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martes, 26 de febrero de 2019

United States Interventions
What For?
By John H. Coatsworth 
In the slightly less than a hundred years from 1898 to 1994, the U.S. government has intervened successfully to change governments in Latin America a total of at least 41 times. That amounts to once every 28 months for an entire century (see table).
Direct intervention occurred in 17 of the 41 cases. These incidents involved the use of U.S. military forces, intelligence agents or local citizens employed by U.S. government agencies. In another 24 cases, the U.S. government played an indirect role. That is, local actors played the principal roles, but either would not have acted or would not have succeeded without encouragement from the U.S. government.
While direct interventions are easily identified and copiously documented, identifying indirect interventions requires an exercise in historical judgment. The list of 41 includes only cases where, in the author’s judgment, the incumbent government would likely have survived in the absence of U.S. hostility. The list ranges from obvious cases to close calls. An example of an obvious case is the decision, made in the Oval Office in January 1963, to incite the Guatemalan army to overthrow the (dubiously) elected government of Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes in order to prevent an open competitive election that might have been won by left-leaning former President Juan José Arévalo. A less obvious case is that of the Chilean military coup against the government of President Salvador Allende on September 11, 1973. The Allende government had plenty of domestic opponents eager to see it deposed. It is included in this list because U.S. opposition to a coup (rather than encouragement) would most likely have enabled Allende to continue in office until new elections.
The 41 cases do not include incidents in which the United States sought to depose a Latin American government, but failed in the attempt. The most famous such case was the failed Bay of Pigs invasion of April 1961. Also, absent from the list are numerous cases in which the U.S. government acted decisively to forestall a coup d’etat or otherwise protect an incumbent regime from being overthrown.
Overthrowing governments in Latin America has never been exactly routine for the United States. However, the option to depose a sitting government has appeared on the U.S. president’s desk with remarkable frequency over the past century. It is no doubt still there, though the frequency with which the U.S. president has used this option has fallen rapidly since the end of the Cold War.
Though one may quibble about cases, the big debates—both in the public and among historians and social scientists—have centered on motives and causes. In nearly every case, U.S. officials cited U.S. security interests, either as determinative or as a principal motivation. With hindsight, it is now possible to dismiss most of these claims as implausible. In many cases, they were understood as necessary for generating public and congressional support, but not taken seriously by the key decision makers. The United States did not face a significant military threat from Latin America at any time in the 20th century. Even in the October 1962 missile crisis, the Pentagon did not believe that the installation of Soviet missiles in Cuba altered the global balance of nuclear terror. It is unlikely that any significant threat would have materialized if the 41 governments deposed by the United States had remained in office until voted out or overturned without U.S. help.
In both the United States and Latin America, economic interests are often seen as the underlying cause of U.S. interventions. This hypothesis has two variants. One cites corruption and the other blames capitalism. The corruption hypothesis contends that U.S. officials order interventions to protect U.S. corporations. The best evidence for this version comes from the decision to depose the elected government of Guatemala in 1954. Except for President Dwight Eisenhower, every significant decision maker, in this case, had a family, business or professional tie to the United Fruit Company, whose interests were adversely affected by agrarian reform and other policies of the incumbent government. Nonetheless, in this as in every other case involving U.S. corporate interests, the U.S. government would probably not have resorted to intervention in the absence of other concerns.
The capitalism hypothesis is a bit more sophisticated. It holds that the United States intervened not to save individual companies but to save the private enterprise system, thus benefiting all U.S. (and Latin American) companies with a stake in the region. This is a more plausible argument, based on repeated declarations by U.S. officials who seldom missed an opportunity to praise free enterprise. However, capitalism was not at risk in the overwhelming majority of U.S. interventions, perhaps even in none of them. So this ideological preference, while real, does not help explain why the United States intervened. U.S. officials have also expressed a preference for democratic regimes, but ordered interventions to overthrow elected governments more often than to restore democracy in Latin America. Thus, this preference also fails to carry much explanatory power.
An economist might approach the thorny question of causality not by asking what consumers or investors say about their preferences, but what their actions can help us to infer about them. An economist’s approach might also help in another way, by distinguishing between supply and demand. A look at the supply side suggests that interventions will occur more often where they do not cost much, either directly in terms of decision makers’ time and resources, or in terms of damage to significant interests. On the demand side, two factors seem to have been crucial in tipping decision makers toward intervention: domestic politics and global strategy.
Domestic politics seems to be a key factor in most of these cases. For example, internal documents show that President Lyndon Johnson ordered U.S. troops to the Dominican Republic in 1965, not because of any plausible threat to the United States, but because he felt threatened by Republicans in Congress. Political competition within the United States accounts for the disposition of many U.S. presidents to order interventions.
The second key demand-side factor could be called the global strategy effect. The United States in the 20th century defined its strategic interests in global terms. This was particularly true after World War II when the United States moved rapidly to project its power into regions of the earth on the periphery of the Communist states where it had never had a presence before. In the case of Latin America, where the United States faced no foreseeable military threat, policy planners did nonetheless identify potential future threats. This was especially true in the 1960s, after the Cuban Revolution. The United States helped to depose nine of the governments that fell to military rulers in the 1960s, about one every 13 months and more than in any other decade. Curiously, however, we now know that U.S. decision makers were repeatedly assured by experts in the CIA and other intelligence gathering agencies that, in the words of a 1968 National Intelligence Estimate, “In no case do insurgencies pose a serious short-run threat...revolution seems unlikely in most Latin American countries within the next few years.” Few challenged the idea that leftist regimes would pose a security threat to the United States. threat…revolution seems unlikely in most Latin American countries
Thus, in a region where intervention was not very costly, and even major failures unlikely to damage U.S. interests, the combination of domestic political competition and potential future threats—even those with a low probability of ever materializing—appear to explain most of the 20th century US interventions.
It is difficult to escape the conclusion that U.S. interventions did not serve U.S. national interests well. They generated needless resentment in the region and called into question the U.S. commitment to democracy and rule of law in international affairs. The downward trend in the past decade and a half is a positive development much to be encouraged.
CHRONICLING INTERVENTIONS
U.S. DIRECT INTERVENTIONS 
Military/CIA activity that changed governments
COUNTRY
YEAR
EVENT SUMMARY
Cuba
1898-1902
Spanish-American War

1906-09
Ousts elected Pres. Palma; occupation regime

1917-23
U.S. reoccupation, gradual withdrawal
Dominican Rep
1916-24
U.S. occupation

1961
The assassination of Pres. Trujillo

1965
U.S. Armed Forces occupy Sto Domingo
Grenada
1983
U.S. Armed Forces occupy island; oust the government
Guatemala
1954
C.I.A.-organized armed force ousts Pres. Arbenz
Haiti
1915-34
U.S. occupation

1994
U.S. troops restore constitutional government
Mexico
1914
Veracuz occupied; the US allows rebels to buy arms
Nicaragua
1910
Troops to Corinto, Bluefields during the revolt

1912-25
U.S. occupation

1926-33
U.S. occupation

1981-90
Contra war; then support for the opposition in the election
Panama
1903-14
U.S. Troops secure protectorate, canal

1989
U.S. Armed Forces occupy the nation
U.S. INDIRECT INTERVENTION
Government/regime changes in which the U.S. is decisive

COUNTRY
YEAR
EVENT SUMMARY
Bolivia
1944
Coup uprising overthrows Pres. Villaroel

1963
Military coup ousts elected Pres. Paz Estenssoro

1971
Military coup ousts Gen. Torres
Brazil
1964
Military coup ousts elected Pres. Goulart
Chile
1973
Coup ousts elected Pres. Allende.

1989-90
Aid to anti-Pinochet opposition
Cuba
1933
The U.S. abandons support for Pres. Machado

1934
The U.S. sponsors coup by Col. Batista to oust Pres. Grau
Dominican Rep.
1914
The U.S. secures ouster of Gen. José Bordas

1963
Coup ousts elected Pres. Bosch
El Salvador
1961
Coup ousts reformist civil-military junta

1979
Coup ousts Gen. Humberto Romero

1980
The U.S. creates and aids new Christian Demo junta
Guatemala
1963
The U.S. supports coup vs elected Pres. Ydígoras

1982
U.S. supports coup vs Gen. Lucas García

1983
The U.S. supports coup vs Gen. Rios Montt
Guyana
1953
CIA aids strikes; Govt. is ousted
Honduras
1963
Military coups oust elected Pres. Morales
Mexico
1913
U.S. Amb. H. L. Wilson organizes coup v Madero
Nicaragua
1909
Support for rebels vs Zelaya govt

1979
U.S. pressures Pres. Somoza to leave
Panama
1941
U.S supports coup ousting elected Pres. Arias

1949
U.S. supports coup ousting constitutional govt of VP Chanís

1969
The U.S. supports a coup by Gen. Torrijos

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