Chile: Political and Economic Conditions and
U.S. Relations

Peter J. Meyer
Analyst in Latin American Affairs
June 1, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R40126
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Chile: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Summary
Since its transition back to democracy in 1990, Chile has consistently maintained friendly
relations with the United States. Serving as a reliable but independent ally, Chile has worked with
the United States to advance democracy, human rights, and free trade in the Western Hemisphere.
Chile and the United States also maintain strong commercial ties. Total trade has nearly tripled to
over $17.9 billion since the implementation of a bilateral free trade agreement in 2004, and the
countries signed an income tax treaty designed to boost private sector investment in February
2010. Additional areas of cooperation between the United States and Chile include investigating
dictatorship-era human rights abuses, promoting clean energy technologies, and supporting
regional security and stability.
Sebastián Piñera of the center-right “Coalition for Change” was inaugurated to a four-year
presidential term in March 2010. Piñera’s election was the first for the Chilean right since 1958,
and brought an end to 20 years of governance by a center-left coalition of parties known as the
Concertación. Since taking office, Piñera has largely maintained the open economic policies and
moderate social welfare policies of his predecessors while implementing reforms designed to
boost economic growth and reduce poverty. Although his political coalition lacks majorities in
both houses of the Chilean Congress, Piñera has been able to win support for several pieces of
legislation, including his earthquake reconstruction plan, an education reform law, and a
conditional cash transfer program. Piñera has also been forced to respond to a number of crises
such as the earthquake that struck Chile just two weeks before his inauguration, the rescue of 33
trapped miners, and a series of high profile political protests over the administration’s indigenous
and energy policies. Public opinion of Piñera’s performance in office is divided with 41%
approving and 49% disapproving in a May 2011 poll.
With a gross national income of $164 billion and a per capita income of $9,470, Chile is
classified by the World Bank as an upper-middle-income developing country. Successive
governments have pursued market-oriented economic policies that have contributed to the
development of what many analysts consider the most competitive and fundamentally sound
economy in Latin America. This solid economic framework has helped the country weather
recent shocks, such as the global financial crisis and the massive February 2010 earthquake. After
a 1.7% contraction in 2009, the Chilean economy grew by 5.2% in 2010 and is expected to grow
by 6.2% in 2011. Strong economic growth—paired with targeted social assistance programs—has
also contributed to a significant decline in the poverty rate, which fell from 38.8% in 1989 to
19.4% in 2010.
Congress has expressed interest in a number of issues in U.S.-Chile relations in recent years.
During the 111th Congress, both houses passed resolutions (S.Res. 431 and H.Res. 1144)
expressing sympathy for the victims of the Chilean earthquake, and the House passed a resolution
(H.Res. 1662) commending the rescue of the country’s trapped miners. The 112th Congress could
take up issues such as the U.S.-Chile bilateral income tax treaty that was signed in 2010 and is
awaiting submission to the U.S. Senate for ratification.
This report provides a brief historical background of Chile, examines recent political and
economic developments, and considers current issues in U.S.-Chilean relations.

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Chile: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Contents
Political and Economic Background............................................................................................ 2
Pinochet Era.......................................................................................................................... 2
Return to Democracy and Concertación Governance ............................................................. 3
Political Situation........................................................................................................................ 4
2009 Presidential and Legislative Elections ........................................................................... 4
Piñera Administration............................................................................................................ 6
Indigenous Activism ............................................................................................................. 7
Mapuche......................................................................................................................... 7
Rapa Nui......................................................................................................................... 8
Economic Conditions .................................................................................................................. 9
Global Financial Crisis........................................................................................................ 10
2010 Earthquake Recovery.................................................................................................. 10
Social Indicators ................................................................................................................. 11
Chile-U.S. Relations ................................................................................................................. 12
U.S. Assistance ................................................................................................................... 12
Commercial Ties ................................................................................................................. 13
Trade Agreement........................................................................................................... 13
Intellectual Property Rights Protection .......................................................................... 14
Income Tax Treaty ........................................................................................................ 14
Human Rights ..................................................................................................................... 14
Energy Cooperation ............................................................................................................ 16
Regional Security................................................................................................................ 18
Haiti Peacekeeping........................................................................................................ 18
Narcotics Trafficking .................................................................................................... 19

Figures
Figure 1. Map of Chile ................................................................................................................ 1
Figure 2. Coalition and Party Affiliation in Chile’s Senate and Chamber of Deputies ................... 5

Tables
Table A-1. Chilean Political Acronyms ...................................................................................... 20

Appendixes
Appendix. Chilean Political Acronyms ...................................................................................... 20

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 20

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Chile: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Figure 1. Map of Chile



Source: Map Resources. Adapted by CRS Graphics.
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Political and Economic Background
Located in the Southern Cone of South
Chile in Brief
America, Chile is a politically stable, upper-

middle-income, developing nation of 17
million people. The country declared
Approximate Size: Twice the size of California
independence from Spain in 1810 but did not
Population: 17 Million
achieve full independence until 1818. By 1932,
Ethnic Groups: Spanish-Indigenous (Mestizo), European,
Chile had established a mass electoral
Indigenous
democracy, which endured until 1973. During
Religion: 70% Roman Catholic; 15.1% Evangelical
much of this period, Chile was governed by
presidents who pursued state-led development
Language: Spanish
through import-substitution industrialization
Life Expectancy: 79 years
(ISI) and the political incorporation of the
Infant Mortality: 7 per 100,000 live births
working classes. These policies were expanded
following the election of Eduardo Frei
Adult Literacy Rate: 99%
Montalva of the Christian Democratic Party
Poverty Rate: 19.4%
(Partido Demócrata Cristiana, PDC) in 1964.
GNI (2009, Atlas Method): $164 Billion
President Frei’s reformist government took
majority ownership of the copper mines,
GNI per Capita (2009, Atlas Method): $9,470
redistributed land, and improved access to
Sources: U.S. State Department, World Bank, Chilean
education. Despite these actions, some
Ministry of Planning
Chileans felt more radical policies were
needed.
In 1970, Salvador Allende, a Socialist and the leader of the leftist “Popular Unity” (Unidad
Popular
) coalition, was elected president in a three-way race with just over 36% of the vote.
Allende accelerated and furthered the changes of the previous administration by fully
nationalizing firms, expanding land reform, and generally socializing the economy. While
Allende’s supporters pushed him to move more quickly, the political center, represented by the
PDC, joined with the parties of the right to block Popular Unity initiatives in the legislature. This
ideological difference prevented the Chilean government from addressing the faltering economy
and served to further radicalize supporters on both ends of Chile’s already polarized society.
When the situation continued to deteriorate following the indecisive 1973 legislative elections,
the military intervened.1
Pinochet Era
On September 11, 1973, the Chilean military, under the control of General Augusto Pinochet,
deposed the Allende government in a violent coup and quickly consolidated control of the
country. The military junta closed Congress, censored the media, declared political parties in
recess, and regarded the organized left as an internal enemy of the state. Within the first few
months of military rule, over 1,200 people in Chile were killed or “disappeared” for political
reasons, and some 18,000 were imprisoned or tortured. By the end of the dictatorship in 1990, the
number of killed or disappeared had risen to at least 2,298 and the number of imprisoned and

1 Chile: A Country Study, ed. Rex A. Hudson, (Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress, 1994).
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tortured reportedly exceeded 27,000.2 General Pinochet emerged as the figurehead of the junta
soon after the coup and won a tightly controlled referendum to institutionalize his regime in 1978.
Pinochet reversed decades of statist economic policies by rapidly implementing a series of
changes that liberalized trade and investment, privatized firms, and dismantled the welfare state.
Pinochet won another tightly controlled referendum in 1980, which approved the constitution that
continues to govern Chile today. The new constitution called for a plebiscite to take place in 1988
in which Chileans would have the opportunity to reelect Pinochet to another eight-year term or
reject him in favor of contested elections. Although the Chilean economy enjoyed a period of
rapid economic growth between 1976 and 1981, a banking crisis from 1981 to 1984 sparked
widespread protests.3 Following these initial demonstrations, Chilean civil society groups became
more active in criticizing the policies of the Pinochet regime. At the same time, political parties
began to reemerge to challenge the government. In 1988, several civil society groups and political
parties formed a coalition in opposition to Pinochet’s reelection. In the plebiscite, 55% of the
Chilean people voted against another eight-year term for Pinochet, triggering the election
campaign of 1989.4
Return to Democracy and Concertación Governance
Two major coalitions of parties were formed to contest the elections of 1989. The center-left
“Coalition of Parties for Democracy,” (Concertación de Partidos por la Democracia,
Concertación) united 17 groups that were opposed to the Pinochet dictatorship, including the
centrist PDC and the center-left Party for Democracy (Partido por la Democracia, PPD). The
center-right “Democracy and Progress” (Democracia y Progreso) coalition included the center-
right National Renewal (Renovación Nacional, RN) and the conservative Independent
Democratic Union (Unión Demócrata Independiente, UDI). Patricio Alwyn, a Christian
Democrat and the candidate of the Concertación, won the presidency with 55% of the vote and
the Concertación won majorities in the Chamber of Deputies and among the elected members of
the Senate.5
Presidents from the Concertación governed Chile for 20 consecutive years following the return of
democracy to the country. In addition to the PDC and the PS, the Concertación currently includes
the Socialist Party (Partido Socialista, PS), and the Social Democratic Radical Party (Partido
Radical Social Demócrata
, PRSD). President Alwyn (1990-1994) was followed by Eduardo Frei
Ruiz-Tagle of the PDC (1994-2000), Ricardo Lagos of the PPD (2000-2006), and Michelle
Bachelet of the PS (2006-2010). Each of the Concertación governments pushed for reforms to the
Pinochet-era constitution, successfully strengthening civilian control over the military,
eliminating the institution of unelected senators, and reducing presidential terms from six years to
four. They were unable to eliminate the binomial election system, however, which tends to

2 Informe de la Comisión Nacional de Verdad y Reconciliación, 2nd ed., vol. 2 (Corporacion Nacional de Reparación y
Reconciliación, December 1996), pp. 1364-1366. Informe de la Comisión Nacional Sobre Prisión Política y Tortura,
(November 2004), pp. 559-582.
3 For more information on the Chilean financial crisis, see CRS Report RS22961, The U.S. Financial Crisis: Lessons
From Chile
, by J. F. Hornbeck.
4 Alan Angell and Benny Pollack, “The Chilean Elections of 1989 and the Politics of the Transition to Democracy,”
Bulletin of Latin American Research, Volume 9 (1), 1990.
5 Ibid. Prior to a 2005 constitutional reform, former presidents served as “senators-for-life” and nine senators were
designated by the armed forces and other governmental bodies.
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distribute power relatively equally between broad coalitions as a result of two-member districts
that require a coalition to win by two-to-one margins in order to secure both seats.6
Each of the Concertación administrations generally maintained the market-oriented economic
policies of the Pinochet regime while implementing targeted social welfare policies. The
Concertación administrations promoted export-led development and economic diversification
through the pursuit of free trade agreements and the encouragement of new export sectors.7 In an
attempt to ensure that the benefits of Chile’s economic growth benefitted a broad cross-section of
society, President Lagos established Chile Solidario, a social protection system that provides
family support, cash subsidies, and skills training to families in extreme poverty.8 Likewise,
President Bachelet introduced a universal minimum state pension and extended free health care
coverage for a number of serious conditions.9 Chile’s economy grew by an average of 5.1%
annually during the two decades of Concertación rule, and per capita income increased from
$1,770 in 1989 to $9,470 in 2009.10 Although income distribution remained virtually unchanged,
the percentage of Chileans living in poverty fell from 38.8% in 1989 to 13.7% in 2006.11 The
poverty rate has increased since then, reaching 19.4% in 2010 in the aftermath of the global
financial crisis and February 2010 earthquake.12
Political Situation
2009 Presidential and Legislative Elections
On January 17, 2010, billionaire businessman Sebastián Piñera, a member of the National
Renewal party (RN) and the candidate of the center-right “Coalition for Change” (Coalición por
el Cambio
, Coalición) was elected president in a second round runoff election. He defeated
former President Eduardo Frei (1994-2000), a member of the Christian Democratic Party (PDC)
and the candidate of the center-left Concertación, 52% to 48%.13 Piñera was forced to contest a
runoff after he failed to win an absolute majority of the vote in a first-round election held on
December 13, 2009. Piñera was the leading vote-getter in the first-round, winning the support of
44% of the electorate. He was followed by Frei at 30% and two Concertación dissidents, Marco
Enríquz-Ominami and Jorge Arrate, at 20% and 6%, respectively.14

6 Peter M. Siavelis, “Electoral System, Coalitional Disintegration, and the Future of Chile’s Concertación,” Latin
American Research Review
, Volume 40 (1), 2005.
7 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, Background Note: Chile, March 10, 2011.
8 Julieta Palma and Raúl Urzúa, Anti-Poverty Policies and Citizenry: The "Chile Solidario" Experience, United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Policy Papers/12, Paris, France, 2005.
9 “The Bachelet Model,” Economist, September 17, 2009.
10 “El País que Entrega la Concertación Dos Décadas Después de Asumir el Mando,” El Mercurio, January 18, 2010;
World Bank, World Development Report, 1991 & 2011.
11 “El País que Entrega la Concertación Dos Décadas Después de Asumir el Mando,” El Mercurio, January 18, 2010.
12 Gobierno de Chile, Ministerio de Planificación, "Ministro Kast Entrega los Datos de la Encuesta Post Terremoto,"
Press Release, January 25, 2011.
13 “Chile: Piñera Wins the Second Round,” Latin American Regional Report: Brazil & Southern Cone, February 2010.
14 “Frei Earns Right to Face Rampant Piñera in January Run-off in Chile,” Latin American Weekly Report, December
17, 2009.
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A number of analysts contend that the election was not a rejection of the moderate social
democratic policies of the Concertación, but reflected a desire for new leadership after two
decades of governance by a coalition that had undergone little internal renovation.15 They note
that outgoing Concertación President Michelle Bachelet remained extremely popular in the final
months of her term, enjoying an 83% approval rating at the time of the election.16 Likewise,
Piñera projected a moderate image throughout the campaign, emphasizing his 1988 vote against
the continuation of the Pinochet regime, pledging to generally continue the policies of the
Concertación, and proposing to extend Chile’s social protection network to the middle class.17
Figure 2. Coalition and Party Affiliation in Chile’s Senate and Chamber of Deputies
Legislative Seat Distribution Resulting from the 2009 Elections

Source: Created by CRS Graphics.
Notes: There are 38 seats in the Senate and 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. Although the PC is not a
member party of the Concertación, it won its seats in the Chamber of Deputies as a result of an electoral pact
with that coalition. See Table A-1 for political party acronyms.
Legislative elections for half of the seats in the Senate and the entire Chamber of Deputies were
held concurrently with the first round of the presidential election. For the first time, the center-

15 “Tendencias que Muestra la Reciente Elección,” El Mercurio, January 19, 2010; Genaro Arriagada, "A Conversation
on the Chilean Elections," Remarks at the Inter-American Dialogue, Washington, DC, January 20, 2010; Patricio
Navia, "Elections and Political Trends," Remarks at XIV Annual CAF Conference on the Americas, Washington, DC,
September 8, 2010.
16 “Chilean President’s Rating Rises Despite Vote,” Reuters, February 1, 2010.
17 “The Strange Chill in Chile,” Economist, September 17, 2009; “Chile: Piñera’s Plan,” Latin American Weekly
Report
, December 3, 2009.
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right coalition of parties (currently known as the “Coalition for Change” or Coalición) surpassed
the center-left Concertación as the largest bloc in the lower house. The Coalición holds 58 of the
120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 16 of the 38 seats in the Senate. The Concertación and
the leftist “Together We Can Do More” (Juntos Podemos Más, JPM) coalition signed an electoral
pact prior to the elections; together, they hold 57 seats in the Chamber of Deputies and 19 seats in
the Senate.18 The Communist Party (Partido Comunista, PC) is represented in the Chilean
Congress for the first time since the 1973 overthrow of Salvador Allende, holding three of the
Concertación-JPM seats. The remaining three Senate seats and five Chamber of Deputies seats
are held by independents and members of the Regionalist Party of Independents (Partido
Regionalista de los Independientes
, PRI), who are unaffiliated with either of the major coalitions
(see Figure 2).
Piñera Administration
Although Piñera’s electoral victory was the first for the Chilean right since 1958, his first year in
office was marked more by continuity than change. The Piñera Administration has largely
maintained the open economic policies and moderate social welfare policies of the Concertación
while implementing reforms designed to boost economic growth and reduce poverty. Piñera must
secure the support of unaffiliated or Concertación legislators in order to pass legislation since his
political coalition lacks majorities in both houses of the Chilean Congress (see Figure 2).
Substantial policy consensus among the major political parties and the political system’s tendency
toward accommodation have aided in this effort, however, enabling Piñera to win legislative
approval for his earthquake reconstruction plan, an education reform law, and the “ethical family
income” conditional cash transfer program. These initiatives have left the Concertación divided,
as centrist sectors such as the PDC have been inclined to work with Piñera and more left-leaning
sectors have preferred to obstruct the administration’s agenda.19
Despite his administration’s legislative victories, Piñera has struggled periodically with intra-
coalition disagreements and high profile public protests. Within the Coalición, the UDI and other
conservative sectors have questioned some of the Piñera Administration’s policy decisions, such
as raising taxes to help fund earthquake reconstruction and placing considerable emphasis on
social policies to reduce poverty.20 Other differences within the Coalición have arisen as a result
of scandal allegations that led to the resignations of two UDI officials.21 Large scale protests have
also put the Piñera Administration on the defensive over its policies. An 80-day hunger strike by
Mapuche prisoners led the administration to reconsider its indigenous policies, and an uprising in
southern Chile over a plan to increase gas prices forced the administration to abandon the
proposal.22 The administration has also faced protests by Chileans unsatisfied with the pace of

18 “Chile: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, January 2010.
19 Hernán López y David Muñoz, “DC Critica a la Concertación por No Aprobar un ‘Proyecto Histórico de Bachelet,”
El Mercurio, April 21, 2011; David Muñoz, “Concertación Evalúa Rechazo a Proyectos Sociales y la Moneda Acusa de
‘Obstruccionismo,’” El Mercurio, May 5, 2011.
20 “Piñera’s Honeymoon Comes to an Abrupt End in Chile,” Latin American Weekly Report, April 29, 2010; “Chile:
Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, April 2011.
21 “Chile: Three Resignations Rock Piñera Government,” Latin American Regional Report: Brazil & Southern Cone,
April 2011; “Chile Politics: Intra-Coalition Rows in the Spotlight,” Economist Intelligence Unit, April 28, 2011.
22 “Chile: Mapuche Hunger Strike Ends After Law is Amended,” Latin American Security & Strategic Review, October
2010; Miguel Sánchez, “Chile: Crisis del Gas Propina Derrota Política a Piñera,” Agence France Presse, January 19,
2011.
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earthquake reconstruction.23 With the exception of the period immediately following the rescue of
Chile’s 33 trapped miners when Piñera’s approval rating reached 63%, the Chilean public
generally has been divided in its opinion of the president.24 In May 2011, 41% of Chileans
approved of Piñera’s performance as president and 49% disapproved.25
Indigenous Activism
In recent years, Chile’s indigenous peoples have become more aggressive in advocating for their
rights and concerns, leading to occasional confrontations with the Chilean government. Members
of the Mapuche community, Chile’s largest indigenous group, have been the most militant;
however, the Rapa Nui—ethnic Polynesian natives of the Chilean territory of Easter Island—have
also engaged in increased activism. Although the Piñera Administration has offered some
concessions to indigenous groups, activists have generally deemed them insufficient.
Mapuche
The Mapuches have long sought official recognition as a people, protection of indigenous rights,
and restoration of full ownership of their ancestral lands. Primarily located in the central and
southern regions of Biobío, Araucanía, Los Ríos, and Los Lagos (see Figure 1 for a map of
Chile), the Mapuches comprise about 4% of Chile’s 17 million citizens and experience
significantly higher poverty levels, lower education levels, and poorer living standards than the
general Chilean population.26 Mapuche groups have pursued their goals through a variety of
means. Some pushed for the ratification of convention 169 of the International Labour
Organization (ILO) on indigenous rights, which then-President Bachelet promulgated in
September 2008.27 Others, such as the Arauco-Malleco Coordinating Committee (CAM), have
employed more militant actions, occupying ancestral Mapuche lands and burning vehicles,
machinery, and buildings on them—frequently targeting logging companies.28
Successive Concertación governments were unable to improve relations with the Mapuches
despite engaging in land transfers and other measures designed to reduce tensions. Concertación
governments transferred some 650,000 hectares (1.6 million acres) of land to Mapuche
communities between 1994 and 2009; however, many Mapuches considered the transfers
insufficient as the lands represented only a fraction of their ancestral territory.29 As CAM steadily

23 “3 Mil Personas Marchan en Concepción en Protesta por Lentitud de Reconstrucción” La Nación (Chile), February
26, 2011.
24 “Adimark: Piñera Alcanza 63% de Aprobación, la Más Alta de Su Mandato, y Golborne Obtiene Inédito 91%,” El
Mercurio
, November 3, 2010.
25 “Adimark: Aprobación de Piñera Llega a 41% y Rechazo se Mantiene en 49%,” El Mercurio, May 5, 2011.
26 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, Background Note: Chile, March 10, 2011; Raúl
Zibechi, “Toward Reconstruction of the Mapuche Nation,” Center for International Policy, Americas Program,
November 13, 2009.
27 “Bachelet Makes Gesture to Chile’s Indigenous Groups,” Latin American Weekly Report, September 25, 2008.
28 “Chile: Bachelet Reacts to Challenge by Radical Activists,” Latin American Security & Strategic Review, January
2008.
29According to CAM, the original land size of the independent Mapuche territory was 10 million hectares (24.7 million
acres). “Chile: Bachelet Reacts to Challenge by Radical Activists,” Latin American Security & Strategic Review,
January 2008; Raúl Zibechi, “Toward Reconstruction of the Mapuche Nation,” Center for International Policy,
Americas Program
, November 13, 2009; Daniela Estrada, “Chile: Mapuche Detainees Say They Were Framed,” Inter
(continued...)
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increased its militant activities during the Bachelet Administration, the government responded
more forcefully, raiding the homes of suspected CAM militants and prosecuting Mapuche
activists under a Pinochet-era anti-terrorism law that has been condemned by human rights
organizations. The anti-terrorism law allows suspects to be held for two years without being
charged, enables prosecutors to withhold evidence from the defense and try suspects in both
military and civil courts, permits the testimony of anonymous witnesses, and mandates
punishments that are three times the normal criminal sentences for activities such as arson and
illegal land occupation.30 The use of the anti-terrorism law—which Bachelet pledged not to
employ against Mapuche activists during her 2005 electoral campaign—exacerbated the
situation.31
Relations between the Chilean government and the Mapuches have not improved under the
Piñera Administration. In addition to disputes over Piñera’s claim that CAM members have
received training from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas
Revolucionarias de Colombia
, FARC)—a U.S.-designated foreign terrorist organization—
conflicts concerning the use the anti-terrorism law have continued. In 2010, dozens of Mapuche
activists being held in prison under the anti-terrorism law went on an 80-day hunger strike. The
hunger strikers demanded the dismissal of proceedings against them in military courts, the
demilitarization of Mapuche territory, and an end to the use of the anti-terrorism law against
Mapuches for actions they consider to be political activism. To bring an end to the strike, Piñera
allowed the Catholic Archbishop of Concepción to mediate the dispute and negotiate an
agreement with the prisoners. As part of the accord, the Chilean government adopted a series of
changes to the anti-terrorism law and the military justice system, and began to reclassify the cases
against the imprisoned Mapuches.32 Although these changes temporarily eased tensions, many
issues remain unresolved. Land occupations have continued and the convictions and lengthy
sentences of several CAM leaders in March 2011 sparked a new round of protests and hunger
strikes.33
Rapa Nui
Some Rapa Nui, ethnic Polynesians whose ancestors first inhabited the Chilean territory of Easter
Island (also known as Rapa Nui), have begun employing methods similar to those of the
Mapuches in opposition to Chilean government policies toward the island. Accounting for
roughly 60% of Easter Island’s 4,000 residents, the Rapa Nui people are the only officially
recognized Chilean indigenous group that still constitutes a majority of the population in its
traditional homeland.34 Tensions between the Rapa Nui and the Chilean government have risen in
recent years as national and international tourism have boomed and an increasing number of

(...continued)
Press Service, November 20, 2009.
30 Benjamin Witte-Lebhar, “Chile: No End in Sight for Worsening Mapuche Conflict,” Latin America Data Base
NotiSur
, November 13, 2009; “Mapuches Declare ‘War’ on Chile,” Latin News Daily, October 22, 2009; “Chile
Congress Tries for Mapuche Deal,” Latin News Daily, September 13, 2010.
31 “Conflicto Mapuche Preocupa pero No Hay Una ‘Guerra Civil’, Según Gobierno,” EFE News Service, October 21,
2009.
32 “Mapuche Hunger Strike Ends After Law is Amended,” Latin American Security & Strategic Review, October 2010.
33 “Mapuches Reanudan Tomas,” El Mercurio, December 28, 2010; “Mapuches Protest After Leader Sentenced,” Latin
News Daily
, March 23, 2011; “Two Hunger Strikers Hospitalized in Chile,” Agence France Presse, May 26, 2011.
34 “Chile: Indigenous Issues Remain Key Policy Challenge,” Oxford Analytica, February 4, 2010.
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continental Chileans have moved to the island, which is located nearly 2,200 miles west of the
Chilean coast. Some Rapa Nui argue that the influx in population is weakening living standards
by reducing employment opportunities, straining government services, and damaging the
ecosystem.35
Frustrated by the lack of government response to their concerns, some Rapa Nui activists have
engaged in land occupations. In August 2009, a Rapa Nui group blocked the airport for two days
to demand greater immigration controls.36 Conflict erupted again in March 2010, when locals
learned that the individual President Piñera appointed as governor of the territory had reportedly
received his position as a result of his ties to a business group with intentions to acquire land the
Rapa Nui had ceded to the government for public purposes. Since then, Rapa Nui activists have
occupied lands and taken over buildings, demanding stricter immigration controls, the return of
their ancestral lands, and a stronger role in governance.37 In February 2011, a number of Rapa
Nui activists were injured when police forcibly removed them from a hotel that they had been
occupying. In response, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights called on the Chilean
government “to immediately bring an end to the use of armed violence in the execution of State
administrative or judicial actions against members of the Rapa Nui people, including evictions
from public spaces or from public property” and “to guarantee that the actions of State agents in
the framework of protests and evictions do not jeopardize the life or physical integrity of the
members of the Rapa Nui people.”38 Although the Chilean government has promised increased
investment in the island and engaged in dialogue on some issues of concern, the Chilean
Congress has yet to pass bills to strengthen immigration controls and self-government and land
disputes continue.
Economic Conditions
With a gross national income of $164 billion and a per capita income of $9,470 (2009), Chile is
classified by the World Bank as an upper-middle-income developing country.39 Over the past
several decades, the country has pursued market-oriented economic policies designed to support
export-led development and economic diversification. Chile has signed more than 60 bilateral or
regional trade agreements—including a free trade agreement with the United States—and
encouraged the development of new export sectors such as forestry products, salmon, fresh fruit,
and wine.40 Chile has also attracted significant amounts of foreign direct investment, which
totaled $15.1 billion in 2010.41 As a result of these policies, Chile has established a diverse
economy that is less reliant on its traditional copper exports and is considered by many analysts to
be the most competitive and fundamentally sound in Latin America.42 In May 2010, Chile became

35 “Rapa Nui Déjà Vu,” Economist, October 10, 2009.
36 “Easter Island,” Latin American Weekly Report, August 20, 2009; “Valor de Isla de Pascua,” El Mercurio, August 5,
2010.
37 Governor of Chile’s Easter Island Resigns Under Fire,” EFE News Service, August 10, 2010; Ximena Pérez,
“Pascuenses y Gobierno Instalan Mesas de Trabajo,” El Mercurio, August 25, 2010.
38 Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, “Precautionary Measures Granted by the Commission During 2011,”
http://www.cidh.oas.org/medidas/2011.eng.htm.
39 World Bank, World Development Report, 2011
40 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, Background Note: Chile, March 10, 2011.
41 “FDI in Latin America Recovers from 2009 Downturn,” Oxford Analytica, May 11, 2011.
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the first South American nation to join the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD).43
Global Financial Crisis
Chile’s solid economic framework has enabled the country to weather recent shocks to the
economy. The country’s economic growth slowed in late 2008 and gross domestic product (GDP)
contracted by 1.7% in 2009 as the global financial crisis took a considerable toll on the
economy.44 The Chilean government was able to lessen the impact of the downturn, however, by
implementing a $4 billion (2.4% of GDP) economic stimulus package that included temporary tax
cuts for small businesses, increased transfer payments for poor Chileans, $700 million for
infrastructure projects, and $1 billion for the state-owned copper company, Codelco (Corporación
Nacional del Cobre)
.45 This counter-cyclical spending was financed by drawing on the country’s
Economic and Social Stabilization Fund, one of two sovereign wealth funds (with a combined
value of $17.3 billion, or 8.5% of GDP, in April 2011) in which the Chilean government invests
windfall surpluses from copper revenues.46 As a result of the stimulus and other efforts the
country began to experience quarter-on-quarter economic growth by the end of 2009.47
2010 Earthquake Recovery
Just as the Chilean economy was beginning to recover from the global financial crisis, the country
was hit by an earthquake of magnitude 8.8 on February 27, 2010.48 Centered 70 miles northeast of
Chile’s second-largest city, Concepción, the earthquake was the second-largest ever recorded in
Chile and the fifth-largest recorded worldwide since 1900.49 The earthquake and subsequent
tsunami devastated a substantial portion of the country. An estimated 1.8 million people were
affected, with 524 people confirmed dead (31 remain missing) and some 220,000 homes
destroyed or severely damaged.50 In addition to physical damages estimated at $29.7 billion (15%
of GDP), the affected areas—which are home to portions of the wine, wood pulp, and fruit
industries—are responsible for generating approximately one-sixth of Chile’s total GDP.51

(...continued)
42 Klaus Schwab, editor, Global Competitiveness Report 2010-2011, World Economic Forum, Geneva, 2010; “Chile:
Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, May 2011.
43 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, "Chile's Accession to the OECD," Press Release, May 7,
2010.
44 “Chile: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, May 2011.
45 "Chile's Economy: Stimulating," Economist, February 19, 2009.
46 Government of Chile, Ministry of Finance, Pension Reserve Fund: Monthly Executive Report as of April 2011 and
Economic and Social Stabilization Fund: Monthly Executive Report as of April 2011, May 30, 2011.
47 “Chile Economy: Quick View—Out of Recession,” Economist Intelligence Unit, November 20, 2009.
48 For more information on the Chile earthquake, see CRS Report R41112, Chile Earthquake: U.S. and International
Response
, by June S. Beittel and Rhoda Margesson.
49 In 1960, southern Chile was struck by a magnitude 9.5 earthquake. Jose Luis Saavedra, “Massive Earthquake Hits
Chile, 214 Dead,” Reuters, February 27, 2010.
50 Roser Toll, “Damnificados del Sismo en Chile: ‘Vivimos en un Campo de Concentración,’” Agence France Presse,
February 23, 2011.
51 “Chile: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, September 2010.
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The Chilean government is implementing an $8.4 billion reconstruction plan, which is being
combined with insurance payments and private sector support, to repair and rebuild what was
damaged and destroyed by the earthquake and tsunami. The government is financing the
reconstruction plan with a mix of temporary tax increases, sovereign debt issuance, and funds
from the government’s Economic and Social Stabilization Fund. The reconstruction effort is
scheduled to conclude in March 2014; however, it is already over half complete. The government
has repaired or rebuilt 70% of the schools, 85% of the hospitals, and 99% of the infrastructure
damaged or destroyed by the disaster.52 Although Chile’s economy suffered in the first quarter of
2010 as a result of the earthquake, the reconstruction effort is now fueling growth. The Chilean
economy grew by 5.2% in 2010 and is expected to grow by 6.2% in 2011.53 President Piñera has
pledged to create one million new jobs and maintain annual economic growth of 6% over the
course of his term.54
Social Indicators
Over the past two decades, strong economic growth and targeted social programs have produced
considerable improvements in social and development indicators in Chile, but challenges remain.
As noted above, the percentage of Chileans living in poverty fell from 38.8% in 1989 to 13.7% in
2006.55 The poverty rate has since increased to 19.4%, however, as a result of the effects of the
global financial crisis and 2010 earthquake.56 Chile has also made considerable progress toward
meeting all eight of the U.N. Millennium Development Goals by 2015.57 The goals include
eradicating extreme poverty, achieving universal primary education, promoting gender equality,
reducing child mortality, improving maternal health, combating disease, ensuring environmental
stability, and developing a global partnership for development.58 At the same time, Chilean
policies have done little to reduce inequality, which some analysts contend is embedded in the
country’s tax system and social and political structures, and is an important barrier to further
poverty reduction.59
President Piñera has pledged to eliminate extreme poverty—which affects 3.7% of Chileans—by
the end of his term and lay the groundwork to end poverty in Chile by the end of the decade.60 His
administration has introduced a number of new policies to support low-income Chileans. These
include higher pensions, health care insurance payment exemptions, and an “ethical family

52 “Post-Quake Rebuild Fuels Chile Recovery a Year On,” Reuters, February 25, 2011; Sebastián Piñera,
“Construyendo una Sociedad de Seguridades, Oportunidades y Valores,” Mensaje Presidencial, May 21, 2011.
53 “Chile: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, May 2011.
54 Sebastian Boyd and James Attwood, “Chile’s Pinera ‘Buries’ Pinochet in Presidential Win,” Bloomberg, January 18,
2010.
55 “El País que Entrega la Concertación Dos Décadas Después de Asumir el Mando,” El Mercurio, January 18, 2010.
56 Gobierno de Chile, Ministerio de Planificación, "Ministro Kast Entrega los Datos de la Encuesta Post Terremoto,"
Press Release, January 25, 2011.
57 “Chile: Leading the Millennium Objectives League,” Latin American Regional Report: Brazil & Southern Cone,
September 2008; United Nations and the Government of Chile, Objetivos de Desarrollo del Milenio: Tercer Informe
del Gobierno de Chile
, February 8, 2011.
58 For more information on the Millennium Development Goals, see CRS Report R41410, The Millennium
Development Goals: The September 2010 U.N. High-level Meeting
, by Luisa Blanchfield and Marian Leonardo
Lawson.
59 “Chile: Poverty Policies Require Rethink,” Oxford Analytica, October 14, 2010.
60 Ibid.
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income” conditional cash transfer program, which provides direct income subsidies to some
130,000 families in exchange for ensuring that their children attend school and receive proper
medical care.61 Piñera has also won congressional approval for policies designed to improve the
quality of the education system, which a number of analysts identify as a source of inequality and
a barrier to economic and social progress.62 Despite these social policy efforts, the Piñera
Administration maintains that “social security networks are important but not sufficient” and that
“growth and job creation are the only ways to overcome poverty permanently.”63
Chile-U.S. Relations
Chile and the United States have enjoyed friendly relations over the two decades since Chile
transitioned back to democratic governance. Serving as a reliable but independent ally, Chile has
worked with the United States to advance democracy, human rights, and free trade in the Western
Hemisphere. The countries also maintain close commercial ties, having signed a bilateral free
trade agreement in 2003 and an income tax treaty in 2010. Other areas of U.S.-Chilean
cooperation include investigations of human rights violations, promotion of clean energy, and
support for security and stability in the hemisphere.
Since taking office, the Obama Administration has sought to maintain close ties with Chile and
encourage its leadership in the region. Vice President Biden visited Chile in March 2009 during
his first trip to Latin America, and then-President Bachelet met with President Obama in
Washington, DC, in June 2009. Bachelet described her Administration’s close relations with the
Obama Administration as “one of the most important events in U.S.-Chile relations in recent
times.”64 Warm relations have continued since the inauguration of President Piñera. President
Obama met with Piñera during the April 2010 Global Nuclear Security Summit in Washington,
D.C., and again in March 2011 during his first visit to South America. During his visit to the
county, President Obama commended Chile as “one of [the United States’] closest and strongest
partners” and “one of the greatest success stories in the region.”65
U.S. Assistance
Although Chile was once a major recipient of U.S. foreign aid, it currently receives only minor
assistance as a result of its relatively high level of development. In an attempt to promote
economic development and prevent the election of a communist government, the United States
provided Chile with extensive assistance during the 1950s and 1960s. President Kennedy made
Chile the centerpiece of his “Alliance for Progress,” providing the country with $1.7 billion
(constant 2009 dollars) in economic assistance between 1961 and 1963.66 Assistance declined

61 “Chile: Country Report,” Economist Intelligence Unit, April 2011; Sebastián Piñera, “Construyendo una Sociedad de
Seguridades, Oportunidades y Valores,” Mensaje Presidencial, May 21, 2011.
62 Manuel Fernández Bolvarán, “Educación Chilena es la Más Segregada de la OCDE,” El Mercurio, April 17, 2011;
Klaus Schwab, editor, Global Competitiveness Report 2010-2011, World Economic Forum, Geneva, 2010; “Chile:
Education Remains Obstacle to Development,” Oxford Analytica, June 17, 2010.
63 “Chile: Piñera Promises to Expunge Poverty,” Latin American Weekly Report, July 22, 2010.
64 “Washington Watch,” Latin News Daily, June 25, 2009.
65 White House, Office of the Press Secretary, “Remarks by President Obama and President Sebastian Piñera of Chile
at Joint Press Conference,” March 21, 2011.
66 U.S. Overseas Loans and Grants: Obligations and Loan Authorizations, July 1, 1945-September 30, 2009,
(continued...)
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following the 1970 election of Socialist President Salvador Allende and has generally remained
low since then, increasing briefly during the early years of the Pinochet dictatorship and again
following the transition to democracy. Chile received about $1.95 million in U.S. assistance in
FY2010. The Obama Administration requested $2.21 million for Chile in FY2011 and $1.3
million in FY2012. The majority of U.S. assistance to Chile is focused on modernizing the
Chilean military by improving its interoperability with U.S. forces and its capacity to participate
in regional security and peacekeeping operations.67
In addition to annual bilateral assistance, the United States has provided emergency assistance to
Chile in recent years. Following Chile’s massive February 2010 earthquake, the U.S. government
provided the country with some $9.8 million in humanitarian assistance. This assistance included
the deployment of a U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) team to identify
humanitarian needs; relief supplies such as satellite phones, emergency shelters, electric
generators, and mobile water treatment units; and the deployment of two C-130 aircraft to
transport emergency relief supplies to disaster-affected areas.68 Likewise, the Obama
Administration dispatched a team of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
experts to Chile in August 2010 to assist the recovery of 33 trapped miners. The team of two
medical doctors, a psychologist, and an engineer provided technical advice concerning human
physiology and behavioral responses to emergencies.69
Commercial Ties
Trade Agreement
The United States and Chile signed a bilateral free trade agreement (FTA) on June 6, 2003.
Following the House and Senate passage of the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Implementation Act,
President Bush signed the bill into law on September 3, 2003 (P.L. 108-77). The FTA established
immediate duty-free treatment for 85% of bilateral trade in consumer and industrial products,
increasing market access for both countries.70 Since the agreement went into force on January 1,
2004, bilateral trade between the United States and Chile has nearly tripled, totaling $17.9 billion
in 2010. U.S. imports from Chile grew from $3.7 billion in 2003 to $7 billion in 2010, while U.S.
exports to Chile grew from $2.7 billion in 2003 to $10.9 billion in 2010. Chile’s top exports to the
United States are copper, edible fruit, seafood, and wood. The top U.S. exports to Chile are heavy
machinery, oil, motor vehicles, and electrical machinery. In 2010, the United States was Chile’s
top source of imports and the third-largest destination for Chile’s exports, while Chile was the
38th-largest source of U.S. imports and 24th-largest export market for U.S. goods.71 In addition to

(...continued)
http://gbk.eads.usaidallnet.gov/.
67 U.S. Department of State, Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2012, April 8,
2011.
68 U.S. Agency for International Development, Bureau for Democracy, Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance
(DCHA), Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA), “Chile—Earthquake: Fact Sheet #18, Fiscal Year (FY)
2010,” April 22, 2010
69 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), "NASA Provides Assistance to Trapped Chilean Miners,"
Press Release, September 7, 2010.
70 For more information on the U.S.-Chile Free Trade Agreement, see: CRS Report RL31144, The U.S.-Chile Free
Trade Agreement: Economic and Trade Policy Issues
, by J. F. Hornbeck.
71 U.S. Department of Commerce and Servicio Nacional de Aduana (Chile) statistics, as presented by Global Trade
(continued...)
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the bilateral FTA, Chile and the United States are both participating in negotiations concerning
the potential expansion of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, an Asia-Pacific regional trade
agreement.72
Intellectual Property Rights Protection
Chile has been on the U.S. Trade Representative’s (USTR) Priority Watch List since 2007 as a
result of insufficient efforts to protect intellectual property rights. Chile is only the second U.S.
FTA partner to be placed on the Priority Watch List. According to USTR, Chile improved its
intellectual property rights protection efforts in 2010 by implementing new copyright legislation
and launching a ministerial-level interagency committee on intellectual property rights. Chile also
ratified the Trademark Law Treaty and the Convention Relating to the Distribution of
Programme-Carrying Signals Transmitted by Satellites (Brussels Convention). Nonetheless,
USTR recommends that Chile take additional actions to address a variety of outstanding
intellectual property rights issues under the United States-Chile Free Trade Agreement.73
Income Tax Treaty74
On February 4, 2010, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and then Chilean Finance
Minister Andrés Velasco signed the “Convention Between the Government of the United States of
America and the Government of the Republic of Chile for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and
the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income and Capital.” The treaty is
designed to encourage private sector growth in both countries by providing certainty on the tax
treatment of investors and reducing tax-related barriers to investment. Among other provisions,
the treaty would reduce source-country withholding taxes on certain cross-border payments of
dividends, interest, and royalties; establish rules to determine when an enterprise or individual of
one country is subject to tax on business activities in the other; enhance the mobility of labor by
coordinating the tax aspects of the U.S. and Chilean pension systems; foster collaboration to
resolve tax disputes and relieve double taxation; and ensure the full exchange between the U.S.
and Chilean tax authorities of information for tax purposes. The treaty, which has yet to be
submitted to the U.S. Senate for ratification, would be the first bilateral income tax treaty between
the United States and Chile and only the second U.S. tax treaty with a South American country.75
Human Rights
Progress in addressing Pinochet-era human rights abuses was rather limited during the Alwyn and
Frei Administrations that followed the return of democratic governance in Chile. Recognizing the
still delicate status of democracy, the Alwyn Administration allowed a 1978 amnesty law to

(...continued)
Atlas, April 2011.
72 For more information, see CRS Report R40502, The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, by Ian F. Fergusson and
Bruce Vaughn.
73 Office of the United States Trade Representative, 2011 Special 301 Report, April 2011.
74 The full text of the treaty, as presented for signature, is available at: http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-
policy/treaties/Documents/ChileTreaty2010.pdf.
75 U.S. Department of the Treasury, "U.S., Chile Sign Income Tax Treaty," Press Release, February 4, 2010.
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remain in place while establishing a National Commission for Truth and Reconciliation (the
Rettig Commission) to investigate political disappearances and killings during the authoritarian
period. The Rettig Commission’s recommendations led to the Chilean government awarding
reparations to family members of those killed or disappeared. Nonetheless, it was only in 1998,
when Pinochet finally stepped down as the head of the Armed Forces and was subsequently
detained in the United Kingdom on an extradition request from Spain, that the government was
able to place more emphasis on the discussion and prosecution of human rights abuses.76
After slow progress during the first two Concertación administrations, attention to human rights
issues accelerated during the Lagos and Bachelet Administrations. In 2003, Lagos established a
National Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture (the Valech Commission), which
awarded reparations to those who were tortured during the dictatorship. During the administration
of President Bachelet—who was tortured by the Pinochet regime—Chile created an Institute of
Human Rights, ratified the International Convention for the Protection of all Persons from
Enforced Disappearance, and established a Museum of Memory dedicated to the victims of the
dictatorship and those who struggled to promote and defend human rights.77 Since 2000, over 200
dictatorship-era officials and members of the military have been convicted of human rights
abuses, with hundreds of others still under investigation.78 Although Pinochet died in 2006 before
standing trial, those convicted include top officials such as former intelligence chief Manuel
Contreras, who is serving multiple life sentences for his roles in myriad of dictatorship-era
crimes, including the 1976 assassination of former Chilean Ambassador to the United States
Orlando Letelier and his American associate, Ronni Moffitt, in Washington, DC.79
President Piñera has been very cautious in dealing with dictatorship-era human rights issues,
seeking to overcome the Chilean right’s historic association with Pinochet without alienating the
portion of his political base that remains sympathetic to the former leader. Piñera largely selected
politicians and private sector officials without major ties to the Pinochet regime when forming his
government, and quickly replaced his ambassador to Argentina after the ambassador claimed that
the majority of Chileans “were not affected” and “were relieved” by the country’s1973 military
coup.80 Likewise, Piñera has ruled out issuing a general pardon to retired members of the military
convicted for violating human rights while remaining open to individual pardons for prisoners of
advanced age or with terminal illnesses.81 Piñera has reopened the investigation into the 1991
assassination of Senator Jaime Guzmán, an influential member of the Pinochet regime that
founded the conservative UDI party and was killed by members of the radical left-wing Manuel
Rodríguez Patriotic Front (Frente Patriótico Manuel Rodríguez, FPMR) after the return to
democracy. The Piñera Administration has unsuccessfully sought the extradition of two former

76 Priscilla B. Hayner, Unspeakable Truths: Facing the Challenge of Truth Commissions (New York: Routledge, 2002).
77 “Chile Ratifica Convención de la ONU Sobre Desaparición Forzada de Personas,” EFE News Service, September 2,
2009; “Chile: Human Rights Institute Established,” Latin American Weekly Report, November 26, 2009; “Un
Monumento en Honor a los Asesinados por la Dictadura Pinochetista; Bachelet Inauguró el Museo de la Memoria a
Días del Balotaje,” Clarín (Argentina), January 12, 2010.
78 Alexander W. Wilde, “Piñera Won. Will He Uphold Chile’s Post-Pinochet Moral Legacy?” Christian Science
Monitor
, January 18, 2010.
79 Jack Epstein, “Augusto Pinochet: 1915-2006/Chilean Leader’s Regime Left Thousands of ‘Disappeared’,” San
Francisco Chronicle
, December 11, 2006; Helen Hughes and Jack Chang, “Ex-Chilean Intelligence Chief Gets 2 Life
Sentences,” Miami Herald, July 1, 2008.
80 Hinde Pomeraniec, “La Mayor Parte de Chile No Sintió la Dictadura de Pinochet,” Clarín (Argentina), June 6, 2010;
“Chile: An Embarrassment in Argentina,” Latin American Regional Report: Brazil & Southern Cone, July 2010.
81 “Piñera Considera Incluir a Militares en Indulto para Aliviar Cárceles,” Agence France Presse, March 9, 2011.
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FPMR members that it believes to have been involved in the assassination that now reside in
Argentina and Cuba. The Chilean judiciary is reexamining several other high profile cases,
including the 1973 death of President Allende (1970-1973) and the 1982 death of former
President Frei Montalva (1964-1970).82
Chile and the United States are currently working together to investigate unresolved human rights
cases from the Pinochet era. During his March 2011 visit to Chile, President Obama said he
would consider Chilean requests for classified information relating to human rights violations.
Although tens of thousands of U.S. documents relating to Chile’s authoritarian period have
already been declassified, many were heavily redacted and others have never been released.
Many analysts believe that further declassification of U.S. documents could assist in the
investigations into dictatorship-era crimes. President Piñera has announced that he will formally
request the information from the U.S. government.83
According to the U.S. State Department, Chile continues to investigate the case of Boris
Weisfeiler, a U.S. citizen who disappeared in the country in 1985. Although the Rettig
Commission did not recognize Weisfeiler’s disappearance as a human rights violation due to lack
of information in 1991, declassified U.S. documents84 released since then suggest that he may
have been killed by the Pinochet regime. In March 2010, Weisfeiler’s family submitted his case to
the Valech Commission, which was temporarily reestablished to look into cases that had not been
fully investigated previously.85 The reestablished commission received some 32,500 cases and is
expected to present its findings in August 2011.86 Two other U.S. citizens—Charles Horman and
Frank Teruggi—were executed by Chilean security forces within weeks of the 1973 coup
according to the Rettig Commission’s 1991 report.87
Energy Cooperation
As a result of Chile’s fast-growing economy and limited domestic energy resources, energy
shortages have become one of the most critical long-term structural bottleneck’s to the country’s
economic growth.88 Chile’s demand for electricity has grown at an average of 6% annually over
the past decade, spurred by strong economic growth, especially in energy-intensive sectors such
as mining.89 The government estimates that energy demand will double over the next decade.90 At

82 “Chile: Still Looking in the Rear View Mirror,” Latin American Regional Report: Brazil & Southern Cone, February
2011.
83 Michael Warren and Eva Vergara, “Investigators: Secret Files Could Help Chile,” Associated Press, February 26,
2011; “AP Interview: Chile’s Leader to Formally Ask for CIA Files to Help Pinochet Dictatorship Probe,” Associated
Press
, March 22, 2011.
84 See, for example, U.S. Department of State, Welfare-Whereabouts: Case of Boris Weisfeiler, October 17, 1985,
http://foia.state.gov/documents/StateChile3/000068EC.pdf.
85 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, 2010 Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices: Chile
, April 8, 2011.
86 “Chile: Piden Prórroga para Presentar Informe Sobre Víctimas de Dictadura,” Agence France Presse, December 14,
2010.
87 For an English language translation of the Rettig Commission report, see Report of the Chilean National Commission
on Truth and Reconciliation
, vol. I (Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 1993), pp. 224-225,
available at http://www.usip.org/files/resources/collections/truth_commissions/Chile90-Report/Chile90-Report.pdf.
88 “Chile Industry: Energy Security Still Elusive,” Economist Intelligence Unit, April 21, 2011.
89 “Chile: Medium-Term Electricity Supply Looks Secure,” Oxford Analytica, April 23, 2009.
90 Eduardo Sepúlveda M, “Estamos Gobernando con Nuestras Ideas, No con Las de la Concertación,” El Mercurio,
(continued...)
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the same time, Chile’s traditional energy sources have come under pressure. Domestic demands
have led Argentina to reduce its gas exports to Chile, and low rainfall has depleted the Chilean
reservoirs used to generate hydroelectricity. The resulting energy shortages have forced blackouts
and contributed to rising energy costs.91
Chile’s efforts to address the shortfalls by encouraging reduced consumption and diversifying its
energy supply have produced mixed results. A January 2011 proposal to increase gas prices in the
Magallanes region of southern Chile sparked large, and sometimes violent, demonstrations that
forced the government to largely back away from the idea.92 The government’s May 2011
decision to approve the environmentally controversial HydroAysén hydroelectric project in the
southern region of Aysén has also generated protests.93 Chile’s National Energy Commission has
called for 20% of the country’s energy to be generated from renewable energy sources by 2020.
Only 2.7% of Chile’s electricity generating capacity came from renewable sources in 2008,
however, as a result of the financial and technical barriers to taking advantage of the country’s
vast wind, solar, tidal, and geothermal energy potential.94 To offset its lack of domestic
production, Chile now imports over two-thirds of its energy supply.95 Investments in liquefied
natural gas terminals and coal-fired thermoelectric plants are diversifying the sources of Chile’s
energy supply. At the same time, the coal-fired plants will contribute to increased carbon
emissions, which could put Chile’s exports at a disadvantage if it were to enter into a global
carbon market in the future.96
In recent years, Chile and the United States have sought to cooperate on energy issues. At the
Fifth Summit of the Americas97 in April 2009, President Obama introduced an “Energy and
Climate Partnership for the Americas” (ECPA) designed to foster regional cooperation on issues
such as energy efficiency, renewable energy investment, and reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions.98 Under the umbrella of ECPA, the United States and Chile signed a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) on cooperation in clean energy technologies in June 2009. Through the
MOU, the U.S. Department of Energy is providing technical support to Chile’s Renewable
Energy Center and two solar plant pilot projects in the Atacama Dessert. Future collaboration is
likely to involve biofuels, biomass, and wind and geothermal energy projects.99 Chile and the
United States signed another MOU during President Obama’s March 2011 trip to the country,

(...continued)
May 22, 2011.
91 “Chile: Power Rationing Risk Shows Investment Need,” Oxford Analytica, February 24, 2011.
92 “8,000 Chileans Protest Hike in Natural Gas Prices,” EFE News Service, January 10, 2011; Miguel Sánchez, “Chile:
Crisis del Gas Propina Derrota Política a Piñera (Analistas),” Agence France Presse, January 19, 2011.
93 Steven Bodzin, “Chileans Protest Government Approval of Five Patagonia Dams,” Christian Science Monitor, May
10, 2011.
94 “Chile: Medium-Term Electricity Supply Looks Secure,” Oxford Analytica, April 23, 2009; “Chile: Renewable
Energy Projects on the Increase,” Oxford Analytica, May 4, 2010.
95 “Chile Industry: Energy Security Still Elusive,” Economist Intelligence Unit, April 21, 2011.
96 “Chile: Coal Generation Raises Emissions Concerns,” Oxford Analytica, August 19, 2009.
97 For more information on the Fifth Summit of the Americas, see CRS Report R40074, Fifth Summit of the Americas,
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, April 2009: Background, Expectations, and Results
.
98 White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "The United States and the 2009 Summit of the Americas: Securing Our
Citizens' Future," Press Release, April 19, 2009.
99 White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "The United States and Chile: Environment, Energy, and Climate
Change," Fact Sheet, March 21, 2011.
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agreeing to cooperate on the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. Through the MOU, the two
governments will work together on issues such as fuel design, nuclear safety and security, and
human resource and infrastructure development.100
Regional Security
Chile’s foreign policy traditionally has been based on respect for international law, peaceful
dispute resolution, and non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries.101 Although
much of Chile’s foreign policy since the return to democracy has focused on forging trade and
investment linkages, Chile also has been an active participant in multilateral efforts to advance
peace and stability in the hemisphere. In recent years, Chile has contributed forces to the U.N.
mission in Haiti, collaborated on regional counternarcotics efforts, and engaged in diplomatic
efforts to resolve political crises in Bolivia and Honduras.102 Moreover, the United States and
Chile are currently working together under a “Trilateral Development Initiative” designed to
improve stability and prosperity in the hemisphere by strengthening health, security, and social
protection efforts in countries such as El Salvador, Guatemala, and Paraguay.103
Haiti Peacekeeping
Chile has worked with the United States as part of the multinational peacekeeping force in Haiti
since 2004. Chile agreed to send peacekeeping forces to Haiti immediately after receiving the
U.N. Security Council’s initial March 2004 request for assistance in stabilizing the deteriorating
situation in the country. As part of the Multinational Interim Force-Haiti (MIFH), Chilean soldiers
provided Haiti with urgently needed assistance while giving the U.N. time to prepare a broader
mission. Chile’s early presence in the MIFH also encouraged a number of other Latin American
countries to contribute to the broader U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH),
establishing an opportunity for regional political and military cooperation and integration. Chile
has committed more human and material resources to MINUSTAH than it has to any previous
peacekeeping mission.104 It currently has some 500 soldiers on the ground. In May 2011, the
Chilean Senate approved a one-year extension that will allow Chilean peacekeeping forces to
remain in Haiti until June 2012.105

100 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, “The United States and Chile: Cooperation on the
Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy,” Fact Sheet, March 21, 2011.
101 Carlos Portales, "A Word from a Foreign Policy Maker," Remarks at the Embassy of Chile's "Chilean Bicentennial:
A Vision From Embassy Row," Washington, DC, September 15, 2010.
102 Patrick J. McDonnell, “Regional Summit Calls on Bolivians to Avoid Strife,” Los Angeles Times, September 16,
2008; “Bachelet No Acepta Legitimar los Golpes de Estado,” La Nación (Chile), December 1, 2009.
103 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs, “The United States and Chile: Trilateral
Development Cooperation,” Fact Sheet, March 20, 2011.
104 Enzo Di Nocera García and Ricardo Benavente Cresta, “Chile: Responding to a Regional Crisis,” in Capacity
Building for Peacekeeping: The Case of Haiti
, eds. John T. Fishel and Andrés Sáenz, 66-90 (Dulles, VA: Potomac
Books, 2007).
105 “Senado Aprobó Prorrogar Permanencia de Tropas Chilenas en Haití,” La Nación (Chile), May 18, 2011.
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Chile: Political and Economic Conditions and U.S. Relations

Narcotics Trafficking
As a result of its long, difficult-to-monitor borders, Chile is a transshipment point for Andean
cocaine destined for Europe and has recently become a source of precursor chemicals for
methamphetamine processing in Mexico and cocaine processing in Peru and Bolivia. Chile
recognizes the threat poised by illicit narcotics and has dedicated substantial personnel and
financial resources to containing the problem. In 2010, Chile’s highly professional and competent
law enforcement officials increased their counternarcotics operations, as well as their arrests for
drug-related offenses and seizures of several forms of illicit narcotics. Through October 2010,
Chilean officials reported seizures of approximately 2.3 metric tons of cocaine hydrochloride, 5
metric tons of cocaine base, 5.6 metric tons of processed marijuana; and 222,260 units of illegal
pharmaceutical drugs.106
The United States recognizes the government of Chile as a strong counternarcotics partner with
which it works closely to reduce drug trafficking in Chile and elsewhere in the region. In
FY2012, the Obama Administration requested $100,000 in counternarcotics assistance for Chile.
The funds will support ongoing activities in areas such as anti-trafficking, border security, citizen
security, and financial investigative techniques.107 Other bilateral U.S.-Chilean counternarcotics
cooperation is focused on improving interagency collaboration and international drug trafficking
investigations. In 2011, Chile and the United States intend to work together to support citizen
security efforts in Central America.108

106 U.S. Department of State, Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, 2011 International
Narcotics Control Strategy Report
, March 2, 2011.
107 U.S. Department of State, Congressional Budget Justification for Foreign Operations, Fiscal Year 2012, April 8,
2011.
108 “Chile y EEUU Acuerdan Cooperación en Seguridad Ciudadana en Centroamérica,” Agence France Presse, January
12, 2011.
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Appendix. Chilean Political Acronyms
Table A-1. Chilean Political Acronyms
Acronym Political
Organization
Description
CAM Arauco-Mal eco
Coordinating
Militant Mapuchea organization
Committee
JPM
Together We Can Do More
Leftist coalition of parties
PC
Communist Party
Leftist member party of JPM
PDC
Christian Democratic Party
Centrist member party of the
Concertaciónb
PPD
Party for Democracy
Center-left member party of the
Concertación
PRI
Regionalist Party of Independents
Centrist party formed in a merger of
regional parties.
PRSD
Social Democratic Radical Party
Center-left member party of the
Concertación.
PS
Socialist Party
Center-left member party of the
Concertación.
RN
National Renewal
Center-right member party of the
Coalición.c
UDI
Independent Democratic Union
Conservative member party of the
Coalición.
Source: Compiled by CRS.
Notes:
a. The Mapuche are Chile’s largest indigenous group.
b. The Concertación is a center-left coalition of parties.
c. The Coalición is a center-right coalition of parties.

Author Contact Information

Peter J. Meyer

Analyst in Latin American Affairs
pmeyer@crs.loc.gov, 7-5474


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