National Security Archive Update, February 3, 2004

NIXON ON CHILE INTERVENTION
WHITE HOUSE TAPE ACKNOWLEDGES INSTRUCTIONS TO BLOCK SALVADOR ALLENDE

KISSINGER SECRETLY LOBBIED PRESIDENT AGAINST "DRIFT TOWARD MODUS VIVENDI"
WITH ELECTED SOCIALIST PRESIDENT

DECLASSIFIED KISSINGER TRANSCRIPTS REVEAL STRONG SUPPORT FOR PINOCHET
FOLLOWING CHILEAN COUP

For further information Contact
Peter Kornbluh 202 994 7116
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.nsarchive.org

WASHINGTON D.C., President Richard Nixon acknowledged that he had given
instructions to "do anything short of a Dominican-type action" to keep the
democratically elected president of Chile from assuming office, according to
a White House audio tape posted by the National Security Archive today.  A
phone conversation captured by his secret Oval Office taping system reveals
Nixon telling his press secretary, Ron Zeigler, that he had given such
instructions to then U.S. Ambassador Edward Korry, "but he just failed, the
son of a bitch... He should have kept Allende from getting in."

A transcript of the president's comments on March 23, 1972, made after the
leak of corporate papers revealing collaboration between ITT and the CIA to
rollback the election of socialist leader Salvador Allende, was recently
published in the National Security Archive book, The Pinochet
File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability by Peter
Kornbluh; the tape marks the first time Nixon can be heard discussing his
orders to undermine Chilean democracy.  The conversation took place as
Zeigler briefed the President on a State Department press conference to
contain the growing ITT/CIA scandal which included one ITT document stating
that Korry had been "given the green light to move in the name of President
Nixon...to do all possible short of a Dominican Republic-type action to keep
Allende from taking power."

Other declassified records show that Nixon secretly ordered maximum CIA
covert operations to "prevent Allende from coming to power or unseat him" in
the fall of 1970 but that Ambassador Korry was deliberately not informed of
covert efforts to instigate a military coup.

When the White House-ordered covert operations failed to prevent Allende's
November 3, 1970, inauguration, Nixon's national security advisor, Henry
Kissinger, lobbied vigorously for a hard-line U.S. policy "to prevent
[Allende] from consolidating himself now when we know he is weaker than he
will ever be and when he obviously fears our pressure and hostility,"
according to a previously unknown eight-page briefing paper prepared for the
President on November 5, 1970.

In the secret/sensitive "memorandum for the president" Kissinger claimed
that Allende's election posed "one of the most serious challenges ever faced
in the hemisphere" and that Nixon's "decision as to what to do about it may
be the most historic and difficult foreign affairs decision you will have to
make this year."

The memorandum reveals that Kissinger forcefully pressed the President to
overrule the State Department's position that there was little Washington
could do to oppose the legitimately elected president of Chile and that the
risks for U.S. interests of intervening to oppose him were greater than
coexisting with him.  "If all concerned do not understand that you want
Allende opposed as strongly as we can, the result will be a steady drift
toward the modus vivendi approach," Kissinger informed Nixon.

Kissinger personally requested an hour to brief Nixon on November 5 in
preparation for a National Security Council meeting to discuss Chile
strategy the next day.  The briefing paper records his threat perception of
an Allende government as a model for other countries.  As Kissinger informed
the president: "The example of a successful elected Marxist government in
Chile would surely have an impact on -- an even precedent value for -- other
parts of the world, especially in Italy; the imitative spread of similar
phenomena elsewhere would in turn significantly affect the world balance and
our own position in it." According to a transcript of the NSC meeting
published in The Pinochet File, Nixon told his aides the next day that "our
main concern is the prospect that [Allende] can consolidate himself and the
picture projected to the world will be his success."

"This document is the Rosetta stone for deciphering the motivations of
Kissinger and Nixon in undermining Chilean democracy," according to Peter
Kornbluh who directs the Archive's Chile Documentation Project. "It
reinforces the judgement of history on Kissinger's role as the primary
advocate of overthrowing the Allende government."

The Archive also posted today a series of declassified transcripts of
Kissinger's staff meetings after he became Secretary of State.  The
transcripts, dated from the days following the coup that brought General
Augusto Pinochet to power through the first several years of his regime's
repression in Chile, record Kissinger's attitude toward human rights
atrocities and mounting Congressional pressure to curtail U.S. economic and
military assistance the military regime.  They are quoted at length in
Kornbluh's book, The Pinochet File, and recently cited in the New York Times
Week in Review section (December 28, 2003).

http://www.nsarchive.org
_________________________________________________________________________
THE NATIONAL SECURITY ARCHIVE is an independent non-governmental research
institute and library located at The George Washington University in
Washington, D.C. The Archive collects and publishes declassified documents
acquired through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). A tax-exempt public
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individuals.
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