Dissension, factionalism and schisms have, throughout history, often been associated with the experience of exile. The Portuguese opposition diaspora in the 1960s and early 1970s was no exception, with the bitter disagreements that fractured the Patriotic National Liberation Front (Frente Patriótica de Libertação Nacional; FPLN) the example that best illustrates this situation. Nothwithstanding this, on the eve of the collapse of the dictatorship it was possible to discern a greater willingness amongst the important opposition groups to link up their efforts. These included, in particular, the Portuguese Communist Party (Partido Comunista Português; PCP) and the Portuguese Socialist Action (Acção Socialista Portuguesa ASP) / Socialist Party (Partido Socialista; PS), led by Álvaro Cunhal and Mário Soares, respectively. However, in general, the impact of the initiatives undertaken by the opposition in exile was modest. Moreover, it is hard to single out any of their actions as a key factor in the process that led to the overthrow of the regime in April 1974, which, after all, is the ultimate objective of any organised dissident movement.Footnote 1
In this article I will try to explain the reasons for this failure, while proposing to investigate whether other ‘intermediate’ objectives,Footnote 2 including raising awareness amongst the European public and their democratic governments about the persistence of the dictatorship in Portugal, the mobilisation of Portuguese emigration circles and the actual joint efforts among the opposition diaspora, were achieved or not. I will start by describing the context which led to the emergence of a new constellation of groups of Portuguese exiles in the early 1960s (concentrated mainly in Western Europe) and provide a brief description of their socio-cultural profile, ideological orientations and ways they integrated into the countries in which they had settled. Then I will present their views on the strategy that they thought most appropriate to overthrow the dictatorship and the type of society they had idealised to succeed the authoritarian system in Portugal. The final section of this article will take stock of the attitude of the Western European powers towards the Salazar and Caetano regime, as well as the evolution of international perception regarding the situation in Portugal, in order to try and understand how these factors were echoed in the aspirations and efforts of the Portuguese opposition movement during this period.
Given the scarcity of general overviews on this particular topic (in the English literature, at least), I have chosen to present a more panoramic view of the oppositionists’ experience in exile, to the detriment of a denser and more in-depth analysis of particular cases. With this I hope to put this issue on the research agenda of scholars studying exiles and opposition in post-Second World War Europe and encourage future comparative analyses. Footnotes will be mainly used to point out some of the most important research produced regarding the Portuguese case, as well as memories and oral histories of former exiled oppositionists and some interviews conducted by the author.
Geographies of Exile
In September 1968, when the token handover of the running of the New State (Estado Novo) took place with the appointment of Marcelo Caetano as Salazar's successor as head of government, a significant number of Portuguese opposition figures were outside the country, some as a consequence of forced exile, such as Álvaro Cunhal, the leader of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP), others, such as Mário Soares, a prominent Socialist lawyer, as ‘deportees’ to the colonies.Footnote 3
The Portuguese opposition diaspora had grown significantly since the late 1950s, after a hiatus during which expatriation for political reasons had become less frequent (in part due to a series of events related to the victory of Franco in Spain in 1939 and the situation of widespread war that Europe experienced until 1945). The first wave of new exiles occurred as a result of the resurgence of activities against the regime immediately after the 1958 presidential elections. The campaign of General Humberto Delgado brought together various opposition currents for the first time in a long while and provided a younger generation with their first significant political experience. In spring 1959, animated by the ‘pre-insurrectional’ environment that the electoral contest had produced, individuals involved in Delgado's candidature created new structures, the Patriotic Action Councils (Juntas de Acção Patriótica; JAP), to prepare the ground for actions that could lead to the fall of the regime. One of these would take place on 11 March that year, the so-called Cathedral Coup (Golpe da Sé), prepared by figures from the National Independent Movement (Movimento Nacional Independente), also linked to Delgado. Its failure was the first of several that led to coup attempts aimed at the overthrow of the dictatorship. Formed in the spirit of ‘anti-fascist unity’, the JAP quickly resented the clashes between the more wayward and romantic elements and the disciplining zeal of figures linked to or close to the PCP. They were therefore relatively easy prey for the Estado Novo’s political police (Polícia Internacional de Defesa do Estado; PIDE), which between 1959 and 1960 made a significant number of arrests. It was at this juncture that several oppositionists, some better known than others, decided to leave the country. Some managed to receive political asylum in embassies of Latin American countries in Lisbon, sometimes after taking refuge in their premises for several months (the cases of Delgado, Henrique Galvão and several participants in the Sé coup). In January 1960 another, more spectacular, departure took place, the escape of Cunhal and other known PCP militants from the Peniche Fort. These individuals were then sent to various countries in the Eastern Bloc, where an important community of communist exiles would be established in the 1960s, particularly in the Soviet Union, Czechoslovakia and Romania – the latter the headquarters of Radio Free Portugal, which began broadcasting in 1962.Footnote 4
Until 1962 the most active core of oppositionists outside Portugal lived in Brazil, where the government had long tended to show a relatively liberal attitude towards initiatives carried out by the individuals who had settled there since the years of the insurrection against the dictatorship, or Reviralho, in the 1930s. With its vast community of Portuguese emigrants, a prosperous economy and a common language, the former colony offered attractive conditions for Portuguese dissidents – with the only drawback being the geographical distance, which strongly limited the impact of anti-Salazar activities, generally confined to carrying out meetings on symbolic dates and publishing magazines with restricted circulations.Footnote 5 The arrival of an impatient and charismatic personality such as Delgado, surrounded by a number of younger collaborators, altered this state of affairs. His most notable impact was the celebrated seizing in January 1961 of the Santa Maria liner in the Caribbean, an operation carried out by a group of Portuguese–Spanish oppositionists, led by Henrique Galvão, which for two weeks gave the anti-Salazar struggle an unprecedented international visibility. In 1964, however, with the advent of the military dictatorship, the situation of these individuals in Brazil became much more complicated, with some of them now being watched by the Department for Political and Social Order (Departamento de Ordem Política e Social), which maintained regular contact with PIDE, its Portuguese counterpart.Footnote 6
Indeed, by around the mid-1960s, it was clear that Western Europe had become the major settlement hub for those who decided to leave Portugal (including some of the ‘overseas provinces’Footnote 7 ) to avoid imminent arrest, escape military service and the war in Africa or for other reasons of a political nature. To some extent this can be considered a movement which ran parallel to the wave of Portuguese economic emigration (made up, in large part, of humble peasants from the northern and central regions of the country), stimulated by the economic bonanza of the more industrialised countries of Western Europe. Between the end of the 1950s and the mid-1970s around 1.1 million Portuguese chose this destiny, in particular in France and the Federal Republic of Germany, encouraged by the receptiveness of local authorities regarding the employment of foreign workers in their more labour-intensive sectors.Footnote 8
The year 1962 saw a major university protest movement develop in Lisbon which, perhaps more than any other thing, showed how deep the fault lines were in some of the usual bastions of support for Salazarism. The so-called ‘academic crisis’ of that year was another opportunity for the intense politicisation of many students from the middle class and the elite, some originating from traditional Catholic sectors, until then unconditionally loyal to the regime.Footnote 9 Since fulfilling military service now involved the possibility of being sent to the war in Africa, many decided to seek a new life outside Portugal. Between 1961 and 1974 it is estimated that the number of those evading military service (draft dodgers and deserters) may have reached an estimated number of between 110 and 170 000, and the percentage of those who abandoned the country following that decision was certainly very high.Footnote 10 The motivations and behaviour of these individuals was certainly varied, but sources suggest that a significant number gradually acquired a greater willingness to question the policies of the regime, especially when based in countries where access to information on the colonial war and European decolonisation was freely available. Some of these exiles or expatriates were involved in setting up various deserter committees in countries such as France, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden, the three of them partners with Portugal in NATO. For activists in ‘anti-imperialist’ networks in Western Europe, these committees took on an important role in their ‘communication strategy’: they were the proof that, contrary to the propaganda proclaimed by the Estado Novo, the continuation of the wars in Africa was far from being a consensual goal in Portuguese society.Footnote 11
The case of draft dodgers and deserters helps to illustrate the conceptual difficulties inherent in an exact definition of the condition of ‘exile’, as has indeed been mentioned in the literature focusing on this phenomenon.Footnote 12 It seems undisputed that within the large Portuguese diaspora established in Europe in the 1960s and 1970s only a minority would have left Portugal for fear of being subjected to repressive measures, or because they intended to start some kind of overseas activity against the regime. However, in the category of non-economic emigrants, consideration has also to be given to the existence of a considerable number of individuals anxious to escape the oppressive cultural atmosphere of the Estado Novo, but whose involvement in initiatives of a civic and political nature abroad took on a more sporadic and discreet character, and who were therefore not identified by the Portuguese authorities as a danger to ‘national security’. They may perhaps be referred to as ‘expats’ (or even, if we wish to retrieve an old term, ‘foreignised‘/estrangeirados Footnote 13 ) and, although playing a less prominent role in opposition-based activities (committees, campaigns, demonstrations) they nevertheless bore witness to the situation of political oppression in Portugal in the countries in which they settled.
The substitution of Western Europe for Latin America as the most prominent geographical location for anti-Portuguese exile at the end of the Estado Novo also includes an African ‘parenthesis’, namely the experience of Algeria, a country which between 1962 to 1965 – the period corresponding to the leadership of Ben Bella – acted as a powerful magnet for the Portuguese oppositionists who were keen to face the dictatorship with a more militant posture, if necessary through armed action. The idea of transforming the Patriotic Front for National Liberation (Frente Patriótica de Libertação Nacional; FPLN) into a great unifying platform for different currents, groups and organisers of the Portuguese opposition did not last long. In 1964 violent disagreements between its leaders led to its rupture and the emergence of a parallel organisation (the ‘Portuguese Front for National Liberation’). Some months afterwards, the assassination of Humberto Delgado (February 1964), who not long before had fallen out with the leadership of the FPLN, as well as the overthrowing of Bella in a military coup, robbed this nucleus of much of its prestige and relevance. In 1973, with the PCP already removed from its leadership, the Front were once again shaken by internal dissent, following the capture of its broadcasting service the Voice of Freedom, the propaganda organ of the Algiers group, by activists of the Revolutionary Brigades (on which see below in this section).Footnote 14
Moreover, it should also not be forgotten that for those who had felt they had languished within the narrow cultural vision of the Estado Novo, the perspective of having to adapt to the idiosyncrasies of a society where the rigours of Islam continued to make its presence felt in numerous social and cultural spheres of life must have confused many Portuguese exiles in the former French colony.Footnote 15 If the experience of exiles was also inseparable from a wish for freedom from the customs of a macho and hypocritical society, such as that of Portugal under Salazar, then Western Europe, experiencing the culmination of the libertarian wave of protests, offered possibilities for personal ‘emancipation’ which were incomparably more attractive.Footnote 16
Despite it being impossible to carry out a reliable quantitative analysis, the indications offered by testimonies of various kinds suggest that the most significant centres of exiles were scattered throughout France, United Kingdom, Switzerland and, to a lesser degree, West Germany, Italy, Belgium and some Scandinavian countries. Expatriation in countries on the other side of the Iron Curtain was limited primarily to individuals whose opposition to the dictatorship had developed under the PCP. The latter is also difficult to quantify, in addition to being an experience less covered in either the academic literature or in memoirs (and the few reports there are on this do not always resist the temptation to settle scores with the history of the PCP and the regimes which were in power at the time in Eastern EuropeFootnote 17 ). It is also important not to lose sight of the much lower attractiveness of the socialist bloc among the Portuguese candidates for exile, even among those who did not ideologically identify themselves with the bourgeois-capitalist regimes of Western Europe. In the 1960s there were few potential exiles lacking the necessary information to leave them reluctant to accept models of so-called ‘real socialism’. Events such as the crushing of the Prague Spring by Soviet tanks (a pretext for various exiled militants to start the process of distancing themselves from the PCP)Footnote 18 made it difficult for the socialist bloc to be able to capitalise on the disenchantment that elements of Western youth felt in relation to the way that power in their societies was organised. This is not to say, however, that such individuals were indifferent to other modern revolutionary myths – the Chinese ‘cultural revolution’, one of the major totalitarian experiences of the twentieth century, held an enormous fascination for the Portuguese radical left,Footnote 19 as did other ‘revolutionary utopias’ experimented with in the Third World (a spell which was also cast on a generation of European leftists).Footnote 20
In most Western countries Portuguese exiles benefited from a condescending, though sometimes understanding, attitude from the respective authorities, which was more pronounced from the mid-1960s onwards. Although the solidarity generated by hostility to communism (for which joint participation in NATO gave an institutional expression) had not ceased to exist, the unpopularity of the colonial wars waged by the regime, and, perhaps, a clearer awareness of the iniquities of its political and judicial system, made several Western European governments more reluctant to be associated with the Estado Novo. This ambiguity, however, lasted almost until 1974. In countries like France, for example, dominated by right-wing governments interested in cultivating good relations with Portugal at the military and strategic level, the judicial authorities had always refused to hand over Portuguese draft dodgers, deserters or elements linked to the opposition to their counterparts.Footnote 21 However, on several occasions, the limits of that ‘hospitality’ was clearly signposted to the Portuguese oppositionists whenever they took a more militant attitude or carried out actions potentially embarrassing for bilateral relations with Lisbon. As will be mentioned later, even social democratic governments tried to be careful in the support they were willing to give to the non-communist elements of the opposition in order not to compromise their diplomatic relations with Portugal.
It appears that the number of exiles who successfully applied for ‘political refugee’ status was reduced (which can perhaps be explained by an instinctive distrust of state bodies, even those in democratic countries), and many experienced regular difficulties in obtaining papers to work or travel.Footnote 22 However, if these adversities and related anxieties are evoked by exiles when recounting their experiences, there are also those who mention the development of a laissez-faire attitude on the part of the authorities with regard to their legal situation, their relative easy insertion into the labour markets of their host countries (although often in low-skilled and badly paid jobs) and their opportunities to start or continue higher educational studies.Footnote 23 Organisations supporting refugees, including the French CIMADE (the Comité inter-mouvements auprès des évacués, an NGO created by Protestant students during the Second World War), or the Association of Portuguese Immigrants in Belgium, also played an important role in the initial settling of many of the Portuguese political exiles (and a considerable number of African students who had decided to join the independence struggle and flee Portugal).Footnote 24 In countries such as Switzerland, France, the United Kingdom and Belgium many exiles were able to complete their university education, often with scholarships from local institutions or occasional subsidies granted by non-governmental organisations;Footnote 25 some were quick to obtain posts in academia, public services and international bodies,Footnote 26 thus qualifying the exile's image as ‘one of the saddest fates’.Footnote 27
Can we speak of ‘communities of exile’ as opposed to groups of individuals who shared only certain subjective affinities and only in circumstances of adversity? Perhaps something halfway between these two situations is closer to reality. Despite the sometimes bitter ideological divisions between them, it is undeniable that their generational and social proximity led them to share a set of cultural references, attitudes and worldviews. Many had attended the same universities in Lisbon, Coimbra and Porto and came from petty bourgeois and middle-class families who venerated the memory of the First Republic and who had always been hostile to the Salazar dictatorship. However, several known cases suggest that in the 1960s this disaffected group already included a significant number of Catholics in the process of distancing themselves from the Estado Novo.Footnote 28 Those who had reached adulthood in the late 1950s and the early 1960s would have been more influenced by the cultural and symbolic ascendancy of the PCP and by French intellectual life, even if these ‘generational’ categories should not be interpreted too rigidly. Those who acquired their political consciousness in the second half of the 1960s were already closer to the libertarian and hedonistic spirit of ‘1968’, of Anglo-Saxon popular culture, while their militancy options reflected the divisions of the international communist movement, with particular emphasis on those resulting from the Sino-Soviet split.Footnote 29
With the exception of the PCP – always present with their cells and ‘fellow travellers’ – it is difficult to speak of well-structured political organisations in the various exile circles in this period. One of the exceptions was the Portuguese Socialist Action (Acção Socialista Portuguesa; ASP), the predecessor of the present-day Socialist Party, founded in Geneva in 1964. With nuclei scattered throughout Latin America and several European countries, and including figures with long records of opposition to Salazar, the ASP would only manage to obtain recognition from the Socialist International (IS) in 1972. Its initiatives abroad were always dependant on the individual efforts of a handful of activists who had carried out their political ‘apprenticeship’ in organisations such as the Juvenile Movement of Democratic Unity (MUD Juvenil) in the immediate post-war period, and it was not always easy for them to forge bonds with a younger generation.Footnote 30 The ASP only leapt into the limelight thanks to Mário Soares, who established himself in exile in France in 1970 and quickly became the internationally known face of the non-communist Portuguese left.Footnote 31
Those remaining groups not affiliated with either the communists or the socialists had more uneven paths and were generally inconsequential. After the experiences of the Revolutionary Action Movement (Movimento de Acção Revolucionária; MAR) and the groups that united under the umbrella of the FLPN, the organisations (if they can be called as such) that attracted a certain number of followers during the Marcelista period were largely made up of students radicalised in university struggles in the second half of the 1960s, with an obvious predominance of so-called ‘Marxist-Leninists’ (i.e. Maoists) groups.Footnote 32 Perhaps it is best to speak above all of informal networks of individuals who, apart from some ‘civic’ or ‘cultural’ work with the immigrant communities (such as promotion of literacy or information on social rights in the host countries), and some involvement in local student movements, generally limited themselves to publishing occasional manifestoes or newspapers and magazines with limited circulations.Footnote 33 Despite the disillusionment that many experienced in relation to the classic tactics of the communist opposition – particularly its preference for ‘frontism’ inherited from other eras – not everybody identified themselves in actions involving a more proactive struggle, particularly armed actions. They frequently limited themselves to producing a dense theoretical analysis on the possibilities of ‘class struggle’ in Portugal, placing less confidence in those kinds of more ‘subjective’ methods. The organisations that went down these paths in this period, with footholds in countries like France, Belgium and Algeria – the League of Unity and Revolutionary Action (Liga de Unidade e Acçao Revolucionária; LUAR) and the Revolutionary Brigades – showed a lower level of ‘doctrinal’ elaboration, either, in the case of the former, claiming a ‘confused anarcho-Marxist-Leninist ideology’, or claiming inspiration from the libertarian tendencies of movements that emerged in the 1960s (such as the Dutch Provos) or the revolutionary paths that emerged from the Marxist student world in Italy.Footnote 34
A common aspect to all of these was their relative inability to mobilise their emigrant compatriots – to a certain extent, the representatives of the exploited Portuguese masses abroad – to undertake initiatives against the regime, despite the success that some had achieved in unionising certain compatriots, or the constitution of autonomous Portuguese sections within trade unions in the host countries.Footnote 35 Factors such as the cultural and social gap (perhaps not as wide as is sometimes supposed because of the proximity established in common workplaces such as factories) may have contributed to this lack of receptivity; but more decisive may have been the fear that many migrants experienced in relation to a possible retaliation from the Portuguese authorities – a feeling very widespread in emigration circles.Footnote 36 As Victor Pereira has underlined, the intimidating effects of Salazar's police abroad were based on a paradox. For various reasons (financial and administrative but also political and diplomatic), the International and State Defence Police (Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado; PIDE) was only occasionally present in some of the main centres of Portuguese exile in Western Europe, never having the means which would have enabled it to carry out fully effective surveillance on the movements and activities of the oppositionists. But the reputation of omnipotence it enjoyed was such (largely built up by the anti-fascist left, which in its publications alluded to fantastic numbers of PIDE agents and informants abroad) that a significant part of the migrants and exiles never broke free of the fear that the political police had ingrained in them.Footnote 37 Indeed, although exaggerated, the image of a PIDE able to extend its tentacles into the heart of many democratic states was not completely divorced from reality, as could be proven by the complex operation mounted to achieve the assassination of Humberto Delgado in Spain (1965), or the collaboration of the French information and counter-intelligence services in the process that led to the arrest of Hermínio da Palma Inácio, a leading member of LUAR, in 1972–73.Footnote 38
The ‘Marcelista Spring’ As Seen from the Outside
Schematically, differences between the various currents that made up the Portuguese oppositionist diaspora can be discerned by looking at two specific points. The first relates to the strategy that was thought best able to accelerate the end of the dictatorship, the second with the type of society that was idealised for a post-authoritarian Portugal.
When Marcelo Caetano succeeded Salazar in September 1968 various debates took place in opposition circles, including those from the political emigration. Would the new government just be a revamped version of the old system? Or was this the start of a process of opening and liberalisation which would allow for an effective democratisation of Portuguese political life? And if this hypothesis was plausible, should the Portuguese anti-fascists play a role in a negotiated transition to a Western-style democracy?Footnote 39 These expectations were partly fuelled by the reputation of Caetano as a reform-minded ruler, as well as the awareness that the economic and social changes experienced by the country since the beginning of the decade (largely stimulated by the effects of its accession to EFTA in 1959) had encouraged important segments of the regime's elites to be sympathetic towards a more technocratic, modernising and pro-European governance.
In the first months of the new situation, Caetano did in fact adopt some symbolic measures (authorisation for the return of some exiles/deported individuals, the release of political prisoners, the promise that the forthcoming general election would take place within a framework of greater freedom, a more liberal legislation for trade unions) which seemed to herald political liberalisation in Portugal. Albeit cautiously, certain opposition sectors were willing to see if Caetano would honour the expectations created by his ‘political spring’. Some exploratory contacts were undertaken between one of Caetano's trusted individuals and Soares himself, interested in understanding how far Salazar's successor could go in terms of concessions that would confer credibility to his policy of openness.Footnote 40 Despite these initial expectations having worn off at the end of the first months, socialists, progressive Catholics and, indirectly, the PCP itself, were willing to present lists of candidates to the legislative elections of November 1969, even knowing that in the past similar overtures had failed to bring about meaningful changes.Footnote 41 Their approach, however, was severely criticised by more radical circles on the left, including political emigrants. For some of them such participation was the same as repeating mistakes made by the opposition at previous historical junctures, particularly in the aftermath of the Second World War, when Salazar had committed himself to holding ‘free and fair’ elections in order to acquire some semblance of legitimacy before the allied powers. According to these critics, the ‘legal’ windows opened by the regime were nothing more than expediencies to distract the masses from the only credible alternative to the defeat of fascism in Portugal: the pursuit of forms of ‘class struggle’ (strikes, collective protests), which would gradually exacerbate the sense of exploitation amongst the workers, thus helping to create a ‘revolutionary situation’.Footnote 42
The fact that the 1969 elections took place, once more, under conditions that were far short of the promises made by the leaders of the regime and were followed by a crackdown directed against opposition figures who had been vocal in them reinforced the idea that the extinction of the Estado Novo could only occur through violent means. This idea was not alien to the political culture of the Portuguese opposition. Since its Sixth Congress in 1965 the PCP had forged a strategy (‘Road to Victory’) for the overthrow of the dictatorship around the concept of ‘popular national uprising’, which involved a combination of legal and illegal methods to ‘radicalise the masses’, cause the breakdown of the regime's security apparatus and make room for a general uprising, based on a coalition of workers, peasants, intellectuals and the more ‘enlightened’ sectors of the petty bourgeoisie and middle classes. In many ways this approach did not differ from previous party strategies (with the exception of the period known in its official history as the ‘rightist deviation’, situated between the Congress in 1957 and the recapture of the leadership by Cunhal in 1960–61). The new factor was that the PCP now faced a potentially embarrassing challenge from sectors to its left, as outlined in the context of the difficulties experienced by the regime in 1961–62 and various international developments (revolution in Cuba, Sino-Soviet split, anti-imperialist liberation struggles) which had exerted a strong impression on the younger fringes of the opposition.Footnote 43 One of the characteristic facets of some of these was the demand for ‘concrete actions’ against the regime, actions that would eventually uproot the ‘masses’ from their apathy.
This challenge persuaded the Party of the need to redesign its strategy in a more ‘militant’ sense, on the one hand, and to engage in initiatives that had hitherto been denounced as adventuristic and irresponsible, on the other. After some years of elaborate preparations, from 1970 to 1972 the Armed Revolutionary Action (Acção Revolucionária Armada; ARA), an organisation created by the PCP for that specific purpose, would carry out a series of sabotage and bombing operations against targets selected in Portugal, mostly identified with the defence and overseas policy of the regime (military installations, NATO command, warships).Footnote 44 These attacks were preceded by the actions of another opposition organisation, LUAR, which despite showing a less efficient operational capacity, managed to garner an equivalent, or even greater, notoriety, through spectacular actions in Portugal and abroad (robberies of banks and Portuguese consulates in European countries). Between 1971 and 1974, a third-party organisation, also based outside Portugal, the Revolutionary Brigades (Brigadas Revolucionárias, founded by two PCP dissidents Carlos Antunes and Isabel Carmo) would also be active in this specific fight, carrying out a handful of initiatives which, symptomatically, involved the help or collaboration of members of a more radicalised ‘progressive Catholicism’.Footnote 45
The impasse that developed in Portugal after the 1969 elections, the absence of substantive policy reforms and, more importantly, the continuing wars in Africa, helped foster a kind of competition between the different currents and opposition groups to see who would be able to present the most impeccable revolutionary credentials. For many of these the establishment of a bourgeois parliamentary democracy, even if based on a social contract comparable to that which had been established in most of Western Europe after 1945, was an undesirable outcome, as this would do no more than legitimise the mechanisms that ensured the hegemony of the capitalist forces in Portuguese society. In fact, a radically anti-capitalist perspective permeated the rhetoric and analysis of virtually all oppositionist groups.Footnote 46 As many liked to point out, their motivation to fight ‘fascism’ was not only rooted in the desire to replace its ‘political superstructure’. What was intended was to start a revolutionary transformation which would significantly alter the economic and social structures of the country, making possible the supremacy of the working class and the building of a ‘socialist society’.
Although the PCP was comparatively more cautious in its analysis of the ‘revolutionary conditions’ in Portugal (and the possible geopolitical implications of a socialist revolution in the Iberian Peninsula), and advocated the need for a democratic transition (until the election of a constituent assembly), its perspective also included a radical break with the power of the plutocracy and ‘capitalist monopolies’, holding the Bolshevik Revolution as its mythical reference point.Footnote 47
It should be noted that these positions also ended up contaminating socialists, whose 1970 (ASP) and 1973 (PS) programmes offered a much more radical flavour than was the hallmark of mainstream social democracy programmes in Western Europe (with the possible exception of the French Socialist Party (SFIO/PS). In its Declaration of Principles adopted in 1970 in Basel, the ASP undertook a clear turn to the left, setting itself up as a Marxist inspired (‘not dogmatic’) socialist movement whose main goal was the construction of a ‘classless society’ in Portugal.Footnote 48 This commitment of Portuguese socialists to mark their differences vis-à-vis European social democracy was again witnessed in a series of documents adopted in 1973, under the process that led to the foundation of the PS – curiously, under the auspices of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD), which after its Bad Godesberg Congress of 1959 had accepted, unambiguously, the legitimacy of the capitalist market economy.
Clearly, this racialised rhetoric was no stranger to the influences that many of these activists were exposed to in countries where the Portuguese opposition in exile was present. After all, there was a full tide of radicalism that had captured the imagination of European/Western youth in the second half of the 1960s – an intellectual movida in which all Portuguese exiles, in one way or another, took an active part. The question, however, is to know to what extent all this militant effervescence had some kind of strategic path or direction. Indeed, between 1969 and 1974 a part of the Portuguese opposition abroad seemed to have reached a stalemate. On the one hand, there was the hangover from the events of May 1968 in France, as well as from Portugal's own elections in October 1969, which ruled out the prospect of a radical change in the European ‘bourgeois-capitalist’ status quo and instilled a sense of disenchantment and helplessness in enthusiasts of a rapid revolutionary change. Although this was not sufficient to shake the utopian worldview of many, it seems to have encouraged some to retreat to a more private sphere and others to search for a deeper understanding of the factors that allowed for the resilience of the Estado Novo.Footnote 49
The appearance of journals, such as that which was created by a group of exiles in Geneva (Polémica), proposing an unorthodox Marxist analysis of the situation in Portugal, was an important indicator of this more ‘introspective’ trend.Footnote 50
However, although here too the signs were sometimes contradictory, it would seem clear that, from the point of view of its international reputation, the Caetano regime was far from enjoying a comfortable position, mainly because of its colonial policy. In the late 1960s all the European powers had dismantled their formal imperial structures and, adding to this, the feeling of empathy for large sections of their public opinions in relation to an anti-imperialist, pro-Third World agenda was growing. Portugal not only seemed anachronistic in the way it was clinging on to the vestiges of its overseas empire but was also criticised for being heavily involved in all sorts of ‘neo-colonial’ initiatives in Africa, in collusion with the forces of ‘large international capital’.Footnote 51 The embarrassment that this could bring to the Estado Novo did not go unnoticed by the Portuguese exiles. In addition to the presence of some of them trying to stand out in anti-imperialist initiatives, from actions of the Anti-Apartheid Movement to targeted campaigns against specific foci (the construction of the Cahora Bassa dam in Mozambique or the visit of Caetano to London in 1973), others would even receive requests to focus their academic activities on a critical study of Portuguese colonialism.Footnote 52
A significant convergence of the oppositionist forces also began to increase their expression in relation to the colonial problem. The dragging on of the wars in Africa eroded the influence of an older generation of oppositionist politicians who had maintained some loyalty to the national-imperialist positions characteristic of the Republican political culture in Portugal. In the early 1970s the adoption of strong anti-colonial positions, and the unconditional acceptance of the right of African peoples to their self-determination, were to be found throughout the Portuguese opposition, even if some nuances and differences were able to persist as regards the specific content of a future decolonisation policy. This vagueness, however, would have prevented members of the Portuguese opposition and African nationalist organisations from being able to explore opportunities for further anti-colonial collaboration – here an exception may be made for the role of the PCP with the liberation movements of the Portuguese colonies, but the content of this cooperation still remains opaque.
Be that as it may, the truth is that, from 1972, the growing difficulties for Caetano, and the evident failure of reformist attempts undertaken by the figures related to the ‘liberal wing’ of the regime,Footnote 53 would at least facilitate a rapprochement between the two mains forces of the Portuguese opposition in exile – the Communists and the Socialists, whose leaders, Cunhal and Soares, had both been based in Paris since 1967 and 1970, respectively. The atmosphere of détente that prevailed in Europe, which had allowed a ruler such as Willy Brandt to develop his Ostpolitik, also seems to have been decisive for the opening of a dialogue between two forces that, until then, had regarded each other with the utmost suspicion. Under the influence of the ‘Left Union’ and the Joint Programme entered into by French Socialists and Communists in 1972 (and perhaps animated by the percentage of the vote achieved by the two parties in the French general elections in March 1973Footnote 54 ), Soares and Cunhal, from September of that year, were able to put aside some of the differences that separated them and meet on a ‘platform’ to oppose and overthrow the dictatorship.Footnote 55 Their key points expressed the common denominators of their programmes: the restoration of democratic freedoms, the end of the colonial war and the opening of negotiations with a view to preparing the independence of the overseas territories, the emancipation of Portugal from the yoke of ‘monopolies’ and ‘imperialism’ and the formation of a provisional government with the task of preparing elections for a constituent assembly.Footnote 56
Humanitarian Consciousness vs Realpolitik
Throughout this period (c. 1968–74), the activities of the Portuguese exiles was never a factor in the calculations of European governments with regard to the Estado Novo, which continued to benefit from considerable goodwill from the major Western powers. This attitude, it does not need recalling, had deep roots – in some cases even being embedded in periods prior to the Cold War. Portugal's participation in NATO, an anti-communist alliance, was the cornerstone of the tolerance that the West dedicated to Salazar and Caetano and the dynamics of détente did nothing to change this state of affairs. In fact, it may even be argued that certain initiatives that symbolised greater European assertiveness in foreign policy, such as Gaullism and the Ostpolitik of West Germany, would have even strengthened the international position of Lisbon. The war effort of Portugal in Africa, in particular, benefited from crucial support from France and West Germany.Footnote 57 While Gaullist France felt happy to explore the cooling of relations between Portugal and its ‘Anglo-Saxon’ allies, the West Germans believed in the existence of a certain symmetry between the logic of Ostpolitik (‘change by rapprochement’) and an attitude of greater encouragement and openness to the ‘modernising’ regime of Caetano – in both cases, it was believed, increasing links with European liberal democracies could only erode the influence of the more static elements of the respective regimes.Footnote 58
Putting aside any gesture or initiative that might offend the Portuguese authorities, some of these countries with greater responsibilities in NATO did not neglect certain elements of what later was designated as ‘soft power’ to give a signal to the opponents of the Estado Novo. Through initiatives by ‘para-statal’ entities (political parties, foundations, cultural organisations, trade unions), they sought to achieve a possible balance between maintaining friendly relations with the Portuguese regime, on the one hand, and the creation of some bridges with non-communist Portuguese opposition figures, on the other – with the same applying with regard to the activists of the African liberation movements based in their countries, never officially recognised, but with which many European governments sought to maintain open channels.
Despite finding itself exempt from the most brutal connotations of its Iberian neighbour (again prominent in the final phase of Francoism, in response to the phenomenon of Basque separatism), and the no less fierce reputation of the ‘dictatorship of the colonels’ in Athens, the Estado Novo was unable to avoid closer scrutiny of its repressive policies. The 1950s and 1960s witnessed the emergence of human rights as an important issue on the international agenda, largely thanks to pressure from activists dissatisfied with the restrictions imposed by the Cold War on the discussion of abuses by regimes considered ‘friends’ of the West.Footnote 59 As is well known, the situation in Portugal played a not insignificant role in this process. This first happened by entering the radar of the International Commission of Jurists, an NGO founded in 1952 and well known for its role in denouncing human rights violations in the Socialist countries.Footnote 60 The second occurred by ‘providing’ the incident in 1961 which would lead a British Catholic lawyer to be driven to set up Amnesty International (the arrest of two students for making a toast to ‘freedom’ in a restaurant in Lisbon).Footnote 61 From that point onwards a significant number of Portuguese oppositionists and figures linked to African nationalist movements (such as the president of the MPLA, Agostinho Neto), would be adopted as ‘prisoners of conscience’ in the context of campaigns in which various elements within Portuguese exile played an active role.Footnote 62
Despite this new importance acquired by human rights issues at the transnational level (which however should not be exaggerated, at least if we accept the assertion of some recent literature that only from the 1970s does it make sense to speak of a genuine movement dedicated to the promotion of human rights beyond state borders),Footnote 63 cases were rare in which Portuguese exiles and their counterparts from other dictatorial regimes in Southern Europe carried out more regular and consistent cooperation arrangements. The campaign to establish the circumstances of the assassination of Humberto Delgado, launched in 1965 by opposition figures, lawyers and political figures from various countries (including Catalan exiles), or some joint initiatives presented by Soares and Spanish and Greek socialist leaders, were exceptions, but future research may reveal the existence of other types of co-working and sharing, including that developed between organisations committed to armed struggle in Spain and Portugal,Footnote 64 or between the Portuguese and Spanish committees of the Congress for Cultural Freedom, an organisation sponsored by US private and governmental agencies in the context of the ‘cultural battles’ of the Cold War.Footnote 65
Above all, the unpopular colonial wars of Portugal in Africa became the focus of intense scrutiny and international protest, involving committees and activist groups committed to ‘anti-imperialist’ struggles in Africa (within which some Portuguese exiles were affiliated). In July 1973 the revelation by the London Times of a massacre perpetrated by Portuguese special forces in Tete, Mozambique, causing an estimated 400 civilian casualties, spoiled the official visit of Caetano to London and galvanised opposition to the regime and to the colonial war in exile circles.Footnote 66 In the British capital, Mário Soares, who was enhancing contacts with British labour leaders, appeared on several platforms on which the Marcelist policy of resistance to decolonisation was discussed, alongside the former representative of Great Britain in the United Nations, Lord Caradon, and the Catholic priest who had gained prominence in denouncing the atrocities committed by Portuguese troops in Mozambique.Footnote 67 The episode also confirmed another underlying trend: the progressive alienation of influential sectors of the Catholic Church (including the Vatican) from the policies of the Estado Novo, particularly in relation to decolonisation, something which was clearly demonstrated in the role played by various figures connected to Spanish and British missionaries circles in the detailed revelation of this and other massacres which also occurred in Mozambique.
All in all, however, these perceptions would, at most, have contributed to a more acute awareness of what separated a country like Portugal from the democratic ‘normality’ of Western Europe, despite other states of Southern Europe, such as Spain and Greece, also living under regimes that combined ‘modernising’ agendas with strong political repression. In the period in question, this was not enough to stigmatise Caetano in the eyes of the vast majority of Portugal's partners in NATO, nor close the door to an advantageous economic agreement with the European Economic Community (EEC). Concepts such as ‘human security’ began to gain a certain currency in international relations, which would soon mark the diplomacy of detente in Europe. But to then arrive at something similar to a strategy of democratic promotion, it would be necessary to wait a few further years. Until 1974 the most widespread view in European chancelleries continued to be based on belief in the potential ‘dissolvent’ effects of closer ties between Portugal and Western Europe – here would lie the key to the country's modernisation, the breakdown of the regime and the adoption of a political solution to the colonial impasse. Recent research has emphasised the comfortable international insertion of the Southern European dictatorships in the security and economic cooperation structures of the West.Footnote 68 They of course would not be the most ‘presentable’ partners from the point of view of the West's public relations strategy; but the promise of stability that safeguarded NATO's southern flank was enough to contain expressions of displeasure towards the toleration of these relics from the Fascist era.
Final Considerations
Perhaps this is why a sense of despondency, or even impotence, would eventually prevail in many expatriate circles regarding the chances of a breakdown in the dictatorship, either by way of an internal ‘uprising’, or through any external pressure. Until 1973–74, and despite obvious signs of a certain political exhaustion, the Caetano regime was nevertheless able to take advantage of a relative economic bonanza, while at the same time a routine surveillance and repression machine managed to keep most of the population politically apathetic.
For many oppositionists, the vulnerabilities of the system only became evident after its fall at the hands of the military – and this may explain the tensions that occasionally occurred between the most impatient activists abroad and a ‘domestic’ opposition more sensitive to the risks certain initiatives proposed by exile circles could lead to (a cleavage that was evident at the time of the founding of the PS in 1973). The same could be said for the majority of European democratic governments. Even though many of them felt uncomfortable with the authoritarianism and colonialism of the Estado Novo, this was never enough to cause a cut that could jeopardise the cohesion of NATO, an objective which tended to ‘concentrate the minds’ of Western decision makers. Moreover, the lack of a leadership perceived as consensual or legitimate among the broad spectrum of opposition to the Estado Novo deprived Western governments of a clear and ‘reliable’ interlocutor – not to mention the fear that many had of the manipulation of any ‘front’ initiative by a PCP which was a recognised expert in these matters.
Even when out of government, the social democratic parties chose to follow a cautious and even relatively cool attitude compared to requests for assistance from the non-communist Portuguese opposition – the same being the case, moreover, regarding the other Spanish and Greek formations recognised by the IS.Footnote 69 Overall, this assistance had a symbolic character and, as mentioned, was channelled through parastatal entities so as not to offend the susceptibilities of the authorities of countries that remained within the policy orbit of NATO or the United States.Footnote 70 Whenever comparisons were drawn with the Greeks and the Spanish, the Portuguese exiles had an additional problem – when it came to take stock of the arbitrariness and state violence, the apparent ‘mildness’ of the Estado Novo mitigated the impact of their testimonies. Many had difficulty in precisely explaining the kind of claustrophobic atmosphere that the regime had built up over the years based on a ‘preventive’ systematic crackdown that dispensed having to submit its opponents to the massive violence typical of other totalitarian states.Footnote 71 But they also had a potential trump card: the enormous unpopularity of the colonial wars in Africa, whose international visibility, especially after the conclusion of the Vietnam peace agreements (1973), showed a tendency to increase. However, as already mentioned, various kinds of factors prevented Portuguese and African nationalist anti-fascists from developing closer forms of cooperation, which could possibly have given greater projection to the common cause which they embraced. The fact that it was the military who, in the end, took to the streets to end forty-eight years of dictatorship, only reinforced the incredulity with which many oppositionists, in the country and abroad, received the first news of the coup of 25 April 1974.
With few exceptions,Footnote 72 this event caused a massive repatriation of almost all the opposition diaspora (as well as many other ‘cultural expatriates’) which would play a role of utmost importance in the construction of Portuguese democracy. On balance, finally, it is possible that the most fruitful aspect of the Portuguese exile in the years 1960–70 was the capital of experience that an entire generation acquired in more plural, cosmopolitan and democratic societies. Even though these aspects were not immediately appreciated, or that many did not establish any link between the personal development opportunities they were able to benefit from and a ‘liberal’ and ‘capitalist’ system that at the time many were said to have repudiated (even in its ‘reformed’ or ‘social-democratic’ version), the fact was that after a few years this ‘cognitive dissonance’ was being corrected. Many ended up reinventing themselves as ‘foreignised/estrangeirados’, apostles of the ‘modernisation’ and ‘Europeanisation’ of a society still deeply marked by the legacies of the ‘Ancien Régime’ (Salazar's or even the pre-liberal one). In many cases, their own personal experiences of exile and expatriation began to be evoked in order to illustrate the virtues of such a process of catching-up with modernity, which many, however, consider still far from complete.Footnote 73