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Colonel Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán (September 14,
1913 – January 27, 1971) was a Guatemalan military officer and
politician. He served as Defense Minister of Guatemala from 1944 -
1951. He served as President of Guatemala from 1951
to 1954. He was ousted in a coup d'état in which the U.S. Government was
complicit and was replaced by a military junta, headed by Colonel Carlos
Castillo. He went into exile after the coup and died in Mexico in 1971.
Early
life
Born in Quetzaltenango, he was the son of a
Swiss pharmacist who
immigrated to Guatemala.
His early years were marred by his father's suicide. Árbenz joined
the army, attending Guatemala's military academy, and became a
sub-lieutenant in 1935. He returned to the Guatemalan Military
Academy in 1937 and served as a teacher of science and history. In
1939 he met his future wife Maria Cristina Villanova, who moved her
husband towards socialist philosophy. Maria, a daughter of a
wealthy Salvadoran
landowner, had a huge impact on his life, and urged him to
overthrow the Guatemalan government. Árbenz joined a group of army
officers and helped to overthrow the dictator Jorge Ubico (1878–1946)
in 1944. After the coup against Ubico, Árbenz served as Guatemala's
defense minister in Juan José Arévalo's new
government.
Presidency
and coup
In March 1951, Árbenz assumed the presidency after Guatemala's
second-ever universal-suffrage election, marking the first peaceful
transition of power in Guatemala's history. He campaigned as a
reformer and garnered 60% of the vote by promising to make
Guatemala an economically independent, capitalist state that would
shed its colonial-era dependence on the U.S. His predecessor, Juan José
Arévalo, had successfully begun a series of reforms to open the
political process to all citizens. Arévalo's extension of voting
and labor rights threatened the power of the traditional elite and
led to more than twenty failed coup attempts to oust him.
Árbenz continued Arévalo's reform agenda and, in June 1952, his
government enacted an agrarian reform program. The agrarian reform
law (decree 900) gave
the government power to expropriate only uncultivated portions of
large plantations. Estates of up to 670 acres
(2.7 km2) were exempted if at least two thirds of
the land was cultivated; also exempt were lands that had a slope of
more than 30 degrees (a significant exemption in mountainous
Guatemala). The land was then allocated to individual families.
Owners of expropriated land were compensated according to the worth
of the land claimed in May 1952 tax assessments. Land was paid for
in twenty-five year bonds with a 3 percent interest rate.[1] Arbenz
himself, a landowner through his wife, gave up 1,700 acres
(7 km2) of his own land in the land reform
program.[2]
While Árbenz's proposed agenda was welcomed by impoverished
peasants who made up the majority of Guatemala's population, it
provoked the ire of the upper landowning classes, powerful U.S.
corporate interests, and factions of the military, who accused
Árbenz of bowing to Communist influence. This tension resulted in
noticeable unrest in the country. Carlos Castillo, an army officer,
rebelled at the Aurora airport in the
early 1950s, was defeated and shot, surviving his injuries.
Castillo then spent some time in a Guatemalan prison before
escaping and going into exile in 1951.
This instability, combined with Árbenz's relative tolerance of
Guatemalan Party of Labour
(PGT) and other leftists influences, prompted the CIA to draw up a
contingency plan entitled Operation PBFORTUNE in 1951. It
outlined a method of ousting Árbenz if he were deemed a Communist
threat in the hemisphere.
The United Fruit Company, a U.S.-based
corporation, was also threatened by Árbenz's land reform
initiative. United Fruit was Guatemala's largest landowner, with
85% of its holdings uncultivated, vulnerable to Árbenz's reform
plans. In calculating its tax obligations, United Fruit had
consistently (and drastically) undervalued the worth of its
holdings. In its 1952 taxes, it claimed its land was only worth $3
per acre. When, in accordance with United Fruit's tax claims, the
Árbenz government offered to compensate the company at the $3 rate,
the company claimed the land's true value was $75/acre but refused
to explain the precipitous jump in its own determination of the
land's value.
In 1952, the Guatemalan Party of Labour
was legalized; Communists subsequently gained considerable minority
influence over important peasant organizations and labor unions, but not
over the governing political party and won only four seats in the
58-seat governing body. The CIA, having drafted Operation
PBFORTUNE, was already concerned about Árbenz's potential Communist
ties. United Fruit had been lobbying the CIA to oust reform
governments in Guatemala since Arévalo's time but it wasn't until
the Eisenhower administration that it
found an ear in the White House. In 1954, the Eisenhower
administration was still flush with victory from its covert operation to topple the
Mossadegh government in Iran the year
before. On February 19, 1954, the CIA began Operation
WASHTUB, a plan to plant a phony Soviet arms cache in Nicaragua
to demonstrate Guatemalan ties to Moscow.[3][4]
In May 1954, Czechoslovak weaponry arrived in secret into
Guatemala aboard the Swedish ship Alfhem. The ship's manifests had been
falsified as to the nature of its cargo. The U.S. took this as
final proof of Árbenz's Soviet links. The Czechoslovaks supplied,
for cash down, obsolete and barely functional German WWII
weaponry.[5]
The direct contacts between the Soviet Union and the Árbenz
Government consisted of one Soviet diplomat working out an exchange
of bananas for agricultural machinery, which fell through because
neither side had refrigerated ships. The only other evidence of
contact the CIA found after the operation were two bills to the
Guatemalan Communist Party from a Moscow bookstore, totalling
$22.95.[6]
The Árbenz government was convinced a U.S.-sponsored invasion
was imminent: it had previously released detailed accounts of the
CIA's Operation PBFORTUNE (called the White Papers) and perceived
US actions at the OAS convention in
Caracas that year as a lead-up to intervention. The administration
ordered the CIA to sponsor a coup d'état, code-named Operation PBSUCCESS that toppled the
government. Árbenz resigned on June 27, 1954 and was forced to
flee, seeking refuge in the Mexican Embassy.
After the coup, Frank Wisner organised an operation called
PBHistory to secure
Árbenz Government documents. PBHistory aimed to prove Soviet
control of Guatemala and, in so doing, hopefully provide actionable
intelligence with regard to other Soviet connections and personnel
in Latin America. Wisner sent two teams who, with the help of the
Army and Castillo Armas's junta, gathered 150,000 documents. Ronald
M. Schneider, an extra-Agency researcher who later examined the
PBHistory documents, found no traces of Soviet control and
substantial evidence that Guatemalan Communists acted alone,
without support or guidance from outside the country.[7]
Later
life
He initially stayed in Mexico, and then he and his family moved to Switzerland. The Swiss
government would not allow him to stay unless he gave up his
Guatemalan citizenship. Refusing to do so, Árbenz moved to Paris, and then to Prague. Czechoslovak officials
were uncomfortable with his stay, unsure if he would demand the
government to repay him for the poor quality of arms that they had
sold him in 1954. After only three months, he moved again, this
time to Moscow. He tried
several times to return to Latin America, and was finally allowed
to move to Uruguay in
1957.
In 1960, after the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro asked
Árbenz to come to Cuba, to which
Arbenz readily agreed. In 1965, his eldest and favorite daughter, a
fashion model named Arabella, committed suicide, shooting herself
in front of her boyfriend, the Matador Jaime Bravo, in Bogotá, Colombia. Árbenz was
devastated by her death. He was allowed to return to Mexico to bury
his daughter and, eventually, was allowed to remain. On January 27,
1971, Árbenz died in his bathroom, either by drowning or scalding
due to hot water. The circumstances under which Árbenz died are
still suspect.
Family
The son of Jacobo Árbenz Guzmán, Jacobo Arbenz Villanova, is a
Guatemalan politician.
See also
Further
reading
References
- ^
Stephen G. Rabe, "Eisenhower and Latin America: The Foreign Policy
of Anticommunism." University of North Carolina Press: Chapel
Hill.
- ^
Peter H. Smith, Talons of the Eagle: Dynamics of US-Latin American
Relations, Oxford University Press, 2000
- ^ Ward, Matthew. "Washington Unmakes
Guatemala, 1954 Appendix A: Timeline of Events" (). Council on Hemispheric
Affairs. http://www.coha.org/NEW_PRESS_RELEASES/Matt%20Ward/MW_Appendix_A.htm.
- ^ Piero Gleijeses, Nick. Secret History:
The CIA's Classified Account of Its Operations in Guatemala,
1952-1954.
Page 57
- ^
John Lewis
Gaddis, We Now Know (1997), p.178
- ^
John Lewis
Gaddis, We Now Know (1997), p.178
- ^
Operation PBSUCCESS: The
United States and Guatemala, 1952- 1954, CIA History Staff
document by Nicholas Cullather, 1994. Excerpt. Chapter 4.
External
links