Automatic military funding from natural resources revenues can be traced in Chile to the 1880s. On 7 January 1938, law N° 6.152, known as
Ley de Cruceros (Spanish for "Cruciers Law"), was issued to transfer 90% of the leasing receipts of South Patagonian territories to arms purchases. Later, in 1942, the Chilean Government, worried about the ongoing
Pacific War and the defense, created the CONSUDENA, Consejo Superior de la Defensa Nacional, and allowed them to allocate revenues from currency dealings, alcohol tax, cigarettes tax and income from big copper companies for the purchase of weapons without parliamentary oversight. The
Ley de Cruceros or
Ley Reservada del Cobre was issued in 1958 after a serious military incident on the
Snipe islet by the administration of President Ibáñez in order to deviate funds from tax revenues from big copper mining corporations directly to the armed forces. The
Chilean nationalization of copper transferred in 1971 the properties of the big copper mining corporations
Anaconda Copper Company and
Kennecott Utah Copper Corporation to the Chilean state and in 1976
CODELCO was created in order to manage the development and production. The law has been modified in 1973, 1975, 1986 and 1987. == The Law ==