The term Cuatrinomio de Oro [1] (Spanish for Golden Four, referring to the four sides of a square) refers to a group of influential Paraguayan politicians of the 1960-1980s, representing the closest allies of the dictatorial President Alfredo Stroessner. The group included three members of the government and the presidential secretary. Under the leadership of Stroessner, members of the "Golden Four" stood at the highest levels of the regime, determining the policy of the state and the Colorado Party. They became infamous in the country due to their involvement in political repression and corruption. After the fall of the regime, they were prosecuted.
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Following the 1954 coup d'état, major general Alfredo Stroessner was elected President and was soon able to place his supporters in positions of power in the provisional government and in the Colorado Party, culminating in Stroessner securing power for himself and establishing the longest dictatorship in the history of Paraguay and Latin America. The one-party state regime was characterized by severe human rights abuses, implacable anti-communism, harsh political repression and large-scale economic projects. The dictatorship gained most of its support from the military-police command, the state bureaucracy, the Colorado Party apparatus and various paramilitary organizations associated with the party. Support also came from the conservative peasantry, the urban middle class and representatives of organized crime.
Under Minister of the Interior Edgar Ynsfrán, the Paraguayan government waged a ruthless campaign against leftist rebels in the country, and became an ally of the United States during the Cold War due to the regime's fervent anti-communism. Ynsfrán provided the ideological backdrop for the regime during its early period, but was eventually replaced in 1966 as Stroessner sought to clean up the country's image internationally and promote liberalization, although in practice such reforms only existed on paper and not in practice as the regime's draconian repressive measures continued under Ynsfrán's successor. At this point, the four people closest to the President became recognized as the Golden Four, and they were:
The leading position in power was determined not so much by state positions as by personal proximity to Stroessner. This group received the name Cuatrinomio de Oro – "Golden Four" or "Fierce Four". Despite their membership of the Colorado Party, their allegiance laid first and foremost with Stroessner himself. [2] Stroessner was prone to making decisions single-handedly. He himself delved into all significant issues and did not need "grey eminences" behind his decisions. However, the members of the "Golden Four" were the main conductors of Stressner's policy and had a noticeable influence for the dictator.
Montanaro was accused of excessive cruelty; the DIPC and DNAT intelligence services, the Macheteros and Garroteros militias spread fear and destruction in Paraguay for many years. Godoy was notorious for his participation in corruption, and became involved in embezzlement trials after the regime fell. Jacquet was perceived as an ideological fanatic, and many were repelled by his scowling image and the GAA's criminal methods. Abdo Benítez was the subject of jokes in Paraguay and had a reputation for being poorly educated and unfit for the job, but he nonetheless managed to remain in Stroessner's favor for the duration of his tenure.
“A terrifying minister Minister of the Interior, a boring Minister of Health, an inscrutable but no less dangerous Minister of Justice, and an unqualified personal secretary" – such an account is given by modern historians. In this capacity they were helping Alfredo Stressner to rule Paraguay. [3]
Individually and ideologically, the members of the Golden Four were not as indispensable as figures such as Edgar Ynsfrán or Juan Manuel Frutos Fleitas had been, but for most Paraguayans these ministers came to symbolize the structure of power within the regime, as well as its excesses, both in terms of violence and corruption. Because of this, they would become prime targets for prosecution during Paraguay's transition to democracy.
In the second half of the 1980s, opposition sentiment began spreading within the Colorado party, as the deteriorating economic conditions and constant suppression of civil liberties had become intolerable for many. This opposition movement grew in strength until the coup d'état of 2 and 3 February 1989, when Stroessner was deposed and replaced by his former confidant, Andrés Rodríguez Pedotti, with the support of the army. Alfredo Stroessner was expelled from Paraguay to Brazil. Godoy, Jacquet, Abdo Benítez were arrested, while Montanaro managed to escape to Honduras. Severity towards the members of the "Golden Four" was supposed to demonstrate the seriousness of the reformist intentions of the new regime.[ citation needed ]
Godoy, Jacquet and Abdo Benítez were put on trial. Godoy was accused of financial manipulation with the fictitious construction of hospitals, Jacquet of embezzlement of budget funds, Abdo Benítez – of appropriation of land during the agrarian reform. All three were found guilty and sentenced to prison. Godoy served a few months, Abdo Benítez three years, and Jacquet five years. After his release, Godoy, who suffered a stroke, and Abdo Benítez, who suffered from Parkinson's disease, led a secluded life. Jacquet remained active, practicing law, but retired from politics. The public was indignant that only corruption charges were brought against them, and not crimes against humanity. [4] [5]
Montanaro returned to Paraguay in 2009 after twenty years in exile. He was arrested, placed in prison, and then under house arrest. He was accused of abuse of power, illegal arrests, torture and murder. [6] The trial against him began, but did not reach the verdict.
Sabino Montanaro died in 2011, [7] Mario Abdo Benitez in 2013, [8] and Adan Godoy in 2017. [9] Montanaro and Abdo Benitez died in Asunción, Paraguay, whereas Godoy in São Paulo, Brazil. None of them expressed remorse about their previous activities.
In 2018, right-wing candidate Mario Abdo Benítez, the son of Abdo Benítez Sr., was elected president of Paraguay. The inauguration ceremony was attended by Eugenio Jacquet, the last member of the "Golden Four". In a controversial interview released afterwards, Jacquet stated that while difficult decisions had to be taken in the Stroessner period, it had all been done for the common good, with the fruits of that work visible today. He also stated that those who were killed by the dictatorship were not tortured or murdered, but were "rebels killed in battle". [10]
Alfredo Stroessner Matiauda was a Paraguayan army officer, politician and dictator who served as President of Paraguay from 15 August 1954 until his overthrow from power on 3 February 1989. His rule is commonly referred inside Paraguay as El Stronato.
Andrés Rodríguez Pedotti was a military officer and politician, being President of Paraguay from February 3, 1989, to August 15, 1993. He led the coup d'état on February 2 and 3, 1989, against the dictator Alfredo Stroessner Matiauda.
Juan Carlos Wasmosy Monti is a Paraguayan former politician and engineer who was the 44th president of Paraguay from 1993 to 1998. He was a member of the Colorado Party, and the country's first freely elected president, as well as the first civilian president in 39 years.
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Agustín Goiburú was a Paraguayan politician. He was the leader of the Popular Colorado Movement that represented the strongest opposition to the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner. He was murdered during the Operation Condor. He was a doctor, specialized in orthopedic surgery in Brazil. When he returned to the country, he worked in the Social Prevention Institute and in the Police Policlinic “Rigoberto Caballero”.
The nations of Mexico and Paraguay established diplomatic relations in 1831. Both countries are full members of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, Latin American Integration Association, Organization of American States, Organization of Ibero-American States and the United Nations.
Sabino Augusto Montanaro Ciarleti was a Paraguayan politician. He served as Minister of the Interior between 1966 and 1989 in the government of Alfredo Stroessner. Montanaro was also the First Vice President of the Partido Colorado.
Brazil–Paraguay relations are foreign relations between Brazil and Paraguay.
The dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner, colloquially known as Stronismo or Stronato, was the period of almost 35 years in the history of Paraguay in which army general Alfredo Stroessner ruled the country as a de facto one-party state under an authoritarian military dictatorship, from 15 August 1954 to 3 February 1989.
The 1954 Paraguayan coup d'état occurred in May 1954. It was led by Alfredo Stroessner, with the support of Epifanio Méndez Fleitas, and resulted in the overthrow of the government of Federico Chávez. The coup was the culmination of a complex series of political rivalries within the ruling Colorado Party. Approximately 25 people were killed during the putsch, which helped set the stage for the election of Stroessner as president of Paraguay later that year.
The 1989 Paraguayan coup d'état, also known as La Noche de la Candelaria, was a coup d'état that took place on 2–3 February 1989 in Asunción, Paraguay, led by General Andrés Rodríguez against the regime of long-time leader Alfredo Stroessner. The bloody overthrow which saw numerous soldiers killed in street fighting was sparked by a power struggle in the highest echelons of the government. Rodríguez's takeover spelled the end of El Stronato, Stroessner's thirty-four year long rule, at the time the longest in Latin America, and led to an array of reforms which abolished numerous draconian laws and led to the liberalization of Paraguay.
Mario Abdo Benítez is a Paraguayan politician who served as the 51st president of Paraguay from 2018 to 2023. He was previously a senator and served as president of the Senate of Paraguay from 2015 to 2016.
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Edgar Linneo Ynsfrán Doldán was a Paraguayan politician who held important governmental posts during the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner. He became Minister of the Interior in Paraguay in 1956, and held key roles in the severe political repressions of the late 50s and early 60s in the country. He was dismissed from his post in 1966 and retired from politics until the mid-1980s, when he emerged as one of the leaders of the anti-Stroessner movement within the military and the Colorado Party.
Juan Manuel Frutos Fleitas was a Paraguayan politician and government minister under the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner. He was the founder and first chairman of the Rural Welfare Institute, and as such, he was one of the key figures of the Stroessner administration's economic policy, spearheading the "March to the East" land reclamation and colonization project of the 1960s-1980s. Frutos, a staunch anti-communist, also served as an ideologue of the Stroessner regime, and was the chairman of the Paraguayan branch of the World League for Freedom and Democracy anti-communist organization.
The Movimiento Popular Colorado, better known as MOPOCO, was an internal movement within the Colorado Party of Paraguay that advocated for more democracy and social justice in the country. It was founded in 1959 as a response to the cruelty of the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner, and as one of the opposition groups to his rule, it suffered heavy repression at the hands of the regime.
The Guión Rojo was a Paraguayan paramilitary organization of the 1930-1950s, which was formed in 1942 as the paramilitary wing of the Colorado Party. It united supporters of Colorado leader Juan Natalicio González, far-right nationalists, anti-communists and adherents of Falangist and pro-fascist ideas. It played a prominent role under the dictatorial regime of the 1940s, in the civil war of 1947, the subsequent political struggle and the establishment of Alfredo Stroessner's dictatorship.
During the course of the 20th century, the Colorado Party of Paraguay set up several paramilitary organizations and militias in the country. They defended party interests and positions by force and actively participated in armed civil conflicts, playing a decisive role in the 1947 civil war. During the period of one-party rule in Paraguay, they were key components of the repressive apparatus of the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner. Politically and ideologically, these paramilitary groups stood on ultra-right and anti-communist positions, from traditionalism to fascism.
Antonio Campos Alum was a Paraguayan politician and head of the National Directorate of Technical Affairs, a law enforcement agency during the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner.
Ramón Aquino was a Paraguayan far-right politician from the Colorado Party, known as the leader of the Garroteros militia during the dictatorship of Alfredo Stroessner.