THE POLITICS OF UNCERTAINTY: SPAIN PREPARES FOR THE POST-FRANCO ERA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
C
Document Page Count: 
15
Document Creation Date: 
December 14, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 27, 2003
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 1, 1975
Content Type: 
IM
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7.pdf1.06 MB
Body: 
C~AIOPR ~,/~`M~.a0~~-75 .~. ~P~o~ed~o~~?~?~fdP,~?~~?~19~t~'~-I.LI'G~N~E M~MORAND~l~~1~ : THE POLITICS- 0~ \ , ..: . UNC,E'~TAIiNT,Y =. SPAIN PR~~PIA~R~S ~0R? THE ~~P:U.S~T-~RANCO ERA- ; ~~ ,. ~ ~. CIA ~E~7S ~ ,. ~. 1 ~vniiaenitial Intelligence l~Iemoran~.um The Politus of Uncertainty: Spain Prepares for the Port Franco Era Confidentiai OPR 303 February 1;75 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 25X1 gpproved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 CENT?AL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE OFFICE OF POLITICAL RESEARCH THE POLI ~ ICS OF UNCERTAINTY: SPAIN PREPARES FOR THE POST-FRANCO ERA 25X1A9A CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/05/28 _ CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05(~Ff~~~DP86T00608R000600180001-7 CONTENTS I:EI' JUDGMENTS Pa~c 1 DISCUSSION ... I. SPAIN AND THE PORTUGt?ESE MODEL ~ II. ECONO\IIC AND SOCIAL CHANGE ;3 III. SPAIN UNDER FRANCO 3 IV. THE CONSTITUTION ~ V. THE POLITICAL ELITE 9 VI. THE ~VURI:ING CLASSES AND COAI~fUNIST OPPOSITION 6 ~'II. TIIE ROLL OF THE ~iILITART VIII. STRESSES AND STRAINS 7 I\. TIIE FUTURE If Franco lingers on If the Caudillo dies soon iii CONfIDENTIAI Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 CONFIDENTIAL KEY JUDGMENTS Francisco Franco is dying. While doctors within and without Spain disag, ~. :, to just when the Caudillo will pass from the scene, all agree th4 t his physical decline has begun, and that there is a general incapacitat;~~n ahead. At the moment, political figures of the extreme right have {.ie greatest influence upon Franco, and continue to frustrate Prime Mi~tister Arias Navarro's attempts to add more flexibility to the politi~~al system. The current dominance of this extreme right dampene?_ the hopes of moderate politicians and groups who sup- ported ~! : ias' proposal to permit independent pot.?tical associations in Spain. r'.oderates are now biding their time. Ur.:1ce Portugal before the revolution, Spain has a larger number of leac? ors and groups with governing experience, and these could grow i-~to .ledgling political pariies. If these groups are allowed to move r:?ut of their present quasi-legal stahis, they could assume an active and important role in guiding Spain toward a more pluralistic form :.f government. The outcome of the post-Franco succession will depe ~d, however, on how long the dictator lives and his current in- timacy with the extreme right wing-to the almost total exclusion of moderate politicians-continues: - Prospects are bleaker if Franco lingers on. The extreme right is likely to come to monopolize the political process, and prove to be inflexible in the face of growing unrest and demands for reform. As public order decays, the military might feel impelled to take over the reins of government to restore social i ^ace. With the assumption of civilian roles, the officer corps will become politicized, and significant numbers of 1. ,~ior officers might turn radical as Spain's major economic and social prob- lems remain unsolved. -Prospects are better if Franco dies soon. It would still be pos- sible for moderate individuals and groups to rally around Prime Minister Arias Navarro, and support his mildly reformist pro- gram. Co-operating i~iformally with the military, an Arias government might accommodate restrained political de- mands, make some gestures to appease labor and regional protests, and attain some political stability through a plural authoritarianism. Whatever the eventual outcome, the immediate future for Spain will be characterized by unrest and uncertainty, and politicians' dis- trust of each other. CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 DISCUSSION I. SPAIN AND THE PORTUGUESE MODEL Francisco Franco has ruled Spain for nearly forty years, and the political structure designed to per- petuate his rule has few real roots in the population. As Franco's heal!h declines his decisions are re- flecting amore rigid conservatism, and moderate groups are coming to think the reforms promised by Premier ~.rias Navarro are being betrayed. In the absence of widely based political parties, the military remains Spain's single most powe,ful or- ganization. Important groups both in and out of Spain are beginning to ?.+?onder if the recent Portu- guese revolution has any implications for Spain. Is the same scenario likely to unfold in Spain as re- cently occurred in Portugal? The forty-year old Portuguese dictatorship re- cently fell q,~ickly, easily and unexpectedly. Politi- cal institutions disappeared almost overnight. Con- ser+?ative elements associated with the old regime were enable to regroup and organize. Exhilarated by a sense of release, the once repressed population kent escalating its political demands, and laborers engaged in a series of wildcat strikes. The only dis- ciplined pulitical force to emerge vas the Com- munist party, ar_d its leaders were able to inflc.encc a new military government that is slo+vly drifting leftward. in retrospect the reasons for the downfall of the Gaetano regime seem obvious. Gaetano did not have the personal authority of Salazar; yet he as- sumed office in 1968 with promises of limited re- form and a flexible African policy. Over time these appeared to be empty gestures as th:; Prime I1tin- ister backed down, and came to rely solely on in- transigent, right-wing support. ::odcrates felt that options in the political are,~a were denied them. Finally in 1974, a group of career military officers, resenting their long assignments in Africa and the rapid promotion of reservists, politicized their dis- content and executed a coup dctat. 1'Vithout the presence of Salazar or a figure of comparable stature, the political system toppled completely. But Spain is not Portugal. Portugal is the least alanco in December 1973, the now retired chief-of-staff, Lieutenant-General :lianuel Dicz-Alegria, and his successor, General Fernandez Vallespin, formed a crisis managcrnent group to curb the excesses of military rightists. They were aided by a younger bencration of officers ~vho had attended the staff school urd:r Dicz- Alegria's principalship. To the left, a miniscule group of junior officers was impressed by the changes wrought by the new military govern- ment in Portugal immediately after the April coup. In any event, concern among military leaders about officers joining any future political associations has grown enough for the three service ministers (army, navy, and air force) to warn all officers against personal involvement in politics. Without Fri nco to protect the officer corps' interests, its response during a period of transition still remains an un- known quantit}? in Spanish politics.' VIII. STRESSES AND STRAINS Franco's heirs will have to deal v?ith a new set of pressures upon the political system. '; he economic 'Arias sensed this, and his first major defense policy speech contained a promise to upgrade the nay's equip- ment. 7 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 boom is apparently over. Spain is almost totally de- pendent upon external energy supplies, and the cost of importing them has more than tripled to nearly four billion dollars in 1974. Real GNP growth has fallen from eight to four percent, and infla- tion has reached seventeen percent-the worst since the civi: war. Income from tourism and emigrant remittances is stagnating at four and one- half billion dollars, and no longer covers the gap behveen export earnings and import costs; Spain's current account deficit in 1974 was three and one- half billion dollars. The government is trying to keep unemployment levels low?, but should produc- tion continue to fall and emigrant laborers be forced to return from western Europe, unemploy- ment is likely to climb far above the officially ad- mitted 1.8 percent. On the bright side, Spain's foreign reserve position and credit rating remain good, and if emigrants do not return in large numbers, problems will be manages-~Ie for the next hvo or three years. But should the economic downturn become severe, a successor regime will have fewer oppor- tunities to satisfy diverging interests. The new middle-class, fearful of losing its recently .von possessions, would become suspicious of any changes that might seem to reduce its share of the economic pie. At the same time, the working class would demand more, and there would be fewer monetary and job benefits to give them. Industrial unrest would increase. In such conditions, politi- cal leaders might have too little time in which to learn the skills of accommodation, compromise and party-building needed for a stable transition. Perhaps, too, the externally motivated incentive to acquire these political skills may be diminishing. In tiic past, an important factor contributing to the support for reform among Spanish politicians was the desire to gain respe~: bility for their nation in western Europe, along wi!h admission into the Common Market and NATO. But the ap- peal of Europe may be foundering; European economies have been weakened and made vulner- able by the energy crisis, and constitutional govern- ments seem less able to contain the threats of mass strikes, domestic Communism and separatist tcrror- isrr: in Spanish eyes. The post-Franco leadership- especially arightist one-might feel less impelled to redeem Spain's reputation among the trouble- plag~ied European democracies. Most significantly, attitudes towards the future may become less flexible as a result of the Portu- guese revolution. The extreme right-with large demonstrations and new organizations-has al- ready indicated its unwillingness to accept any basic political reforms lest a similar revolution occur in Spain. In contrast, moderate elements arc insistent that changes be enacted quickly to prevent such a revolution. Arias was in the latter camp when he attempted to add more bite to the associations la~v after the April coup in Portugal. The right thwarted his effort, as well as his plans to alter the electoral and syndical systems. IX. THE FUTURE For as long as r ranco lives, uncertainty and stalemate will prevail. The ailing dictator remains the arbiter of Spanish politics. Right-wing friends and family arc monopolizing his attention, while moderates arc biding their time and waiting for the end. Neither group expects to see Franco again demonstrate his old flexibility of favoring one faction and then another to create political balance. If Franco lingers on . The loner Franco lives-whether he formalh? relinquishes prnver or not-the less easy and obvious the outcome of the transition is likely to bc. As it continues to inllucnce Franco's thinking, the cxtrcmc right will grow more confident about the future. Some of its members arc even now pre- paring to take advantage of the nc~v association law. 1lfoderates arc divided and wavering; men like Fraga Iribarne are willing to try their hands at forminr' organizations while others arc hesi!ant and fear that any connection to the \'ational :~lovc- ment will hurt their chances of winning support from the electr,ratc. The cxtrcmc right will gain an edge in organization-building, and seek to rally the support of a middle-class afraid of losing its economic position. Through Franco, the right will continue to bring pressure upon the Arias govern- ment, and probably will cause the prime minister to tighten press laws and to halt any significant syndical and municipal electoral informs; the: 8 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Approved f=or Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP$6t00608R000600180001-7 prince has no clout with which to counter such moves, and his reputation, already shaky, is apt to dimir::sh. Rightist elements are almost c..rtain to exert even mo-e pressure on the government in hopes of bringing about Arias' resignation. If Franco lingers on over the next two or three years, Spain will become even more polarized: the political right and petit-bourgeois interests will be ascendent; moderate politicians will be alienated; the working classes will be further radicalized, and the Communists will grow stronger among them. Under these conditions labor unrest is bound to escalate, and the right-with or without Franco by their-may not be able to control it. Either called in by the government or on their own in- itiative, the armed forces would then enter politics to restore order. With the assumption of civilian functions, groups of officers resenting the burden of underwriting an isolated and ineffectual dictator- ship in western Europe, might feel impelled to re- form Spain fundamentally. Spain could then expe- rience the abrupt and cataclysmic turn-about of 1974 Portugal. If the Caudillo dies soon .. . But if Franco dies within the next twelve to eighteen months, the chances for a stable transition are better. Barring the unlikely event of a last- gasp right-wing c pup attempt-the military would probably react .;gorously in the face of unconsti- tutional actions from any quarter-Arias and Juan Carlos will have the opportunity to solidify their support among moderate and less intransigent polit- ical groupings. During the lull provided by a period of national mourning, bargaining and compromises that would bring prominent figures into government could be reached. And acting on his earlier policy statements, Arias' new cabinet could present a prc ;ram thai in the guise of a modern "Francoism" we ald permit more electoral and party representa- ti ,n in the Cartes, some syndical reform and a d~?gree of regional autonomy. No politician or fac- tio: ~ is as yet strong enough to replace Arias or tota'ly Thwart such a program; the military will n~~t be inc;iaed to interfere with civil affairs immediately so long as public order is preserved, and the Com- munists will try if they can to dilute workers' de- mands in order to win political re;.pectability. But the initial stages of the transition in the year or so after Franco will be characterized by tension, muted conflict and wary steps towards a new political balance. Even should Fra:~co die soon, difficulties will emerge: will Spanish politicians be able to restrain their personal ambition and competitiveness for the sake of greater national good? Will they be able to forego grandiloquent gestures and high- flown rhetoric for the stolid work of daily political compromise and the Witty-gritty of party-building? Coming out of the shadow of F_anco, the skills of prominent Spanish politicians are untried. In the past individual ar:rbition and an instinct for behind- the-scenes maneuvering sufficed, and at first many will probably be content with the recognition brought by cabinet positions. fs associations or parties are formed, open politicking ~?rill mean little more than collecting splintere3 votes from a conservati~~e middle-class; real competition will continue to be conducted out of public view among prominent individuals and factions. But the politi- cal system will be a more open, fluid form of authoritarianism than under Franco. The gap between the regime and the working classes remains to be bridged, and political leaders will have to see that it is in their own self-interest to accommodate labor and linked regional demands. The more thoughtful among them-including Arias along with Fraga, Garrigues Walker, the younger Diez-Alegria and a majority of the hierarchy- have already advocated a kind of trade-unionism that would allow workers to organize locally and negotiate contracts at their factories; they are gambling on proletarian energies becoming ab- sorbed in legal activities, and so diminishing labor's ~vlnerability to Communist and other radical in- fluence. It is a risky business, because the workers' commissions are likely to increase their strikes during the transition period, and politicians will have to be persistent in the face of strong opposition from the right-wing. While the extreme right nc doubt will try to sway sympathetically inclined old?time officers, the military will hesitate to inter- vene in civilian politics so bong as the government appears moderate in its views, capable, and main- tains affirm grip over public protest. 9 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000601~180001-7 Approved For Release 200~~J,~-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7 Even should appropriate labor legislation be passed, the gap between the establishment and the workers will still exist. However, labor is not united enough to bring the nation to a total halt as in France or Italy and thus raise the specter of another civil waz. And if domestic peace is not shattered completely, the military vtould continue in its role as guazantor of the regime. Both officers and civilians shaze a commitment to the general outlines of Franco's state. The majority see room for moderate, legally enacted reforms,8 and all aze fi_mly anti-Communist-the party will be banned as it is now. Relations between the military and government are likely to be closer after Franco: without the presence of a reassuring, mediating figure, an informal consulting arrangement can be e~cpected to grow up, and the prime minister and prince would take the precaution of approaching senior officers before making any major, unexpected policy moves. Unless unforeseen political and eco- nomic forces were to appear on the scene, Spain would manage to achieve a loose, flabby sort of stability.s In any event, the leaders of post-Franco Spain will for some time be pre-occupied with internal political and economic problems; and while they would welcome admission into NATO and the EC, they will be prepazed to bargain hazd for concrete security and commercial benefits. They will watch events in Portugal with concern, continue to cul- tivate relations with the Communist and Arab worlds, and-perhaps as a symbol of Spanish in- dependence-give voice to a loud but superficial ..nti-Americanism. 10 CONFIDENTIAL 25X: Approved For Release 2003/05/28 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000600180001-7