All the attempts to cause a coup were in 1970. They failed and strengthen support for the regime. After that the US used economic and political means to cut off Chile. I'm don't see how the latter actions is remotely wrong. If you elect an anti-American regime, no shit the US is going to constrict trade. The 1973 coup was not planned by the US government.Duckie wrote: Also, in 1998 documents were declassified detailing CIA support for the regime, coup, and manufacturing the conditions that led to the coup, as well as trying to influence the election away from Allende anyhow. Go check out Project FUBELT.
http://foia.state.gov/Reports/HincheyReport.asp#17
Hinchy report wrote:The CIA continued to collect intelligence on Chilean military officers actively opposed to the Allende government, but no effort was made to assist them in any way. Some CIA assets and contacts were in direct contact with coup plotters; CIA guidance was that the purpose of these contacts was only to collect intelligence. As coup rumors and planning escalated by the end of 1972, CIA exercised extreme care in all dealings with Chilean military officers and continued to monitor their activities but under no circumstances attempted to influence them. By October 1972 the consensus within the US government was that the military intended to launch a coup at some point, that it did not need US support for a successful coup, and that US intervention or assistance in a coup should be avoided.
There is a difference between involved and responsible. Of course the US was involved- we sponsered opposition parties. We were sponsoring them until 1973 (which doesn't make sense if we were also responsible for the coup). There is nothing morally wrong with financial support- although how we did it was probably illegal.Any thinking person would have known this in 1973 because when hasn't the US overthrown latin american governments that work against US business or foreign policy interests, but it's confirmed as of over 20 years ago, so there's no excuse claiming the US wasn't involved.
That is great. And when countries stop reacting to what other nations do that might be true. Whenever you are willing to interfere in another country to ensure a friendly government, covertly rigging elections is less bloody than most of the alternatives.Molyneux wrote:"They elected the guy I don't like!" or "They elected someone who's not friendly towards our country!" are not valid justifications for rigging an election. Period.
Lets take an example- Palestine. The election of Hamas lead to the blockade of Gaza, the halt of financial aid and rocket attacks by Hamas. Not electing Hamas would not have lead to those things.