Francisco Morales Bermúdez (born October 4, 1921, Lima, Peru—died July 14, 2022, Lima) was a Peruvian general and politician who was president of Peru in 1975–80.
Morales, the grandson of a former Peruvian president, was regarded as a moderate among the military leaders of Peru’s 1968 revolution. He was minister of economy and finance from 1968 to 1974 and chief of the army general staff in 1974–75. In February 1975 he was named prime minister and minister of war by Pres. Juan Velasco Alvarado, whom Morales overthrew in a bloodless coup on August 29. His aim, he said, was to “consolidate” the radical reforms of Velasco’s military regime, which had included the nationalization of several sectors of the economy and a sweeping land reform program. But within a year, Morales had begun to reverse the nationalization of industry and had excluded from his cabinet most of the early protagonists of the 1968 revolution.
In 1977 Morales presented the four-year “Túpac Amaru Plan,” designed to return the country to civilian rule, reduce state control of the economy, and encourage foreign investment. Morales held elections on May 18, 1980, and stepped aside for the winner, Fernando Belaúnde Terry, the civilian president who had been overthrown by the military 12 years earlier. Morales ran for president unsuccessfully in the 1985 elections.
Morales was later accused of participating in Operation Condor, in which several South American military governments coordinated their efforts to systematically eliminate left-wing opponents in the 1970s and ’80s. Italy began investigating the disappearance of a number of its citizens and unsuccessfully sought his extradition. In 2017 Morales was convicted in absentia for his alleged role in the murder of 23 Italian nationals. He was sentenced to life in prison.