President of Chile Essays

  • Crisis Management: Disaster in Chile

    3373 Words  | 7 Pages

    On October 13, 2010, thirty three miners of Chile were finally rescued. The men had been trapped underground since August 5, 2010 when a rockfall caused a tunnel to collapse. Since then, the miners had remained trapped in a collapsed gold and copper mine for two months. The miners were hauled to the surface by a specially designed steel shaft known as “Phoenix” capsule through 2,050 feet of rock to the surface. While the mission of rescuing was completed, the Chilean government has gained enormous

  • Impact of the Great Depression on Chile and Peru

    1383 Words  | 3 Pages

    that United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt provided during his inauguration speech at the onset of the Great Depression, while also describing the melancholy and hopelessness that many citizens felt. This sentiment, however, was not just confined to the United States—the impact of the Wall Street Crash of 1929 had also reverberated throughout Latin America, and very few countries escaped the ensuing economic depression unscathed, including the Latin American nations of Chile and Peru. However

  • Neoliberalism in Chile as a Result of an Extreme Leftist Movement and Pinochet's Regime

    1806 Words  | 4 Pages

    Neoliberalism in Chile In this paper, I argue that Neoliberalism is the product of an extreme leftist movement and US intervention that Chile’s former dictator, Augusto Pinochet who ruled between the years 1973 and 1990, used to transform Chile into an economic power during the wound down of the cold war era. This essay first analyses the US’s fears of communism taking root in Latin America and the extreme measures the US took throughout Latin America in brainwashing military personnel and promoting

  • To What Extent did the U.S. Engaged in Covert Actions in Chile

    1172 Words  | 3 Pages

    interests in Chile represented an estimated 90% of the country’s foreign investments. The rise of an ideological Marxist coalition led by Salvador Allende immediately raise concerns among U.S. security advisors, policy makers, and U.S. and multinational private industrial corporations operating in Chile. In an almost instantaneous reaction from the U.S, Covert Actions in Chile begun in 1963 and were carried out thru 1974 under the executive authorization of three U.S. Presidents. Interesting

  • Augusto Pinochet: The Powerful Dictator Who Ruled Chile

    1061 Words  | 3 Pages

    Augusto Pinochet was the president and dictator who ruled Chile. He overthrew Salvador Allende government with the coup September 11, 1973. Of course, Pinochet was very brutal and he was a well-known destroyer. This didn’t stop his rampages and he continued to make his territory spiral downward at a fast pace. His 17 year dictatorship was covered with murder, torture, and abuse. He had over 200,000 political assassinations on his record, which is more than any other dictator contributed. Pinochet

  • Chile - The Pinochet Era

    1174 Words  | 3 Pages

    Chile - The Pinochet Era Background: Salvador Allende Gossens was elected the first Marxist president of Chile in 1970. He governed Chile from 1970 until 1973, the year of his death. The Allende government was not very successful. It approved sharp increases in the minimum wage whilst attempting to prevent price increases in consumer goods, in an effort to end Chile's economic slump. This resulted in disaster for the country, as inflation soared, strikes became common and opposition towards

  • Bureaucratic-Authoritarianism in Chile

    1308 Words  | 3 Pages

    Bureaucratic-Authoritarian governments, according to O’Donnell’s definition, are “excluding and emphatically non-democratic” (Collier 24). The case of Chile emphasizes the exclusion O’Donnell speaks of, most importantly after democratic processes in Chile came to a halt during Pinochet’s reign. The implementation of a bureaucratic-authoritarian government in Chile led to a positive in change in the country’s economy while sacrificing political involvement. To understand the origins of Chile’s bureaucratic-authoritarian

  • The Dictator who Was Augusto Pinochet

    928 Words  | 2 Pages

    Augusto Jose Ramon Pinochet Ugarte also known as Augusto Pinochet was born on November 25, 1915 in Valparaiso, Chile, and died on December 10, 2006 in Santiago, Chile. He was a murderous Dictator who ruled in Chile from 1973 to 1990. He was Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean Army from 1973 to 1998 and president of the Government Junta of Chile between 1973 and 1981. Pinochet managed to attain full power by overthrowing Salvador Allende, a socialist government, by using military force. His years in

  • 9/11 of Chile: The 1973 Coup and Its Aftermath

    1828 Words  | 4 Pages

    attacks were made by foreign terrorists because of their foreign interests. The Chilean people have their own remembrance of a similar incident, but it was in 1973. On this day, Augusto Pinochet and The United States lead a coup that overthrew the president Salvador Allende, of the Chilean government. The United States government “supported, trained, funded, and armed military tin-pot dictatorships in order to defend democracy and the free market from progressive movements made up of the workers in

  • The U.S. and Pinochet

    1514 Words  | 4 Pages

    response to the success of the Cuba’s Communist Revolution, President John F. Kennedy initiated the Alliance for Progress to discourage Marxist revolutions and to promote economic and social cooperation through democracy between the United States and Latin America . All throughout Latin America during the 1960’s Marxism had become the central philosophy and the future of democracy in the region appeared to be greatly threatened. Chile was viewed by the US as the ideal model for the Alliance for

  • Augusto Pinochet

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    headline “Augusto Pinochet, dictator who ruled by terror in Chile, Dies at 91” clearly suggests that he was indeed was a traditional dictator. However, an article published by the BBC which entailed an interview with a Chilean woman states, "I don't believe the dictatorship was that bad". The dictatorship of General Pinochet has indeed been documented harshly by the American newspapers; however, there indeed is another side to the story inside Chile, which clearly states another view on whether or not Augusto

  • Marxism Vs Marxism

    2758 Words  | 6 Pages

    interest were overthrown with the funding and instruction of the U.S. It was with the watchful and accusing eye of Uncle Sam looming over Latin America that in 1970, that Unidad Popular candidate, Salvador Allende, was democratically elected President of Chile. Even before Allende assumed the presidency, oppositional forces were conspiring to destroy him, everything he was to accomplish, and the pro-working class ideology that he represented. The events that occurred in the three years that his presidency

  • The Chilean Coup D’état of 1973

    1481 Words  | 3 Pages

    atrocity were committed during the September 11, 1973 military coup d’état, which effectively overthrew the democratically elected government of Chile, and replaced it with a military Junta that would eventually be headed by the, then newly appointed, Army Commander-in-chief General Augusto Pinochet. After the military had taken control, the ousted president Salvador Allende was dead, and the military began collecting people they perceived to be dissidents, leftists, or supporters Allende. People

  • The Movie Machuca Sparknotes

    3083 Words  | 7 Pages

    serve U.S. interests. In the case of Chile, Klein argues that the U.S., in the midst of Cold War paranoia, wanted to maintain its political and economic hegemony in South America. Washington accordingly whipped the Chilean army into an anti-Allende, anti-communist frenzy, bringing about the bloodshed of ‘the Caravan of Death’ as well as the years of tyrannical military dictatorship. Also significant was the fact that the neoliberal economics implemented in Chile were taught to Chilean economists of

  • Charles Horman: A Disappearance Amid Chile's Coup

    1297 Words  | 3 Pages

    American hailing from a wealthy upper-class New York family named Charles Horman and his wife Beth were living in Chile. A free-lance writer, Charles was a curious fellow, meticulously recording conversations and events he deemed significant. On September 11th, a coup d’etat led by the military junta and army leader Augusto Pinchot overthrew the existing socialist government of President Salvador Allende. In the confusion and chaos surrounding the immediate aftermath of the coup, Charles was separated

  • Understanding the Cultural and Historical Landscape of Chile

    1263 Words  | 3 Pages

    Chile is located in South America and is a Spanish speaking country. The official name of Chile is the Republic of Chile. Chile has a population of 15,153,797. The literacy rate in Chile is 95.2%. Chile’s academic year starts in March and ends in December. Students in Chile are required eight years of schooling (Chile History and Background). Chile was first under the control by the Incas in the north and the south was under control by the nomadic Araucanos. In 1541, Pedro Valdivia, founded the

  • Chile Movie Themes

    892 Words  | 2 Pages

    Pablo Larrain. 2012. Chile: Sony Pictures Classic, 2012. DVD. The film’s setting is in 1988 during Chile’s Berlin Wall moment. The genre of the film is drama and historical fiction. The film was directed by Pablo Larrain in 2012. The major actors in the film were Gael Garcia Bernal, Alfredo Castro, and Luis Gnecco. There was only one actress in the film and that was Antonia Zegers. NO was a very dramatic and inspirational movie that showed the hardships of people’s lives in Chile. It was very intense

  • Chile

    877 Words  | 2 Pages

    Chile In this project we are going to summarize the main points concerning the history of CHILE , its independance, and bring the country to present day CHILE. We are also going to mention some important facts about CHILE"S economy. I. COLONIZATION PERIOD CHILE is a country located in the wester coast of South America, on the Pacific Ocean. It is known for the famous Andes Mountain Range that covers all of Peru and part of Chile CHILE was first discovered in 1520 by a Portuguese navigator named

  • Utilitarianism In Chile

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    Although today, Chile is known as one of the biggest economic and political powerhouses in Latin America, it wouldn’t be where it is today without its long and complicated history. In the 16th century, the Spanish commenced the colonization of modern day Chile, and Pedro de Valdivia established the capital Santiago in 1541. However, the Mapuche people greatly resisted this invasion and weren’t subdued until the 1880’s. Chile declared independence in 1810 following the overthrow of the king of Spain

  • Chile and Peru Tacna-Arica and US Involvement

    1029 Words  | 3 Pages

    and Chilean representatives signed the Treaty of Ancon, by which Chile incorporated the Tarapaca province. On the other hand, the final treaty of peace and boundaries with Bolivia was signed in 1904, two decades later. By this treaty Bolivia ratified the Chilean sovereignty over the Atacama desert territory” (Antofagasta province) accepting its condition as a landlocked country. Nevertheless, territorial problems between Peru and Chile were far from over and the seed for a new controversy was right