- Revolutionary Left Movement (Peru)
Revolutionary Left Movement (in Spanish: "Movimiento de la Izquierda Revolucionaria"), was a
Marxist group founded inPeru in 1962 byLuis de la Puente Uceda and his group "APRA Rebelde ", a splinter-group from theAPRA which had rallied the government in the 1950s and 1960s. Inspired by theCuban Revolution and close to anon-aligned position which opposed itself both to theCommunist Party of Peru , theSoviet Union andChina , the group initiated guerrilla actions against the government in 1965. After its leader's death end of 1965, the MIR splitted into three different factions. One of them, the MIR-EM, would merge with theRevolutionary Socialist Party (Marxist-Leninist) in 1982 to create the "Movimiento Revolucionario Túpac Amaru " (MRTA). The two others factions, MIR-VR and MIR-IV, would join the parliamentary left-wing coalition "Izquierda Unida" in the early 1980s.Origins
The MIR is born out of a split with the APRA, a former leftist group which increasingly began to collaborate with the government in the 1950s-60s.
Luis de la Puente Uceda 's faction created the APRA Rebelde in the end of the 1950s, which became the MIR in 1962. The MIR was part of the "New Left ", as was the other group "Vanguardia Revolucionaria", characterized by its critics against both the APRA and the Communist Party, and its independence towards China and the Soviet Union. Instead, it turned itself toward the contemporaryGuevarist foco strategy .Following the 1963 election to the presidency of
Fernando Belaunde Terry , and his failure to implement social reforms, the situation in the very poor countryside became more critical. The first guerrilla movement, theELN (National Liberation Army), appeared, to be quickly defeated by the military. 1964 was marked by the continuing failure of governmental reforms and clashes during land occupations by landless peasants, and the MIR launched its armed struggle the following year.Creation
With the intent of creating various "focos", Luis Felipe de La Puente Uceda divided the country into three zones of influence,
Manco Cápac in the North lead by Gonzalo Fernández Gasca,Pachacutec in the South headed by Rubén Tupayachi Solórzano, andTúpac Amaru in the Center directed by Guillermo Lobatón.However the MIR did not manage to find sufficient popular support, while the divisions between rival revolutionary groups, such as the ELN, the
FIR ("Frente de Izquierda Revolucionaria") headed byHugo Blanco or the MIR prevented any concerted action. Confined in the jungles, the MIR unsuccessfully battled against the military forces, assisted by theCIA who, according to former CIA officialVictor Marchetti 's words, created a "miniatureFort Bragg " into the jungle [William Blum , "", 2003 ] . The MIR leader Luis Felipe de la Puente Uceda died on October 23, 1965 in an armed confrontation. A few months later, the movement was all but annihilated.Splits
Two years after Luis Felipe de la Puente Uceda's death in 1965, the MIR splitted into rival factions, including MIR El Militante (MIR-EM), MIR Voz Rebelde (MIR-VR) and MIR IV Etapa (MIR-IV), all claiming political orthodoxy.
During the elections for a Constituent Assembly, the MIR-VR and the MIR IV participated to the left-wing "
Unidad Democrática Popular " (UDP) coalition, thus merging with the legalist left, and then to the "Izquierda Unida" coalition in the 1980s. On the other hand, the MIR-EM continued armed struggle, merging in 1982 with the "Partido Socialista Revolucionario - Marxista Leninista " (PSR-ML) to create the "Movimiento Revolucionario Túpac Amaru " (MRTA).References
See also
*
History of Peru External links
*RÉNIQUE, José Luis. [http://www.tau.ac.il/eial/XV_1/renique.html De la traición aprista al gesto heroico - Luis de la Puente y la guerrilla del MIR] en Estudios Interdisciplinarios de América Latina y el Caribe. Vol. 5, Nº 1. Universidad de Tel Aviv. ene-jun 2004
* [http://www.ildepu.tk/ Instituto de Estudios Luis Felipe de la Puente Uceda]
* [http://www.marxists.org/espanol/delapuente/index.htm Luis de la Puente] on "Marxist Archives "
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