Question
Why did military leaders overthrow the governments of Chile and Argentina in the 1970s?(1 point)
Responses
They feared their governments were moving toward communism.
They feared their governments were moving toward communism.
They thought their governments were not doing enough to combat inequality.
They thought their governments were not doing enough to combat inequality.
They disapproved of their governments using oil revenue to fund social programs.
They disapproved of their governments using oil revenue to fund social programs.
The governments had jailed and murdered political opponents.
Responses
They feared their governments were moving toward communism.
They feared their governments were moving toward communism.
They thought their governments were not doing enough to combat inequality.
They thought their governments were not doing enough to combat inequality.
They disapproved of their governments using oil revenue to fund social programs.
They disapproved of their governments using oil revenue to fund social programs.
The governments had jailed and murdered political opponents.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:
**They feared their governments were moving toward communism.**
In both Chile and Argentina during the 1970s, military leaders overthrew democratically elected governments primarily out of concern that these governments were leaning towards socialist or communist ideologies, which they believed threatened their nation's stability and aligned with broader Cold War dynamics.
**They feared their governments were moving toward communism.**
In both Chile and Argentina during the 1970s, military leaders overthrew democratically elected governments primarily out of concern that these governments were leaning towards socialist or communist ideologies, which they believed threatened their nation's stability and aligned with broader Cold War dynamics.
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