A Tale of Two Dictators
R. Alex Whitlock
From a Washington Post editorial:
It's hard not to notice, however, that the evil dictator leaves behind the most successful country in Latin America. In the past 15 years, Chile's economy has grown at twice the regional average, and its poverty rate has been halved. It's leaving behind the developing world, where all of its neighbors remain mired. It also has a vibrant democracy. Earlier this year it elected another socialist president, Michelle Bachelet, who suffered persecution during the Pinochet years.

Like it or not, Mr. Pinochet had something to do with this success. To the dismay of every economic minister in Latin America, he introduced the free-market policies that produced the Chilean economic miracle -- and that not even Allende's socialist successors have dared reverse. He also accepted a transition to democracy, stepping down peacefully in 1990 after losing a referendum.

By way of contrast, Fidel Castro -- Mr. Pinochet's nemesis and a hero to many in Latin America and beyond -- will leave behind an economically ruined and freedomless country with his approaching death. Mr. Castro also killed and exiled thousands. But even when it became obvious that his communist economic system had impoverished his country, he refused to abandon that system: He spent the last years of his rule reversing a partial liberalization. To the end he also imprisoned or persecuted anyone who suggested Cubans could benefit from freedom of speech or the right to vote.

The contrast between Cuba and Chile more than 30 years after Mr. Pinochet's coup is a reminder of a famous essay written by Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, the provocative and energetic scholar and U.S. ambassador to the United Nations who died Thursday. In "Dictatorships and Double Standards," a work that caught the eye of President Ronald Reagan, Ms. Kirkpatrick argued that right-wing dictators such as Mr. Pinochet were ultimately less malign than communist rulers, in part because their regimes were more likely to pave the way for liberal democracies. She, too, was vilified by the left. Yet by now it should be obvious: She was right.

Posted to Around the World
 
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Observations

 
SAM wrote:
I'm not comfortable with casting Pinochet as a good guy. I thought that, because he left power peacefully, he should not have been prosecuted after the fact -- a straight quid pro quo. That's as much gratitude as I can muster.

"Not as murderous as Castro" is pretty damn faint praise.
12/13/2006
 
RAW wrote:
That's certainly a fair perspective. I found the editorial more instructive for Castro than Pinochet... that the latter is destructive even for a dictator.

As for Pinochet... I think it falls under the category that sometimes bad people cause good things to happen. Had he not become so imperialistic and had our relationship with him not become so antagonistic, it's possible that future generations could have been asking the same of Saddam Hussein.
12/13/2006
 
kevinp wrote:
Speaking of Saddam, I can't remember where I heard it, but someone suggested the best way out of the Iraq debacle is to dust Saddam off, say "Sorry about your boys!", and reinstall him as dictator. I'd be lying if I said that idea didn't hold some appeal...
12/13/2006

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