The Argentine military, ironically, finally fell from power after it lost a conventional war with Britain over control of the obscure Falkland Islands. Argentina had long protested British occupation and control of the Malvinas, as they are known in Latin America. In April 1982, the junta decided to reclaim them by force, a ploy to deflect public attention from the collapse of the economy during the global recession of the early 1980s. But when the invasion was decisively repulsed, the Malvinas episode completed the military's humiliation rather than rescuing its reputation. Having attacked its own people, brought the economy to the brink of ruin, and then embarrassed itself and the country before the entire world, the Argentine military had little choice but to permit a return to civilian government. On October 30, 1983, Raúl Alfonsin won the national presidential election. He took office on December 10, the thirty-fifth anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In Chile, the economy also collapsed in the early 1980s. In 1982, per capita gross domestic product declined one-sixth. By March 1983, onethird of the labor force was unemployed. The minimum wage lost between one-fifth and one-half of its purchasing power. Close to half of Chile's children were malnourished, an appalling situation in a country that had previously been relatively prosperous. A wave of bankruptcies brought hard times even to the middle and upper classes.
As the junta approached its tenth anniversary in power, opposition increased in all sectors of society. Working-class residential neighborhoods began to organize. The old political parties (especially the centrist Christian Democrats, which had never been forced entirely underground) began to act, cautiously, in public. Strikes by truck drivers and copper miners in June 1983 were labor's first major challenge since the coup, followed by a successful general strike in July. Between May and November, several Days of National Protest culminated in a demonstration by close to 1 million people in Santiago. The military, however, also found new resolve. As opposition grew, so did repression. Several deaths and over one thousand arrests accompanied the July general strike. Mass arrests increased dramatically, as did banishments, exiles, torture, and political deaths. By late 1984, the government was forced to reimpose a state of siege, and repression became more brutal. For example, two young Chileans were set on fire by the police during a protest demonstration, killing one and savagely maiming the other. Although the government claimed that the youths had accidentally set themselves aflame with a Molotov cocktail, a third victim was torched a week later, as if to remind opponents that it had been no accident. Popular resistance, however, could not be crushed this time. In October 1988, the military tried a plebiscite to legitimate its rule. The majority of Chileans, however, rejected a new eight-year term for Pinochet. On December 14, 1989, an opposition alliance of seventeen parties, led by Patricio Aylwin, won the first free elections in Chile in nearly two decades. The Uruguayan military was also hit hard by the economic crisis of the early 1980s. By 1984, real wages were less than one-half their 1968 levels, and more than 10 percent of the population had left the country, including one-seventh of the country's university graduates and close to one-fifth of the economically active population of the capital city of Montevideo. But the military, after some initial indecision, was unwilling to adopt the Chilean strategy of increased repression in the face of growing opposition. Elections were held in 1984 and a freely elected civilian government returned to power in 1985, even without a Falklands-like blunder.
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