo Armas making a pact with members of the U.S. government at the time, such as US ambassador to Guatemala John Peurifoy, Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother, CIA Director Allen Dulles, with the face of the bomb alluding to President Eisenhower. In the background is shown a United Fruit Company ship exporting bananas, as well as the figure of Archbishop Mariano Rossell y Arellano officiating a mass over the massacred bodies of the workers. Castillo Armas would lead the overthrow of Árbenz.

The CIA operation to overthrow Jacobo Árbenz, code-named Operation PBSuccess, was authorized by Eisenhower in August 1953.[111] Carlos Castillo Armas, once Arana's lieutenant, who had been exiled following the failed coup in 1949, was chosen to lead the coup.[112] Castillo Armas recruited a force of approximately 150 mercenaries from among Guatemalan exiles and the populations of nearby countries.[113] In January 1954, information about these preparations were leaked to the Guatemalan government, which issued statements implicating a "Government of the North" in a plot to overthrow Árbenz. The US government denied the allegations, and the US media uniformly took the side of the government; both argued that Árbenz had succumbed to communist propaganda.[114] The US stopped selling arms to Guatemala in 1951, and soon after blocked arms purchases from Canada, Germany, and Rhodesia.[115] By 1954, Árbenz had become desperate for weapons, and decided to acquire them secretly from Czechoslovakia, an action seen as establishing a communist beachhead in the Americas.[116][117] The shipment of these weapons was portrayed by the CIA as Soviet interference in the United States' backyard, and acted as the final spur for the CIA to launch its coup.[117]

Árbenz had intended the shipment of weapons from the Alfhem to be used to bolster peasant militia, in the event of army disloyalty, but the US informed the Guatemalan army chiefs of the shipment, forcing Árbenz to hand them over to the military, and deepening the rift between him and the chiefs of his army.[118] Castillo Armas' forces invaded Guatemala on 18 June 1954.[119] The invasion was accompanied by an intense campaign of psychological warfare presenting Castillo Armas' victory as a fait accompli, with the intent of forcing Árbenz to resign.[111][120] The most wide-reaching psychological weapon was the radio station known as the "Voice of Liberation", whose transmissions broadcast news of rebel troops converging on the capital, and contributed to massive demoralization among both the army and the civilian population.[121] Árbenz was confident that Castillo Armas could be defeated militarily,[122] but he worried that a defeat for Castillo Armas would provoke a US invasion.[122] Árbenz ordered Carlos Enrique Díaz, the chief of the army, to select officers to lead a counter-attack. Díaz chose a corps of officers who were all known to be men of personal integrity, and who were loyal to Árbenz.[122]

By 21 June, Guatemalan soldiers had gathered at Zacapa under the command of Colonel Víctor M. León, who was believed to be loyal to Árbenz.[123] The leaders of the communist party also began to have their suspicions, and sent a member to investigate. He returned on 25 June, reporting that the army was highly demoralized, and would not fight.[124][125] PGT Secretary General Alvarado Monzón informed Árbenz, who quickly sent another investigator of his own, who brought back a message asking Árbenz to resign. The officers believed that given US support for the rebels, defeat was inevitable, and Árbenz was to blame for it.[125] The message stated that if Árbenz did not resign, the army was likely to strike a deal with Castillo Armas.[125][124] On 25 June, Árbenz announced that the army had abandoned the government, and that civilians needed to be armed in order to defend the country; however, only a few hundred individuals volunteered.[126][121] Seeing this, Díaz reneged on his support of the president, and began plotting to overthrow Árbenz with the assistance of other senior army officers. They informed US ambassador John Peurifoy of this plan, asking him to stop the hostilities in return for Árbenz's resignation.[127] Peurifoy promised to arrange a truce, and the plotters went to Árbenz and informed him of their decision. Árbenz, utterly exhausted and seeking to preserve at least a measure of the democratic reforms that he had brought, agreed. After informing his cabinet of his decision, he left the presidential palace at 8 pm on 27 June 1954, having taped a resignation speech that was broadcast an hour later.[127] In it, he stated that he was resigning in order to eliminate the "pretext for the invasion," and that he wished to preserve the gains of the October Revolution.[127] He walked to the nearby Mexican Embassy, seeking political asylum.[128]

Later life edit

Beginning of exile edit

After Árbenz's resignation, his family remained for 73 days at the Mexican embassy in Guatemala City, which was crowded with almost 300 exiles.[129] During this period, the CIA initiated a new set of operations against Árbenz, intended to discredit the former president and damage his reputation. The CIA obtained some of Árbenz's personal papers, and released parts of them after doctoring the documents. The CIA also promoted the notion that individuals in exile, such as Árbenz, should be prosecuted in Guatemala.[129] When they were finally allowed to leave the country, Árbenz was publicly humiliated at the airport when the authorities made the former president strip before the cameras,[130] claiming that he was carrying jewelry he had bought for his wife, María Cristina Vilanova, at Tiffany's in New York City, using funds from the presidency; no jewelry was found but the interrogation lasted for an hour.[131] Through this entire period, coverage of Árbenz in the Guatemalan press was very negative, influenced largely by the CIA's campaign.[130]

The family then initiated a long journey in exile that would take them first to Mexico, then to Canada, where they went to pick up Arabella (the Árbenzs' oldest daughter), and then to Switzerland via the Netherlands and Paris.[132] They hoped to obtain citizenship in Switzerland based on Árbenz's Swiss heritage. However, the former president did not wish to renounce his Guatemalan nationality, as he felt that such a gesture would have marked the end of his political career.[133] Árbenz and his family were the victims of a CIA-orchestrated and intense defamation campaign that lasted from 1954 to 1960.[134] A close friend of Árbenz, Carlos Manuel Pellecer, turned out to be a spy working for the CIA.[135]

Europe and Uruguay edit

After being unable to obtain citizenship in Switzerland, the Árbenz family moved to Paris, where the French government gave them permission to live for a year, on the condition that they did not participate in any political activity,[133] then to Prague, the capital of Czechoslovakia. After only three months, he moved to Moscow, which came as a relief to him from the harsh treatment he received in Czechoslovakia.[136] While traveling in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, he was constantly criticized in the press in Guatemala and the US, on the grounds that he was showing his true communist colors by going there.[136] After a brief stay in Moscow, Árbenz returned to Prague and then to Paris. From there he separated from his wife: María traveled to El Salvador to take care of family affairs.[136] The separation made life increasingly difficult for Árbenz, and he slipped into depression and took to drinking excessively.[136] He tried several times to return to Latin America, and was finally allowed in 1957 to move to Uruguay.[137] The CIA made several attempts to prevent Árbenz from receiving a Uruguayan visa, but these were unsuccessful, and the Uruguayan government allowed Árbenz to travel there as a political refugee.[138] Árbenz arrived in Montevideo on 13 May 1957, where he was met by a hostile "reception committee" organized by the CIA. However, he was still a figure of some note in leftist circles in the city, which partially explained the CIA's hostility.[139]

While Árbenz was living in Montevideo, his wife came to join him. He was also visited by Arévalo a year after his own arrival there. Although the relationship between Arévalo and the Árbenz family was initially friendly, it soon deteriorated due to differences between the two men.[140] Arévalo himself was not under surveillance in Uruguay and was occasionally able to express himself through articles in the popular press. He left for Venezuela a year after his arrival to take up a position as a teacher.[139] During his stay in Uruguay, Árbenz was initially required to report to the police on a daily basis; eventually, however, this requirement was relaxed somewhat to once every eight days.[139] María Árbenz later stated that the couple was pleased by the hospitality they received in Uruguay, and would have stayed there indefinitely had they received permission to do so.[139]

Daughter's suicide and death edit

After the Cuban Revolution of 1959, a representative of the Fidel Castro government asked Árbenz to come to Cuba, to which he readily agreed, sensing an opportunity to live with fewer restrictions on himself. He flew to Havana in July 1960, and, caught up in the spirit of the recent revolution, began to participate in public events.[141] His presence so close to Guatemala once again increased the negative coverage he received in the Guatemalan press. He was offered the leadership of some revolutionary movements in Guatemala but refused, as he was pessimistic about the outcome.[141]

In 1965 Árbenz was invited to the Communist Congress in Helsinki.[141] Soon afterwards, his daughter Arabella committed suicide in Bogotá, an incident that badly affected Árbenz. Following her funeral, the Árbenz family remained indefinitely in Mexico City, while Árbenz himself spent some time in France and Switzerland, with the ultimate objective of settling down in Mexico.[141]

On one of his visits to Mexico, Árbenz contracted a serious illness, and by the end of 1970 he was very ill. He died soon after. Historians disagree as to the manner of his death: Roberto García Ferreira stated that he died of a heart attack while taking a bath,[141] while Cindy Forster wrote that he committed suicide.[142] On 19 October 1995, Árbenz's remains were repatriated to Guatemala, accompanied by his widow María.[143] After his remains were returned to Guatemala, Árbenz was given a military honor as military officers fired cannons in salute as Árbenz's coffin was placed onto a horse-drawn carriage and transported to San Carlos University, where students and university officials paid posthumous homage to the former president.[143][144] The Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, which previously held autonomy following the 1944 Guatemala Revolution,[143] awarded Árbenz with a posthumous decoration soon after.[141] After departing from the university, the coffin containing Árbenz's remains was then taken to the National Palace, where it would remain until midnight.[143] On 20 October 1995, thousands of Guatemalans flocked to the Guatemala City's cemetery for his burial service.[144] During the burial service, then-Guatemala Defense Minister Gen. Marco Antonio González, who received Árbenz's remains after they were returned to the country, stayed in his car after crowds booed and screamed, "Army of assassins get out of the country."[144]

Guatemalan government apology edit

In 1999, the Árbenz family went before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to demand an apology from the Guatemalan government for the 1954 coup which saw him ousted.[145] Following years of campaigning, the Árbenz Family took the Guatemalan Government to Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in Washington, D.C. It accepted the complaint in 2006, leading to five years of stop-and-start negotiations.[146][147] In May 2011 the Guatemalan government signed an agreement with Árbenz's surviving family to restore his legacy and publicly apologize for the government's role in ousting him. This included a financial settlement to the family, as well as the family's insistence on social reparations and policies for the future of the Guatemalan people, a first for a judgement of this kind from the OAS. The formal apology was made at the National Palace by Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom on 20 October 2011, to Jacobo Árbenz Vilanova, the son of the former president, and a Guatemalan politician.[70] Colom stated, "It was a crime to Guatemalan society and it was an act of aggression to a government starting its democratic spring."[70] The agreement established several forms of reparation for the next of kin of Árbenz Guzmán. Among other measures, the state:[70][148]

  • held a public ceremony recognizing its responsibility
  • sent a letter of apology to the next of kin
  • named a hall of the National Museum of History and the highway to the Atlantic after the former president
  • revised the basic national school curriculum (Currículo Nacional Base)
  • established a degree program in Human Rights, Pluriculturalism, and Reconciliation of Indigenous Peoples
  • held a photographic exhibition on Árbenz Guzmán and his legacy at the National Museum of History
  • recovered the wealth of photographs of the Árbenz Guzmán family
  • published a book of photos
  • reissued the book Mi esposo, el presidente Árbenz (My Husband President Árbenz)
  • prepared and published a biography of the former president, and
  • issued a series of postage stamps in his honor.

The official statement issued by the government recognized its responsibility for "failing to comply with its obligation to guarantee, respect, and protect the human rights of the victims to a fair trial, to property, to equal protection before the law, and to judicial protection, which are protected in the American Convention on Human Rights and which were violated against former President Juan Jacobo Árbenz Guzman, his wife, María Cristina Villanova, and his children, Juan Jacobo, María Leonora, and Arabella, all surnamed Árbenz Villanova."[148]

Legacy edit

Historian Roberto García Ferreira wrote in 2008 that Árbenz's legacy was still a matter of great dispute in Guatemala itself, while arguing that the image of Árbenz was significantly shaped by the CIA media campaign that followed the 1954 coup.[149] García Ferreira said that the revolutionary government represented one of the few periods in which "state authority was used to promote the interests of the nation's masses."[150] Forster described Árbenz's legacy in the following terms: "In 1952 the Agrarian Reform Law swept the land, destroying forever the hegemony of the planters. Árbenz in effect legislated a new social order ... The revolutionary decade ... plays a central role in twentieth-century Guatemalan history because it was more comprehensive than any period of reform before or since."[151] She added that even within the Guatemalan government, Árbenz "gave full compass to Indigenous, campesino, and labor demands" in contrast to Arévalo, who had remained suspicious of these movements.[151] Similarly, Greg Grandin stated that the land reform decree "represented a fundamental shift in the power relations governing Guatemala".[152] Árbenz himself once remarked that the agrarian reform law was "most precious fruit of the revolution and the fundamental base of the nation as a new country."[153] However, to a large extent the legislative reforms of the Árbenz and Arévalo administrations were reversed by the US-backed military governments that followed.[154]

In popular culture edit

The Guatemalan movie The Silence of Neto (1994), filmed on location in Antigua Guatemala, takes place during the last months of the government of Árbenz. It follows the life of a fictional 12-year-old boy who is sheltered by the Árbenz family, set against a backdrop of the struggle in which the country is embroiled at the time.[155]

The story of Árbenz's life and subsequent overthrow in the CIA sponsored coup d'état has been the subject of several books, notably PBSuccess: The CIA's covert operation to overthrow Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz June–July 1954[156] by Mario Overall and Daniel Hagedorn (2016), American Propaganda, Media, And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman by Zachary Fisher (2014),[157] as well as New York Times Best Seller The Devil's Chessboard by Author David Talbot (HarperCollins 2015). The Árbenz story was also the subject of the multi award-winning 1997 documentary by Andreas Hoessli Devils Don't Dream![158]

See also edit

  • Salvador Allende - Socialist president of Chile who was ousted in a US-supported coup
  • Juan José Torres - Socialist president of Bolivia ousted by a US-supported coup
  • Ernest V. Siracusa - Embassy official in Guatemala who later was ambassador in Bolivia during the coup against Torres

Notes edit

  1. ^ In order to run for election, the constitution required that Arana resign his military position by May 1950, and that his successor be chosen by Congress from a list submitted by the Consejo Superior de la Defensa, or CSD.[48] Elections for the CSD were scheduled for July 1949. The months before this election saw intense wrangling, as Arana supporters tried to gain control over the election process. Specifically, they wanted the election to be supervised by regional commanders loyal to Arana, rather than centrally dispatched observers.[48]

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  143. ^ a b c d Castellanos, Amafredo (19 October 1995). "Guatemala receives Arbenz's remains". United Press International. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
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  155. ^ Borrayo Pérez 2011, pp. 37–48.
  156. ^ Overall, Mario; Hagedorn, Dan (2016). PBSuccess: The CIA's covert operation to overthrow Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz June–July 1954. ISBN 978-1910777893.
  157. ^ Zachary, Fisher (April 2014). American Propaganda, Media, And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman: American Propaganda, Popular Media, And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. ISBN 978-3659528064.
  158. ^ "Devils Don't Dream!".

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  • 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.
  • Hunt, Michael (2004). The World Transformed. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-937234-8.
  • "IACHR Satisfied with Friendly Settlement Agreement in Arbenz Case Involving Guatemala". Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. August 2009. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  • Ibarra, Carlos Figueroa (June 2006). "The culture of terror and Cold War in Guatemala". Journal of Genocide Research. 8 (2): 191–208. doi:10.1080/14623520600703081. S2CID 72555904.
  • Immerman, Richard H. (1982). The CIA in Guatemala: The Foreign Policy of Intervention. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71083-2.
  • Koeppel, Dan (2008). Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World. New York: Hudson Street Press. p. 153. ISBN 9781101213919.
  • Kornbluh, Peter; Doyle, Kate, eds. (23 May 1997) [1994]. "CIA and Assassinations: The Guatemala 1954 Documents". National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 4. Washington, D.C.: National Security Archive.
  • LaFeber, Walter (1993). Inevitable revolutions: the United States in Central America. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 77–79. ISBN 978-0-393-30964-5.
  • 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.
  • Malkin, Elizabeth (20 October 2011a). "An Apology for a Guatemalan Coup, 57 Years Later". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  • Malkin, Elisabeth (23 May 2011b). "Guatemala to Restore Legacy of a President the U.S. Helped Depose". New York Times.
  • Martínez Peláez, Severo (1990). La Patria del Criollo (in Spanish). México: Ediciones En Marcha. p. 858.
  • McCreery, David (1994). Rural Guatemala, 1760–1940. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-2318-3.
  • Paterson, Thomas G. (2009). American Foreign Relations: A History, Volume 2: Since 1895. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0-547-22569-2.
  • "Guatemalan Government Issues Official Apology to Deposed Former President Jacobo Arbenz's Family for Human Rights Violations - 57 Years Later". PR Neswire (Press release). 11 October 2011. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  • Rabe, Stephen G. (1988). Eisenhower and Latin America: The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-4204-1.
  • Sabino, Carlos (2007). Guatemala, la historia silenciada (1944–1989) (in Spanish). Vol. Tomo 1: Revolución y Liberación. Guatemala: Fondo Nacional para la Cultura Económica.
  • Sabino, Carlos (2019). Árbenz, una biografía (in Spanish). Guatemala: GrafiaEtc.
  • Schlesinger, Stephen; Kinzer, Stephen (1999). Bitter Fruit: The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala. David Rockefeller Center series on Latin American studies, Harvard University. ISBN 978-0-674-01930-0.
  • Schlesinger, Stephen (3 June 2011). "Ghosts of Guatemala's Past". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  • Smith, Peter H. (2000). Talons of the Eagle: Dynamics of U.S.-Latin American Relations. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512997-0.
  • Streeter, Stephen M. (2000). Managing the counterrevolution: the United States and Guatemala, 1954–1961. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-89680-215-5.

Further reading edit

Books edit

  • Arévalo Martinez, Rafael (1945). ¡Ecce Pericles! (in Spanish). Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional.
  • Chapman, Peter (2009). Bananas: How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World. Canongate. ISBN 978-1-84767-194-3.
  • Dosal, Paul J. (1993). Doing Business With the Dictators: A Political History of United Fruit in Guatemala, 1899–1944. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8420-2590-4.
  • Handy, Jim (1984). Gift of the devil: a history of Guatemala. South End Press. ISBN 978-0-89608-248-9.
  • Holland, Max (2004). "Operation PBHistory: The Aftermath of SUCCESS". International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence. 17 (2): 300–332. doi:10.1080/08850600490274935. S2CID 153570470.
  • Jonas, Susanne (1991). The battle for Guatemala: rebels, death squads, and U.S. power (5th ed.). Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-0614-8.

Government/NGO reports edit

  •   Works related to CIA and Guatemala Assassination Proposals: CIA History Staff Analysis at Wikisource
  • CIA file about Operations against Jacob Árbenz 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

News edit

  • From Árbenz to Zelaya: Chiquita in Latin America, Democracy Now!, 21 July 2009

External links edit

  •   Media related to Jacobo Arbenz Guzman at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Jacobo Árbenz at Wikiquote
  • International Jose Guillermo Carrillo Foundation
  • Jacobo Árbenz Biography brought to you by the United Fruit Company's "United Fruit Historical Society"
Political offices
Preceded by  
President of Guatemala

1951–1954
Succeeded by

jacobo, Árbenz, arbenz, redirects, here, 1910s, automobile, arbenz, Árbenz, daughter, arabella, Árbenz, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, Árbenz, second, maternal, family, name, guzmán, juan, guzmán, spanish, xwaŋ, xaˈkoβo, ˈaɾβens, ɣusˈman, septe. Arbenz redirects here For the 1910s automobile see ArBenz For Arbenz s daughter see Arabella Arbenz In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Arbenz and the second or maternal family name is Guzman Juan Jacobo Arbenz Guzman Spanish xwaŋ xaˈkobo ˈaɾbens ɣusˈman 14 September 1913 27 January 1971 was a Guatemalan military officer and politician who served as the 25th President of Guatemala He was Minister of National Defense from 1944 to 1950 before he became the second democratically elected President of Guatemala from 1951 to 1954 He was a major figure in the ten year Guatemalan Revolution which represented some of the few years of representative democracy in Guatemalan history The landmark program of agrarian reform Arbenz enacted as president was very influential across Latin America 2 Jacobo ArbenzArbenz in the 1950s25th President of GuatemalaIn office 15 March 1951 27 June 1954Preceded byJuan Jose ArevaloSucceeded byCarlos Enrique Diaz de LeonMinister of National DefenseIn office 15 March 1945 20 February 1950 1 PresidentJuan Jose ArevaloChiefFrancisco Javier AranaCarlos Paz TejadaPreceded byPosition established Francisco Javier Arana as Secretary of DefenseSucceeded byRafael O MeanyHead of State and Government of GuatemalaIn office 20 October 1944 15 March 1945Serving with Francisco Javier Arana and Jorge TorielloPreceded byFederico Ponce VaidesSucceeded byJuan Jose ArevaloPersonal detailsBornJacobo Arbenz Guzman 1913 09 14 14 September 1913Quetzaltenango GuatemalaDied27 January 1971 1971 01 27 aged 57 Mexico City MexicoResting placeGuatemala City General CemeteryPolitical partyRevolutionary ActionSpouseMaria Cristina Vilanova m 1939 wbr Children3 including ArabellaAlma materPolytechnic School of GuatemalaSignatureWebsiteOfficial website tribute Military serviceBranch serviceGuatemalan ArmyYears of service1932 1954RankColonelUnitGuardia de HonorBattles warsGuatemalan Revolution1954 Guatemalan coup d etat Arbenz was born in 1913 to a wealthy family son of a Swiss German father and a Guatemalan mother He graduated with high honors from a military academy in 1935 and served in the army until 1944 quickly rising through the ranks During this period he witnessed the violent repression of agrarian laborers by the United States backed dictator Jorge Ubico and was personally required to escort chain gangs of prisoners an experience that contributed to his progressive views In 1938 he met and married Maria Vilanova who was a great ideological influence on him as was Jose Manuel Fortuny a Guatemalan communist In October 1944 several civilian groups and progressive military factions led by Arbenz and Francisco Arana rebelled against Ubico s repressive policies In the elections that followed Juan Jose Arevalo was elected president and began a highly popular program of social reform Arbenz was appointed Minister of Defense and played a crucial role in putting down a military coup in 1949 3 4 5 6 After the death of Arana Arbenz contested the presidential elections that were held in 1950 and without significant opposition defeated Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes his nearest challenger by a margin of over 50 He took office on 15 March 1951 and continued the social reform policies of his predecessor These reforms included an expanded right to vote the ability of workers to organize legitimizing political parties and allowing public debate 7 The centerpiece of his policy was an agrarian reform law under which 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 His policies ran afoul of the United Fruit Company which lobbied the United States government to have him overthrown The US was also concerned by the presence of communists in the Guatemalan government and Arbenz was ousted in the 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat engineered by the government of US president Dwight Eisenhower through the US Department of State and the Central Intelligence Agency Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas replaced him as president Arbenz went into exile through several countries where his family gradually fell apart and his daughter committed suicide He died in Mexico in 1971 In October 2011 the Guatemalan government issued an apology for Arbenz s overthrow Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career and marriage 3 October revolution and defense ministership 3 1 Historical background 3 2 October revolution 3 3 Government of Juan Jose Arevalo 3 4 1950 election 4 Presidency 4 1 Inauguration and ideology 4 2 Land reform 4 3 Relationship with the United Fruit Company 5 Coup d etat 5 1 Political motives 5 2 Operation PBSuccess 6 Later life 6 1 Beginning of exile 6 2 Europe and Uruguay 6 3 Daughter s suicide and death 7 Guatemalan government apology 8 Legacy 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 14 1 Books 14 2 Government NGO reports 14 3 News 15 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Arbenz s parents Hans Jakob Arbenz and Octavia Guzman Caballeros Arbenz was born in Quetzaltenango the second largest city in Guatemala in 1913 He was the son of a Swiss German pharmacist Hans Jakob Arbenz Grobli 8 9 who immigrated to Guatemala in 1901 His mother Octavia Guzman Caballeros was a Ladino woman from a middle class family who worked as a primary school teacher 9 His family was relatively wealthy and upper class his childhood has been described as comfortable 10 At some point during his childhood his father became addicted to morphine and began to neglect the family business He eventually went bankrupt forcing the family to move to a rural estate that a wealthy friend had set aside for them out of charity Jacobo had originally desired to be an economist or an engineer but since the family was now impoverished he could not afford to go to a university He initially did not want to join the military but there was a scholarship available through the Polytechnic School of Guatemala for military cadets He applied passed all of the entrance exams and became a cadet in 1932 His father committed suicide two years after Arbenz entered the academy 10 Military career and marriage edit nbsp Arbenz seated next to his wife Maria Cristina Vilanova in 1944 His wife was a great ideological influence upon him and they shared a desire for social reform Arbenz excelled in the academy and was deemed an exceptional student He became first sergeant the highest honor bestowed upon cadets only six people received the honor from 1924 to 1944 His abilities earned him an unusual level of respect among the officers at the school including Major John Considine the US director of the school and of other US officers who served at the school A fellow officer later said that his abilities were such that the officers treated him with a respect that was rarely granted to a cadet 10 Arbenz graduated in 1935 10 After graduating he served a stint as a junior officer at Fort San Jose in Guatemala City and later another under an illiterate Colonel in a small garrison in the village of San Juan Sacatepequez While at San Jose Arbenz had to lead squads of soldiers who were escorting chain gangs of prisoners including political prisoners to perform forced labor The experience traumatized Arbenz who said he felt like a capataz i e a foreman 10 During this period he first met Francisco Arana 10 Arbenz was asked to fill a vacant teaching position at the academy in 1937 Arbenz taught a wide range of subjects including military matters history and physics He was promoted to captain six years later and placed in charge of the entire corps of cadets His position was the third highest in the academy and was considered one of the most prestigious positions a young officer could hold 10 In 1938 he met his future wife Maria Vilanova the daughter of a wealthy Salvadoran landowner and a Guatemalan mother from a wealthy family They were married a few months later without the approval of Maria s parents who felt she should not marry an army lieutenant who was not wealthy 10 Maria was 24 at the time of the wedding and Jacobo was 26 Maria later wrote that while the two were very different in many ways their desire for political change drew them together Arbenz stated that his wife had a great influence on him 10 It was through her that Arbenz was exposed to Marxism Maria had received a copy of The Communist Manifesto at a women s congress and left a copy of it on Jacobo s bedside table when she left for a vacation Jacobo was moved by the Manifesto and he and Maria discussed it with each other Both felt that it explained many things they had been feeling Afterwards Jacobo began reading more works by Marx Lenin and Stalin and by the late 1940s was regularly interacting with a group of Guatemalan communists 11 October revolution and defense ministership edit nbsp President Jorge Ubico in the 1930s Like his predecessors he gave a number of concessions to the United Fruit Company and supported their harsh labor practices He was forced out of power by a popular uprising in 1944 Further information Guatemalan Revolution Historical background edit In 1871 the government of Justo Rufino Barrios passed laws confiscating the lands of the native Mayan people and compelling them to work in coffee plantations for minimal compensation 3 Several United States based companies including the United Fruit Company received this public land and were exempted from paying taxes 12 13 In 1929 the Great Depression led to the collapse of the economy and a rise in unemployment leading to unrest among workers and laborers Fearing the possibility of a revolution the landed elite lent their support to Jorge Ubico who won the election that followed in 1931 an election in which he was the only candidate 14 13 With the support of the United States Ubico soon became one of Latin America s most brutal dictators 15 Ubico abolished the system of debt peonage introduced by Barrios 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 16 3 In addition the state made use of unpaid Indian labor to work on public infrastructure such as roads and railroads Ubico also froze wages at very low levels and passed a law allowing landowners complete immunity from prosecution for any action they took to defend their property 16 including allowing them to execute workers as a disciplinary measure 17 18 19 20 The result of these laws was a tremendous resentment against him among agricultural laborers 21 Ubico was highly contemptuous of the country s indigenous people once stating that they resembled donkeys 22 He gave away 200 000 hectares 490 000 acres of public land to the United Fruit Company and allowed the US military to establish bases in Guatemala 17 18 19 20 23 24 October revolution edit nbsp Arbenz Jorge Toriello center and Francisco Arana right in 1944 The three men formed the junta that ruled Guatemala from the October Revolution until the election of Arevalo In May 1944 a series of protests against Ubico broke out at the university in Guatemala City Ubico responded by suspending the constitution on 22 June 1944 25 26 27 The protests which by this point included many middle class members and junior army officers in addition to students and workers gained momentum eventually forcing Ubico s resignation at the end of June 28 17 29 Ubico appointed a three person junta led by General Federico Ponce Vaides to succeed him Although Ponce Vaides initially promised to hold free elections when the congress met on 3 July soldiers held everyone at gunpoint and forced them to appoint Ponce Vaides interim president 29 The repressive policies of the Ubico administration were continued 17 29 Opposition groups began organizing again this time joined by many prominent political and military leaders who deemed the Ponce regime unconstitutional Arbenz had been one of the few officers in the military to protest the actions of Ponce Vaides 30 Ubico had fired Arbenz from his teaching post at the Escuela Politecnica and since then Arbenz had been living in El Salvador organizing a band of revolutionary exiles 31 Arbenz was one of the leaders of the plot within the army along with Major Aldana Sandoval Arbenz insisted that civilians also be included in the coup over the protests of the other military men involved Sandoval later said that all contact with the civilians during the coup was through Arbenz 30 On 19 October 1944 a small group of soldiers and students led by Arbenz and Francisco Javier Arana attacked the National Palace in what later became known as the October Revolution 31 Arana had not initially been a party to the coup but his position of authority within the army meant that he was key to its success 32 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 20 October the next day Ponce Vaides surrendered unconditionally 33 Arbenz and Arana both fought with distinction during the revolt 32 and despite the idealistic rhetoric of the revolution both were also offered material rewards Arbenz was promoted from captain to lieutenant colonel and Arana from major to full colonel 34 The junta promised free and open elections to the presidency and the congress as well as for a constituent assembly 35 The resignation of Ponce Vaides and the creation of the junta has been considered by scholars to be the beginning of the Guatemalan Revolution 35 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 36 Elections subsequently took place in December 1944 Although only literate men were allowed to vote the elections were broadly considered free and fair 37 38 39 Unlike in similar historical situations none of the junta members stood for election 37 The winner of the 1944 elections was a teacher named Juan Jose Arevalo who ran under a coalition of leftist parties known as the Partido Accion Revolucionaria Revolutionary Action Party PAR and won 85 of the vote 38 Arana did not wish to turn over power to a civilian administration 32 He initially tried to persuade Arbenz and Toriello to postpone the election and after Arevalo was elected he asked them to declare the results invalid 32 Arbenz and Toriello insisted that Arevalo be allowed to take power which Arana reluctantly agreed to on the condition that Arana s position as the commander of the military be unchallenged Arevalo had no choice but to agree to this and so the new Guatemalan constitution adopted in 1945 created a new position of Commander of the Armed Forces a position that was more powerful than that of the defense minister He could only be removed by Congress and even then only if he was found to have broken the law 40 When Arevalo was inaugurated as president Arana stepped into this new position and Arbenz was sworn in as defense minister 32 Government of Juan Jose Arevalo edit Arevalo described his ideology as spiritual socialism He was anti communism and believed in a capitalist society regulated to ensure that its benefits went to the entire population 41 Arevalo s ideology was reflected in the new constitution that was ratified by the Guatemalan assembly 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 forbidden 41 Once in office Arevalo implemented these and other reforms including minimum wage laws increased educational funding and labor reforms The benefits of these reforms were largely restricted to the upper middle classes and did little for the peasant agricultural laborers who made up the majority of the population 42 43 Although his reforms were based on liberalism and capitalism he was viewed with suspicion by the United States government which would later portray him as a communist 42 43 When Arbenz was sworn in as defense minister under President Arevalo he became the first to hold the portfolio since it had previously been known as the Ministry of War In the fall of 1947 Arbenz as defense minister objected to the deportation of several workers after they had been accused of being communists Well known communist Jose Manuel Fortuny was intrigued by this action and decided to visit him and found Arbenz to be different from the stereotypical Central American military officer That first meeting was followed by others until Arbenz invited Fortuny to his house for discussions that usually extended for hours Like Arbenz Fortuny was inspired by a fierce nationalism and a burning desire to improve the conditions of the Guatemalan people and like Arbenz he sought answers in Marxist theory This relationship would strongly influence Arbenz in the future 44 On 16 December 1945 Arevalo was incapacitated for a while after a car accident 45 The leaders of the Revolutionary Action Party PAR which was the party that supported the government were afraid that Arana would take the opportunity to launch a coup and so struck a deal with him which later came to be known as the Pacto del Barranco Pact of the Ravine 45 Under the terms of this pact Arana agreed to refrain from seizing power with the military in return the PAR agreed to support Arana s candidacy in the next presidential election scheduled for November 1950 45 Arevalo himself recovered swiftly but was forced to support the agreement 45 However by 1949 the National Renovation Party and the PAR were both openly hostile to Arana due to his lack of support for labor rights The leftist parties decided to back Arbenz instead as they believed that only a military officer could defeat Arana 46 In 1947 Arana had demanded that certain labor leaders be expelled from the country Arbenz vocally disagreed with Arana and the former s intervention limited the number of deportees 46 The land reforms brought about by the Arevalo administration threatened the interests of the landed elite who sought a candidate who would be more amenable to their terms They began to prop up Arana as a figure of resistance to Arevalo s reforms 47 The summer of 1949 saw intense political conflict in the councils of the Guatemalan military between supporters of Arana and those of Arbenz over the choice of Arana s successor a 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 all agreed that Arana should be exiled 48 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 Historian Piero Gleijeses stated that Arbenz probably had orders to capture rather than to kill Arana 48 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 48 Arbenz and a few other ministers suggested that the entire truth be made public however they were overruled by the majority of the cabinet and Arevalo made a speech suggesting that Arana had been killed for refusing to lead a coup against the government 48 Arbenz kept his silence over the death of Arana until 1968 refusing to speak out without first obtaining Arevalo s consent He tried to persuade Arevalo to tell the entire story when the two met in Montevideo in the 1950s during their exile however Arevalo was unwilling and Arbenz did not press his case 49 1950 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 50 In 1950 the economically moderate Partido de Integridad Nacional PIN announced that Arbenz would be its presidential candidate in the upcoming election The announcement was quickly followed by endorsements from most parties on the left including the influential PAR as well as from labor unions 50 Arbenz carefully chose the PIN as the party to nominate him Based on the advice of his friends and colleagues he believed it would make his candidacy appear more moderate 50 Arbenz himself resigned his position as Defense Minister on 20 February and declared his candidacy for the presidency Arevalo wrote him an enthusiastic personal letter in response but publicly only reluctantly endorsed him preferring it is thought his friend Victor Manuel Giordani who was then Health Minister It was only the support Arbenz had and the impossibility of Giordani being elected that led to Arevalo deciding to support Arbenz 51 Prior to his death Arana had planned to run in the 1950 presidential elections His death left Arbenz without any serious opposition in the elections leading some including the CIA and US military intelligence to speculate that Arbenz personally had him eliminated for this reason 52 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 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 had the support of the hardline opponents of the revolution During his campaign Arbenz promised to continue and expand the reforms begun under Arevalo 53 Arbenz was expected to win the election comfortably because he had the support of both major political parties of the country as well as that of the labor unions which campaigned heavily on his behalf 54 In addition to political support Arbenz had great personal appeal He was described as having an engaging personality and a vibrant voice 55 Arbenz s wife Maria also campaigned with him despite her wealthy upbringing she had made an effort to speak for the interests of the Mayan peasantry and had become a national figure in her own right Arbenz s two daughters also occasionally made public appearances with him 56 The election was held on 15 November 1950 with Arbenz winning more than 60 of the vote in elections that were largely free and fair with the exception of the disenfranchisement of illiterate female voters 50 Arbenz got more than three times as many votes as the runner up Ydigoras Fuentes Fuentes claimed electoral fraud had benefited Arbenz but scholars have pointed out that while fraud may possibly have given Arbenz some of his votes it was not the reason that he won the election 57 Arbenz s promise of land reform played a large role in ensuring his victory 58 The election of Arbenz alarmed US State Department officials who stated that Arana has always represented the only positive conservative element in the Arevalo administration and that his death would strengthen Leftist sic materially and that developments forecast sharp leftist trend within the government 59 Arbenz was inaugurated as president on 15 March 1951 50 Presidency edit nbsp Colonel Jacobo Arbenz Guzman addressing the crowd at his inauguration as the President of Guatemala in 1951 Inauguration and ideology edit See also Jose Manuel Fortuny In his inaugural address Arbenz promised to convert Guatemala from a backward country with a predominantly feudal economy into a modern capitalist state 60 He declared that he intended to reduce dependency on foreign markets and dampen the influence of foreign corporations over Guatemalan politics 61 He said that he would modernize Guatemala s infrastructure without the aid of foreign capital 62 Based on advice from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development he set out to build more houses ports and roads 60 Arbenz also set out to reform Guatemala s economic institutions he planned to construct factories increase mining expand transportation infrastructure and expand the banking system 63 Land reform was the centerpiece of Arbenz s election campaign 64 65 The revolutionary organizations that had helped put Arbenz in power kept constant pressure on him to live up to his campaign promises regarding land reform 66 Agrarian reform was one of the areas of policy which the Arevalo administration had not ventured into 63 when Arbenz took office only 2 of the population owned 70 of the land 67 Historian Jim Handy described Arbenz s economic and political ideals as decidedly pragmatic and capitalist in temper 68 According to historian Stephen Schlesinger while Arbenz did have a few communists in lower level positions in his administration he was not a dictator he was not a crypto communist Schlesinger described him as a democratic socialist 69 Nevertheless some of his policies particularly those involving agrarian reform would be branded as communist by the Guatemalan upper class and the United Fruit Company 70 71 Historian Piero Gleijeses has argued that although Arbenz s policies were intentionally capitalist in nature his personal views gradually shifted towards communism 72 73 His goal was to increase Guatemala s economic and political independence and he believed that to do this Guatemala needed to build a strong domestic economy 74 He made an effort to reach out to the indigenous Mayan people and sent government representatives to confer with them From this effort he learned that the Maya held strongly to their ideals of dignity and self determination inspired in part by this he stated in 1951 that If the independence and prosperity of our people were incompatible which for certain they are not I am sure that the great majority of Guatemalans would prefer to be a poor nation but free and not a rich colony but enslaved 75 Although the policies of the Arbenz government were based on a moderate form of capitalism 76 the communist movement did grow stronger during his presidency partly because Arevalo released its imprisoned leaders in 1944 and also through the strength of its teachers union 77 Although the Communist party was banned for much of the Guatemalan Revolution 50 the Guatemalan government welcomed large numbers of communist and socialist refugees fleeing the dictatorial governments of neighboring countries and this influx strengthened the domestic movement 77 In addition Arbenz had personal ties to some members of the communist Guatemalan Party of Labour which was legalized during his government 50 The most prominent of these was Jose Manuel Fortuny Fortuny played the role of friend and adviser to Arbenz through the three years of his government from 1951 to 1954 78 Fortuny wrote several speeches for Arbenz and in his role as agricultural secretary 79 helped craft the landmark agrarian reform bill Despite his position in Arbenz s government however Fortuny never became a popular figure in Guatemala and did not have a large popular following like some other communist leaders 80 The communist party remained numerically weak without any representation in Arbenz s cabinet of ministers 80 A handful of communists were appointed to lower level positions in the government 69 Arbenz read and admired the works of Marx Lenin and Stalin before Khrushchev s report officials in his government eulogized Stalin as a great statesman and leader whose passing is mourned by all progressive men 81 The Guatemalan Congress paid tribute to Joseph Stalin with a minute of silence when Stalin died in 1953 a fact that was remarked upon by later observers 82 Arbenz had several supporters among the communist members of the legislature but they were only a small part of the government coalition 69 Land reform edit nbsp Farmland in the Quetzaltenango Department in western Guatemala Main article Decree 900 The biggest component of Arbenz s project of modernization was his agrarian reform bill 83 Arbenz drafted the bill himself with the help of advisers that included some leaders of the communist party as well as non communist economists 84 He also sought advice from numerous economists from across Latin America 83 The bill was passed by the National Assembly on 17 June 1952 and the program went into effect immediately It transferred uncultivated land from large landowners to their poverty stricken laborers who would then be able to begin a viable farm of their own 83 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 85 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 85 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 85 The redistribution was organized by local committees that included representatives from the landowners the laborers and the government 85 Of the nearly 350 000 private land holdings only 1 710 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 landowners as well as at peasants who had minor landholdings of their own 85 Arbenz himself a landowner through his wife gave up 1 700 acres 7 km2 of his own land in the land reform program 86 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 85 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 1951 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 85 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 85 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 85 The law also included provisions for nationalization of roads that passed through redistributed land which greatly increased the connectivity of rural communities 85 Contrary to the predictions made by 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 85 Overall the law resulted in a significant improvement in living standards for many thousands of farmer families the majority of whom were indigenous people 85 Gleijeses stated that the injustices corrected by the law were far greater than the injustice of the relatively few arbitrary land seizures 85 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 farmers Nonetheless it represented a fundamental power shift in favor of those that had been marginalized before then 87 In 1953 the reform was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court but the Guatemalan Congress later impeached four judges associated with the ruling 88 Relationship with the United Fruit Company edit Further information United Fruit Company nbsp Route Map of the Great White Fleet of the United Fruit Company The company had held the monopoly of freight and passenger maritime transportation to and from Puerto Barrios in Guatemala since 1903 nbsp Map of railway lines in Guatemala and El Salvador The lines were owned by the IRCA the subsidiary of the United Fruit Company that controlled the railroad in both countries the only Atlantic port was controlled by the Great White Fleet also a UFC subsidiary The relationship between Arbenz and the United Fruit Company has been described by historians as a critical turning point in US dominance in the hemisphere 89 The United Fruit Company formed in 1899 90 had major holdings of land and railroads across Central America which it used to support its business of exporting bananas 91 By 1930 it had been the largest landowner and employer in Guatemala for several years 92 In return for the company s support Ubico signed a contract with it that included a 99 year lease to massive tracts of land and exemptions from virtually all taxes 93 Ubico asked the company to pay its workers only 50 cents a day to prevent other workers from demanding higher wages 92 The company also virtually owned Puerto Barrios Guatemala s only port to the Atlantic Ocean 92 By 1950 the company s annual profits were 65 million US dollars twice the revenue of the Guatemalan government 94 As a result the company was seen as an impediment to progress by the revolutionary movement after 1944 94 95 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 which led to a perception by the company that it was being specifically targeted by the reforms 96 The company s labor troubles were compounded in 1952 when 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 96 Additionally Arbenz supported a strike of UFC workers in 1951 which eventually compelled the company to rehire a number of laid off workers 97 The United Fruit Company responded with an intensive lobbying campaign against Arbenz in the United States 98 The Guatemalan government reacted 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 98 In 1953 200 000 acres 81 000 ha of uncultivated land was expropriated under Arbenz s agrarian reform law and the company was offered compensation at the rate of 2 99 US dollars to the acre twice what it had paid when buying the property 98 This resulted in further lobbying in Washington particularly through Secretary of State John Foster Dulles who had close ties to the company 98 The company had begun a public relations campaign to discredit the Guatemalan government 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 of Jacobo Arbenz needed to be overthrown 99 Coup d etat editMain article 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat nbsp A CIA memorandum dated May 1975 which describes the role of the Agency in deposing the Guatemalan government of President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman in June 1954 1 5 Political motives edit Several factors besides the lobbying campaign of the United Fruit Company led the United States to launch the coup that toppled Arbenz in 1954 The US government had grown more suspicious of the Guatemalan Revolution as the Cold War developed and the Guatemalan government clashed with US corporations on an increasing number of issues 100 The US was also concerned that it had been infiltrated by communists 101 although historian Richard H Immerman argued that during the early part of the Cold War the US and the CIA were predisposed to see the revolutionary government as communist despite Arevalo s ban of the communist party during his 1945 1951 presidency 100 Additionally the US government was concerned that the success of Arbenz s reforms would inspire similar movements elsewhere 102 Until the end of its term the Truman administration relied on purely diplomatic and economic means to attempt to reduce communist influences 103 Arbenz s enactment of Decree 900 in 1952 provoked Truman to authorize Operation PBFortune a covert operation to overthrow Arbenz 104 The plan had originally been suggested by the US backed dictator of Nicaragua Anastasio Somoza Garcia who said that if he were given weapons he could overthrow the Guatemalan government 104 The operation was to be led by Carlos Castillo Armas 105 However the US state department discovered the conspiracy and secretary of state Dean Acheson persuaded Truman to abort the plan 104 105 After being elected president of the US in November 1952 Dwight Eisenhower was more willing than Truman to use military tactics to remove regimes he disliked 106 107 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 108 109 John Foster Dulles had previously represented United Fruit Company as a lawyer and his brother then CIA director Allen Dulles was on the company s board of directors Thomas Dudley Cabot a former CEO of United Fruit held the position of director of International Security Affairs in the State Department 110 Undersecretary of State Bedell Smith later became a director of the UFC while the wife of the UFC public relations director was Eisenhower s personal assistant These connections made the Eisenhower administration more willing to overthrow the Guatemalan government 108 109 Operation PBSuccess edit nbsp Gloriosa victoria in english Glorious victory by Diego Rivera circa 1954 It shows General Castillo Armas making a pact with members of the U S government at the time such as US ambassador to Guatemala John Peurifoy Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother CIA Director Allen Dulles with the face of the bomb alluding to President Eisenhower In the background is shown a United Fruit Company ship exporting bananas as well as the figure of Archbishop Mariano Rossell y Arellano officiating a mass over the massacred bodies of the workers Castillo Armas would lead the overthrow of Arbenz The CIA operation to overthrow Jacobo Arbenz code named Operation PBSuccess was authorized by Eisenhower in August 1953 111 Carlos Castillo Armas once Arana s lieutenant who had been exiled following the failed coup in 1949 was chosen to lead the coup 112 Castillo Armas recruited a force of approximately 150 mercenaries from among Guatemalan exiles and the populations of nearby countries 113 In January 1954 information about these preparations were leaked to the Guatemalan government which issued statements implicating a Government of the North in a plot to overthrow Arbenz The US government denied the allegations and the US media uniformly took the side of the government both argued that Arbenz had succumbed to communist propaganda 114 The US stopped selling arms to Guatemala in 1951 and soon after blocked arms purchases from Canada Germany and Rhodesia 115 By 1954 Arbenz had become desperate for weapons and decided to acquire them secretly from Czechoslovakia an action seen as establishing a communist beachhead in the Americas 116 117 The shipment of these weapons was portrayed by the CIA as Soviet interference in the United States backyard and acted as the final spur for the CIA to launch its coup 117 Arbenz had intended the shipment of weapons from the Alfhem to be used to bolster peasant militia in the event of army disloyalty but the US informed the Guatemalan army chiefs of the shipment forcing Arbenz to hand them over to the military and deepening the rift between him and the chiefs of his army 118 Castillo Armas forces invaded Guatemala on 18 June 1954 119 The invasion was accompanied by an intense campaign of psychological warfare presenting Castillo Armas victory as a fait accompli with the intent of forcing Arbenz to resign 111 120 The most wide reaching psychological weapon was the radio station known as the Voice of Liberation whose transmissions broadcast news of rebel troops converging on the capital and contributed to massive demoralization among both the army and the civilian population 121 Arbenz was confident that Castillo Armas could be defeated militarily 122 but he worried that a defeat for Castillo Armas would provoke a US invasion 122 Arbenz ordered Carlos Enrique Diaz the chief of the army to select officers to lead a counter attack Diaz chose a corps of officers who were all known to be men of personal integrity and who were loyal to Arbenz 122 By 21 June Guatemalan soldiers had gathered at Zacapa under the command of Colonel Victor M Leon who was believed to be loyal to Arbenz 123 The leaders of the communist party also began to have their suspicions and sent a member to investigate He returned on 25 June reporting that the army was highly demoralized and would not fight 124 125 PGT Secretary General Alvarado Monzon informed Arbenz who quickly sent another investigator of his own who brought back a message asking Arbenz to resign The officers believed that given US support for the rebels defeat was inevitable and Arbenz was to blame for it 125 The message stated that if Arbenz did not resign the army was likely to strike a deal with Castillo Armas 125 124 On 25 June Arbenz announced that the army had abandoned the government and that civilians needed to be armed in order to defend the country however only a few hundred individuals volunteered 126 121 Seeing this Diaz reneged on his support of the president and began plotting to overthrow Arbenz with the assistance of other senior army officers They informed US ambassador John Peurifoy of this plan asking him to stop the hostilities in return for Arbenz s resignation 127 Peurifoy promised to arrange a truce and the plotters went to Arbenz and informed him of their decision Arbenz utterly exhausted and seeking to preserve at least a measure of the democratic reforms that he had brought agreed After informing his cabinet of his decision he left the presidential palace at 8 pm on 27 June 1954 having taped a resignation speech that was broadcast an hour later 127 In it he stated that he was resigning in order to eliminate the pretext for the invasion and that he wished to preserve the gains of the October Revolution 127 He walked to the nearby Mexican Embassy seeking political asylum 128 Later life editBeginning of exile edit After Arbenz s resignation his family remained for 73 days at the Mexican embassy in Guatemala City which was crowded with almost 300 exiles 129 During this period the CIA initiated a new set of operations against Arbenz intended to discredit the former president and damage his reputation The CIA obtained some of Arbenz s personal papers and released parts of them after doctoring the documents The CIA also promoted the notion that individuals in exile such as Arbenz should be prosecuted in Guatemala 129 When they were finally allowed to leave the country Arbenz was publicly humiliated at the airport when the authorities made the former president strip before the cameras 130 claiming that he was carrying jewelry he had bought for his wife Maria Cristina Vilanova at Tiffany s in New York City using funds from the presidency no jewelry was found but the interrogation lasted for an hour 131 Through this entire period coverage of Arbenz in the Guatemalan press was very negative influenced largely by the CIA s campaign 130 The family then initiated a long journey in exile that would take them first to Mexico then to Canada where they went to pick up Arabella the Arbenzs oldest daughter and then to Switzerland via the Netherlands and Paris 132 They hoped to obtain citizenship in Switzerland based on Arbenz s Swiss heritage However the former president did not wish to renounce his Guatemalan nationality as he felt that such a gesture would have marked the end of his political career 133 Arbenz and his family were the victims of a CIA orchestrated and intense defamation campaign that lasted from 1954 to 1960 134 A close friend of Arbenz Carlos Manuel Pellecer turned out to be a spy working for the CIA 135 Europe and Uruguay edit After being unable to obtain citizenship in Switzerland the Arbenz family moved to Paris where the French government gave them permission to live for a year on the condition that they did not participate in any political activity 133 then to Prague the capital of Czechoslovakia After only three months he moved to Moscow which came as a relief to him from the harsh treatment he received in Czechoslovakia 136 While traveling in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe he was constantly criticized in the press in Guatemala and the US on the grounds that he was showing his true communist colors by going there 136 After a brief stay in Moscow Arbenz returned to Prague and then to Paris From there he separated from his wife Maria traveled to El Salvador to take care of family affairs 136 The separation made life increasingly difficult for Arbenz and he slipped into depression and took to drinking excessively 136 He tried several times to return to Latin America and was finally allowed in 1957 to move to Uruguay 137 The CIA made several attempts to prevent Arbenz from receiving a Uruguayan visa but these were unsuccessful and the Uruguayan government allowed Arbenz to travel there as a political refugee 138 Arbenz arrived in Montevideo on 13 May 1957 where he was met by a hostile reception committee organized by the CIA However he was still a figure of some note in leftist circles in the city which partially explained the CIA s hostility 139 While Arbenz was living in Montevideo his wife came to join him He was also visited by Arevalo a year after his own arrival there Although the relationship between Arevalo and the Arbenz family was initially friendly it soon deteriorated due to differences between the two men 140 Arevalo himself was not under surveillance in Uruguay and was occasionally able to express himself through articles in the popular press He left for Venezuela a year after his arrival to take up a position as a teacher 139 During his stay in Uruguay Arbenz was initially required to report to the police on a daily basis eventually however this requirement was relaxed somewhat to once every eight days 139 Maria Arbenz later stated that the couple was pleased by the hospitality they received in Uruguay and would have stayed there indefinitely had they received permission to do so 139 Daughter s suicide and death edit After the Cuban Revolution of 1959 a representative of the Fidel Castro government asked Arbenz to come to Cuba to which he readily agreed sensing an opportunity to live with fewer restrictions on himself He flew to Havana in July 1960 and caught up in the spirit of the recent revolution began to participate in public events 141 His presence so close to Guatemala once again increased the negative coverage he received in the Guatemalan press He was offered the leadership of some revolutionary movements in Guatemala but refused as he was pessimistic about the outcome 141 In 1965 Arbenz was invited to the Communist Congress in Helsinki 141 Soon afterwards his daughter Arabella committed suicide in Bogota an incident that badly affected Arbenz Following her funeral the Arbenz family remained indefinitely in Mexico City while Arbenz himself spent some time in France and Switzerland with the ultimate objective of settling down in Mexico 141 On one of his visits to Mexico Arbenz contracted a serious illness and by the end of 1970 he was very ill He died soon after Historians disagree as to the manner of his death Roberto Garcia Ferreira stated that he died of a heart attack while taking a bath 141 while Cindy Forster wrote that he committed suicide 142 On 19 October 1995 Arbenz s remains were repatriated to Guatemala accompanied by his widow Maria 143 After his remains were returned to Guatemala Arbenz was given a military honor as military officers fired cannons in salute as Arbenz s coffin was placed onto a horse drawn carriage and transported to San Carlos University where students and university officials paid posthumous homage to the former president 143 144 The Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala which previously held autonomy following the 1944 Guatemala Revolution 143 awarded Arbenz with a posthumous decoration soon after 141 After departing from the university the coffin containing Arbenz s remains was then taken to the National Palace where it would remain until midnight 143 On 20 October 1995 thousands of Guatemalans flocked to the Guatemala City s cemetery for his burial service 144 During the burial service then Guatemala Defense Minister Gen Marco Antonio Gonzalez who received Arbenz s remains after they were returned to the country stayed in his car after crowds booed and screamed Army of assassins get out of the country 144 Guatemalan government apology editIn 1999 the Arbenz family went before the Inter American Commission on Human Rights IACHR to demand an apology from the Guatemalan government for the 1954 coup which saw him ousted 145 Following years of campaigning the Arbenz Family took the Guatemalan Government to Inter American Commission on Human Rights in Washington D C It accepted the complaint in 2006 leading to five years of stop and start negotiations 146 147 In May 2011 the Guatemalan government signed an agreement with Arbenz s surviving family to restore his legacy and publicly apologize for the government s role in ousting him This included a financial settlement to the family as well as the family s insistence on social reparations and policies for the future of the Guatemalan people a first for a judgement of this kind from the OAS The formal apology was made at the National Palace by Guatemalan President Alvaro Colom on 20 October 2011 to Jacobo Arbenz Vilanova the son of the former president and a Guatemalan politician 70 Colom stated It was a crime to Guatemalan society and it was an act of aggression to a government starting its democratic spring 70 The agreement established several forms of reparation for the next of kin of Arbenz Guzman Among other measures the state 70 148 held a public ceremony recognizing its responsibility sent a letter of apology to the next of kin named a hall of the National Museum of History and the highway to the Atlantic after the former president revised the basic national school curriculum Curriculo Nacional Base established a degree program in Human Rights Pluriculturalism and Reconciliation of Indigenous Peoples held a photographic exhibition on Arbenz Guzman and his legacy at the National Museum of History recovered the wealth of photographs of the Arbenz Guzman family published a book of photos reissued the book Mi esposo el presidente Arbenz My Husband President Arbenz prepared and published a biography of the former president and issued a series of postage stamps in his honor The official statement issued by the government recognized its responsibility for failing to comply with its obligation to guarantee respect and protect the human rights of the victims to a fair trial to property to equal protection before the law and to judicial protection which are protected in the American Convention on Human Rights and which were violated against former President Juan Jacobo Arbenz Guzman his wife Maria Cristina Villanova and his children Juan Jacobo Maria Leonora and Arabella all surnamed Arbenz Villanova 148 Legacy editHistorian Roberto Garcia Ferreira wrote in 2008 that Arbenz s legacy was still a matter of great dispute in Guatemala itself while arguing that the image of Arbenz was significantly shaped by the CIA media campaign that followed the 1954 coup 149 Garcia Ferreira said that the revolutionary government represented one of the few periods in which state authority was used to promote the interests of the nation s masses 150 Forster described Arbenz s legacy in the following terms In 1952 the Agrarian Reform Law swept the land destroying forever the hegemony of the planters Arbenz in effect legislated a new social order The revolutionary decade plays a central role in twentieth century Guatemalan history because it was more comprehensive than any period of reform before or since 151 She added that even within the Guatemalan government Arbenz gave full compass to Indigenous campesino and labor demands in contrast to Arevalo who had remained suspicious of these movements 151 Similarly Greg Grandin stated that the land reform decree represented a fundamental shift in the power relations governing Guatemala 152 Arbenz himself once remarked that the agrarian reform law was most precious fruit of the revolution and the fundamental base of the nation as a new country 153 However to a large extent the legislative reforms of the Arbenz and Arevalo administrations were reversed by the US backed military governments that followed 154 In popular culture editThe Guatemalan movie The Silence of Neto 1994 filmed on location in Antigua Guatemala takes place during the last months of the government of Arbenz It follows the life of a fictional 12 year old boy who is sheltered by the Arbenz family set against a backdrop of the struggle in which the country is embroiled at the time 155 The story of Arbenz s life and subsequent overthrow in the CIA sponsored coup d etat has been the subject of several books notably PBSuccess The CIA s covert operation to overthrow Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz June July 1954 156 by Mario Overall and Daniel Hagedorn 2016 American Propaganda Media And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman by Zachary Fisher 2014 157 as well as New York Times Best Seller The Devil s Chessboard by Author David Talbot HarperCollins 2015 The Arbenz story was also the subject of the multi award winning 1997 documentary by Andreas Hoessli Devils Don t Dream 158 See also editSalvador Allende Socialist president of Chile who was ousted in a US supported coup Juan Jose Torres Socialist president of Bolivia ousted by a US supported coup Ernest V Siracusa Embassy official in Guatemala who later was ambassador in Bolivia during the coup against Torres Portals nbsp Guatemala nbsp BiographyNotes edit In order to run for election the constitution required that Arana resign his military position by May 1950 and that his successor be chosen by Congress from a list submitted by the Consejo Superior de la Defensa or CSD 48 Elections for the CSD were scheduled for July 1949 The months before this election saw intense wrangling as Arana supporters tried to gain control over the election process Specifically they wanted the election to be supervised by regional commanders loyal to Arana rather than centrally dispatched observers 48 References edit Sabino 2019 pp 127 Gleijeses 1992 p 3 a b c Martinez Pelaez 1990 p 842 LaFeber 1993 pp 77 79 Forster 2001 pp 81 82 Friedman 2003 pp 82 83 Hunt 2004 p 255 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 60 a b Castellanos Cambranes Julio Jacobo Arbenz Guzman Por la Patria y la Revolucion en Guatemala 1951 1954 Jacobo Arbenz Guzman For the Motherland and the Revolution in Guatemala 1951 1954 PDF p 90 ISBN 978 9929 8119 3 5 Retrieved 9 April 2019 via Copredeh a b c d e f g h i Gleijeses 1992 pp 134 137 Gleijeses 1992 p 141 Streeter 2000 pp 8 10 a b Gleijeses 1992 pp 10 11 Forster 2001 pp 12 15 Streeter 2000 p 11 a b Forster 2001 p 29 a b c d Streeter 2000 pp 11 12 a b Immerman 1982 pp 34 37 a b Cullather 2006 pp 9 10 a b Rabe 1988 p 43 Forster 2001 pp 29 32 Gleijeses 1992 p 15 McCreery 1994 pp 316 317 Gleijeses 1992 p 22 Immerman 1982 pp 36 37 Forster 2001 p 84 Gleijeses 1992 pp 24 25 Forster 2001 p 86 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 39 40 a b Gleijeses 1992 p 140 a b Immerman 1982 pp 41 43 a b c d e Gleijeses 1992 pp 48 51 Forster 2001 pp 89 91 Loveman amp Davies 1997 pp 126 127 a b Gleijeses 1992 pp 28 29 Gleijeses 1992 pp 30 31 a b Immerman 1982 pp 45 45 a b Streeter 2000 p 14 Gleijeses 1992 p 36 Gleijeses 1992 pp 48 54 a b Immerman 1982 pp 46 49 a b Streeter 2000 pp 15 16 a b Immerman 1982 p 48 Sabino 2007 pp 9 24 a b c d Gleijeses 1992 pp 51 57 a b Gleijeses 1992 pp 58 60 Gleijeses 1992 pp 59 63 a b c d e f Gleijeses 1992 pp 59 69 Gleijeses 1992 p 70 a b c d e f g h Gleijeses 1992 pp 73 84 Gleijeses 1992 p 74 Streeter 2000 pp 15 17 Immerman 1982 pp 60 61 Gleijeses 1992 p 83 Immerman 1982 p 62 Immerman 1982 pp 62 62 Streeter 2000 p 16 Forster 2001 p 2 Gleijeses 1992 p 124 a b Streeter 2000 p 18 Fried 1983 p 52 Gleijeses 1992 p 149 a b Immerman 1982 p 64 Gleijeses 1992 p 49 Handy 1994 p 84 Handy 1994 p 85 Paterson 2009 p 304 Handy 1994 p 36 a b c Schlesinger 2011 a b c d Malkin 2011a Chomsky 1985 pp 154 160 Gleijeses 1992 p 77 Gleijeses 1992 p 134 Immerman 1982 pp 62 63 Immerman 1982 p 63 Streeter 2000 pp 18 19 a b Forster 2001 pp 98 99 Gleijeses 1992 pp 50 60 Ibarra 2006 a b Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 55 59 Gleijeses 1992 pp 141 181 Gleijeses 1992 pp 181 379 a b c Immerman 1982 pp 64 67 Gleijeses 1992 pp 144 146 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gleijeses 1992 pp 149 164 Smith 2000 p 135 Grandin 2000 pp 200 201 Gleijeses 1992 pp 155 163 Forster 2001 p 118 Immerman 1982 pp 68 70 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 65 68 a b c Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 67 71 Immerman 1982 pp 68 72 a b Immerman 1982 pp 73 76 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 71 a b Immerman 1982 pp 75 82 Forster 2001 pp 136 137 a b c d Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 72 77 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 90 97 a b Immerman 1982 pp 82 100 Gaddis 1997 p 177 Streeter 2000 p 4 Immerman 1982 pp 109 110 a b c Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 102 a b Gleijeses 1992 pp 228 231 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 100 101 Gleijeses 1992 p 234 a b Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 106 107 a b Immerman 1982 pp 122 127 Cohen Rich 2012 The Fish that Ate the Whale New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux p 186 a b Kornbluh amp Doyle 1997 Immerman 1982 pp 141 143 Immerman 1982 pp 162 165 Gleijeses 1992 pp 259 262 Immerman 1982 pp 144 150 Gleijeses 1992 pp 280 285 a b Immerman 1982 pp 155 160 Gleijeses 1992 pp 300 311 Cullather 2006 pp 87 89 Immerman 1982 p 165 a b Cullather 2006 pp 100 101 a b c Gleijeses 1992 pp 320 323 Gleijeses 1992 pp 326 329 a b Cullather 2006 p 97 a b c Gleijeses 1992 pp 330 335 Gleijeses 1992 pp 342 345 a b c Gleijeses 1992 pp 345 349 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 p 201 a b Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 56 a b Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 62 PR Newswire 2011 Garcia Ferreira 2008 pp 64 65 a b Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 66 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 54 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 55 a b c d Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 68 Koeppel 2008 p 153 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 69 a b c d Garcia Ferreira 2008 pp 70 72 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 72 a b c d e f Garcia Ferreira 2008 pp 72 73 Forster 2001 p 221 a b c d Castellanos Amafredo 19 October 1995 Guatemala receives Arbenz s remains United Press International Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b c Phillips Richard 21 October 1995 41 Years After Coup Hero S Body Returns Chicago Tribune Retrieved 13 June 2021 Apology reignites conversation about ousted Guatemala leader CNN 24 October 2011 Retrieved 21 June 2021 Malkin 2011b Guatemala una disculpa que tardo 57 anos BBC 20 October 2011 a b IACHR 2011 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 74 Garcia Ferreira 2008 p 61 a b Forster 2001 p 19 Grandin 2000 p 221 Grandin 2000 p 239 Schlesinger amp Kinzer 1999 pp 190 204 Borrayo Perez 2011 pp 37 48 Overall Mario Hagedorn Dan 2016 PBSuccess The CIA s covert operation to overthrow Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz June July 1954 ISBN 978 1910777893 Zachary Fisher April 2014 American Propaganda Media And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman American Propaganda Popular Media And The Fall Of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman ISBN 978 3659528064 Devils Don t Dream Sources editBorrayo Perez Gloria Catalina 2011 Analisis de contenido de la pelicula El Silencio de Neto con base a los niveles historico contextual terminologico de presentacion y el analisis de textos narrativos PDF Tesis in Spanish Guatemala Escuela de Ciencias de la Comunicacion de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala Chomsky Noam 1985 Turning the Tide Boston Massachusetts South End Press 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 Forster Cindy 2001 The time of freedom campesino workers in Guatemala s October Revolution University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 4162 0 Fried Jonathan L 1983 Guatemala in rebellion unfinished history Grove Press p 52 Friedman Max Paul 2003 Nazis and good neighbors the United States campaign against the Germans of Latin America in World War II Cambridge University Press pp 82 83 ISBN 978 0 521 82246 6 Gaddis John Lewis 1997 We Now Know rethinking Cold War history New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 878070 2 Garcia Ferreira Roberto 2008 The CIA and Jacobo Arbenz The story of a disinformation campaign Journal of Third World Studies XXV 2 United States 59 Gleijeses Piero 1992 Shattered hope the Guatemalan revolution and the United States 1944 1954 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02556 8 Grandin Greg 2000 The blood of Guatemala a history of race and nation Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 2495 9 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 Hunt Michael 2004 The World Transformed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 937234 8 IACHR Satisfied with Friendly Settlement Agreement in Arbenz Case Involving Guatemala Inter American Commission on Human Rights August 2009 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Ibarra Carlos Figueroa June 2006 The culture of terror and Cold War in Guatemala Journal of Genocide Research 8 2 191 208 doi 10 1080 14623520600703081 S2CID 72555904 Immerman Richard H 1982 The CIA in Guatemala The Foreign Policy of Intervention University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71083 2 Koeppel Dan 2008 Banana The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World New York Hudson Street Press p 153 ISBN 9781101213919 Kornbluh Peter Doyle Kate eds 23 May 1997 1994 CIA and Assassinations The Guatemala 1954 Documents National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No 4 Washington D C National Security Archive LaFeber Walter 1993 Inevitable revolutions the United States in Central America W W Norton amp Company pp 77 79 ISBN 978 0 393 30964 5 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 Malkin Elizabeth 20 October 2011a An Apology for a Guatemalan Coup 57 Years Later The New York Times Retrieved 21 July 2014 Malkin Elisabeth 23 May 2011b Guatemala to Restore Legacy of a President the U S Helped Depose New York Times Martinez Pelaez Severo 1990 La Patria del Criollo in Spanish Mexico Ediciones En Marcha p 858 McCreery David 1994 Rural Guatemala 1760 1940 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2318 3 Paterson Thomas G 2009 American Foreign Relations A History Volume 2 Since 1895 Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 547 22569 2 Guatemalan Government Issues Official Apology to Deposed Former President Jacobo Arbenz s Family for Human Rights Violations 57 Years Later PR Neswire Press release 11 October 2011 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Rabe Stephen G 1988 Eisenhower and Latin America The Foreign Policy of Anticommunism Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 4204 1 Sabino Carlos 2007 Guatemala la historia silenciada 1944 1989 in Spanish Vol Tomo 1 Revolucion y Liberacion Guatemala Fondo Nacional para la Cultura Economica Sabino Carlos 2019 Arbenz una biografia in Spanish Guatemala GrafiaEtc Schlesinger Stephen Kinzer Stephen 1999 Bitter Fruit The Story of the American Coup in Guatemala David Rockefeller Center series on Latin American studies Harvard University ISBN 978 0 674 01930 0 Schlesinger Stephen 3 June 2011 Ghosts of Guatemala s Past The New York Times Retrieved 21 July 2014 Smith Peter H 2000 Talons of the Eagle Dynamics of U S Latin American Relations Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512997 0 Streeter Stephen M 2000 Managing the counterrevolution the United States and Guatemala 1954 1961 Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 89680 215 5 Further reading editBooks edit Arevalo Martinez Rafael 1945 Ecce Pericles in Spanish Guatemala Tipografia Nacional Chapman Peter 2009 Bananas How the United Fruit Company Shaped the World Canongate ISBN 978 1 84767 194 3 Dosal Paul J 1993 Doing Business With the Dictators A Political History of United Fruit in Guatemala 1899 1944 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 2590 4 Handy Jim 1984 Gift of the devil a history of Guatemala South End Press ISBN 978 0 89608 248 9 Holland Max 2004 Operation PBHistory The Aftermath of SUCCESS International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence 17 2 300 332 doi 10 1080 08850600490274935 S2CID 153570470 Jonas Susanne 1991 The battle for Guatemala rebels death squads and U S power 5th ed Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 0614 8 Government NGO reports edit nbsp Works related to CIA and Guatemala Assassination Proposals CIA History Staff Analysis at Wikisource CIA file about Operations against Jacob Arbenz Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine News edit From Arbenz to Zelaya Chiquita in Latin America Democracy Now 21 July 2009External links edit nbsp Media related to Jacobo Arbenz Guzman at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Jacobo Arbenz at Wikiquote International Jose Guillermo Carrillo Foundation Jacobo Arbenz Biography brought to you by the United Fruit Company s United Fruit Historical Society Political offices Preceded byJuan Jose Arevalo nbsp President of Guatemala1951 1954 Succeeded byCarlos Enrique Diaz de Leon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacobo Arbenz amp oldid 1220571672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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