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1971 Bolivian coup d'état

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Overthrow of Bolivian president Juan José Torres
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1971 Bolivian coup d'état
Part of theCold War in South America andOperation Condor
Date18–21 August 1971
Location
Result

Coup attempt successful

Belligerents

Bolivia Bolivian Government

BoliviaNationalist Popular Front


Supported by:
United States
BrazilBrazil
ArgentinaArgentina (alleged)
ParaguayParaguay (alleged)
Commanders and leaders
BoliviaJuan José TorresBoliviaHugo Banzer
United States involvement in
regime change
20th century

The1971 Bolivian coup d'état was led by military officerHugo Banzer on August 18, 1971, against the government of presidentJuan José Torres.[1]

Political background

[edit]

Following the uprising of October 7, 1970, General Juan José Torres came to power. Torres would form a left-wing nationalist government, with an "anti-imperialist" stance. Torres would try to form a co-government with the Popular Assembly, a workers' organization, the same sector that helped him come to power.

On January 10, 1971, there was an attempted coup against the Torres regime, led by Colonel Hugo Banzer, who was later exiled toArgentina.

The coup

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According to theBarcelona Center for International Affairs (CIDOB), on August 18, 1971, Hugo Banzer entered Bolivia clandestinely, being arrested inSanta Cruz and later flown to the Carabineros barracks inLa Paz.[2]

The next day, August 19, a rebellion broke out in Santa Cruz led by theNationalist Popular Front, a movement made up of the military and theRevolutionary Nationalist Movement (MNR) andBolivian Socialist Falange (FSB) parties. On August 20, Colonel Andrés Selich ordered the shooting of university students in Santa Cruz. The insurgents supposedly freed Banzer from prison and took over radio stations.[3]

In the early hours of August 21, 1971, Juan José Torres and theBolivian Colorados Regiment called for resistance to the coup. Many took to the streets with this objective, including the socialist leaderMarcelo Quiroga Santa Cruz along with other people and students, however, the lack of weapons and disorganization of these played against them.[4] It is estimated that there were around 100 dead and 50 wounded.[5] Many of Torres' military changed sides, with Rubén Sánchez Valdivia being the only loyal military man at the end. With this scenario, Torres was forced to flee and the rebels took the presidential palace. A triumvirate made up of Jaime Florentino Mendieta, Andrés Selich Chop, and Hugo Banzer Suárez himself took power. Later, the junta passed the presidency with full powers to Banzer.

Foreign involvement

[edit]

Before the coup, Torres's government had been subjected to external pressure from theUnited States. U.S. ambassadorErnest V. Siracusa (who participated in the coup d'état againstJacobo Arbenz inGuatemala in 1954, then was expelled fromPeru in 1968, accused of being aCIA man) ordered him to change his policy, threatening him with financial blockage. TheWorld Bank and theInter-American Development Bank refused to grant Bolivia the loans necessary to pursue industrial development work.

On June 11, 1971, PresidentRichard Nixon and National Security AdvisorHenry Kissinger discussed plans for a coup in Bolivia.[6] Later in July, the40 Committee approved covert funding towards Torres's opposition.[7]

A week after the coup,The Washington Post published a report which claimed that U.S. Air Force Major Robert J. Lundin had advised the plotters and lent them a long-range radio. The report was never substantiated, however, and the State Department denied it immediately, asserting that the United States had no involvement in the overthrow of Torres.[8]

TheBrazilian military government openly supported the Bolivian coup.[9][10]Brazilian Air Force planes dropped weapons, including ammunition, rifles, and machine guns, to the rebels in Santa Cruz de la Sierra. Additionally, troops from the II Army, commanded by GeneralHumberto Melo [pt], were deployed toMato Grosso, ready to intervene if necessary.[9]

According to former U.S. ambassador to ArgentinaJohn Davis Lodge, the government of dictatorAlejandro Agustín Lanusse was also involved in the coup.[11]

Consequences

[edit]

After this, Hugo Banzer started a new military dictatorship in Bolivia for seven years that banned unions and civil rights, being a participant in the so-calledOperation Condor, which killed or caused the disappearance of hundreds of people in Bolivia.

Juan José Torres, on the other hand, went into exile inBuenos Aires, where he was kidnapped and killed in 1976 as part of Operation Condor. Hugo Banzer was overthrown by a new military uprising in 1978.[1]

See also

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References

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ab"A 50 años del golpe de Estado de Hugo Banzer en Bolivia".Página 12. 19 August 2021.
  2. ^"Hugo Banzer Suárez".CIDOB. 6 August 1997.
  3. ^"Miners and peasants move against rebels in Bolivia".The New York Times. 21 August 1971. Retrieved29 November 2024.
  4. ^"Golpe de Banzer de 1971: a 49 años, el dolor y la incertidumbre de las víctimas aún persisten".La Razón. 21 August 2020.
  5. ^"Bolivia anuncia que no permitirá acciones judiciales contra Banzer".El País (in Spanish). 1999-11-05.ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved2023-09-27.
  6. ^"101. Conversation Between the President's Assistant for National Security Affairs (Kissinger) and President Nixon".Office of the Historian. RetrievedNovember 12, 2024.
  7. ^"76a. Editorial Note".Office of the Historian. RetrievedNovember 12, 2024.
  8. ^"U.S. Denies Bolivia Role".The New York Times. 30 August 1971. Retrieved29 November 2024.
  9. ^abBandeira 2017.
  10. ^"Como o Brasil ajudou no golpe na Bolívia".Revista Piauí (in Portuguese). 4 February 2023. Retrieved2024-11-12.
  11. ^"state"(PDF).National Security Archive. RetrievedNovember 14, 2024.

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