132. Memorandum from Dungan to President Kennedy, January 221

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Attached are two background papers—one dealing with Haiti and one with Guatemala. They were prepared for your 4 o’clock meeting today.

As you will note from reading them, the situation in both countries has one similarity—both regimes are discredited, there is no suitable alternative on the horizon, and we have relatively few assets.

Ralph A. Dungan
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Attachment

SUBJECT

  • Guatemala

1. The term of President Ydígoras ends in March 1964, with the election of his successor scheduled to take place late this year.

2. The prospect that former President (1945 to 51) Juan José Arévalo may successfully mobilize his considerable popularity to win re-election to office has spread fear and confusion among middle-of-the-road and other anti-Communist elements in Guatemala. Arévalo is not a Communist, but his confused, ill-balanced, political philosophy of “spiritual socialism”, fed by deep prejudice against the United States, served the Communist purpose well during his administration, precursor to the Communist dominated Arbenz administration of 1951 to 54. Should he regain power, he would likely serve the Communist purpose well again, turning his country away from friendly relations with the United States, and away from a constructive role in the Alliance for Progress for which he has no apparent understanding or sympathy.

3. The moderate forces opposing Arevalism within Guatemala persist in their traditional inability to unify for victory. They have been unable thus far to produce a leader of significant political stature.

4. Ydígoras, through his mastery of internal Guatemalan politics, has maintained himself in power, but he is not leading his country anywhere. He suppressed a brief Air Force revolt on November 25, and has managed to overcome the most immediate severities of his administration’s chronic budget problem and to meet Government payrolls quickly enough to avert disorder which threatened to come from arrears in payments.

(Guatemala recently succeeded in floating $7 million in bond sales to private United States banks, removing the apparent need for an emergency budgetary support loan of the same amount which we had been prepared to make to the Government. While the basic condition of the Guatemalan economy is reasonably good and will probably improve, assuming political stability, Government finances are in need of drastic reform and the administration will operate on a hand-to-mouth basis for the foreseeable future.)

5. It is no secret that there is wide-spread feeling in Guatemala favoring a military coup to oust Ydígoras, and arrange for elections which would exclude the participation of Arévalo. Under Guatemalan electoral law, Arévalo would be ineligible to assume office for a term beginning before March 1963, i.e., before the end of a 12-year interval since he last held the office of President. The key element in this respect is the military; its intent is still uncertain.

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6. Ydígoras is withholding endorsement from any of the current candidates, hoping to maximize his influence on the ultimate choice. While he has been an outspoken opponent of Arévalo, there has allegedly been some contact between them, and the possibility is not to be excluded that Ydígoras could accommodate himself to an Arévalo victory in return for assurance of being left in peace in Guatemala after retiring from office.

7. The Latin American Policy Committee with the participation of Ambassador Bell in November 1962 examined the problem of the presidential succession in [Facsimile Page 3] Guatemala and decided on the course of action set forth in the Secretary’s Memorandum for the President of December 7, relating to the Special Letter Attached to the Byroade Report on Guatemala.

[text not declassified]

  1. Transmits attached background paper on Guatemala. Top Secret. 3 pp. Kennedy Library, President’s Office Files, Guatemala, Security, 1961–63.