The United Officers' Group (Spanish, Grupo de Oficiales Unidos) or GOU was a secret society within the Argentine Army which staged a coup d'état in 1943 to overthrow President Ramón Castillo, thus ending the Infamous Decade and forming a military junta which lasted until 1945.[1] Arturo Rawson was made President, but was only in office for a few days before the GOU replaced him with Pedro Pablo Ramírez.
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The GOU started to operate somewhere in the beginning of the 1940 decade, after the time Juan Domingo Perón returned from Europe. In his book "Yo, Juan Domingo Perón", Perón described that the people that would be part of the GOU shared his ideas about the promotion of trade unions and labor rights, and wanted to prevent further acts of electoral fraud by the Infamous Decade. However, Perón was concerned in that the group would be aiming to make a mere coup d'état, without planning in advance the social changes they intended to implement.[2]
As with most secret societies, secrecy makes historian's work difficult, and the specific details about the internal work of the society are unrecorded, incomplete or contradictory.[3] One of those details is the creation of the GOU: according to a report by Domingo Mercante, the GOU was created by him and Perón, between the end of 1942 and May 1943,[4] while Juan Carlos Montes claimed to be the creator with Urbano de La Vega.[3] Both former members of the GOU did not point any specific ideology as the point in common between members, but the need to unite the officers opposed to Agustín Pedro Justo.[3]
The original members of the GOU were 19 officials, without a chief. Other members joined later. The recorded list of original members is as follows, in the original order:
The officials that joined the GOU afterwards are as follows
Presidents Arturo Rawson, Pedro Pablo Ramírez and Edelmiro Farrell had close ties to the GOU, but were not members themselves.
Little information exists about the GOU. Felipe Pigna suggests that GOU members were nationalist sympathisers of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy,[5] but Noberto Galasso argues that there is no conclusive evidence for that in documents, reports or confirmed events.[6] Silvano Santander wrote the book Técnica de una traición (Spanish: Technique of a treason) with documents that would prove that Juan Domingo Perón and Eva Perón were agents of Nazism. Uruguayan Eduardo Víctor Haedo was accused as well, which motivated an investigation by the Uruguayan Congress: it turned out that the documents used were forged.[7] There is also a resolution supporting Adolf Hitler, but it is considered another forgery: none of the members of the GOU acknowledged it, and it was unsigned, whereas all GOU resolutions were signed.
On a general level, the military of Argentina was influenced by the German military, but this influence was dated from decades before the rise of Nazism. This influence was also limited to the military topics, and did not include the ideas of political organization.[8]
The GOU is featured in the song "The Lady's Got Potential" from the album Evita, using the backronym "Government, Order, Unity":
The G.O.U. is a three-pronged operation
Government-unopposed and allied
With Order-ruthlessly applied
And Unity-those not on our side
Are subject to the process of elimination[9]
The song is missing from most versions of the musical production, but does appear in the 1996 film, where the above words are not included, but the GOU is still mentioned:
In June of forty-three there was a military coup
Behind it was a gang called the G.O.U.
Who did not feel the need to be elected[10]