MILITARY AND POLICE REFORM IN CHILE
3/29/2010
Civilian Control Over the Military and Democracy Rule of Law Guarantees during non-election times Elections Democratic Culture Institutionalization
Methods of Ensuring Civilian Control Control of the allocation of leadership positions
The ability of the executive to remove high-ranking military personnel from their positions
Control over the setting of defense priorities and related policies The limitation of military advisors
Control and/or effective oversight over intelligence and espionage functions
Civilian Government Effectiveness and Credibility Control over the political process and effective
policy Economic stability Social tranquility Lack of corruption and fear
Methods of Avoiding Civilian Control The ideal of the military as “guardian of the
homeland” Loyalty: the continuing loyalty of soldiers to
the military before the state, and of the military to its own institutions before those of the state/society
Holdovers from non-democratic or transition-era laws: incomplete reorganization of power leads to the persistence of military prerogatives
Accommodation by Omission: certain topics are neither addressed by law nor in ongoing political negotiations
Methods of Avoiding Civilian Control Mediation: where civilian institutions are
unable to effectively represent various citizen groups and their competing demands, the military may take a role in doing so
Social Control: paramilitary groups and militarized police forces strengthen the role of the military in domestic control
Alliance with elites: the exchange of favors with civilian (economic and political) elites helps the military to retain influence
Police v. Military
Military: the capabilities of a nation pertaining to preparation and war-making capabilities As the guarantor of security – of national
existence – the military may operate outside of “politics as usual,” even within the confines of its own territory
The military is not the appropriate tool for the everyday provision of safety and order
Police: “civil force for maintaining order, preventing and detecting crime, and enforcing laws” (dictionary.com) The police are not concerned with threats to
national existence so much as the everyday maintenance of order
As an organization for civil administration, the police obey normal legal procedures
Chile: How We Got Here
Colonial Legacy: The Chilean judicial system as a remnant of Spanish colonization
Undermining the Inquisitorial System: the Allende Administration
The Fall and Rise of the Rule of Law: the Pinochet Regime 1973 state of siege 1980 Constitution
Chile: How We Got Here
Democratic Reforms Procedural reforms
Public trials Oral hearings Public prosecutors and defenders Recognition of victims' rights
Constitutional reforms Reduces the Presidential term to four years from
six Revokes the role of the armed services as
guarantor of national security Elimination of irremovability of military
commanders in chief Elimination of designated senators Weakens the National Security Council
Is the Military A Threat to Chilean Democracy? Control of the allocation of leadership
positions Constitutional reforms eliminate the irremovability
of military commanders in chief Constitutional reforms eliminate designated
senators Control over the setting of defense priorities
and related policies Territorial disputes with Peru and Bolivia Peacekeeping deployments in Haiti,
India/Pakistan, and the Middle East Force Modernization: Professionalization,
Cooperation between the branches of the services, Equipment acquisition
Is the Military A Threat to Chilean Democracy? Civilian Government Effectiveness and
Credibility Confidence in the police:
Latin America: 37% (2005) Chile: 64% (2005)
Confidence in the military: Latin America: 42% (2005) Chile: 49% (2005)
Satisfaction with Democracy Latin America: 31% (2005) Chile: 43%(2005)
Informe Latinobarometro
Is the Military A Threat to Chilean Democracy? The ideal of the military as “guardian of the
homeland” Constitutional reforms revoke the role of the
armed services as guarantor of national security The continuing loyalty of soldiers Holdovers from non-democratic or transition-era
laws Supreme Court expressly declared torture to be a
crime against humanity AND the amnesty decreed by the military government in 1978 is inapplicable to war crimes or crimes against humanity
The military justice system investigates all cases of alleged police abuse.
Is the Military A Threat to Chilean Democracy? Accommodation by Omission
Consensus has emerged over the last decade that institutional violence has ceased to be a problem despite “individual lapses”
Because of high public approval ratings of the police, there is little political debate over the way they should function
Social Control During the political transition there was an
increased sense of insecurity and thus security was a major concern of the transitional government but the security agenda turned to focus on street crime
The use of the military to respond to natural disasters, including the recent earthquake