Armed resistance in Chile (1973–1990)

Armed Resistance in Chile
Part of Operation Condor and the Cold War

Left-wing protesters during street riots on 1 May 1984
DatePre-Dictatorship Guerrillas:
1968 – 1973
Main Conflict:
11 September 1973 – 5 October 1988
Location
Result

Tactical Chilean government victory

Belligerents
Junta
Chilean Armed Forces

Police forces:


Political support:


Supported by:
 United States
Israel
South Africa
Guerrillas

MIR
(1973–1987)
FPMR
(1983–1997)
MAPU Lautaro
(1982–1994)
MIR-EGP-PL
(1987–1994)
GAP (1973)
Cordones industriales (1973)


Political support:


Supported by:
 Nicaragua
 Cuba
 Libya
 North Korea
EPR (Argentina)
Tupamaros (Uruguay)
ELN (Bolivia)
Commanders and leaders

Augusto Pinochet (WIA)
(President of Chile, Commander-in-chief of the Chilean Army)

Prominent rebels:
  • Comité Central MIR
Casualties and losses
15 casualties (1973–1977), (military and police)
77 casualties (1977–1990), (military and police)
1,500–2,000 guerrillas killed
49 guerrillas killed
hundreds captured

Following the 1973 Chilean coup d'état, an armed leftist resistance movement against Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship developed until 1990 when democracy was restored. This conflict was part of the South American theater in the Cold War, with the United States backing the Chilean military and the Soviet Union backing the guerrillas. The main armed resistance groups of the period were the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR) and Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez (FPMR), the armed wing of the Communist Party of Chile. These groups had a long-standing rivalry, including over Marxist orthodoxy and its implementation.

Key events during the armed resistance were the attempt to set up guerrilla camps around Neltume from 1970 to 1973 and from 1980 to 1981, the February 1986 sabotaging of the Limache train tracks, the Carrizal Bajo arms smuggling operation in August 1986 and the attempted killing of Pinochet in September that same year. After the return to democracy was initiated in 1990 the bulk of the armed groups demobilized. However, splinter groups that reportedly switched targets after the dictatorship fell, continued to carry out assassinations, bombings, kidnappings and armed robberies until 2010.

The insurgency was supported by Cuba, Libya, Nicaragua and North Korea (the Warsaw Pact states provided minor financial assistance), while the Chilean security forces were backed by the United States.