Friday, December 13, 2013

Latin American Dictators

The recent execution of Jang Song Thaek (12/12/13) by his nephew, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, brought to mind the various ways in which ego-centric totalitarian leaders have sought to silence criticism throughout the ages, and especially the Latin American regimes of the 20th Century. The exhumation and autopsy of the body of for Brazilian president João “Jango” Goulart and the 40th anniversary of Pinochet’s coup d’etat underline this historical nadir.

New leaders always try to consolidate their power, be it a freshly minted CEO of a large corporation, the recently appointed director of a governmental agency, or a usurping monarch who won the crown on the field of battle. The less democratic the institution or the circumstances, the more ruthless these individuals tend to be in the elimination of dissenting voices. Stalin’s purges, Mao’s “Cultural Revolution,” Elizabeth’s execution of Mary, Queen of Scots: all of these are examples of absolute power attacking others who may more or less legitimately oppose it, especially when said opposition may itself house some form of power-base, be it military, political, or moral authority.

The history of Latin America overflows with totalitarian and quasi-totalitarian regimes, from the first European monarchs, through the corporatist models of the mid-20th Century such as Vargas and Peron, and including various military regimes throughout the region.  In some cases, dissenting voices were stifled by fiat: the government suspended rights of expression and assembly, utilizing strong-arm tactics to enforce the decrees. More hardline rulers also used fabricated and/or exaggerated charges of treason, similar to Kim Jong Un’s declarations regarding his uncle, as reported in CNN, describing him as a “traitor for all ages” who plotted to overthrow the dictator’s regime “by all sorts of intrigues and despicable methods.” CNN quoted Marcus Noland, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, who described Jang Song Thaek’s arrest as “theatrical” and execution as “unprecedented.”1

As obviously false and vile as these kangaroo court proceedings may be, the dictators of Latin America in the latter half of the 20th Century developed an even more insidious mechanism for silencing critics who could potentially harm their credibility by casting the light of truth on their lies and abuses: the dissidents simply disappeared. The military regimes in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay, among others, disposed of inconvenient individuals in a manner that defined the ultimate lack of transparency. Friends, family and coworkers would not know the fate of a “disappeared person,” encountering stone walls when inquiring of police and other governmental agencies. Someone could leave for work one morning and never be heard from again. At places of employment, colleagues would find mysteriously vacant offices. At schools and universities, desks and lecterns would suddenly be empty without explanation. And adjacent to secret government installations, such as the “31 de Março” ranch in São Paulo2 or the “300 Carlos” at the headquarters of the 13th Infantry Battalion in Montevideo, clandestine cemeteries received the mutilated bodies of those “disappeared” who were tortured to death.3 Vast numbers of these individuals were erased from the face of the Earth by their own governments, gone without a trace. As 86-year old former coroner and director of the Brazilian Forensic Medicine Institute (Instituto Médico Legal) under the military regime, Harry Shibata, declared, “Disappeared is disappeared.”4

The disappearance of hundreds of individuals under these Latin American dictatorships defines the extreme in cowardice. Afraid to operate under democratic institutions – sometimes regent in constitutions the very regimes purported to uphold – this practice lacked even the theatrical “transparency” of Kim Jong Un’s farce.  At the same time, it constituted an act of domestic terrorism, for a collateral intention was to strike such fear into the hearts of the general citizenry that further dissent would be dissuaded.  This facilitated the role of secret police. Like the infamous Gestapo of the Nazi regime, agents or informants could be lurking around the next corner, or at the next table. Others would be too terrified to speak out, since they, too, could simply disappear.

In the final analysis, the tactic of “disappearing” people demonstrated the actual impotence of those who practiced it. Unable to govern openly, incapable of leading their people honestly, too weak to build a democratic base for their governments, the self-serving tyrants chose deceit and violence in an attempt to cover up their own inadequacies.



1 comment:

  1. See also my additional observation regarding collaborators at: http://latamperspectives.blogspot.com/2014/02/dictators-ii-controllers-and.html

    ReplyDelete