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Summary
This Biographics video expounds on the complex legacy of Augusto Pinochet, who rose from obscurity to become one of the most notorious dictators in Latin American history. Pinochet's reign in Chile was marked by a violent coup, extreme repression under Operation Condor, and controversial Chicago Boys economic policies. Despite improving Chile's economy in ways applauded by free-market enthusiasts, he orchestrated human rights abuses that cast a long shadow over his achievements. His eventual fall from power came after a 1988 plebiscite and subsequent legal challenges, although he evaded complete justice before his death.
Highlights
Pinochet rose from obscurity to power through betrayal and a military coup, marking the beginning of a brutal regime. š„
The 1973 coup against Allende saw Pinochet backstab a confidant, altering Chile's trajectory dramatically. š
Pinochet's era was tainted by human rights abuses, with Operation Condor targeting leftists continent-wide. šµļø
Despite his oppressive rule, Pinochet boosted Chile's economy, credited largely to the Chicago Boys' policies. š
Pinochet faced legal challenges post-retirement, highlighting international pressure on dictatorship abuses. š
Chile has made strides in addressing past human rights violations, a lengthy but crucial quest for justice. š¶
Key Takeaways
Augusto Pinochet rose to power via a violent coup, betraying President Salvador Allende in 1973. āļø
Pinochet's military regime was marked by brutal human rights abuses including the infamous Caravan of Death. šØ
Economic reforms by the Chicago Boys during Pinochet's rule stabilized Chile's economy but left significant inequality. š°
Pinochet avoided full justice despite his arrest in London due to international political nuances. š
Chile continues to reckon with Pinochet's legacy, striving to deliver justice to the victims of his regime. āļø
Overview
Augusto Pinochet, once a seemingly obscure army officer, rose to infamous power after betraying President Salvador Allende of Chile in the 1973 coup where military jets bombarded La Moneda, ending Allende's reign. Pinochet transformed Chile with his brutal military dictatorship, reputed for extreme repression and human rights abuses, while paradoxically boosting the nation's economy through radical free-market reforms executed by the Chicago Boys.
Despite orchestrating a reign of terror comparable to the worst on the continent, Pinochet found unlikely friends in some influential world leaders, which shielded his regime from international ostracism. His tenure saw a chilling Operation Condor collaboration with other Latin dictatorships to obliterate leftist opposition, while his economic policies fostered a controversial period known as the 'miracle of Chile.'
Pinochet's downfall commenced with a failed plebiscite in 1988, eventually leading to the return of democratic governance in 1990. Arrested in London years later on an international warrant, he faced multiple charges but escaped full accountability. Chile continues to grapple with his legacy, slowly seeking justice for his innumerable crimes.
Chapters
00:00 - 01:30: Introduction to Augusto Pinochet's Rise to Power This chapter introduces the theme of personal betrayal for power, focusing on Augusto Pinochet's rise to power in Chile. It poses a hypothetical moral dilemma about whether one would betray a benefactor to become the most powerful person in their country. The narrative is set nearly fifty years ago, highlighting Pinochet's decision to sacrifice everything for his own glory, establishing the premise for his ascent to power.
01:30 - 03:00: Pinochet's Early Life Augusto Pinochet, the eldest son in a middle-class Catholic family, led a relatively obscure life for 58 years before rising to notoriety as the orchestrator of the 1973 coup in Chile. This event led to the displacement of the country's democratically elected president and initiated a period of severe repression known as his 'reign of terror.' Despite these actions, Pinochet maintained significant connections on the world stage, notably counting figures like Margaret Thatcher as close allies. The chapter explores the duality of his legacy, acknowledging his controversial role in boosting Chile's economy amidst widespread human rights violations.
03:00 - 06:30: Pinochet's Military Career and Encounters with Allende The chapter discusses the absence of early signs in Augusto Pinochet's life that would suggest his future as a dictator. It implies that often in the lives of notorious figures, early indicators of their later dangerous actions are evident, such as cruelty or delight in suffering. However, in Pinochet's case, such indicators were absent, foreshadowing the bloodshed he would later bring upon his nation.
06:30 - 12:30: Salvador Allende's Life and Political Career Augusto Pinochet was born in Valparaiso, Chile, on November 25, 1915, into a middle-class family. His father, Augusto Senior, worked as a local customs official and had French ancestry, while his mother, Avelina, was very religious. Pinochet was particularly attached to his mother, choosing to stay with her in Valparaiso when the rest of the family moved to the countryside.
12:30 - 15:00: Pinochet's Ascendancy and 1973 Coup The chapter titled 'Pinochet's Ascendancy and 1973 Coup' begins by recounting Pinochet's privileged early life. He was enrolled in the elite Sagrados Corazones private school, which did not shield him from bullying due to his weak physique and distinctive loud laugh, earning him the nickname 'donkey.' Despite being a poor student, he excelled in art, winning school prizes for painting. However, any aspirations of becoming an artist did not persist.
15:00 - 22:00: Reign of Terror and Human Rights Violations The chapter titled 'Reign of Terror and Human Rights Violations' outlines the early life and career aspirations of Augusto Pinochet. Despite his father Augusto Snr.'s wish for him to become a doctor, Pinochet was determined to join the military. His mother, Avelina, supported his ambition, ensuring through her influence that he could pursue his desire to become a soldier, even after facing rejection twice from the military academy.
22:00 - 27:00: Economic Policies and International Perception The chapter details the early career of Pinochet and the geopolitical stance of Chile during WWII. It highlights Pinochet's acceptance into the War Academy in Santiago in 1933 after persistent efforts by him and his mother. Despite graduating during a time of global conflict, Chile remained largely uninvolved in WWII, thus affecting Pinochet's military career. The chapter underscores Chile's decision to avoid active participation in the war, only declaring war on Nazi Germany at the very end, which reflects the nation's cautious international policies and how these influenced both personal and national trajectories.
27:00 - 31:00: Decline and Fall from Power This chapter explores the impact of the USSR's role in defeating fascism, which led to increased activity of Communist parties in Latin America. As a result, Latin American governments, such as Chile, resorted to extreme measures to suppress Communists, including internment camps. The chapter introduces a key event in 1948 involving a visit by a Socialist senator to one of these camps, which was overseen by Pinochet, marking an early encounter between Pinochet and the senator known as the Doctor.
31:00 - 39:00: Pursuit of Justice and Pinochet's Legacy The chapter titled 'Pursuit of Justice and Pinochet's Legacy' explores the intertwined destinies of two significant figures in Chilean history: Doctor Salvador Allende and General Augusto Pinochet. It begins with a tense moment where Allende, before his presidency, was threatened by someone to shoot him, though neither he nor his assailant, referred to metaphorically as the 'Donkey', realized the impact they would have on each other. The narrative delves into how the lives of Allende, a democratically elected socialist president, and Pinochet, a military dictator who led a coup against him, were interconnected, shaping both personal histories and the broader national history of Chile.
Augusto Pinochet: The Great Betrayal Transcription
00:00 - 00:30 Imagine, for a moment, that you were given
the opportunity to become the most powerful person in your country. To get there, all you need to do is betray
the very man who made you who you are. Would you demure, step back, say āthanks,
but no thanksā? Or would you grab that opportunity with both
hands? Nearly half a century ago, one man in Chile
made the decision to betray everything for his own glory. His name was Augusto Pinochet.
00:30 - 01:00 The eldest son of middle class Catholics,
Pinochet spent the first fifty eight years of his life wallowing in obscurity, only to
suddenly rise to infamy. The driving force of the 1973 coup that deposed
Chileās democratically elected president, Pinochet oversaw a reign of terror almost
unmatched on the continent. Yet he was also a leader who counted icons
like Margaret Thatcher among his closest friends. Join us today as we delve into the murky life
of the man who boosted Chileās economy,
01:00 - 01:30 even as he eviscerated its soul. The Donkey
In the lives of evil men, there are often telling details from their early years that
show the monsters they will become. The serial killer who tortures animals; the
future dictator who delights in suffering. In the early life Augusto Pinochet Ugarte,
however, there was nothing. Nothing to suggest this young boy would one
day drown his nation in a sea of blood.
01:30 - 02:00 Born on November 25, 1915 in Chileās great
port city of Valparaiso, baby Augusto came from a solidly middle class background. His father, Augusto Snr., was a local customs
official descended from French settlers, while his mother, Avelina, was deeply religious. Speaking of Avelina, the child Pinochet was
something of a mommyās boy. When most of the family moved out to the countryside,
leaving Avelina in Valparaiso, Pinochet demanded to stay with her. Still, itās not like this familial separation
constituted āhardship.ā
02:00 - 02:30 Pinochetās early life was remarkably privileged. He was even enrolled in Sagrados Corazones
private school, then one of Chileās most elite institutions. Not that this stopped other boys from picking
on him. As a teenager, the boy was, by his own admission,
woefully weak. He had a loud, braying laugh that earned him
the nickname ādonkeyā. He was also a pretty terrible student. One of the only things teenage Pinochet was
really good at was art, netting himself school prizes for his paintings. But if Pinochet ever seriously flirted with
being an artist, the dream didnāt last long.
02:30 - 03:00 By the time he graduated, the boy had decided
he was going to be a soldier. This was easier said than done. Pinochetās father, Augusto Snr., was determined
his oldest son become a doctor. But Pinochet had an ace up his sleeve. Avelina doted on her eldest son as intensely
as Pinochet revered her. When the boy said he wanted to be a soldier,
Avelina made damn sure a soldier was what he became. It was a rocky road. The military actually rejected his application
twice.
03:00 - 03:30 But finally, in 1933, the boy and his motherās
persistence paid off. Pinochet was accepted to the War Academy in
Santiago. The remarkable thing about Pinochetās time
there is just how unremarkable it was. By the time Pinochet graduated with a commission
in the infantry, WWII was already looming. But since Chile decided to sit the war out
ā only symbolically declaring war on Nazi Germany during the endgame ā Pinochet spent
his best fighting years kicking his heels in Santiago. Still, even way down south in Chile, WWII
had a potent effect.
03:30 - 04:00 The role of the USSR in fascismās defeat
galvanized Communist parties in Latin America. Governments responded by cracking down on
them, sometimes using extreme measures. By 1948, the Chilean government was keeping
Communists in internment camps. It was while overseeing one of these camps
that Pinochet had his first run-in with the Doctor. That year, an upstart Socialist senator decided
to make a personal inspection of the internment camps, to see if the Communists were being
treated well. When he arrived at Pinochetās camp, the
man whoād once been known as the Donkey
04:00 - 04:30 threatened to shoot the senator. That senatorās name was Doctor Salvador
Allende. Neither the Doctor nor the Donkey knew it
yet, but their fates were already inextricably linked. The Doctor
The story of Augusto Pinochet isnāt the story of one life so much as it is of two
lives. The life of Pinochet himself⦠and the life
of Dr. Salvador Allende.
04:30 - 05:00 Born on June 26, 1908, the Doctorās early
life was eerily similar to the Donkeyās. Like Pinochet, Allende was likely born in
the Chilean port of Valparaiso ā although weāve seen at least one source claim he
was really born in the capital, Santiago. Whatās certainly true is that Allende also
came from a large, middle class family with a devoutly religious matriarch. Like Pinochet, Allendeās father wanted him
to become a doctor. But while Pinochetās formative experiences
would be shaped by the military, Allendeās came from a very different direction.
05:00 - 05:30 Juan Demarchi is one of those figures who
exist on the sidelines of history, yet still manage to exert an outsized pull on events. An Italian immigrant cobbler, Demarchi lived
on the same street as the Allendes. But he had another identity he liked to keep
secret. Demarchi was a committed anarchist. At some point in Allendeās childhood, the
boy and the Italian cobbler became friends. Demarchi wound up teaching the teenager about
class oppression, workerās rights, and the failings of capitalism.
05:30 - 06:00 Although Allende never fell for anarchismās
charms, under Demarchiās sway he became a committed socialist. It was Allende who, in 1933, cofounded Chileās
first Socialist party. Allende who, in 1945, became one of its first
elected Senators. It was while in office that he had his first
run in with Pinochet. Remember? In that camp where Pinochet threatened to
shoot him? Not that the Doctor dwelled much on the encounter. He was too busy running for president. In Chileās 1952 election, Allende finished
an impressive⦠dead last.
06:00 - 06:30 He was even temporarily booted out his own
party for his abysmal campaign! But you canāt keep a good socialist down
and, in 1958, Allende ran again. This time, he almost won. The result was painfully close. The Conservative candidate squeaked home with
a mere 33,000 more votes than Allende. Allendeās team came away convinced that,
next time, they would win. Unfortunately, they hadnāt counted on Fidel
Castro. On January 1, 1959, Fidel Castro overthrew
Cubaās government and installed a Communist
06:30 - 07:00 dictatorship. Suddenly, the whole of Latin America was in
the grip of a red scare, and trying to win elections as a socialist was like trying to
win Mr. Universe when you look like a Biographics scriptwriter. Allendeās third presidential run, in 1964,
was a failure. The Doctorās public admiration of Castro
left him a very distant second. Really, that should have been the end of it. Allende had lost three elections now, get
the message already, dude! But Allende didnāt get the message.
07:00 - 07:30 Like Sisyphus marching his boulder up the
hill, Allende entered the 1970 election determined to win. Against all the odds, he did. By 1970, Chileās economy was struggling. There was widespread discontent, a hunger
for change. To top it all off, the rightwing parties split
the vote, leaving the way open for a leftwing challenger. The result was Allende winning 36.6 percent
of the vote, a tiny mandate, but more than anyone else. The shock victory set alarm bells ringing
across the Americas.
07:30 - 08:00 In Washington, DC, the Nixon administration
demanded the CIA stop this upstart Marxist from taking the presidency. Instead, they handed Allende the keys to the
Chilean White House. On October 25, 1970, a bunch of CIA-backed
rightwing paramilitaries tried to kidnap a pro-Allende Chilean general, likely to clear
the way for a coup. But they bungled the operation, killing the
general and rallying the Chilean public, the Chilean establishment, even the Chilean military
to Allendeās side. Suddenly, the Chilean Congressās attempts
to block Allendeās inauguration were dead
08:00 - 08:30 in the water. On November 5, 1970, Doctor Salvador Allende
was sworn in as Chileās president; the first democratically-elected Marxist head of state
in Latin American history. Barely was the inauguration ceremony over
than the CIA began plotting to make sure he was also the last. The Battle for Chile
OK, so weāre up to 1970 now, a full 22 years
08:30 - 09:00 since we last saw Pinochet, guarding an internment
camp and threatening to shoot senators. Thatās a heck of a long time. Whatās the old donkey been up to all these
years? The answer is: nothing. We canāt stress enough how the most intriguing
part of Pinochetās life is how utterly destined for obscurity he seemed to be. In 1970, he was a 55 year old career army
man whose only contribution to world history had been once threatening to shoot the future
president of Chile. The one thing that pointed towards his future
notoriety was how, in 1971, he was placed
09:00 - 09:30 in charge of the Santiago army garrison. Yāknow, the ideal post to have if you ever
wanted to send an army marching on the Chilean capital. Not that Pinochet currently had any reason
to do so. Nor wouldāve he ever had, were it not for
the third key player in our game. The CIA. Up in Washington, DC, the Nixon Whitehouse
was tearing its hair out at Allendeās election. The CIA was ordered to āmake the (Chilean)
economy scream.ā
09:30 - 10:00 American money flowed into rightwing Chilean
propaganda. Into sabotage attempts. Into aborted coups. To be fair, Allende was a scary prospect for
US and Chilean elites. With barely a third of the vote, he was nationalizing
everything in sight. Still, every move Allende made was in line
with the Chilean constitution. A socialist he may have been; a burgeoning
tyrant he was not. Keep that in mind as his tragic, bloody story
plays out. By 1972, Allendeās government was widely
unpopular.
10:00 - 10:30 In an attempt to shore up support, the Socialist
president invited military men into his cabinet. Among them was Carlos Prats. The leading constitutionalist in the Chilean
Army, Prats wasnāt happy with Allende, but he was even less happy with the idea the army
should remove him from power. So long as Prats was running the army, there
was no chance of a coup in Chile. We know this because on 29 June, 1973, a bunch
of disaffected officers tried to stage one. Known as the Tanquetazo because most of those
involved attacked the Presidentās residence
10:30 - 11:00 ā La Moneda ā in tanks, the coup was a
monumental failure. Nobody flocked to the plottersā banner. When Pinochet got wind, he made sure his garrison
came out on Allendeās side. Thereās actually footage from this era that
appeared in the documentary The Battle of Chile of Salvador Allende striding down the
streets of Santiago in the coupās immediate aftermath, Augusto Pinochet loyally at his
side. It was this very moment that convinced Carlos
Prats that Pinochet was on the Constitutionalist
11:00 - 11:30 side. So when Prats resigned a month later, he made
sure Pinochet replaced him. And so it was that, on August 22, 1973, Augusto
Pinochet became head of the Chilean armed forces. When most Chileans heard this, they were kinda
like āwhat? That donkey?ā Even Pinochetās wife thought he was joking. But it was no joke. Prats had just promoted the most unremarkable
man in Chile to a position of remarkable power. It was a decision that would soon destroy
him. Democracy Burns
Many years later, long after Salvador Allende
11:30 - 12:00 was dead, Pinochet would boast that heād
been plotting a coup against the Socialist for more than a year. But other sources paint a picture not of a
cunning man waiting for his chance, but a nobody who accidentally wound up heading a
conspiracy. On September 8, Chileās other generals confronted
Pinochet. While no record exists of the conversation,
it seems they basically said ālook, weāre gonna overthrow Allende, and you too if you
stand in our way.
12:00 - 12:30 Now, are you in or out?ā It turned out Pinochet was way in. On September 11, 1973, the residents of Santiago
awoke to the earthshaking thud of explosions. Across the capital, military fighter jets
were bombing La Moneda, each pass causing new plumes of smoke to spiral up towards the
clear blue sky. Imagine watching on TV as the Whitehouse is
consumed by flames, knowing those burning it are American soldiers. Thatās what millions of Chileans felt that
fateful morning.
12:30 - 13:00 In a great historical irony, Allendeās first
reaction as the coup got underway was to mutter "I wonder what they have done with poor Pinochetā. He had no way of knowing that the last army
man he thought was loyal was directing the bombs raining down around him. Allendeās last stand is today legendary. Armed with a Kalashnikov given to him by Fidel
Castro, he and his entourage managed to hold off the Chilean army for hours. But there was only one way this could ever
end. As soldiers swarmed the flaming ruins of La
Moneda, Doctor Salvador Allende shot himself
13:00 - 13:30 through the head. He was 65. Out on the streets of Santiago, leftists,
protestors, artists and intellectuals were all being rounded up and marched to the internment
camps that were springing up across the city. Most notoriously, this included the National
Stadium, where dissidents were tortured in locker rooms before being dragged out onto
the pitch and shot through the head. At the same time, announcements were going
out that Chile was now under the control of a four man military junta, headed by General
Pinochet.
13:30 - 14:00 As the shockwaves of the coup spread out,
the old Constitutionalist general Carlos Prats slipped out of Santiago for exile in Argentina. Yet the man who had made Pinochet wouldnāt
be able to outrun his erstwhile friend for long. On September 30, 1974, a car bomb killed Prats
and his wife in Buenos Aires. Itās thought Pinochet himself ordered the
assassination. Back in Santiago, the junta instituted a reign
of repression. Political parties were banned.
14:00 - 14:30 Censorship put in place. All leftist media shut down. Around 80,000 people were arrested. Another 200,000 were forced into exile. Not that the junta itself lasted long. On June 27, 1974, just ten months after the
coup, Pinochet used his clout with the Army to force the other junta leaders to step aside. In their place, he had himself elevated to
Supreme Chief of the Nation. The long tradition of democratic rule in Chile
were now at an end. For the next 16 years, the Donkey would rule
his nation as its undisputed king.
14:30 - 15:00 Days of Terror
From the get-go, the regime of Augusto Pinochet marked itself out with its sheer brutality. One of Pinochetās first acts was to order
a mop up operation against leftists who still remained in Chile. Known as the Caravan of Death, this unit traveled
the vast length of Chileās deserts and wastelands, flying into small towns and executing anyone
who opposed military rule.
15:00 - 15:30 All told, 97 Chileans were murdered by the
Caravan. In some cases, they were flown far out over
the Pacific in helicopters and simply hurled to their fates. Meanwhile, those whoād been arrested in
the aftermath of the coup were funneled into concentration camps. Out in the dry Atacama Desert, old saltpeter
works were turned into centers where leftists were worked to death, or executed by being
blown up with dynamite. Similar camps appeared in the frozen wastes
of Patagonia. But the worst of the new regimeās torture
centers was right in the capital.
15:30 - 16:00 The Villa Grimaldi was once a grand old colonial
house. Now it became a monument to mankindās worst
impulses. At the still-awful, but normal end of the
scale, prisoners there were suffocated to the point of death and then released. At the nastier end, the teenage daughters
of regime critics were kidnapped and used as practice for soldiers learning the ropes
of electroshock torture. At the most deranged end of all, female prisoners
were forced to have intercourse with animals while their guards watched and laughed. It was a Grand Guignol of horror.
16:00 - 16:30 Nor was it confined just to Chile. In November, 1975, Pinochetās secret police
ā the DINA ā made contact with the dictatorships of Brazil, Paraguay, and Uruguay ā later
including Argentina after the March 1976 military coup. Together, they came up with something called
Operation Condor. Its goal was to assassinate every single leftist
on the continent. The idea was that the DINA would pass information
on Chilean dissidents to the other Condor nations, and vise versa. They would then ādisappearā one anotherās
enemies. For the 60,000 people killed by Condor, that
meant being dropped into deep lakes or rivers,
16:30 - 17:00 or shot and buried in remote mass graves no-one
would ever find. Sometimes, though, it meant a more dramatic
end. On September 21, 1976, Salvador Allendeās
former Foreign Minister, Orlando Letelier, got into his car in Washington, DC, where
heād been living in exile since the coup. With him was a 25-year old US citizen, Ronni
Moffitt. At 09:30 am, a bomb concealed in the car exploded,
killing both occupants. Even the American capital seemingly wasnāt
safe from the DINAās reach.
17:00 - 17:30 Yet, this terror only strengthened Pinochetās
grip on power. As the 1980s dawned, the Chilean tyrant rammed
through a new constitution giving himself 8 year terms as president. Come 1988, there would be a Yes or No referendum
on whether Pinochet could keep power. Until then, he would be the one man ruler
of Chile. Chileās dictatorship was here to stay. The Two āMiraclesā
By this point, you may be wondering why such
17:30 - 18:00 a perverse regime wasnāt an international
pariah. The reasons can be summed up in a single phrase:
āthe miracle of Chile.ā That was the name given by the free market
economist Milton Friedman to what happened in Chile after Pinochet seized power. Under successive governments, Chileās economy
had been badly struggling. During Allendeās years in office, things
had only gotten worse ā although its debatable whether that was due to leftwing policies,
or due to the CIA constantly trying to instigate
18:00 - 18:30 a coup. When Pinochet took over, he decided to try
a new route, one mapped out by the Chicago Boys. The Chicago Boys were native Chileans whoād
studied in Chicago under Friedman. Suddenly elevated by the regime to key positions,
they were tasked with transforming the economy. Transform it, they did. In the second half of the 1970s, Chile became
a laboratory for perhaps the most extreme free market economic policies in history. Everything that wasnāt bolted down was privatized,
everything opened up to the market, and businesses
18:30 - 19:00 given unfettered access to all parts of Chilean
life. The result was a wild rollercoaster ride that
saw both the highest inflation rate in Chileās history, and one of the worst one-year recessions
on record. But, by the time 1988 arrived, the wild ride
was over. Chileās economy was the most stable in Latin
America. Chile was rich. Pinochetās supporters still point to this
as his signature achievement. It certainly won the regime friends, with
Margaret Thatcher openly talking of her admiration
19:00 - 19:30 for Pinochet. But even here, we should sound a note of caution. Chile today is successful, but it also has
one of the highest levels of inequality in the world. The Chicago Boys may have made Chile rich,
but they did so while eviscerating the poorest in society. Come 1988, Pinochet was riding high. The economy was doing great, all his enemies
were dead, and he was secure in power. So when it came time to hold that referendum
we mentioned earlier, the one on keeping Pinochet
19:30 - 20:00 as dictator, Pinochet went ahead and held
it. Despite all the abuses, he thought he really
was popular. How could the hero whoād delivered Chile
from socialism lose? But if Pinochet thought he was a hero, Chileās
electorate was about to prove they still saw him as a donkey. On October 5, 1988, the plebiscite returned
its shock result. The pro-Pinochet side had scraped a mere 44%
of the vote. The anti-Pinochet side had won by 12 points.
20:00 - 20:30 The next day, an outraged Pinochet called
his generals to his offices and declared he would never stand down, that the vote was
a fix, that it was all a mistake. But the generals knew something the old donkey
didnāt. They knew the US was already piling on the
pressure, that Pinochet would have to honor the result, or face international consequences. One by one, they refused to back Pinochet. Isolated, the dictator had no choice but to
publicly announce he would step down in two years.
20:30 - 21:00 The next year, in 1989, the first presidential
election since 1970 was held in Chile. The center left candidate, Patricio Aylwin,
romped home with over 55% of the vote. Suddenly, the age of oppression was over. When Aylwin was inaugurated on March 11, 1990,
democracy finally returned to Chile. Of course, Pinochet didnāt just return to
civilian life.
21:00 - 21:30 He remained head of the armed forces, and
was later gifted not just the post āsenator for lifeā, but immunity from prosecution. But if the Donkey thought heād have an easy
retirement, he had another thing coming. Justice At Last? On October 17, 1998, Augusto Pinochet was
visiting London for minor surgery on his back. Ever since heād stepped down as Chileās
leader, 8 long years ago, the former dictator had grown fond of the British capital.
21:30 - 22:00 Thanks to Chileās clandestine help to Britain
during the Falklands War, he thought the British had grown fond of him, too. Well, the British were about to give him a
rude awakening. That day, as the 83-year old Pinochet lay
in hospital, he was arrested by officers from Londonās Met Police. Seven days earlier, a Spanish judge known
as Baltasar Garzón had issued an international arrest warrant for Pinochet. Under Spanish law, serious crimes against
Spanish citizens can be charged in Spanish courts no matter what jurisdiction they are
committed in.
22:00 - 22:30 Several Spanish citizens had been abducted
and tortured in Chile during the regime, and now it was payback time. The arrest was like a lightning bolt to the
international community. Suddenly, the eyes of Pinochetās many victims
were all trained on London. We wish we could now wrap up this video with
āand then Pinochet was extradited to Madrid, where the judge found him guilty and sentenced
him to a bazillion years in prison,ā but, sadly, thatās not what happened. Although British Parliament ruled international
immunity did not apply in cases of torture,
22:30 - 23:00 the establishment still closed ranks to protect
a foreign leader. On the Conservative side, Margaret Thatcher
made an impassioned plea for Pinochet to be freed. On the Labour Party side, the Home Secretary,
Jack Straw, declared Pinochet was too ill to stand trial. On March 3, 2000, Pinochet was wheeled onto
a plane from London to Chile, looking like he was at deathās door. When he touched down in Santiago, the dictator
triumphantly stood up from his wheelchair and smugly waved at his supporters. As is so often the case with history, the
monster had escaped unscathed.
23:00 - 23:30 However, there is still a postscript to this
story. While the Spanish warrant never went anywhere,
at home in Chile, lawmakers were starting to reassess the idea of lifetime immunity. In 2004, a state commission on crimes of the
dictatorship dropped a shocking report that revealed over 35,000 people had been tortured
by the regime, and over 3,000 murdered. That same year, Chilean lawmakers lifted Pinochetās
immunity over the Caravan of Death killings, and the car bomb assassination of the Constitutionalist
general, Carlos Prats.
23:30 - 24:00 One year later, in 2005, Pinochet was placed
under house arrest. It was days after his 90th birthday. Over the next year, more and more allegations
came to light. Evidence of colossal levels of embezzlement
was presented. In 2006, Pinochet was formally charged with
kidnapping, torture, and murder. Sadly, the stubborn donkey once again escaped
justice. On December 10, 2006, Pinochet died of a heart
attack at his home in Santiago. Just days earlier, heād been told he was
fit to stand trial.
24:00 - 24:30 Today, the Chilean state has begun to slowly
account for the crimes committed during Pinochetās tenure. Over 40,000 living victims have been identified
and provided with compensation. Around thirteen hundred former officers and
soldiers have been tried for crimes against humanity. Chile may still be haunted by the shadow of
Augusto Pinochet, but at least history is now able to judge him for the monster he was. He may have escaped justice in his lifetime,
but Pinochetās crimes will go down in history.