Republic of El Salvador República de El Salvador (Spanish) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1931–1979 | |||||||||
| Motto: Dios, Unión, Libertad "God, Union, Liberty" | |||||||||
| Anthem: Himno Nacional de El Salvador "National Anthem of El Salvador" | |||||||||
| Capital and largest city | San Salvador 13°42′N89°12′W / 13.700°N 89.200°W /13.700; -89.200 | ||||||||
| Common languages | Spanish | ||||||||
| Demonym | Salvadoran | ||||||||
| Government | Unitarypresidential republic under anauthoritarianmilitary dictatorship | ||||||||
| President | |||||||||
• 1931–1934, 1935–1944 | Maximiliano Hernández Martínez (first) | ||||||||
• 1977–1979 | Carlos Humberto Romero (last) | ||||||||
| Legislature | Legislative Assembly | ||||||||
| Historical era | Interwar period,World War II,Cold War | ||||||||
| 2 December 1931 | |||||||||
| 9 May 1944 | |||||||||
| 14–18 July 1969 | |||||||||
| 15 October 1979 | |||||||||
| Population | |||||||||
• 1950 | 2,200,000 | ||||||||
• 1970 | 3,736,000 | ||||||||
| Currency | Salvadoran colón | ||||||||
| |||||||||
| Today part of | El Salvador | ||||||||
TheSalvadoran military dictatorship, officially theRepublic of El Salvador (Spanish:República de El Salvador), was the period inSalvadoran history where theArmed Forces of El Salvador (FAES) governed the country for almost 48 years from 1931 to 1979. Themilitary dictatorship governed in anauthoritarian manner, limited political rights throughout, and maintained its governance through rigged elections.
The military came to power inEl Salvador when the firstdemocratically electedpresident,Arturo Araujo, was overthrown in amilitary coup d'état on 2 December 1931. The military appointed Araujo'svice president, GeneralMaximiliano Hernández Martínez, as acting president on 4 December 1931. He remained in office until he was forced to resign on 9 May 1944 following strikes and protests by students[a] in the capital ofSan Salvador. He was followed by three short-lived presidents, who were then succeeded byÓscar Osorio in 1950. His successor,José María Lemus, was overthrown in a military coup d'état in 1960 and was replaced byJulio Adalberto Rivera Carballo in 1962. From 1962 to 1979, theNational Conciliation Party (PCN) ruled the country in ade facto one party state; opposition parties existed, but in practice held no real power. The military regime ended on 15 October 1979, when young military officersoverthrew PresidentCarlos Humberto Romero and established theRevolutionary Government Junta, a joint civilian-military government which ruled the country from 1979 until thepresidential elections of 1982. The fall of the military government marked the beginning of the twelve-year-longSalvadoran Civil War which lasted until 1992.[1]
Many atrocities and human rights violations were committed under the Salvadoran military government. Under Martínez, theSalvadoran Army massacred anywhere from 10,000 to 40,000 peasants and indigenous people in response to a communist uprising in 1932, in an event known in El Salvador asLa Matanza.[b][2] TheNationalist Democratic Organization was established by Rivera in 1965. It was a collection offar-right paramilitaries and death squads that tortured political opponents, intimidated voters, rigged elections, and killed peasants.[3][4] PresidentFidel Sánchez Hernández initiated theFootball War withHonduras in July 1969, claiming that the Honduran government had allowed violence targeting Salvadorans to go unchecked following El Salvador's victory over Honduras in the1970 FIFA World Cup qualifiers.[5] In March 1979, President Romero ordered soldiers to fire on a crowd of protestors using live ammunition.[6] The military regime received support from the United States due to itsanti-communist stance, which aligned with the United States'Cold War interests.[7]
Manuel Enrique Araujo becamePresident of El Salvador on 1 March 1911.[8] He was president until his assassination on 9 February 1913 by farmers.[9] He was succeeded byCarlos Meléndez who served as acting president until 29 August 1914 when he was succeeded byAlfonso Quiñónez Molina.[10][11]
Carlos Meléndez and Quiñónez established a political dynasty under theNational Democratic Party (PND) which lasted from 1913 until 1927.[12] Carlos Meléndez was president from 1 March 1915 until his resignation on 21 December 1918.[10] He later died on 8 October 1919 inNew York City.[13] Meléndez was succeeded by Quiñónez until his younger brother,Jorge Meléndez, waselected President.[11] Jorge Meléndez was president from 1 March 1919 until 1 March 1923 when he was succeeded by Quiñónez who remained in power until 1 March 1927.[11][14] Quiñónez'svice president,Pío Romero Bosque, succeeded him on 1 March 1927.[15]
Unlike his predecessors, Romero Bosque did not appoint a successor and held El Salvador's firstfree election, ending theMeléndez–Quiñónez dynasty.[16][17] In the election,Labor Party (PL) candidateArturo Araujo, a relative of Araujo, won 46.65 percent of the vote and became president on 1 March 1931.[17][18] Araujo's vice president was GeneralMaximiliano Hernández Martínez of theNational Republican Party.[17]
Araujo became president during a severe economic crisis due to the effects of theGreat Depression.[16] From 1871 to 1927, El Salvador was called a "coffee republic" due to its heavy reliance oncoffee exports to sustain its economy.[19] However, because of the Great Depression, coffee prices fell 54 percent and the Salvadoran economy was unable to sustain itself.[16] Because of the economic crisis, wages fell, food supplies became limited, and living conditions worsened.[16] The crisis caused peasant unrest across western El Salvador, and as a result, Araujo appointed Martínez to be the country'sMinister of National Defense.[20][21] Araujo attempted to implement a tax reform to combat the economic crisis, however, resistance from wealthy landowners caused the reforms to fail.[17]
Araujo cut expenditures to the military and refused to pay its soldiers which caused anger within the military.[17][21] The military moved to overthrow Araujo and on 2 December 1931, the Armyoverthrew his government at 10 pm local time.[17][21][22] The coup was a watershed moment in Salvadoran history since it began the nearly 48 year long military dictatorship of the country.[23]

The military established theCivic Directory, a junta composed of military officers, to govern the country on 2 December 1931.[24] The directory was co-chaired by ColonelsOsmín Aguirre y Salinas andJoaquín Valdés.[17][24] The directory was dissolved on 4 December and power was transferred to Martínez who assumed dictatorial powers as acting president.[17][24][25] Martínez promised to hold alegislative election in January 1932, but when theCommunist Party won many municipalities, he canceled the election results.[7][26] Further elections were also canceled.[27] The elections did, however, give the government a list of communist party members.[2] The list allowed the government to arrest prominent communist leaders on 18 January 1932.[28]

The communist party believed that democracy had failed them,[29] and communists and peasants across the country, led byFarabundo Martí,Feliciano Ama,Mario Zapata, andAlfonso Luna.[30] Peasants rose up on 22 January 1932 inAhuachapán,Santa Tecla, andSonsonate, killing at most 100 people in the uprising.[31] Martínez responded by sending the military to crush the revolt.[32] In Martínez's crackdown, around 10,000 to 40,000 peasants were killed.[2][7][28] The event is known asLa Matanza, "the Massacre," in El Salvador.[28] TheConstitutional Assembly issued Legislative Decree No. 121 on 11 July 1932, which granted unconditional amnesty to anyone who committed crimes of any nature during La Matanza in order to "restore order, repress, persecute, punish and capture those accused of the crime of rebellion of this year."[33]
Because of the1923 Central American Treaty of Peace and Amity, the United States refused to recognize Martínez's government's legitimacy.[34] The US only recognized his government after the events of La Matanza.[35] Martínez eventually denounced El Salvador's membership of the treaty on 26 December 1932.[35][36][37]
Martínez helped El Salvador's financial situation improve during his presidency. On 23 February 1932, Martínez suspended payment on foreign debt, and again on 1 January 1938, but the debt was eventually paid off in 1938.[38] TheCentral Reserve Bank of El Salvador was established during his administration on 19 June 1934 to help stabilize thecolón, the national currency.[39] He appointedLuis Alfaro Durán as president of the Central Bank.[39] Martínez established Social Improvement, a welfare program to support poor peasants in July 1932.[40]
The Martínez regime sought to maintain the image of democratic legitimacy in the nation. Martínez won the1935,1939, and1944 presidential elections under the banner of theNational Pro Patria Party (PNPP).[18][40] His party also won legislative elections in1936,1939, and1944, however, for both the legislative and presidential elections, he was the only candidate, the PNPP was the only legal political party, and election results were sometimes not publicized.[18][41]
Martínez was personally sympathetic toNazi Germany andFascist Italy.[40] He appointedWehrmacht GeneralEberhardt Bohnstedt as the director of the Military School.[42][43] TheSalvadoran Air Force purchased aircraft from Italy in 1938 for US$39,000 with some of the payment being made with coffee.[44] Minister of National DefenseAndrés Ignacio Menéndez attempted to purchase planes from the United States butNorth American Aviation refused to accept coffee as a percentage of the payment.[44] El Salvador was one of the first nations to recognize theNationalists underFrancisco Franco as the legitimate government ofSpain in 1936.[45][46] El Salvador was also the first country afterJapan to recognize the independence ofManchukuo.[47][48]
Some Salvadorans supported theAxis as on 10 June 1940, the day Italy joined theSecond World War, 300 men dressed like the ItalianBlackshirts marched in the streets of San Salvador in support of Italy; however, the government suppressed the march.[49] Under pressure from the United States, the government fully supported theAllies on 8 December 1941 after the Japaneseattack onPearl Harbor.[40][50][51] El Salvador declared war on Japan on 8 December and then later Germany and Italy on 12 December.[50] The government arrested German, Italian, and Japanese nationals and seized their land.[52] El Salvador never provided soldiers to directly fight in the war but it did send workers to maintain thePanama Canal.[53] During the war,George Mantello and ColonelJosé Castellanos Contreras saved 40,000 Jews fromCentral Europe, mostly fromHungary, by providing them falseSalvadoran passports and political asylum.[54]

In 1944, Martínez held an election and elected himself to a third term as president.[18][40] The move angered many politicians, military officers, bankers, and businessmen since it overtly violated the constitution.[55] On 2 April 1944, Palm Sunday, pro-Axis military officers attempted a coup against Martínez.[55] The 1st Infantry Regiment and the 2nd Artillery Regiment rose up inSan Salvador andSanta Ana and seized the national radio station, took control of the Air Force, and captured the Santa Ana police station.[56] Martínez was able to take control of the situation and ordered military units still loyal to put down the uprising which was accomplished by 3 April.[56] Reprisals lasted for two weeks, martial law was declared, and a national curfew was established.[56]
Civilians wanted to remove Martínez from power and so on 2 May 1944, students took to the streets of San Salvador in the Strike of Fallen Arms to force his resignation.[56][57] The students engaged in non-violence to oppose the government.[57] On 7 May, the police shot and killed José Wright Alcaine, a 17-year-old who was a US citizen, which put pressure on Martínez to resign.[57][58] Martínez resigned on 9 May and left for exile in Guatemala.[55][56][57] Menéndez replaced Martínez as acting president and accepted the protestors' demands for amnesty for political prisoners, freedom of the press, and new general elections.[55][57][59] His term in office was short-lived as he was overthrown in a military coup d'état on 20 October 1944 and replaced by Aguirre.[55][60] Aguirre held the promisedelections in January 1945.[18][55] He was accused of rigging the election in favor of a candidate he supported and the election resulted in GeneralSalvador Castaneda Castro becoming president with 99.70% of the vote.[18][55][61][62] Castaneda was deposed in a coup d'état on 14 December 1948 by young military officers.[55][63][64] The coup, known as the Major's Coup, forced all Salvadoran military officers above the rank of lieutenant colonel to resign.[64][65] The young officers established theRevolutionary Council of Government which governed the country until MajorÓscar Osorio, the chairman of the Revolutionary Council of Government, waselected President in 1950.[18][65][66]

Osorio Hernández ran under the banner of theRevolutionary Party of Democratic Unification (PRUD).[18] He became President of El Salvador on 14 September 1950 under a new constitution.[64][65][67] Osorio Hernández's policies supported economic development, agricultural reform, and social security programs, although policies like agrarian reform were not implemented as to not alienate wealthy landlords and oligarchs.[68]
Osorio Hernández was succeeded by Lieutenant ColonelJosé María Lemus on 14 September 1956 following the1956 presidential election.[69] In the election,Roberto Edmundo Cannessa of theNational Action Party, his primary and most popular opponent, was disqualified by the Central Electoral Council a month before the election which led to his landslide victory.[68] In office, he granted amnesty to many political prisoners and exiled politicians.[68] He also repealed several repressive laws instituted by his predecessors.[68] Following theCuban Revolution in 1959, students in El Salvador were influenced by the nationalistic and revolutionary movement ofFidel Castro which led to protests for a truly democratic system to be implemented in the country.[68] In response, Lemus abandoned his reforms and cracked down on freedom of expression and arrested political opponents.[68] Lemus' turn to authoritarianism caused the military to turn against him and he wasoverthrown on 26 October 1960.[69][70][71]
The military established theJunta of Government and was led by Lieutenant ColonelMiguel Ángel Castillo.[70][71]Fabio Castillo Figueroa, one of the three civilian members of the junta, had pro-Castro views who was seen as a potential threat by the military.[71] The militaryoverthrew the junta and replaced it with another junta, theCivic-Military Directory.[70] Lieutenant ColonelJulio Adalberto Rivera Carballo served as the chairman of the new junta and promised new elections for 1962.[70][71]
The junta was dissolved on 25 January 1962 and anindependent politician,Eusebio Rodolfo Cordón Cea, was appointed as Provisional President.[72] During the1962 presidential election, the newly formedNational Conciliation Party (PCN) ran unopposed and its candidate, Rivera, won 100% of the vote.[18] He became president on 1 July 1962 under a new constitution.[73]
Although only the PCN had a candidate in the 1962 presidential election, other parties had formed and ran in the1961 legislative election but gained no seats.[18] The most prominent opposition party was theChristian Democratic Party (PDC).[70][74] The party formed in 1960 and had broad support from the middle class.[70] The party came under attack from both the political left and right, with the left believing the party would uphold the capitalist economic system and increase wealth gaps while the right saw the party as a socialist reactionary movement that threatened their wealth and power.[70] The party, underAbraham Rodríguez Portillo andRoberto Lara Velado, believedChristian democracy was the best path forward for El Salvador's modernization.[70] The party's ideology was inspired byPope Leo XIII'sRerum novarum and from the works ofPope John XXIII and French philosopherJacques Maritain.[70] The party was also inspired from other Christian democratic movements inChile andVenezuela.[70]
Rivera got El Salvador involved in US PresidentJohn F. Kennedy'sAlliance for Progress, an initiative to improverelations betweenLatin America and the United States through economic cooperation.[75][76] He supported the implementation of agrarian reform but it was never actually implemented.[77] He established theNational Security Agency of El Salvador (ANSESAL) in 1965.[78] It served as the national intelligence agency of the country and it oversaw the operations of theNational Democratic Organization (ORDEN), a group ofparamilitaries that killed peasants, rigged elections, and intimidated voters.[3][4][79]
Rivera instituted electoral reforms by allowed opposition political parties to run in presidential elections and compete in legislative elections.[77] Previously, whichever party won the most votes in a certaindepartment, that party won all seats and all representation for that department, but under his reforms, seats and representatives were elected proportional to how many votes a party got.[77] The reform allowed the PDC to gain 14 seats and theRenovating Action Party (PAR) won 6 seats in the Constitutional Assembly in the1964 legislative elections.[18][77] In the election,José Napoleón Duarte, a prominent PDC politician, was elected asMayor of San Salvador.[77]
The PCN maintained its control on power with United States support and through the country's continued economic growth.[77] In the1967 presidential election, the PCN won with 54.37% of the vote with the PDC's nominee, Rodríguez Portillo, coming in second place with 21.62%.[18][80]Fidel Sánchez Hernández of the PCN became president on 1 July 1967.[81]
In the late 1960s, around 300,000 Salvadorans migrated to Honduras, many of whomentered the country illegally.[5][82] On 3 October 1963,Oswaldo López Arellano overthrew PresidentRamón Villeda Morales of Honduras and established a military dictatorship.[82] During López Arellano's regime, the Honduran economy staggered and he blamed the country's economic issues on the Salvadoran immigrants who were stealing Honduran jobs.[82]
During the1970 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, Honduras and El Salvador competed in separate groups for theConfederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) qualifications, Honduras was in Group 3 and El Salvador was in Group 4, both winning their respective groups.[83][5] The met each other in the semifinals.[83][5] Honduras won the first match inTegucigalpa 1–0 on 8 June 1969.[5] Salvador won the second match in San Salvador 3–0 on 15 June.[5] Both matches witnessed violence from fans on both sides.[5][82] During the second match, the Salvadorans raised a dirty rag instead of theHonduran flag.[5] One of the players of theHonduran team,Enrique Cardona, reportedly stated, "We're awfully lucky that we lost. Otherwise we wouldn't be alive today."[5] The loss caused Honduran civilians to attack Salvadoran immigrants.[84] Salvadorans were murdered, assaulted, and had their homes burned, forcing 17,000 to flee back to El Salvador.[5][84] The Salvadorans called the attacks on the Salvadorans a massacre.[84]
A third match was held inMexico City on 26 June to decide who would go on to the final round againstHaiti.[5][84] The Salvadorans defeated the Honduras 3–2 inextra time and theSalvadoran team advanced to the finals.[5] The defeat caused further attacks against the Salvadoran immigrants and led to a migrant crisis in El Salvador since the government was unable to provide housing for all the refugees coming from Honduras.[84]
Due to the ongoing crisis, El Salvador severed diplomatic ties with Honduras on 26 June and declared war on 14 July 1969.[5][82][84][85] The Salvadoran Air Force attacked theToncontín International Airport to disable theHonduran Air Force and the Salvadoran Army launched a two prong invasion following two major roads connecting the two countries.[5] After two days, the Honduran Air Force began attacking Salvadoran air bases in Chalatenango andLa Unión, halting the Salvadoran advance.[5] After four days of fighting, theOrganization of American States (OAS) negotiated acease fire on 18 July.[5] El Salvador withdrew its troops on 2 August and the OAS promised to guarantee the safety of the Salvadorans in Honduras.[5] Around 2,000 people, most of whom were civilians, were killed during the war.[86]
Initially, Salvadoran politics were united against Honduras, but the Communist Party and the left eventually turned against the war and continued to oppose the government.[86][87] The war also caused the Salvadoran economy to stagnate and many refugees overcrowded the country.[7][86]

The refugees coming from Honduras to El Salvador received little to no aid or support from the Salvadoran government.[5] To the refugees, now living in poverty, left-wing groups such as theUnited Front for Revolutionary Action (FUAR),Unified Popular Action Front (FAPU), andChristian Federation of Salvadoran Peasants (FECCAS) seemed as the only opportunity to raise themselves out of poverty.[7] As a result, left-wing militant organizations grew in size and numbers and continued to gain more support among the poor population.[7] The increased support led to an increase in left-wing terrorist actions against the government.[88]
The PDC gained more support from the refugees as well.[7] The PDC advocated for land and agrarian reform to gain the support of the voter base.[86] The refugees coming from Honduras had no land to farm like they had in Honduras so they overwhelmingly supported the PDC.[86] In January 1970, the government established the National Agrarian Reform Congress to begin implementing agrarian reforms that were demanded for by the people.[86] The congress consisted of members that were from the government, the opposition, labor groups, and businesses.[89]
The PDC lost 3 seats in the Constitutional Assembly in the1970 legislative elections while the PCN gained 7 seats.[18][89] The election was claimed to have been rigged by the PCN to ensure they would gain seats and retain a majority.[18][89] In 1972, the PDC joined forced with two other political parties, theNational Revolutionary Movement (MRN) and theNationalist Democratic Union (UDN), to run in the 1972presidential andlegislative elections under the banner of theNational Opposition Union (UNO).[18][90][91] ColonelArturo Armando Molina was the candidate of the PCN while Duarte was the PDC candidate.[90] The Central Election Board stated that Duarte had won by 9,000 votes with 327,000 votes compared to Molina's 318,000, but the PCN called for a recount.[90][92] A recount was conducted and the statement was changed and it declared that Molina won by 10,000 votes.[93] The final result was that Molina won 43.42% of the vote while Duarte won 42.14%.[18] Duarte andGuillermo Ungo, his running mate, petitioned for a second recount but the petition was denied.[90] UNO also lost 9 seats in the1972 legislative election while the PCN gained 5 more seats.[18]
On 25 March 1972, a group of young left-leaning military officers called the Military Youthattempted a coup d'état against Sánchez Hernández to prevent Molina from becoming president.[90] The officers were led by ColonelBenjamin Mejía and their goal was to establish a revolutionary junta and establish Duarte as president.[90] The coup plotters captured Sánchez Hernández and theNational Palace.[90] Duarte announced his support for the coup and the coup plotters called for garrisons to support the coup, however, the Air Force attacked the National Palace and garrisons engaged the revolutionaries.[94][95] By 26 March, the coup was over and 200 were killed.[95] Sánchez Hernández retook power and Duarte was arrested.[94] He was initially sentenced to death but it was commuted to torture and he was exiled toVenezuela.[94][95]
Molina took office on 1 July 1972.[96] On 19 July, he had tanks attack theUniversity of El Salvador.[97] Around 800 were arrested and another 15 were exiled to Nicaragua.[97] He closed the university for two years to "eliminate the opposition."[97] Molina attempted to institute land reform in 1976 but it only increased political unrest since the reforms redistributed little to no land to the peasants.[98][99]
UNO selectedErnesto Antonio Claramount Roseville as its candidate for the1977 presidential election while the PCN selected general and incumbent Minister of National DefenseCarlos Humberto Romero as its nominee.[100] Romero was declared to have the election with 67.30% of the vote while according to witnesses, Claramount actually won with 75% of the vote.[93] Romero assumed office on 1 July 1977.[101]
When theNicaraguan Revolution began in 1978, Romero grew concerned that the revolution would spread to El Salvador.[6] He attempted to begin negotiation with the opposition to ensure that did not happen, but his attempt emboldened opposition forces who took to the streets of San Salvador to strike in March 1979.[6] Romero cracked down on the strikes and ordered his soldiers to fire live ammunition into the crowds to end the strike.[6] The event was broadcast in the United States and Europe which resulted in Costa Rica,Japan, Switzerland, the United Kingdom andWest Germany closing their respective embassies in El Salvador.[6]
PresidentAnastasio Somoza Debayle of Nicaragua was finally deposed by theSandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) in September 1979 which caused alarm among young military officers in the Salvadoran Army.[102] The Military Youth, led by ColonelsAdolfo Arnoldo Majano andJaime Abdul Gutiérrez staged acoup d'état against Romero on 15 October 1979 with the support of the United States.[103][104][105] Romero fled for exile in Guatemala, as didFederico Castillo Yanes, the Minister of National Defense.[20][106][107][108]
On 18 October 1979, the military established theRevolutionary Government Junta.[6][109] The junta was composed of five men: Colonels Majano and Gutiérrez, Ungo,Mario Antonio Andino, the former president of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of El Salvador (CCIES), andRomán Mayorga Quirós, a member of theCentral American University.[7][110][111][112]
The coup of October 1979 marked the end of the military regime of El Salvador and many mark it as the start of theSalvadoran Civil War.[1] The civil war lasted until 1992 with the signing of theChapultepec Peace Accords.[1][113]
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