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Juan José Torres González (5 March 1920, Cochabamba — 2 June 1976)
was a Bolivian socialist politician and
military leader. He served as President of Bolivia from October
7, 1970 to August 21, 1971. He was popularly known as "J.J."
(Jota-Jota). Juan José Torres was murdered in 1976 in Buenos Aires,
in the frame of Operation Condor.
Early
life
Torres was born to a poor family of Mestizo heritage with mainly Aymara ancestry[1] and
joined the military as a young man, eventually rising to the rank
of general. He became the reform-minded
dictator Alfredo Ovando's right-hand man and
commander of the army when the latter came to power as a result of
a coup d'état in September 1969. Torres became one of the more
left-leaning officers in the Bolivian military, urging Ovando to
enact more far-reaching reforms and to stand up to the more
conservative officers. On October 6, 1970, an anti-government coup
d'état took place, led by right-wing military commanders. Much
blood was shed on the streets of various major cities, with
military garrisons fighting each other on behalf of one camp or the
other. Eventually, President Ovando sought asylum in a foreign
embassy, believing all hope was lost. But the leftist military
forces re-asserted themselves under the combative leadership of
general Torres, and eventually triumphed. Worn out by 13 grueling
months in office, Ovando agreed to leave the presidency in the
hands of his friend, general Torres, the hero of the moment. The
latter was sworn in and went on to govern the country for 10
difficult and tumultuous months.
Presidency
Though most military leaders throughout Latin American history
have been associated with right-wing politics, Torres - like
his contemporaries Juan Velasco in Peru and Omar Torrijos in Panama - was decidedly left wing. He was known
as a man of the people and was popular in some sectors of the
Bolivian society. His mestizo and even native-Andean features
enhanced his standing with the poorer sectors of society. Despite
Torres' best intentions, his marked leftward drift led him to adopt
measures that greatly de-stabilized the country. He called an
Asamblea del Pueblo, or People's Assembly, in which representatives
of specific "proletarian" sectors of society were represented
(miners, unionized teachers, students, peasants). The Assembly was
imbued with all the powers of a working parliament, even though
opponents of the regime tended to call it a gathering of virtual
soviets. Torres also allowed the legendary (and Trotskyst-oriented)
labor leader, Juan Lechín, to resume his post as head of
the Central Obrera Boliviana/Bolivian
Workers' Union (COB) and to operate without a single restraint.
To his surprise, Lechín proceeded to cripple the government with
strikes.
In the end, "J.J." was a victim of the same condundrum that had
plagued Ovando: he was seen as leading the country to Communism
itself by his enemies on the right, but was essentially mistrusted
by those on the left for being a member of the military. To the
former, he was going too far and for the latter, not nearly far
enough. The Nixon administration may also have played a role in
sabotaging the Torres regime and calling for its ouster.
After less than a year in power, Torres was overthrown in a
bloody coup
d'état led by the Junta
of Commanders of the Armed Forces. Despite massive resistance —
both civilian and military
— the conservative forces had learned the lessons of the failed
October, 1970 uprising, and applied brutality without compunction.
Banzer ruled the country for the next seven years. As for Torres,
he fled the country and settled in Buenos Aires, Argentina remaining there even after the
March 1976 coup that brought to power General Jorge
Videla. In early June 1976 general Torres was kidnapped and assassinated, most likely
by right-wing death squads associated with the Videla government
but also—it has been argued—with the acquiescence of Hugo Banzer. His murder
was part of Operation Condor [1].
Despite his failings and the short duration of his government,
Torres's memory is still revered by the poorest strata of Bolivian
society. He is remembered as the smiling general who dared to break
the norm of what a Bolivian military leader was supposed to be
like. His body was eventually repatriated to Bolivia (in 1983),
where it received a massively-attended state funeral.
See also
References
- ^
International Academy at Santa Barbara,
International Academy at Santa Barbara (1970). Current World
Leaders. Almanac of Current World Leaders.
p. 6.
External
links