The Vatican once dismissed reports of massacres by Chilean dictator
Augusto Pinochet as “Communist propaganda”, according to US diplomatic
and intelligence documents from the 1970s leaked on Monday.
One cable dated October 18, 1973 sent to Washington by the US embassy
to the Holy See relayed a conversation with the Vatican’s then deputy
Secretary of State, Giovanni Benelli, the leak by whistleblowing website
WikiLeaks showed.
Benelli expressed “his and the pope’s grave concern over successful
international leftist campaign to misconstrue completely realities of
Chilean situation,” read the cable to then US Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger.
“Benelli
labelled exaggerated coverage of events as possibly greatest success of
Communist propaganda,” it said, adding that the Italian monsignor said
this showed “how Communists can influence free world media in future”.
“As is unfortunately natural following coup d’etat, Benelli observed,
there has admittedly been bloodshed during mopping up procedures in
Chile,” it said.
But Benelli went on to say that Chilean bishops had assured him “that
stories alleging brutal reprisals in international media are
unfounded.”
The conversation took place five weeks after army general Pinochet
took power in a coup that overthrew the socialist regime of Salvador
Allende, as thousands of perceived leftist sympathisers were being
imprisoned and killed.
The cables also showed the Vatican later realised the full extent of
the abuses being carried out but refused to criticise Pinochet’s regime
openly and continued with normal diplomatic relations.