Carlos Prats | |
|---|---|
| Commander-in-chief of the Chilean Army | |
| In office October 27, 1970 – August 23, 1973 | |
| President | Salvador Allende |
| Preceded by | René Schneider |
| Succeeded by | Augusto Pinochet |
| Chilean Minister of the Interior | |
| In office November 2, 1972 – March 27, 1973 | |
| President | Salvador Allende |
| Preceded by | Jaime Suárez |
| Succeeded by | Gerardo Espinoza Carrillo |
| Chilean Minister of National Defense | |
| In office August 9, 1973 – August 23, 1973 | |
| President | Salvador Allende |
| Preceded by | Clodomiro Almeyda |
| Succeeded by | Orlando Letelier |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1915-02-24)February 24, 1915 Talcahuano, Chile |
| Died | September 30, 1974(1974-09-30) (aged 59) Buenos Aires, Argentina |
| Manner of death | Assassination (car bomb) |
| Political party | Independent |
| Spouse | - died with her husband |
| Children | 3 |
| Profession | Military officer |
| Signature | |
Carlos Prats González (Spanish:[ˈkaɾlosˈpɾats]; February 24, 1915 – September 30, 1974) was aChilean Army officer and politician. He served as aminister inSalvador Allende's government while Commander-in-chief of the Chilean Army. He resigned in August 1973 amid growing national discontent. Immediately after GeneralAugusto Pinochet's September 11, 1973 coup, Prats went into voluntary exile in Argentina. The following year, he and his wife,Sofía Cuthbert, were assassinated inBuenos Aires by acar bomb planted by theDirección de Inteligencia Nacional.
Carlos Prats González was born inTalcahuano, a port city in southern Central Chile, in 1915, the oldest son of Carlos Prats Risopatrón and Hilda González Suárez. He joined the Army in 1931 and graduated at the top of his class.
In 1935, he was commissioned as an artillery officer. Three years later he became aSub-lieutenant. Soon he returned to the Military Academy, this time as a teacher. He taught there and at the War Academy until 1954. In 1944, he marriedSofia Cuthbert Chiarleoni, with whom he had three daughters.
In 1954, Prats González was promoted to Major and sent to the military mission to the United States as adjunct military attaché, where he served until 1958. That year he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and returned to the War Academy as a teacher. In 1961, he became commander of the Artillery Regiment Nº3 “Chorrillos”, and in 1963, became commander of the Regiment Nº1 “Tacna”.
In 1964, Prats González was promoted to Colonel and sent as military attaché toArgentina. He returned to Chile in 1967 as commander of the III Army Division. In 1968, he was promoted to Brigade General and Chief of the General Staff. The following year he was promoted to Division General.
Salvador Allende was elected in the1970 Chilean presidential election. General Prats became the head of the "constitutionalists", members of the armed forces who supported theSchneider Doctrine. With time, he became the army's strongest supporter of President Allende, and was appointed several times as a member of his cabinet. Allende appointed him Vice-President in 1972 (The Chilean Constitution does not have a standing vice-presidential office; rather, the sitting Minister of the Interior, as the senior cabinet minister, is temporarily designated "vice president" during the President's absence on formal State visits abroad).
Prats' reputation was significantly damaged in theAlejandrina Cox incident of June 1973, in which he became involved in an altercation with members of the public and fired a shot at their car. He immediately tendered his resignation, but Allende refused to accept it. Days later, an attempted coup known as theTanquetazo took place; Prats' rapid response helped to defeat the coup and somewhat restored his public standing.
On August 22, 1973, the wives of Prats' generals and officers staged a rally in front of his home, calling him a coward for not restoring civil order in Chile. This event convinced Prats that he had lost support of his fellow officers. The next day he resigned his positions as Interior minister and as Commander in Chief of the Army. The only two other generals in favor of a constitutional solution to the political crisis, GeneralsMario Sepulveda Squella andGuillermo Pickering (both in key troop command positions), also presented their resignations in a show of support for him. GeneralAugusto Pinochet, previously second in command and thought to be loyal to Allende, was appointed Commander in Chief of the Army, taking over the position on August 23, 1973. Prats had personally recommended to Allende to appoint Pinochet to the position.[1]
Prats' retirement removed the last real obstacle to a military coup, which took place less than three weeks later, on September 11, 1973. Immediately afterthe coup, on September 15, 1973, Prats voluntarily went into exile with his wife inArgentina.

On September 30, 1974, inBuenos Aires, Prats and his wife Sofia were killed outside their apartment by a radio-controlledcar bomb. Debris reached the ninth-floor balcony of the building across the street.
In 1983,Michael Townley admitted to his role in carrying out the assassination of Prats on behalf ofDINA officials, but was granted immunity from prosecution after entering a plea deal.[2] The former leaders of DINA, including chiefManuel Contreras, ex-chief of operation, and retired generalRaúl Iturriaga, his brother Roger Iturriaga, and ex-brigadiers Pedro Espinoza and Jose Zara, were charged in 2003 in Chile with Prats' assassination,[3] and were later convicted.[4][5] The Chilean judge investigating the case, Alejandro Solis, exempted Pinochet from prosecution after theChilean Supreme court rejected a request in January 2005 to lift the ex-dictator's immunity.
In Argentina, DINA civil agentEnrique Arancibia was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in 2004 for Prats' murder.[6][7][8] In 2000,SIDE agent Juan Martín Siga Correa was detained by Argentine officials on the orders of federal judgeMaría Servini de Cubría.[9] Martín Siga Correa was DINA's main connection with the SIDE and withIntelligence Battalion 601, and was also a member of theTacuara Nationalist Movement.
In 2003, Argentine federal judge María Servini de Cubría asked Chile for the extradition ofMariana Callejas, who was Michael Townley's wife, and Cristoph Willikie Fleent, a retired colonel from the Chilean army; the three together were charged with Prat's murder. But Chilean Appeals court judge Nibaldo Segura refused extradition in July 2005, arguing that the three had already been prosecuted in Chile.[10]
Italian terroristStefano Delle Chiaie was reportedly also involved in the murder of Prats. Along with fellow extremistVincenzo Vinciguerra, Delle Chiaie testified inRome in December 1995 before Judge Servini thatEnrique Arancibia Clavel (a former Chilean secret police agent prosecuted forcrimes against humanity in 2004[11]) and Michael Townley were directly involved in this assassination.[12]
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Minister of the Interior 1972-1973 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Minister of Defense 1973 | Succeeded by |
| Military offices | ||
| Preceded by | Army Commander-in-chief 1970-1973 | Succeeded by |