Sunday, October 02, 2005

The blame lies clearly with Dr. Allende and those of his followers who persistently overrode the Constitution

While Dominique Dhombres shows some healthy skepticism towards the figure of Saint Guevara, do not forget that the muffled tone bears no comparison to the shrillness the Le Monde journalist uses when America and/or Bush are involved…

Elsewhere in Latin America, José Piñera, armed with evidence including "the momentous Agreement of 23 August 1973 … widely unknown outside Chile", opines that because

President Allende became a tyrant when he broke his solemn oath to respect the Constitution and the Chilean laws [and because] his government [had] fomented the creation of armed militias … the origin of the Pinochet government is that of any revolutionary one, in which only the use of force was left in order to remove a tyrant [and to] "put immediate end" to these constitutional violations. It must be agreed that this was, in fact, an unequivocal call to remove by force the President who had initiated the use of force with the purpose of imposing a communist dictatorship.

…the truth demands recognition that former President Pinochet led a legitimate rebellion against tyranny and that the origin of Chile's civil war --and its victims-- lies with former President Allende and his marxist Socialist party. … The Economist said it clearly at the time: "The temporary death of democracy in Chile will be regrettable, but the blame lies clearly with Dr. Allende and those of his followers who persistently overrode the Constitution" (September 15, 1973).

Regarding Allende's purported suicide, Eduardo Mackenzie and the Politic have advice for Venezuela's Hugo Chávez…

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