April 4,
2014 5:42 pm
King’s heroic role in Spain ’s
transition to democracy questioned
By Tobias
Buck in Madrid
/ Financial Times / http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/089e6188-bc0a-11e3-831f-00144feabdc0.html?siteedition=intl#axzz2xzcTo2Wt
Written by
Pilar Urbano, a veteran journalist and popular historian, the book was released
on Thursday to huge public interest and significant pent-up demand. Titled The
Great Forgetfulness, it spent a week on top of Amazon’s list of bestsellers in Spain before
going on sale.
The book’s
core accusation is that Juan Carlos supported a campaign by senior military
leaders to oust Spain ’s
elected government, and personally put fierce pressure on Adolfo Suárez, the
prime minister, to stand down.
The claims
have met near-universal condemnation from historians and contemporary witnesses
– including several who were interviewed for the book – and a barrage of
hostile reviews. In an unusual move that highlights the sensitivity of the
accusations, the palace itself issued public statements dismissing Ms Urbano’s
claims as “pure fiction”.
The
controversy is the latest in a series of setbacks and scandals to trouble Spain ’s
monarch, who has appeared unusually frail in recent months and has suffered a
sharp slide in popularity. The most damaging blow so far came in January, when
a Spanish court identified the king’s younger daughter as a formal suspect in a
high-profile money laundering and tax evasion case.
While the
king has struggled to raise his standing, the monarch’s historical role –
especially during the transition – has long been viewed as above reproach. Juan
Carlos won widespread admiration both in Spain and abroad for his role
during the transition, and is credited with helping to steer the country to its
first democratic election after decades of dictatorship. He played a
particularly important part during the attempted military coup in February
1981, intervening decisively to isolate the plotters and keep key parts of the military
on side.
But the new
864-page history casts doubt on the depth of Juan Carlos’s commitment to
democracy at key moments during the transition, portraying him as too close to
military plotters on the far right. The most incendiary claim centres on the
king’s alleged support for a campaign to oust Mr Suárez and replace him with
Alfonso Armada, an army general.
The
so-called Operation Armada was distinct from the actual 1981 coup attempt, even
if several key military figures were involved in both plots. Rumours over the
king’s support – tacit or otherwise – for installing a new government led by a
military man have long circulated. Gen Armada was a close adviser to the palace
at a moment when Juan Carlos was increasingly troubled by the weakness and unpopularity
of Mr Suárez’s government.
Most
historians agree, however, that Juan Carlos was determined throughout to
prevent a slide back into autocratic rule. Paul Preston, a professor at the
London School of Economics and one of the most respected historians of 20th
century Spain ,
writes in his biography of the king: “He was meticulous in his respect for the
constitution.”
Ms Urbano’s
claims appear especially poignant because they surface less than a month after
the widely mourned death of Mr Suárez, who was described by the king in his
eulogy as “a loyal friend”.
According
to Ms Urbano, however, the two men had a series of bitter clashes over the
king’s alleged campaign to oust Mr Suárez from office. She recounts a heated
conversation between the two in January 1981 in which the king told his prime minister:
“One of the two [of us] is superfluous in this country. One of the two is too
much. And, as you will understand, I will not abdicate.
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