State Terror or Capitalist Terror, Military
Coup or Capitalist Coup
By James Petras
October 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Democratic
critics of military seizures of power commonly refer to them as
military coups. They adopt a very narrow and misleading
conception of what is taking place.
Likewise, human rights activists and
progressive analysts who conceptualize the reign of violence
which follows, a ‘coup’ as state terror fail to take account of
the systemic forces – the capitalist social order and class
relations – which determine the classes which wield state power.
They ignore the specific classes and groups which are targeted
and which classes direct and benefit from terror.
Concepts like ‘state terror’ and ‘military
coup’ obscure as much as enlighten. Moreover, the narrow focus
on the military limits the political changes in the class
structure required to avoid the repetition of the violent
overthrow of democratic governments.
In this essay we will focus on the case of
Argentina, where the Central Bank has opened its archives to
judicial investigators looking into the relationship between the
military dictatorship (1976-83) and major capitalist
enterprises.
We will also cite the empirical research of
Professor Juan Carlos “Lito” Marin, one of Argentina’s leading
scholars on the violent overthrow of the elected government. His
specialty was on the social relations and class context of the
killing of 30,000 Argentines during the military dictatorship.
We will especially draw on his statistical
analysis of the victims found in his book (“Lucha de calles,
lucha de clase –Street struggles, class struggle).
Capitalist and Military Rule
According to the documentary evidence
presented by the Argentine Central Bank, immediately after the
military seized power, the leading manufacturers presented the
military with a comprehensive list of all the trade union
leaders, delegates and activists to be eliminated. In other
words the capitalist class give the military their ‘marching
orders’. They dictated who was to be arrested, tortured, killed
and/or disappeared. The military executed the orders of the
capitalist class – of the 30,000 Argentines who were murdered
the vast majority were unarmed industrial workers involved in
workplace industrial action.
The Central Bank documents confirm the earlier
detailed study of Professor Marin. He found that over eighty
percent of the ‘disappeared’, the victims of the military
regime, were trade unionists, urban neighborhood activists and
rural organizers. Less than twenty percent were in any way
affiliated with the urban or rural guerrillas.
In other words it was not state terror in the
abstract – but violent class struggle organized according to the
priorities and demands of the capitalist class which accounted
for the vast majority of killings. And the massacre set the
stage for the second priority of the capitalist class, the
introduction of the neo-liberal economy. The mass slaughter
allowed the military to hand-over lucrative public enterprises
to the capitalist class who proceeded to fire large number of
employees without the problem of worker opposition.
The intellectual authors and beneficiaries of
the mass murder were not a band of power hungry military
officials; but highly respectable leaders and upholders of the
capitalist social order.
In the run-up to the coup the capitalist
class, for the better part of a decade, was engaged in a bitter
class struggle with militant trade unions, which organized
several successful general strikes in Cordoba(the ‘Cordobazo’,
el ‘viborazo’),Rosario, and greater Buenos Aires.
Between 1970-71 ,some 5 years before the
military takeover ,I conducted interviews with leaders of
Argentina’s principle industrial association (Argentine
Industrial Union).Without exception they looked at the
“Brazilian example” as a model for Argentina.Brazil was ruled by
a business-military regime resulting from the overthrow of a
democratic government in1964.In other words, the strategic
decision to seize power was taken by the capitalist class; the
military made the tactical decision of when and how, in
consultation with US military attaches at the Embassy
The capitalist class set several tasks for the
military, according to the Central Bank documents.
First and foremost, the capitalist class
demanded a comprehensive and violent purge of all levels of
leaders of the working class, at work and in the neighborhoods.
But the largest percentage of killings affected militant grass
roots leaders,especially shop floor delegates.
Secondly, the capitalists demanded the
expropriation and dispossession of enterprises and farms owned
by sectors of the nationalist ,“Keynesian”, bourgeoisie and
their handover to the neo-liberal business elite. This led to
the concentration and centralization of ownership and capital.
Among the beneficiaries was a powerful media conglomerate (the
Clarin group) which served as a propaganda megaphone in favor of
the dismantling of labor and social legislation and the
privatization of public enterprises.
Thirdly, the capitalist class demanded and
secured the military purge of the judiciary, police andcivil
service of independent voices and the appointment ofhard right
officials.
In other words the capitalist social order
supported and directed the military seizure of government;
dictated the transformation of state institutions and targeted
the social class representatives to be eliminated.
The Capitalist Coup ad the Transition
to Democracy
Subsequent to the so-called “transition to
democracy”, when the military ceded governance to civilian
electoral parties and politicians, the entire judicial, police
and administrative structure organized to promote neoliberalism
and defend the power, privileges and prerogatives of the
capitalist class, remained intact.
Even more important, up until the present, the
capitalist class which actively participated in the
identification, purge and murder of the vast majority of workers
killed by the military, was never brought to trial. In some
cases, the military executioners were tried for crimes against
humanity, and in Argentina (but not elsewhere), some were
jailed.
The social order, the capitalist system, which
presided over mass murder was never called into question. The
whole issue of class violence was reduced to an issue of “human
rights” violations committed by the military elite.
The larger context of class conflict and class
struggle, which precipitated the violent seizure of power which
culminated in mass murder was obfuscated.
The key to understanding why the capitalist
class prospered during the dictatorship and escaped any
punishment and prosecution afterwards is found in the fact that
the vast majority of worker and community leaders who would have
led the majority in the quest for justice were murdered.
In other words the capitalist class’s violent
political power grab and mass murder ensured the growth of
profits and the consolidation of growth during the military
regime, and the obfuscation of their role in the mass killings
secured their illicit property grab and wealth with the
restoration of electoral politics.
Conclusion
Labeling the violent seizure of power as a
military coup is to adopt a one-dimensional view . Instead, if
we examine the coup as an integral element of the internal
dynamics of the class struggle, which allowed the capitalist
class to deepen and extend its power, we have a fuller
understanding of its deeper meaning. The continuation of
capitalist power within the electoral political system allowed
the bourgeoisie to continue organizing and promoting profoundly
anti-democratic, anti-working class activity.
Not all military coups or reigns of state
terror are linked to class struggle between capitalists and
workers. Even in Argentina, the coup served to resolveintra-capitalist
conflicts between neo-liberal and nationalist-protectionist
business elites.
In Africa, Asia and in nineteenth and early
twentieth century Latin America, military coups were largely
elite shifts in power. However, with the growth and emergence of
capitalist class relations and class conflict, the military’s
role as an autonomous force diminished, as it became integrated
and subordinated to the emerging capitalist order.
By the middle of the twentieth century onward,
especially as class conflict intensified and class polarization
deepened, the military coup became astrategic weapon of the
capitalist class to advance its class interests. This was
especially the case where they could no longer retain their
profits and prerogatives in a democratic electoral framework.
In other words as capitalism expands and
defines the nature of the social order, the military coup is
redefined as capitalist coup; and state violence deepens and
expands to encompass larger sectors of the working population.
In each and every capitalist coup and in each
example of organized state terror, the US imperial state is
directly involved at the behest and on behalf of the capitalist
class – be they multi-national corporations or banks. The US
imperial state coordinates with their multinational corporations
and the Latin American capitalist class the objects and targets
of the capitalist coup as well as the composition of the
post-coup regime. The US military influenced the political
timing of the Argentine coup – as a former US military official
operating out of the Argentine embassy once told me. The US CIA
compiled lists of working class and social activist to be
targeted (murdered) in Chile after the 1973 coup, especially of
those employed by US multi-nationals, as was revealed by US
Senator Church’s Congressional investigation between 1974-76.
In other words, the capitalist coup and terror
state has a strategic international character. It is also an
integral part of imperialist conquest and anti-imperialist
struggles. The class struggle and the anti-imperialist
struggles, are two sides of the same process.