Of rightwing ultra-conservative
anti-communist persuasion, García Meza endeavored to bring a
Pinochet-style dictatorship that was intended to last 20 years. He immediately outlawed all political parties, exiled opposition leaders, repressed
trade unions and muzzled the press. He was backed by the
Argentinian military junta and the Italian
neofascist Stefano Delle Chiaie. Further collaboration came from other European
neofascists, most notoriously Spanish
Ernesto Milá Rodríguez (accused of the
1980 Paris synagogue bombing). Among other foreign collaborators were professional torturers allegedly imported from the notoriously repressive Argentine dictatorship of General
Jorge Videla. The García Meza regime, while brief (its original form ended in 1981), became internationally known for its extreme brutality. The population was repressed in the same ways as under the Banzer dictatorship. In January 1981, the
Council on Hemispheric Affairs named the García Meza regime, "Latin America's most errant violator of human rights after Guatemala and El Salvador." Some 1,000 people are estimated to have been killed by the
Bolivian Army and security forces in only 13 months. The administration's chief repressor was the Minister of Interior, Colonel
Luis Arce, who cautioned that all Bolivians who opposed the new order should "walk around with their written will under their arms." The most prominent victim of the dictatorship was the congressman, presidential candidate, and gifted orator
Marcelo Quiroga, murdered and "disappeared" soon after the coup. Quiroga had been the chief advocate of bringing to trial the former dictator, General Hugo Banzer (who was in power from 1971 until 1978), for human right violations and economic mismanagement.
Drug trafficking The García Meza government's
drug trafficking activities led to the complete isolation of the regime. In contrast to his position regarding the other military dictatorships in Latin America, the new conservative U.S. President
Ronald Reagan kept his distance, as the regime's unsavory links to criminal circles became more public. Eventually, the international outcry was sufficiently strong to force García Meza's resignation on 3 August 1981. He was succeeded by a less tainted but equally repressive general,
Celso Torrelio. The Bolivian military sustained itself in power only for another year, and then withdrew from civilian politics, embarrassed and tarnished by the excesses of the 1980–82 dictatorships. ==Exile and jail==