September 13, 2008
When Henry
Kissinger began secretly taping all of his phone
conversations in 1969, little did he know that he
was giving history the gift that keeps on giving.
Now, on the 35th anniversary of the September 11,
1973, CIA-backed military coup in Chile, phone
transcripts that Kissinger made of his talks with
President Nixon and the CIA chief among other top
government officials reveal in the most candid of
language the imperial mindset of the Nixon
administration as it began plotting to overthrow
President Salvador Allende, the world's first
democratically elected Socialist. "We will not let
Chile go down the drain," Kissinger told CIA
director Richard Helms in a phone call following
Allende's narrow election on September 4, 1970,
according to a recently declassified transcript. "I
am with you," Helms responded.
The "telcons"--telephone
conversations transcripts made by Kissinger's
secretary from audio tapes that were later
destroyed--captured for posterity all of Kissinger's
outgoing and incoming phone calls during his tenure
as national security advisor and secretary of state.
When Kissinger left office in January 1977, he took
more than 30,000 pages of the transcripts, claiming
they were "personal papers," and using them,
selectively, to write his memoirs. In 1999, my
organization, the National Security Archive,
initiated legal proceedings to force Kissinger to
return these records to their rightful owner--the
government. At the request of Archive senior analyst
William Burr, telcons on foreign policy crises from
the early 1970s, including four previously unknown
conversations on Chile, were recently declassified
by the Nixon Presidential library.
'The Big Problem
Today Is Chile'
September 15, 1970,
when Richard Nixon ordered the CIA to ""prevent
Allende from coming to power or to unseat him," has
been considered, the starting point of the covert
operations that eventually helped topple the
socialist government, until now. According to the
transcripts, however, Nixon and Kissinger set in
motion plans to roll back Allende's election three
days earlier on September 12. At noon on that day,
Kissinger called Helms to schedule an urgent meeting
of the "40 Committee"--an elite group that oversaw
covert operations. And approximately 35 minutes
later, in the middle of briefing Nixon on a major
terrorist hijacking/hostage crisis in Amman, Jordan,
Kissinger is recorded as telling the President: "The
big problem today is Chile."
The transcript of
their conversation, kept secret for 35 years,
reveals just how focused the U.S. president became
on overseeing the effort to block Allende. In that
call, Nixon demanded to see all instructions being
sent to U.S. ambassador Edward Korry in Santiago;
indeed, he ordered that the State Department be
alerted that "I want to see all cables to Chile."
"I want an appraisal
of what the options are," Nixon told Kissinger. When
Kissinger told him that the State Department's
position was to "let Allende come in and see what we
can work out," Nixon immediately vetoed the idea:
"Like against Castro? Like in Czechoslovakia? The
same people said the same thing. Don't let them do
that."
But Nixon cautioned:
"We don't want a big story leaking out that we are
trying to overthrow the Govt."
Secretary of State
William Rogers, who Nixon and Kissinger largely
excluded from deliberations over Chile, was
similarly sensitive to such a story leaking out.
Indeed, the transcript of his conversation with
Kissinger two days later underscored just how
concerned the State Department was to the
possibility that Washington might get caught trying
to undermine Chile's electoral democracy. In their
September 14th discussion, Rogers accurately
predicted that "no matter what we do it will
probably end up dismal." He also cautioned Kissinger
to cover up any paper trail on U.S. operations "to
be sure the paper record doesn't look bad."
"My feeling--and I
think it coincides with the President's--is that we
ought to encourage a different result from the
[censored reference]," Rogers conceded to Kissinger,
"but should do so discretely so that it doesn't
backfire." Their conversation continues:
Kissinger: The only
question is how one defines 'backfire.'
Rogers: Getting
caught doing something. After all we've said about
elections, if the first time a Communist wins the
U.S. tries to prevent the constitutional process
from coming into play we will look very bad.
Kissinger: the
President's view is to do the maximum possible to
prevent an Allende takeover, but through Chilean
sources and with a low posture."
The next day, during
a 15 minute meeting at the White House attended by
Kissinger, Nixon instructed CIA director Helms that
Allende's election was "not acceptable" and ordered
the agency to "make the economy scream" and "save
Chile," as Helms recorded in his notes. The CIA
launched a massive set of covert operations--first
to block Allende's inauguration, and, when that
failed, to undermine his ability to successfully
govern. "Our main concern in Chile is the prospect
that [Allende] can consolidate himself and the
picture projected to the world will be his success,"
Nixon told his National Security Council on November
6, 1970, two days after Allende took office.
'That Chilean Guy
Might Have Some Problems'
So far, the
declassification of Kissinger's telcons has not
yielded much evidence of phone discussion on Chile
as CIA operations to destabilize Allende evolved
over the next several years. But at 11am on July 4,
1973, Kissinger's clandestine tape recorder captured
another previously unknown conversation with
President Nixon. Two weeks after an aborted coup in
Santiago, Nixon phoned Kissinger from his summer
home in San Clemente, California, to chat about
Allende and the prospects that he might be soon
overthrown.
Nixon: You know, I
think that Chilean guy might have some problems.
Kissinger: Oh, he
has massive problems. He has definitely massive
problems.
Nixon: If only the
Army would get a few people behind them.
Kissinger: And that
coup last week - we had nothing to do with it but
still it came off apparently prematurely.
Nixon: That's right
and the fact that he just set up a Cabinet without
any military in it is, I think, very significant.
Kissinger:. It's
very significant.
Nixon: Very
significant because those military guys are very
proud down there and they just may - right?
Kissinger: Yes, I
think he's definitely in difficulties.
Only ten weeks
later, the military did move to overthrow Allende in
a bloody coup on September 11, 1973. On September
15, Nixon called Kissinger again. They commiserated
about what Kissinger called "the bleeding [heart]
newspapers" and the "filthy hypocrisy" of the press
for focusing on the Chilean military's repression
and the condemnations of the U.S. role. In this
telcon--which was declassified in May 2004--Nixon
noted that "our hand doesn't show on this, though."
"We didn't do it," Kissinger replied on the issue of
direct involvement in the coup. I mean we helped
them. [Deleted] created the conditions as great as
possible."
As Kissinger told
the President: "In the Eisenhower period we would be
heroes."
You can see all
the new Kissinger documents at
www.nsarchive.org.
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