Dirty War

Dirty War
Part of Cold War and Operation Condor
Date1974–1983
LocationArgentina
Result
Belligerents

 Argentina

Supported by:
 United States[1][2][3]
 Bolivia
 Brazil
 Chile
 Paraguay
 Uruguay

ERP
Montoneros

Supported by:
 Cuba
 Soviet Union[4]
Commanders and leaders
Argentina Juan Domingo Perón
Argentina José López Rega
Argentina Isabel Martínez de Perón
Argentina Jorge Rafael Videla
Argentina Emilio Eduardo Massera
Argentina Orlando Ramón Agosti
Argentina Roberto Eduardo Viola
Argentina Carlos Lacoste
Argentina Leopoldo Galtieri
Mario Roberto Santucho
Enrique Gorriarán Merlo
Benito Urteaga
Mario Firmenich
Casualties and losses
500-540 military and police officials [5] and up to 230 civilians [6] Estimated 8,960-30,000 citizens[7][8]

The "Dirty War" (Spanish: Guerra Sucia), was the name used by the Argentine Military Government for a period of state terrorism in Argentina[9] from roughly 1974[10][11] to 1983 (some sources date the beginning to 1969), during which military and security forces and right-wing death squads in the form of the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A)[12][13] hunted down and killed left-wing guerrillas,[14][15] political dissidents, and anyone believed to be associated with socialism.[16][17][18][19] About 30,000 people disappeared, many of which were impossible to be formally reported due to the nature of the issue: state terrorism. The targets were left-wing activists, guerrillas and militants, trade unionists, students, journalists and Marxists and Peronist guerrillas[20] and their support network in the Montoneros believed to be 150,000[21]-250,000-strong and 60,000-strong in the ERP,[22] as well as alleged sympathizers.[23] Some 10,000 of the "disappeared" were guerrillas of the Montoneros (MPM) and the Marxist People's Revolutionary Army (ERP)[24][25][26] although the lowest estimate is that the Montoneros and ERP had a combined strength of 5,000.[26] The "disappeared" included those thought to be a political or ideological threat to the military junta, even vaguely, and they were killed in an attempt by the junta to silence the opposition and break the determination of the guerrillas.[27] The worst repression reportedly occurred after the guerillas were largely defeated in 1977, when the church, labor unions, artists, intellectuals and university students and professors were targeted. Although the Montoneros reported having carried out some 600 armed attacks in 1977, the guerrilla threat had greatly declined.[28] The junta justified this mass terror by exaggerating the guerrilla threat, and even staged attacks to be blamed on guerillas and used frozen dead bodies of guerilla fighters that had been kept in storage for this purpose.[29] In late 1979, Amnesty International accused the Videla military government of being responsible for the disappearance of 15,000 to 20,000 Argentine citizens since the 1976 coup.[30] That year, a special study by the New York City Bar concluded that around 10,000 Argentines had disappeared since the coup.[31] According to Registro Unificado de Víctimas del Terrorismo de Estado (Ruvte), 662 were disappeared under the presidency of Isabel Perón and 6,348 were disappeared during the military dictatorship.[32]

During his years as US Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger had congratulated Argentina’s military junta for combating the left, stating that in his opinion the government of Argentina had done an outstanding job in wiping out terrorist forces."[33] Declassified documents of the Chilean secret police cite an official estimate by the Batallón de Inteligencia 601 of 22,000 killed or "disappeared" between 1975 and mid-1978. During this period, it was later revealed that at least 12,000 "disappeared" were detainees held by PEN (Poder Ejecutivo Nacional, anglicized as "National Executive Power"), and kept in clandestine detention camps throughout Argentina before eventually being freed under diplomatic pressure.[34] The number of people believed to have been killed or "disappeared," depending on the source, range from 7,158[35] to 30,000 in the period from 1976 to 1983, when the military was forced from power following Argentina's defeat in the Falklands War.[36][37] In 2003, The National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons claimed the true number of disappeared to be around 13,000.[38]

After democratic government was restored, Congress passed legislation to provide compensation to victims' families. Some 11,000 Argentines as the next of kin have applied to the relevant authorities and received up to US$200,000 each as monetary compensation for the loss of loved ones during the military dictatorship.[39]

The exact chronology of the repression is still debated, however, and some sectors claim the long political war started in 1969. Trade unionists were targeted for assassination by the Peronist and Marxist guerrillas as early as 1969,[40] and individual cases of state-sponsored terrorism against Peronism and the left can be traced back to the Bombing of Plaza de Mayo and Revolución Libertadora in 1955. The Trelew massacre of 1972, the actions of the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance since 1973, and Isabel Martínez de Perón's "annihilation decrees"[41] against left-wing guerrillas during Operativo Independencia (translates to Operation of Independence) in 1975,[41] have also been suggested as dates for the beginning of the Dirty War. The left-wing guerrillas and their support base, were responsible for causing at least 6,000 casualties among the military, police forces and civilian population, according to a National Geographic Magazine article published in the mid-1980s.[42]Proyecto Desaparecidos estimates that 500-540 [43] members of the Armed Forces and police were killed combating left-wing terrorism from 1976–83, but does not reveal the number of civilians believed to have been killed or wounded (including the armed forces and police wounded) at the hands of the guerrillas during this period.

Criticism of the term

Some sectors of Argentina society claim that the term "dirty war" was created by the US government and the media in the US, considering this expression as an insult to the families of the victims of state terrorism.[44][45]

Overview

Part of a series on the
History of Argentina
Argentina portal

The military, supported by a significant part of the population in the form of the Radical Party and the Socialist Party, opposed Juan Perón's populist government and attempted a coup d'état in 1951 and two in 1955, before succeeding with one later that year known as Revolución Libertadora. After taking control, the armed forces proscribed Peronism.[46] Soon after the coup, Peronist resistance began organizing in workplaces and trade unions, as the working classes sought economic and social improvements. Over time, as democratic rule was partially restored but promises of legalizing the expression and political liberties for Peronism were not respected, guerrilla groups began to operate in the 1960s, namely the Peronist Uturuncos[47] and the Guevarist People's Guerrilla Army (EGP). Both were small and quickly defeated. Nevertheless, with the Cuban Revolution in 1959, the popularity of left-wing guerrilla forces continued to grow among civilians in Latin America.

Jorge Ricardo Masetti, leader of the EGP, which had infiltrated into Salta Province from Bolivia in 1964, is considered by some as Argentina's first "disappeared", as he went missing after the party militants' defeat in clashes with the Argentine gendarmerie. Prior to 1973 the major revolutionary groups were the Peronist Armed Forces (Fuerzas Armadas Peronistas, FAP), the Marxist–Leninist-Peronist[48] Revolutionary Armed Forces (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias or FAR), and the Marxist–Leninist[48] Armed Forces of Liberation (Fuerzas Armadas de Liberación or FAL).[49] The FAL guerrillas raided Campo de Mayo in April 1969 and stole 100 assault rifles from the elite 1st Infantry Regiment Patricios.[50]

In time these armed groups consolidated, with the FAR joining the Montoneros, formerly an urban group of intellectuals and students, and the FAP and FAL being absorbed into the ERP. In 1970, Pedro Eugenio Aramburu, one of the military leaders of the 1955 coup, was kidnapped and killed by the Montoneros, in its first claimed military action.[51] In 1970, the Marxist People's Revolutionary Army (ERP) was founded. By the early 1970s, leftist guerrillas kidnapped and assassinated high-ranking military and police officers almost weekly.[52] These assassinations generated much panic among the officer corps with a naval officer in the book Military Rebellion in Argentina (University of Nebraska Press, 1996) claiming that his wife had to stand guard at their apartment window with rifle in hand in order to cover him as he drove to work each morning.[53] The extreme left bombed and destroyed numerous buildings in the 1970s in its campaign against the government; these belonged chiefly to military[54] and police hierarchies.[55] But a number of civilian and non-governmental buildings were targeted as well, such as the Sheraton Hotel in Buenos Aires, which was bombed in 1972, killing a Canadian woman and injuring her husband;[56] a crowded theatre in downtown Buenos Aires was bombed in 1975.[57] In 1978, a powerful bomb meant to kill an Argentine admiral ripped through a nine-story apartment building, killing three civilians and trapping scores beneath the debris.[58]

In 1973, as Juan Perón returned from exile, the Ezeiza massacre marked the end of the alliance between left- and right-wing factions of Peronism. In 1974, Perón withdrew his support of the Montoneros shortly before his death. During the presidency of his widow Isabel, the far-right paramilitary death squad Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A) emerged. Armed struggle increased, and in 1975 Isabel signed a number of decrees empowering the military and the police to "annihilate" left-wing subversion, most prominently the People's Revolutionary Army (ERP) armed activity in the province of Tucumán.

Isabel Martínez de Perón was ousted in 1976 by a military coup. According to the International Congress for Victims of Terrorism in 2010, prior to the military takeover in 1976, there were a total of 16,000 casualties (including killed, wounded or abducted) of left-wing guerrilla activity in Argentina,[59] including civilians and military personnel. Years later in 1995, under the presidency of Carlos Saúl Menem. Argentine military intelligence officers claimed that the ERP guerrillas alone were responsible for the deaths of at least 700 people, in addition to scores of attacks on police and military units, as well as kidnappings and robberies.[60]

In August 2016, the US State Department released 1,080 pages of declassified State Department documents which revealed that the Administration of US President Jimmy Carter had grown increasingly hostile towards the 1976 junta due to its human rights violations and that former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was derailing efforts to weaken the junta by fueling tensions between Carter's Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and his national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski.[61] Other State Department documents have indicted that the Gerald Ford Administration which preceded the Carter Administration was strongly sympathetic to the junta and that in October 1976, Kissinger had managed to strengthen the junta by successfully advising Argentina Foreign Minister César Guzzetti to carry out his anti-Communist policies "before Congress gets back."[62] These documents also reveal that President Carter initially congratulated the Argentine Military Junta for combating left-wing terrorism without quarter.[63] Nevertheless, it has also been documented that the US government did not have either direct involvement or direct knowledge of the developments leading up to coup or the subsequent developments which followed.[62]

Photographs of victims of the 1976-83 dictatorship

The juntas, led by Jorge Rafael Videla until 1981, and then by Roberto Viola and Leopoldo Galtieri until 1983, organized and carried out strong repression of political dissidents (and perceived dissidents) through the government's military and security forces. They were responsible for the illegal arrests, tortures, killings and/or forced disappearances of an estimated 30,000 people. Assassination occurred domestically in Argentina via mass shootings and the throwing of live citizens from airplanes to death in the South Atlantic. Additionally, 12,000 prisoners,[64] many of whom had not been convicted through legal processes, were detained in a network of 340 secret concentration camps located throughout Argentina. These actions against victims called desaparecidos, because they simply “disappeared” without explanation, were confirmed via Argentine navy officer Adolfo Scilingo, who has publicly confessed his participation in the Dirty War, stating, “…we did worse things than the Nazis” (Verbitsky 7). The victims not only included armed combatants of the ERP and Montoneros and their large civilian support base, but also trade-unionists, students and left-wing activists, journalists and other intellectuals, and their families.

The junta referred to their policy of suppressing opponents as the "National Reorganization Process" (Proceso de Reorganización Nacional). However, the result of these disappearances was not submission of the opposition; it later led to a subversion the military junta in conjunction with other causes.[27] Argentine military and security forces also created paramilitary death squads, operating behind "fronts" as supposedly independent units. Argentina coordinated actions with other South American dictatorships, as in Operation Condor.[65] Accounts by Dirty War survivors indicate that the Argentine government commonly seized innocent people who witnessed the capture of targeted individuals that occurred in public places; physicians’ reports confirm the torture endured by survivors. In 1979, US President Jimmy Carter offered to accept 3,000 PEN detainees, as long as they had no guerrilla background.[66] Faced with increasing public opposition and severe economic problems, the military tried to regain popularity by occupying the disputed Falkland Islands. It lost any remaining favour in its defeat by Britain in the resulting Falklands War. It stepped aside in disgrace and allowed the restoration of democracy.

Restoration of democracy and accounting for disappeared

The democratic government of Raúl Alfonsín was elected to office in 1983. It organized the National Commission CONADEP to investigate crimes committed during the Dirty War and heard testimony from hundreds of witnesses. According to the official count[67] of the 1984 truth commission, between 1976 and 1979 alone, 8,353 Argentines were killed or "disappeared", and 113 were killed or disappeared at the hands of the military regime between 1980 and 1983.[68] Documents by Chilean agents in Argentina found in 2006 report that the Argentine military had internally documented 22,000 cases of deaths and abductions from 1976 to 1978.[69] Amnesty International reported in 1979 that 15,000 disappeared had been abducted, tortured and possibly killed by the military dictatorship up to that time.[70]

Human rights groups in Argentina often cite a figure of 30,000 disappeared; Amnesty International estimates 20,000.[67] In 1988, the Asamblea por los Derechos Humanos (APDH or Assembly for Human Rights) published its findings on the disappearances, concluding that 12,261 people were killed or "disappeared" during the Dirty War.[71] Although there is strong disagreement on the total number of missing persons,[72] in the early 21st century it is commonly accepted that between 9,000 and 30,000 people,[36][73] depending on the source, had been killed or disappeared. Some 8,600 were disappeared as PEN (Poder Ejecutivo Nacional) detainees held by security forces in secret camps; survivors were eventually released under international pressure.

Trial of the Juntas

The government of Raúl Alfonsín began to develop cases against offenders. It organized a tribunal to conduct prosecution of offenders, and in 1985 the Trial of the Juntas was held. The top military officers of all the juntas were among the nearly 300 people prosecuted, and the top men were all convicted and sentenced for their crimes. At the time, Argentina was the only Latin American example of the government conducting such trials.

Threatening another coup, the military opposed subjecting more of its personnel to such trials. It forced through passage by the legislature of Ley de Punto Final in 1986, which "put a line" under previous actions and ended prosecutions for crimes under the dictatorship. Fearing military uprisings, Argentina’s first two presidents sentenced only the two top Dirty War ex-commanders, and even then, very conservatively. Despite President Raúl Alfonsín’s 1983 establishment of CONADEP, a commission to investigate the atrocities of the Dirty War, in 1986 the Ley de Punto Final (Full Stop Law) provided amnesty to Dirty War acts, stating that torturers were doing their “jobs". President Carlos Menem praised the military in their "fight against subversion."[74]

Repeal of laws

In 2003 Congress repealed the Pardon Laws, and in 2005 the Argentine Supreme Court ruled they were unconstitutional. The government re-opened investigations and began prosecutions again of the war crimes committed by military and security officers. In its 2006 sentencing of Miguel Etchecolatz, Director of Intelligence for the Buenos Aires Provincial Police, for conviction on numerous charges of kidnapping, torture and murder, an Argentine tribunal condemned the 1970s government's crimes as crimes against humanity and genocide of political dissidents.[75] But the courts declined to prosecute the crimes of the left-wing guerrilla groups that, according to Argentina's Center for the Legal Study of Terrorism and its Victims, killed or maimed some 13,000 Argentines.[76]

Carlos Marcelo Shäferstein in his work, Cien años de subversión en Argentina, Alejandro García,[77] and Antonius C. G. M. Robben[78] have said that the Dirty War has longstanding roots. There was extensive leftist violence and police repression in Buenos Aires during the 1900s and 1910s that culminated in the Tragic Week of 1919. Related fighting took place in Patagonia in 1921 and 1922, between anarchists and elements of the Argentine government forces; the events are popularly known today as the Patagonia rebelde (Rebellious Patagonia). Alicia García, in her study of the National Security Doctrine in Argentina, also notes the government's use of paramilitary squads to smash labour unions during the 1919 Semana Tragica, and the mass executions ("disappearances") used by the Argentine army in 1920 against the strikers in Patagonia as examples of Argentina's traditional way of dealing with "subversives".[79] In a brief memoir published in Panorama (14 April 1970), Juan Peron acknowledged that the first Argentine military coup in 1930 "had been prepared by the tragic week of 1919."[80]

Origin of the term

The term "Dirty War" was originated by the military junta, which claimed that a war, albeit with "different" methods (including the large-scale application of torture and rape), was necessary to maintain social order and eradicate political subversives. This explanation has been questioned in court and by human rights NGOs, as it suggests that a "civil war" was going on, and implies justification for the killings. During the 1985 Trial of the Juntas, public prosecutor Julio Strassera suggested that the term "Dirty War" was a "euphemism to try to conceal gang activities" as though they were legitimate military activities.[81]

Although the junta said its objective was to eradicate guerrilla activity because of its threat to the state; it conducted wide-scale repression of the general population; it worked against all political opposition, and those it considered on the left: trade unionists (half of the victims), students, intellectuals including journalists and writers, rights activists, and other civilians, and their families. Many others went into exile to survive, and many remain in exile today (despite the return of democracy in 1983). During the Trial of the Juntas, the prosecution established that the guerrillas were never substantial enough to pose a real threat to the state, and could not be considered a belligerent as in a war: "The subversives had not taken control of any part of the national territory; they had not obtained recognition of interior or anterior belligerency, they were not massively supported by any foreign power, and they lacked the population's support."[82]

Analysts say that crimes committed during this time may not be covered under the laws of war (jus in bello), which shields soldiery of inferior rank from prosecution for acts committed under military or state orders. Paul H. Lewis, Professor of Political Science at Tulane University, who has written Guerrillas and Generals: The Dirty War in Argentina, is among those who claim otherwise. Terence Roehrig in his The Prosecution of Former Military Leaders in Newly Democratic Nations: The Cases of Argentina, Greece, and South Korea (McFarland & Company, 2001) estimates that of the disappeared, "at least 10,000 were involved in various ways with the guerrillas". Justice Minister Ricardo Gil Lavedra, who formed part of the 1985 tribunal for the Trial of the Juntas, later went on record saying, "I sincerely believe that the majority of the victims of the illegal repression were guerrilla militants."[83] The Montoneros in a statement issued in 1984 acknowledged having lost 5,000 guerrillas killed,[24][84] and the Marxist–Leninist People's Revolutionary Army (Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo or ERP) in 2007 admitted the deaths of some 5,000 of their own armed fighters.[25] Mario Firmenich, the commander of the Montoneros, in a radio interview in late 2001 from Spain said that, "In a country that experienced a civil war, everybody has blood on their hands."[85]

The government passed legislation to provide compensation to people who lost loved ones in the war under the dictatorship. To date, some 11,000 Argentines have applied for and received up to US$200,000 each as monetary compensation for their losses.[86] The program of extermination of dissidents was termed "genocide" by a court of law, for the first time in the official treatment of illegal crimes of the dictatorship, during the 2006 trial of Miguel Etchecolatz, a former senior official of the Buenos Aires Provincial Police.[75]

Return of Peronism

Since former army officer Juan Perón was ousted from the presidency by a coup in 1955 (Revolución Libertadora), military hostility to Peronism and populist politics dominated Argentine politics. The 1963 Aramburu decree prohibited the use of Perón's name, and when General Lanusse, who was part of the Revolución Argentina, called for elections in 1973 and authorized the return of political parties, Perón, who had been invited back from exile, was barred from seeking office.

In May 1973, Peronist Héctor José Cámpora was elected as president, but everyone understood that Perón was the real power behind him. Peronism has been difficult to define according to traditional political classifications, and different periods must be distinguished. A populist and nationalist movement, it has sometimes been accused of fascist tendencies; Perón's admiration for Benito Mussolini is often cited in support of that assertion. After World War II, Argentina became a popular country of exile for escaped Nazi war criminals who entered clandestinely via various ratlines.[87] Following nearly two decades of weak civilian governments, economic decline, and military interventionism, Perón returned from exile on 20 June 1973, as the country was becoming engulfed in immense financial, social and political disorder. The months preceding his return were marked by important social movements, as in the rest of South America, and in particular of the Southern Cone before the military intervention of the 1970s. Thus, during Héctor Cámpora's first months of government (May–July 1973), approximately 600 social conflicts, strikes and factory occupations had taken place.[88]

Immediately after the swearing in of Cámpora on 25 May 1973, the Peronist Youth converged on the main prison, forcing the release and pardoning of 400 captured guerrilla fighters.[89] The next day congress approved an amnesty for the revolutionary groups, repealed anti-terrorist legislation, and abolished the Federal Criminal Court of the Nation.[90] From the perspective of the military, Campora's decree had demonstrated the police actions to be insufficient in combating guerrilla actions. Paul H. Lewis, Professor of Political Science at Tulane University said: "Now it became clear to many officers that, if the anti-guerrilla war were ever resumed in the future, it would be better to kill captured terrorists outright than to see them released by sympathetic civilians to fight again."[91]

On the economic side of his politics, Time Magazine (14 January 1974) estimated that 60% of foreign businessmen fled Argentina in 1973, prompted by the kidnapping of 170 businessmen that year. On several occasions, business executives involved in industrial disputes with militant workers learned their homes had been burned down by the Montoneros.[92] On 6 September 1973 the ERP "Compañía Ramón Rosa Jiménez" attacked the Army Medical Command in Buenos Aires, killing Lieutenant-Colonel Jorge Duarte Hardoy but lost several fighters killed or captured in that operation.[93]

Upon Perón's arrival at Buenos Aires Airport, snipers opened fire on the crowds of left-wing Peronist sympathizers. Known as the 1973 Ezeiza massacre, this event marked the split between left-wing and right-wing factions of Peronism. Perón was re-elected in 1973, backed by a broad coalition that ranged from trade unionists in the center to fascists on the right (including members of the neo-fascist Movimiento Nacionalista Tacuara) and socialists like the Montoneros led by Mario Firmenich on the left.[94] Following the Ezeiza massacre and Perón's denouncing of "bearded immature idealists," Perón sided with the Peronist right, the trade unionist bureaucracy and Radical Civic Union of Ricardo Balbín, Cámpora's unsuccessful rival at the May 1973 elections. Some leftist Peronist governors were deposed, among them Ricardo Obregón Cano, governor of Córdoba, who was ousted by a police coup in February 1974. According to historian Servetto, "the Peronist right... thus stimulated the intervention of security forces to resolve internal conflicts of Peronism."[94]

Isabel Perón's government

Perón died on 1 July 1974, and was replaced by his vice-president and third wife, Isabel Perón, who ruled Argentina until overthrown in March 1976 by the military. The 1985 CONADEP human rights commission counted 458 assassinations from 1973 to 1975 in its report Nunca Más (Never Again): 19 in 1973, 50 in 1974 and 359 in 1975, carried out by paramilitary groups, who acted mostly under the José López Rega's Triple A death squad (according to Argenpress, at least 25 trade-unionists were assassinated in 1974[95]). However, the repression of the social movements had already started before the attempt on Yrigoyen's life: on 17 July 1973, the CGT section in Salta was closed, while the CGT, SMATA and Luz y Fuerza in Córdoba were victims of armed attacks. Agustín Tosco, Secretary General of Luz y Fuerza, successfully avoided arrest, and went into hiding until his death on 5 November 1975.[95]

Trade-unionists were also targeted by the repression in 1973: Carlos Bache was assassinated on 21 August 1973; Enrique Damiano, of the Taxis Trade-Union of Córdoba, on 3 October; Juan Avila, also of Córdoba, the following day; Pablo Fredes, on 30 October in Buenos Aires; Adrián Sánchez, on 8 November 1973 in the Province of Jujuy. Assassinations of trade unions, lawyers, etc. continued and increased in 1974 and 1975, while the most combative trade-unions were closed and their leaders arrested. In August 1974, Isabel Perón's government took away the rights of trade-unionist representation of the Federación Gráfica Bonaerense, whose Secretary General Raimundo Ongaro was arrested in October 1974.[95] During the same month of August 1974, the SMATA Córdoba trade-union, in conflict with the company Ika Renault, was closed by the national direction of trade-unions, and the majority of its leaders and activists arrested. Most of them, including its Secretary General René Salamanca, were assassinated during the 1976–83 dictatorship. Atilio López, General Secretary of the CGT of Córdoba and former Vice-Governor of the Province, was assassinated in Buenos Aires on 16 September 1974.[95]

The left-wing guerrillas were also responsible for a number of atrocities committed in this period. On 4 February 1972, police corporal Conrado Likay Faldi was shot dead in the Bernal suburb of Buenos Aires. On 14 February 1972, FAL guerrillas supporting urban operations in the Barrio Norte suburb of Buenos Aires, delivered a bomb concealed in a flower bouquet to the house of the ex-Justice Minister Jaime Perriaux, killing three policemen (Roque Russo, Rómulo Salvatierra and Néstor Godoy) and mortally wounding another (Oscar Raúl Pereda) of an anti-explosives unit, and wounding eleven others, including neighbors. On 1 February 1973, First Lieutenant José Maria Naccarato was killed while driving in the city of Resistencia in Chaco Province when a bomb planted in his car detonated. [96] On 6 March 1973, urban guerrillas shot dead three policemen (1st Corporal Máximo Maydana and Corporals José Sergio Contreras and Luis María Benítez) at a dance hall in the José C. Paz suburb of Buenos Aires. [97] Between 16 and 17 September 1974, about 100 Montoneros bombs exploded throughout Argentina against ceremonies commemorating the military revolt which ended Juan Perón's first term as president and foreign companies.[98] Targets in the bombings included three Ford showrooms; Peugeot and IKA-Renault showrooms; Goodyear and Firestone tire distributors, Riker and Eli pharmaceutical laboratories, Union carbide Battery Company, Bank of Boston and Chase Manhattan Bank branches, Xerox Corporation; and Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola bottling companies. In all, 83 servicemen and policemen were killed in left-wing guerrilla incidents between 1973 and 1974.[99]

The ERP publicly remained in the forefront. ERP guerrilla activity took the form of attacks on military outposts, police stations and convoys. Between March and July 1971 the Argentine newspapers reported 316 armed attacks by the ERP.[100] In 1971, the left-wing guerrillas killed 57 policemen, and in 1972 the ERP and Montoneros killed another 38 policemen.[101] On 19 January 1974 60–70 ERP guerrillas traveling aboard captured army trucks[102] attacked the 2,000-strong barracks at Azul, killing the Commanding Officer of the 10th 'Húsares de Pueyrredon' Armored Cavalry Regiment, Colonel Camilo Arturo Gay and his wife as well as capturing the Commanding Officer of the 1st Artillery Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Jorge Roberto Ibarzabal. The guerrillas, dressed as soldiers, held the barracks for seven hours.[103]

In another case, the famous ERP "Compañía Ramón Rosa Jiménez" (with about 300 serving members between 1974–76 and a first class unit) struck the 17th Airborne Infantry Regiment in Catamarca and the Argentine Army's Villa Maria explosives factory in Córdoba. The attacks involved some 90 guerrillas of the "Compañía Ramón Rosa Jiménez" and supporting militants who on 10 August, with the ERP guerrillas again dressed in Argentine Army combat fatigues attempted to raid simultaneously the factory and parachute unit. In the aftermath, 8 police and army paratroopers were killed or wounded[104] and several ERP guerrillas were executed after having been captured wearing army uniforms. On 1 November 1974 the Montoneros successfully blew up General Commissioner Alberto Villar, the chief of the Argentine federal police, in his yacht along with his wife.[105] On 8 August 1975, Montoneros parked a car bomb outside the University of Belgrano, killing one student and wounding four.[106] In 10 years of guerrilla operations (1969–79) there were 1,501 killings, 1,748 kidnappings, 5,215 bombings and 45 major attacks on military units blamed on leftist guerrillas.[107]

"Annihilation decrees"

Military zones of Argentina, 1975–83

Meanwhile, the Guevarist People's Revolutionary Army (ERP), led by Roberto Santucho and inspired by Che Guevara's foco theory, began a rural insurgency in the province of Tucumán, in the mountainous northwest of Argentina. It started the campaign with no more than 100 men and women of the Marxist ERP guerrilla force and ended with about 300 in the mountains (including reinforcements in the form of the elite Montoneros 65-strong Jungle Company that arrived in February 1976 and latter the ERP's "Decididos de Córdoba" Urban Company),[108] which the Argentine Army managed to defeat, but at a cost.

On 5 January 1975, an Army DHC-6 transport plane was downed near the Monteros mountains, apparently shot down by guerrillas.[109] All thirteen on board were killed. The military believe a heavy machine gun had downed the aircraft.[110] In response, Ítalo Luder, President of the National Assembly who acted as interim President substituting himself to Isabel Perón who was ill for a short period, signed in February 1975 the secret presidential decree 261, which ordered the army to neutralize and/or annihilate the insurgency in Tucumán, the smallest province of Argentina. Operativo Independencia granted power to the Armed Forces to "execute all military operations necessary for the effects of neutralizing or annihilating the action of subversive elements acting in the Province of Tucumán."[111][112] Santucho had declared a 620-mile (1,000 km) "liberated zone" in Tucuman and demanded Soviet-backed protection for its borders as well as proper treatment of captured guerrillas as POW's.[113]

The Argentine Army Fifth Brigade, then consisting of the 19th, 20th and 29th Mountain Infantry Regiments[114] and commanded by Brigadier-General Acdel Vilas received the order to move to Famailla in the foothills of the Monteros mountains on 8 February 1975. While fighting the guerrillas in the jungle, Vilas concentrated on uprooting the ERP support network in the towns, using tactics later adopted nationwide, as well as a civic action campaign. The Argentine security forces used techniques no different from their US and French counterparts in Vietnam and Algeria.[115][116]

The leadership of the rural guerrilla force was mostly eradicated and many of the ERP guerrillas and civilian sympathizers in Tucumán were either killed or forcefully disappeared. Efforts to restrain the rural guerrilla activity to Tucumán, however, remained unsuccessful despite the use of 24 recently arrived US-made Bell UH-1H Huey troop-transport helicopters. In early October, the 5th Brigade suffered a major blow at the hands of the Montoneros, when more than one hundred, and possibly several hundred [117] Montoneros and supporters were involved in the Operation Primicia, the most elaborate operation of the "Dirty War", which involved hijacking of a civilian airliner, taking over the provincial airport, attacking the 29th Infantry Regiment (which had retired to barracks at Formosa Province) and capturing its cache of arms, and finally escaping by air. Once the operation was over, they escaped towards a remote area in Santa Fe Province. The aircraft, a Boeing 737, eventually landed on a crop field not far from the city of Rafaela.

In the aftermath, 12 soldiers and 2 policemen[118] were killed and several wounded. The sophistication of the operation, and the getaway cars and safehouses they used to escape from the crash-landing site, suggest several hundred guerrillas and their supporters were involved.[119] The Argentine security forces admitted to 43 army troops killed in action in Tucuman, although this figure does not take into account police and Gendarmerie troops, and the soldiers who died defending their barracks in Formosa province on 5 October 1975. By December 1975 the Argentine military could, with some justification claim that it was winning the 'Dirty War', but it was dismayed to find no evidence of overall victory.[120]

On 23 December 1975, several hundred ERP fighters[121] with the help of hundreds of underground supporters, staged an all-out battle with the 601st Arsenal Battalion nine miles (14 km) from Buenos Aires and occupied four local police stations and a regimental headquarters.[122] 63 guerrillas,[123] seven army troops and three policemen were killed.[124] In addition 20 civilians were killed in the crossfire. Many of the civilian deaths occurred when the guerrillas and supporting militants burned 15 city buses[125] near the arsenal to hamper military reinforcements. This development was to have far-reaching ramifications. On 30 December 1975, urban guerrillas exploded a bomb inside the Army's headquarters in Buenos Aires, injuring at least six soldiers.[126] The Montoneros movement successfully utilized divers in underwater infiltrations and blew the pier where the Argentine destroyer ARA Santísima Trinidad was being built, on 22 August 1975. The ship was effectively immobilized for several years. By mid-1975, the country was a stage for widespread violence. Extreme right-wing death squads used their hunt for far-left guerrillas as a pretext to exterminate any and all ideological opponents on the left and as a cover for common crimes.

Assassinations and kidnappings by the Peronist Montoneros and the ERP contributed to the general climate of fear. In July, there was a general strike. On 6 July 1975, the government, presided temporarily by Italo Luder from the Peronist party, issued three decrees to combat the guerrillas. The decrees 2770, 2771 and 2772 created a Defense Council headed by the president and including his ministers and the chiefs of the armed forces.[127][128][129] It was given the command of the national and provincial police and correctional facilities and its mission was to "annihilate … subversive elements throughout the country".

Raid in Santa Fe (March 1975)

Isabel Perón's government ordered a raid on 20 March 1975, which involved 4,000 military and police officers, in Villa Constitución, Santa Fe, in response to various trade-unionist conflicts. Many citizens and 150 activists and trade-unionists leaders were arrested, while the Unión Obrera Metalúrgica's subsidiary in Villa Constitución was closed down with the agreement of the trade-unions' national direction, headed by Lorenzo Miguel.[95] Repression affected trade-unionists of large firms, such as Ford, Fiat, Renault, Mercedes Benz, Peugeot, Chrysler etc., and was sometimes carried on with support from the firms' executives and from the trade-unionist bureaucracies.[95]

Left-wing terrorism in the automotive industry

In November 1971, in solidarity with militant car workers, Montoneros guerrillas took over a car manufacturing plant in Caseros, sprayed 38 Fiats with petrol, and then set them alight.[130] Dr. Oberdan Sallustro, director-general of the Fiat Concord company in Argentina–which manufactured cars, rolling stock and power generators under license from Fiat of Italy, the parent company–and an Italian citizen, was kidnapped by ERP guerrillas in Buenos Aires on 21 March 1972 and found murdered on 10 April, after having been held in a "people's prison" in a working-class suburb of the city. On 2 December, the bodyguards of a Chrysler Corporation executive were attacked by militants, two were killed and another wounded.[131]

On 21 May 1973, Luis Giovanelli, a Ford Motor Company executive, was killed and a female employee was wounded when machine-gunned by the ERP guerrillas in a kidnapping attempt that netted them US$1 million from Ford as "protection money".[132] On 25 May, ERP guerrillas attempted to kill two Ford Motor Company executives but only wounded them.[133] On 3 June 1973, militants in Buenos Aires kidnapped Jose Chohelo, a Peugeot representative and later released him for a reported US$200,000.[134] On 22 November 1973, FAP guerrillas ambushed and killed John Swint, the American general manager of a Ford Motor Company subsidiary and three of his bodyguards.[135] On 29 December 1973, the director of Peugeot in Argentina was kidnapped by seven armed militants.[136] Between 24–26 June 1974, seventeen bombs of the militants exploded in Buenos Aires, damaging offices, warehouses, showrooms including Ford, General Motors and Fiat dealerships, according to the Bangor Daily News.[137]

On 27 August 1974, FAP guerrillas killed Ricardo Goya, the labour relations manager of the IKA-Renault Motor Company in Córdoba while he was driving to work. On 8 January 1975, Rodolfo Saurnier, manager of an auto parts factory, was kidnapped by Montoneros guerrillas.[138] On 28 July 1975, a bomb of the urban militants exploded at the Peugeot dealership in La Plata. On 9 October 1975 several Molotov cocktails were thrown by militants at Car dealerships in city of Mendoza. On 24 October 1975, Heinrich Franz Metz, production manager of the Mercedes-Benz truck plant in Buenos Aires, was kidnapped by Montoneros guerrillas.[139] On 29 October 1975, four Montoneros killed the Fiat-Concord personnel manager. On 16 November, militants broke into the home of a Renault executive in Córdoba and took him hostage. On 26 March 1976, two security guards of a Ford executive were killed by militants firing from a car. On 14 April, militants in Buenos Aires killed an executive of the US Chrysler Corporation. On 4 May, militants assassinated a Fiat executive in a suburb of Buenos Aires.[140]

The director of Renault Argentina was badly wounded by plastic explosives concealed in a box of flowers on 27 August. On 10 September a Chrysler executive was killed by militants while leaving his home in Buenos Aires. On 8 October, the Buenos Aires offices of Fiat, Mercedes Benz and Chevrolet were attacked by militants with bombs. On 10 October, Domingo Lozano, Argentine manager of the Renault plant in Córdoba, was shot and killed by Montoneros guerrillas after leaving a church service in Córdoba.[141] On 18 October 1976, five guerrillas killed Enrique Aroza Garay, an executive of the German-owned Borgward automobile factory. On 3 November, a Chrysler executive, Carlos Roberto Souto, was killed in Buenos Aires by Montoneros. Later the same month, the Montoneros kidnapped Franz Metz, the industrial director of Mercedez Benz in Argentina, but released him five weeks later when the German company agreed to pay a ransom, reportedly US$S 5 million. On 13 October 1977, a Montoneros car bomb detonated outside the home of a Chrysler executive. The businessman was not there, but his guard and a neighbor were killed. On 16 December, Montoneros killed Andre Gasparoux, a top French executive of the Peugeot Motor Company.[142]

Military's rise to power

A total of 137 members of the armed forces and police were killed by left-wing guerrillas in 1975.[99] US journalist Paul Hoeffel, in an article written for The Boston Globe, concluded that, "Although there is widespread reluctance to use the term, it is now impossible to ignore the fact that civil war has broken out in Argentina."[143] During the month of August 1975, the Argentine city of Córdoba witnessed a number of armed actions on the part of the left-wing guerrillas that resulted in the death of at least five policemen and units of the elite 4th Airborne Infantry Brigade were obliged to be called in to stand guard at strategic points around the city after the bombing of police headquarters and the police radio communications centre.[144] Conservatives, including some among the wealthy elite, encouraged the army, which prepared to take control by making lists of people who should be "dealt with" after the planned coup.

In 1975, President Isabel Perón, under pressure from the military establishment, appointed Jorge Rafael Videla commander-in-chief of the Argentine Army. "As many people as necessary must die in Argentina so that the country will again be secure", Videla declared in 1975 in support of the death squads. He was one of the military heads of the coup d'état that overthrew Isabel Perón on 24 March 1976. In her place, a military junta was installed, which was headed by Admiral Emilio Eduardo Massera, who stepped out in September 1978, General Orlando Agosti and Videla himself. On 13 January 1976, left-wing guerrillas set fire to a Buenos Aires commuter train after forcing passengers to descend at gunpoint.[145] On 2 February 1976 about fifty Montoneros attacked the Juan Vucetich Police Academy in Buenos Aires in an attempt to capture the helicopter-gunships there,[146] but were repelled in heavy fighting. In the week preceding the military coup, the Montoneros killed 13 policemen as part of its Third National Military Campaign.[147] On 15 March, a powerful guerrilla bomb exploded next to the Argentine Army Headquarters, smashing windows in the nearby Casa Rosada and wounding 15 military personnel and 6 civilians as well as killing a civilian passerby.[148] During 1976, Videla himself narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in which a time bomb planted in the reviewing stand at the vast Campo de Mayo barracks blew out a meter-wide hole at the exact spot where he had been standing.[149]

The junta, which dubbed itself "National Reorganization Process", systematized the repression, in particular through the way of "forced disappearances" (desaparecidos), which made it very difficult, as in Augusto Pinochet's Chile, to file legal suits, as the bodies were never found. The Generals organized a nationwide system, from national to local scale, to track down so-called "subversives". Argentine newspaper La Opinión founded by Jacobo Timerman, who would himself disappear (although intervention by high-profile human rights advocates resulted in his eventual reappearance), wrote on 31 December 1976 that the Argentine "guerrillas" had suffered losses of 4000, and that the Montoneros had lost 80% of their leaders. The Buenos Aires Herald estimated the victims in 1976 to be 1,100 dead. A clandestine newspaper added that "there is one dead each five hours, and one bomb each three hours." According to Argentine journalist Stella Calloni, author of the classic Los años del lobo, all of these numbers may be correct.[150] In all, 293 servicemen and policemen were killed in left wing guerrilla attacks between 1975 and 1976.[99]

This generalization of state terror tactics has been explained in part by the information received by the Argentine militaries in the infamous School of Americas and also by French instructors from the secret services, who taught them "counter-insurgency" tactics first experimented during the Algerian War (1954–62).[95][151] In 1976 there was a successful series of Montoneros bomb attacks in which the general commanding the Federal Police, Cesáreo Cardozo was killed. Lieutenant-General Jorge Videla narrowly escaped three Montoneros assassination attempts between February 1976 and April 1977. On 14 December 1975, the Montoneros conducted an assassination attempt against Navy Commandant Admiral Emilio Massera. In an underwater mining attack on the Itati yacht of the Argentine Navy, the luxury craft was badly damaged by the explosives but Massera escaped unscathed. As pressure mounted on the Montoneros, the urban guerrillas struck back. On 29 April 1976, the guerrillas planted explosives on six Mirage IIIEA interceptors from Grupo 8 but this attack was foiled by alert sentries. On 2 July 1976 a Claymore shrapnel mine exploded at the headquarters of the Federal Police in west Buenos Aires during a secret meeting of the police leadership, killing 21, and injuring 60 others.[152] On 12 September 1976, a car bomb destroyed a bus filled with police officers in Rosario, killing 9 policemen and 2 civilians[153] and injuring at least 50.[154]

On 29 September 1976 fierce fighting took place in the Floresta suburb of Buenos Aires, where one-hundred soldiers and policemen were forced to use bazookas and armored cars against heavily armed guerrillas.[155] On 2 October, Lieutenant-General Jorge Videla narrowly escaped death when a bomb packed in metal tubing supporting a reviewing stand at the Campo de Mayo army barracks exploded only moments after he left.[156] On 17 October a bomb blast in an Army Club Cinema in downtown Buenos Aires killed 11 and wounded about 50 officers and their families. On 15 December, another bomb planted in a Defense Ministry movie hall killed at least 14 and injured 30[152] officers and their families. By the first anniversary of the coup that ousted President Isabel Perón, 124 soldiers and police had been killed in incidents involving left wing guerrillas[157] in what the military referred to as, "the Dirty War".

In 1976 there had been plans to send great part of the Uruguayan MLN Tupamaros, the Chilean Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR) and the Bolivian Revolutionary Army (ELN) to fight alongside the ERP and Montoneros in Argentina, but the plans failed to materialize due to the military coup.[158] Furthermore, by 1976 Operation Condor, which had already centralized information from South American intelligence agencies for years, was at its height. Chilean exiles in Argentina were threatened again, and had to go into hiding or seek refuge in a third country. Chilean General Carlos Prats had already been assassinated by the Chilean DINA in Buenos Aires in 1974, with the help of former DINA agents Michael Townley and Enrique Arancibia. Cuban diplomats were also assassinated in Buenos Aires in the infamous Automotores Orletti torture center, one of the 300 clandestine prisons of the dictatorship, managed by the Grupo de Tareas 18, headed by Aníbal Gordon, previously convicted for armed robbery, and answered directly to the General Commandant of the SIDE, Otto Paladino. Automotores Orletti was the main base of foreign intelligence services involved in Operation Condor. One of the survivors, José Luis Bertazzo, who was detained for two months there, identified Chileans, Uruguayans, Paraguayans and Bolivians among the prisoners. These captives were interrogated by agents from their own countries.[150]

According to John Dinges's Los años del Cóndor, Chilean MIR prisoners in Orletti center told José Luis Bertazzo that they had seen two Cuban diplomats, 22-year-old Jesús Cejas Arias and 26-year-old Crescencio Galañega, tortured by Gordon's group and interrogated by a man who came one day from Miami to interrogate them. The two Cuban diplomats, charged with the protection of the Cuban ambassador to Argentina, Emilio Aragonés, had been kidnapped on 9 August 1976, in the intersection between Calle Arribeños and Virrey del Pino, by 40 armed SIDE agents who blocked off all sides of the street with their Ford Falcons, the cars used by the security forces during the dictatorship.[159] According to John Dinges, the FBI as well as the CIA were informed of their abduction. In his book, Dinges published a cable sent by Robert Scherrer, an FBI agent in Buenos Aires on 22 September 1976, where he mentions in passing that Michael Townley, later convicted of the assassination on 21 September 1976 of former Chilean minister Orlando Letelier in Washington, D.C., had also taken part to the interrogation of the two Cubans. Former head of the DINA confirmed to Argentine federal judge María Servini de Cubría on 22 December 1999, in Santiago de Chile, the presence of Townley and Cuban Guillermo Novo Sampoll in the Orletti center. The two men traveled from Chile to Argentina on 11 August 1976, and "cooperated in the torture and assassination of the two Cuban diplomats". Luis Posada Carriles boasted in his autobiography, Los caminos del guerrero, of the murder of the two young men.[150] According to the "terror archives" discovered in Paraguay in 1992, 50,000 persons were murdered in the frame of Condor, 9,000–30,000 disappeared (desaparecidos) and 400,000 incarcerated.[160][161]

False flag actions by SIDE agents

During a 1981 interview whose contents were revealed by documents declassified by the CIA in 2000, former DINA agent Michael Townley explained that Ignacio Novo Sampol, member of CORU anti-Castro organization, had agreed to commit the Cuban Nationalist Movement in the kidnapping, in Buenos Aires, of a president of a Dutch bank. The abduction, organized by civilian SIDE agents, the Argentine intelligence agency, was to obtain a ransom. Townley said that Novo Sampol had provided $6,000 from the Cuban Nationalist Movement, forwarded to the civilian SIDE agents to pay for the preparation expenses of the kidnapping. After returning to the US, Novo Sampol sent Townley a stock of paper, used to print pamphlets in the name of "Grupo Rojo" (Red Group), an imaginary Argentine Marxist terrorist organization, which was to claim credit for the abduction of the Dutch banker. Townley declared that the pamphlets were distributed in Mendoza and Córdoba in relation with false flag bombings perpetrated by SIDE agents, which had as aim to accredit the existence of the fake Grupo Rojo. However, the SIDE agents procrastinated too much, and the kidnapping finally was not carried out.[162]

Human rights violations from 1976 to 1983

A former illegal detention center in the headquarters of the provincial police of Santa Fe, in Rosario, now a memorial

On 5 January 1979, The New York Times published an article by David Vidal, who claimed that the number of disappeared in Latin America now numbered 30,000.[163] The Christian Science Monitor and The Boston Globe followed suit with similar articles claiming that 30,000 people had disappeared under military dictatorships in Latin America.[164][165] The Los Angeles Times repeated the claims of 30,000 Latin Americans disappeared in a new article in October[166] and November[167] of that year. In May 1980, the Montreal Gazette, in an interview with the sister of the slain guerrilla commander Ernesto (Che) Guevara, Cecilia Guevara, said that in Argentina alone more 30,000 people had disappeared and another 15,000 had been imprisoned.[168]

On 10 December 1983, Raúl Alfonsín assumed the presidency in Argentina, and on 17 December he announced that he was setting up a commission to investigate the disappearances of what he believed to be more than 6,000 Argentines in nearly eight years of military rule.[169] The National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP) researched and recorded, case by case, the "disappearance" of about 7,158 persons,[35] though Argentine human rights group maintain that 30,000 disappeared. However, official records put the number of disappeared at 13,000.[38] An estimated 15,000 people "disappeared" in Argentina, according to a Human Rights Watch report in 2002.[170] Human rights groups such as Amnesty International were gravely concerned by the state's use of 'disappearances' and periodical use of extrajudicial killings against what were supposed 'subversives'. In the last months of the military junta under Lieutenant-General Reynaldo Bignone, Amnesty International estimated the total number of disappeared in Argentina to be 15,000.[171]

Anyone believed to be associated with activist groups, including trade-union members, students (including young students, for example in September 1976 during the Night of the Pencils, an operation directed by Ramón Camps, General and head of the Buenos Aires Provincial Police from April 1976 to December 1977[81]), people who had uncovered evidence of government corruption, and people thought to hold left-wing views (for example French nuns Léonie Duquet and Alice Domon, kidnapped by Alfredo Astiz). Ramón Camps told Clarín in 1984 that he had used torture as a method of interrogation and orchestrated 5,000 forced disappearances, and justified the appropriation of newborns from their imprisoned mothers "because subversive parents will raise subversive children".[172] But, there are people such as Professor Paul H. Lewis, who has written Guerrillas and Generals: The Dirty War in Argentina, that claim the guerrilla threat was real and that the guerrillas had countless sympathizers among the civilian population. Terence Roehrig, who has written The prosecution of former military leaders in newly democratic nations. The cases of Argentina, Greece, and South Korea (McFarland & Company, 2001), estimates that of the disappeared "at least 10,000 were involved in various ways with the guerrillas". Many of the "disappeared" were pushed out of planes and into the Río de la Plata or the Atlantic Ocean to drown. This form of disappearance, theorized by Luis María Mendía, former chief of naval operations in 1976–77 who is today before the court for his role in the ESMA case, was termed vuelos de la muerte (death flights).[173][174][175] These individuals who suddenly vanished are called los desaparecidos, meaning "the missing ones" or "vanished ones". This term often refers to the 7,158[35]–30,000 Argentines that went missing. Tomás Di Toffino, Deputy Secretary General of Luz y Fuerza de Córdoba, was kidnapped on 28 November 1976 and executed in a military camp in Córdoba on 28 February 1977, in a "military ceremony" presided by General Luciano Benjamín Menéndez.[95]

In December 1976, 22 captured Montoneros responsible for the death of General Cáceres Monié and the attack on the Argentine Army 29th Mountain Infantry Regiment[176] were tortured and executed during the Massacre of Margarita Belén, in the military Chaco Province, for which Videla would be found guilty of homicide during the 1985 Trial of the Juntas, as well as Cristino Nicolaides, junta leader Leopoldo Galtieri and Santa Fe Provincial Police chief Wenceslao Ceniquel. The same year, fifty anonymous persons were illegally executed by a firing-squad in Córdoba.[177] Victims' relatives uncovered evidence that some children taken from their mothers soon after birth were being raised as the adopted children of military men, as in the case of Silvia Quintela, a member of the Montoneros guerrillas movement.[178] For three decades, the Mothers and Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, a group founded in 1977, has demanded the return of these kidnapped children, estimated to number as many as five hundred. 77 of the kidnapped children have been located so far.[179]

On 28 January 1977, Montoneros planted a bomb in a suburban police station, killing three policemen and wounding at least 10 others.[180] On 18 February, left-wing guerrillas bombed a crowded bus in Buenos Aires and several civilians suffered severe burns in the attack.[181] On 26 March, left-wing guerrillas bombed the ground floor of the Sheraton hotel in Buenos Aires, wounding a Spanish tourist and six hotel employees.[182] On 5 April, the Montoneros detonated a powerful bomb inside the building housing the Argentine Air Force Headquarters located in Buenos Aires.[183] On 11 April, Montoneros guerrillas shot and killed Luis Liberato Arce of the Surrey company, an air conditioner maker.[184] On 7 May, the Montoneros mortally wounded Vice-Admiral César Augusto Guzzetti of the Argentine Navy. On 30 July 6 left-wing guerrillas were killed in a shootout with security forces in the La Plata suburb of Buenos Aires, and a kidnapped executive, Roberto Leon Lanzilliota was freed.[185] In 1977, 36 policeman in Buenos Aires alone were assassinated or killed in action with left-wing militants and guerrillas.[186]

In September 1977, General Albano Harguindeguy, minister of the interior, admitted that in May of that year 5,618 disappeared in the form of PEN detenidos-desaparecidos were being held in detention camps throughout Argentina.[187] The Montoneros tried to disrupt the World Cup Soccer Tournament being hosted in Argentina in 1978 by launching a number of bomb attacks.[188] In a declassified memorandum from the US State Department dated May 1978, it is asserted that "...if there has been a net reduction in reports of torture, this is not because torture has been forsworn but 'derives from fewer operations' because the number of terrorists and subversives has diminished," and presents that case that disappearances "include not only suspected terrorists but also encompass a broader range of people, for example, labor leaders, workers, clergymen, human rights advocates, scientists, doctors, and political party leaders."[189] The report describes the torture methods used to intimidate and extract information, including electric shocks, prolonged immersion in water, cigarette burns, sexual abuse, rape, the removal of teeth and fingernails, burning with boiling water, oil and acid, and castration.[190]

In late September 1979, Major-General Luciano Benjamín Menéndez tried to stage a military takeover from Córdoba, calling for Lieutenant-General Roberto Eduardo Viola's resignation, charging the army chief had not "kept the promise to completely eradicate subversion, making it impossible for Marxism to make a comeback in the country in the future".[191] Viola, a moderate who favored a return to democracy, was forced to send in 4,000 paratroopers to put down the rebellion. In late 1979, the Montoneros launched a "strategic counteroffensive" in Argentina, and lost more than one hundred commandos killed.[192] Among their targets was Francisco Soldatti, a top banking figure killed along with his driver at a busy downtown intersection in Buenos Aires on the morning of 6 November 1979.[193] The exiled Montoneros had been sent back to Argentina after receiving special forces training in guerrilla training camps in the Middle East.[194] The Montoneros leadership had wrongly believed the moment was ripe for revolution in Argentina. More than 600 Argentines, the majority of them civilians, had disappeared in 1978, and as the decade came to an end there were "only" 36 reported incidents of disappearances since January 1979. [195]

In 1980, Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, a Catholic human rights activist who had organized the Servicio de Paz y Justicia (Peace and Justice Service) and suffered torture while held without trial for 14 months in a Buenos Aires concentration camp, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts in the defense of human rights in Argentina. On 17 September 1980, an ERP platoon[196] killed Anastasio Somoza Debayle, the former president of Nicaragua, in a carefully planned ambush that also killed his driver and his financial advisor. Unable to operate in Argentina any longer, some Argentine guerrillas relocated to Central America. During the 1980s, a captured Sandinista guerrilla revealed that Montoneros "Special Forces" were training Sandinista frogmen and conducting gun runs across the Gulf of Fonseca to the Sandinista allies in El Salvador, FMLN guerrillas.[197] In 1981, Videla retired and General Roberto Eduardo Viola replaced him, but nine months later, Viola stepped down, allegedly for health reasons, and General Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri took the post.

Democracy returned with Raúl Alfonsín, who created the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP) on 15 December 1983. Under Alfonsín, Congress would then pass the Ley de Punto Final and Ley de Obediencia Debida as amnesty laws, overturned in June 2005 by the Supreme Court. According to Argentine war correspondent Nicolas Kasanzew, a pro-Montoneros group of Buenos Aires national servicemen saw action in the Falklands War with the 7th Infantry Regiment unbeknown to their superiors. Upon returning to Argentina, these soldiers formed a vocal veterans group that repeatedly accused their officers of cowardice and maltreatment. They were largely ignored by the Alfonsin and Menem governments. But their attempts to arrest and put on trial their former commanders gained momentum under the presidency of the Kirchners. The case ran its course but their case was declared null and void in May 2011[198] when it was discovered that Pablo Andres Vassel, a former Corrientes human rights' lawyer representing their case, was paying for false testimonies[199] against Argentine Army officers and NCO's.

The Disappeared held under PEN

Collections of photos from families whose children and grandchildren had disappeared

By the time of the coup on 24 March 1976, the number of disappeared held under Poder Ejecutivo Nacional (PEN) stood at least 5,182.[200] Some 18,000 disappeared in the form of PEN detainees were imprisoned in Argentina by the end of 1977 and it is estimated that some 3,000 deaths occurred in the Navy Engineering School (ESMA) alone.[201] These disappeared were held incommunicado and reportedly tortured. Some, like senator Hipolito Solari Yrigoyen and socialist leader professor Alfredo Bravo, were "detenidos-desaparecidos".[202] Alicia Partnoy, a poet and member of the Peronist Youth that had links with the Montoneros,[203] also counts as one of the victims who had disappeared but later "reappeared."[204] On 10 November 1977, Colonel Ricardo Flouret and captain Eduardo Andujar, representing the interior ministry, explained to Amnesty International that many of the disappeared were guerrillas who had gone underground or fled the country.[205]

By refusing to acknowledge the existence of what was later established to be at least 340 concentration camps throughout the country they also denied the existence of their occupants, some 30,000 Argentines are estimated to have passed through the camps. The total number of people who were detained for long periods was 8,625.[206] Among them was future President Carlos Menem, who between 1976 and 1981 had been a political prisoner.[207]

US President Jimmy Carter offered to accept 3,000 PEN detainees, as long as they had no guerrilla background.[208] Some 8,600 PEN disappeared were eventually released under international pressure. Of these 4,029 were held in illegal detention centers for less than a year, 2,296 for one to three years, 1,172 for three to five years, 668 for five to seven years, and 431 for seven to nine years. Of these detenidos-desaparecidos 157 were murdered after being released from detention.[209] In one frank memo, written in 1977, an official at the Foreign Ministry issued the following warning:

Our situation presents certain aspects which are without doubt difficult to defend if they are analyzed from the point of view of international law. These are: the delays incurred before foreign consuls can visit detainees of foreign nationality, (contravening article 34 of the Convention of Vienna.) the fact that those detained under Executive Power (PEN) are denied the right to legal advice or defense, the complete lack of information of persons detained under PEN, the fact that PEN detainees are not processed for long periods of time, the fact that there are no charges against detainees. The kidnapping and disappearance of people.[210]

Children of the Disappeared

At the time when the CONADEP report was prepared, the Asociación Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo or Abuelas), had records of 172 children who disappeared together with their parents or were born at the numerous concentration camps and had not been returned to their families.[211] The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo now believe up to 500 grandchildren were stolen. 102 are believed to have been located. [212] On 13 April 2000, the grandmothers received a tip off that the birth certificate of Rosa Roisinblit's infant grandson, born in detention, had been falsified and the child given to an Air Force civil agent and his wife. Following the anonymous phone call, he was located and agreed to a DNA blood test, confirming his true identity. Rodolfo Fernando, grandson of Roisinblit, is the first known newborn of missing children returned to his family through the work of the grandmothers.[213] Roisinblit's daughter, 25-year-old Patricia Julia Roisinblit de Perez, who was active in the Montoneros,[214] was kidnapped along with her husband, 24-year-old José Martínas Pérez Rojo, on 6 October 1978.[215]

The case of Maria Eugenia Sampallo (born some time in 1978) also received considerable attention. Sampallo sued the couple who adopted her illegally as a baby after her parents disappeared, both Montoneros.[216] Her grandmother spent 24 years looking for her. The case was filed in 2001, after DNA tests indicated that Osvaldo Rivas and Maria Cristina Gomez were not her biological parents. They, along with Army Captain Enrique Berthier, who furnished the couple with the baby, were sentenced respectively to 8, 7 and 10 years in prison for kidnapping.[217][218]

Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo

Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo - Argentine mothers whose children were "disappeared" during the Dirty War

The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo is the best-known Argentine human rights organization. For over thirty years, the Mothers have campaigned to find out about the fate of their lost relatives. The Mothers first held their vigil at Plaza de Mayo in 1977, where they continue to gather there every Thursday afternoon. An article of the Madres of the Plaza de Mayo monthly publication caused quite a stir in the mid-1980s, when the Human Rights Group Familiares were quoted as saying: "Familiares assumes the causes of their children's fight as their own, vindicates all the disappeared as fighters of the people, ... [and when occurs] the defeat of imperialism and the sovereignty of the people, we will have achieved our objectives".[219]

In 1986 the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo split into two groups: Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo – Linea Fundadora (Founding Line), remains focused in recovering the remains of the missing and bringing former police and military commanders to justice. The Asociacion de Madres de Plaza de Mayo (The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo Association) on the other hand, is opposed to the search for and identification of the missing and have also rejected monetary compensation.[220][221] In April 2004, the former head of the Mothers of Plaza, Hebe de Bonafini declared her admiration for her missing children Jorge Omar and Raúl Alfredo for taking up arms as left-wing guerrillas.[222] In September 2011, the original Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo organization became embroiled in a major corruption scandal over alleged money laundering and fraud with government housing funds granted.[223] On 26 January 2012, former Argentine President Eduardo Duhalde criticized Hebe de Bonafini for openly supporting the Basque separatist group ETA and the Colombian left-wing FARC guerrilla movement.[224]

Falklands War

Anti-Communism

In 1980, the Argentine military helped Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie, Stefano Delle Chiaie and major drug lords mount the bloody Cocaine Coup of Luis García Meza Tejada in neighboring Bolivia. They hired 70 foreign agents for this task,[225] which was managed in particular by the 601st Intelligence Battalion headed by General Guillermo Suárez Mason. After having been trained by the French military, the Argentine Armed Forces would train their counterparts, in Nicaragua, but also El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, in the frame of Operation Charly. From 1977 to 1984, after the Falklands War, the Argentine Armed Forces exported counter-insurgency tactics, including the systemic use of torture, death squads and disappearances. Special force units, such as Batallón de Inteligencia 601, headed in 1979 by Colonel Jorge Alberto Muzzio, trained the Nicaraguan Contras in the 1980s, in particular in Lepaterique base.

Following the release of classified documents and an interview with Duane Clarridge, former CIA responsible for operations with the Contras, the Clarín showed that with the election of President Jimmy Carter in 1977, the CIA was blocked from engaging in the special warfare it had previously been engaged in. In conformity with the National Security Doctrine, the Argentine military supported US goals in Latin America, while they pressured the US to be more active in counter-revolutionary activities. In 1981 following the election of Ronald Reagan the CIA took over training of the Contras from Batallón 601.[226] Many Chilean and Uruguayan exiles in Argentina were murdered by Argentine security forces (including high-profile figures such as General Carlos Prats in Buenos Aires in 1974, Héctor Gutiérrez Ruiz and Zelmar Michelini in Buenos Aires in 1976). Others, such as Wilson Ferreira Aldunate escaped death. Central Intelligence Agency documents released in 2002 show that Argentina's brutal policies were known and tolerated by the United States State Department, led by Henry Kissinger under Gerald Ford's presidency and that the Argentine military believed that the US approved of the Dirty War.[227]

US involvement with the junta

Although at least six US citizens had been "disappeared" by the Argentine military by 1976 and the US embassy in Buenos Aires had been pushing Argentina's government to respect human rights, high-ranking state department officials including then Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had secretly given their approval to Argentina's new military rulers.[228] Although the importance of his role was not known about until The Nation published in October 1987 an exposé written by Martin Edwin Andersen, a Washington Post and Newsweek special correspondent, Kissinger had secretly given the junta dirty "warriors" a "green light" for their state terrorist policies.[229]

In Buenos Aires, Robert C. Hill, a five-time conservative Republican ambassadorial appointee, worked hard behind the scenes to keep the Argentina military junta that took power from engaging in massive human rights violations. Upon finding out that Kissinger had given the Argentine generals a "green light" for the so-called "dirty war" in June 1976 while at an Organization of American States meeting in Santiago (at the Hotel Carrera, later made famous as the Hotel Cabrera in the film Missing), Hill quietly scrambled to try to roll back the Kissinger decision. Hill did this although Kissinger aides told him that if he continued, Kissinger would likely have him fired and even as left-wing Argentine guerrillas attempted to assassinate both the U.S. envoy and family members in Buenos Aires. During that meeting with Argentinian foreign minister César Augusto Guzzetti, Kissinger assured him that the United States was an ally, but urged him to "get back to normal procedures" quickly before the U.S. Congress reconvened and had a chance to consider sanctions.

The Nation of October 1987 noted: "'Hill was shaken, he became very disturbed, by the case of the son of a thirty-year embassy employee, a student who was arrested, never to be seen again,' recalled former New York Times reporter Juan de Onis. 'Hill took a personal interest.' He went to the Interior Minister, an army general with whom he had worked on drug cases, saying, 'Hey, what about this? We're interested in this case.' He buttonholed (Foreign Minister Cesar) Guzzetti and, finally, President Jorge R. Videla himself. 'All he got was stonewalling; he got nowhere.' de Onis said. 'His last year was marked by increasing disillusionment and dismay, and he backed his staff on human rights right to the hilt." "It sickened me," said Patricia Derian, the Mississippi civil rights crusader who became President Jimmy Carter's State Department point person on human rights, after Hill reported to her Kissinger's real role, "that with an imperial wave of his hand, an American could sentence people to death on the basis of a cheap whim. As time went on I saw Kissinger's footprints in a lot of countries. It was the repression of a democratic ideal."[230][231][232][233][234]

In 1978, former Secretary Kissinger was feted by the "dirty war" generals as a much-touted guest of honor at the World Cup soccer matches held in Argentina. In a letter to The Nation editor Victor Navasky, protesting publication of the 1987 article, Kissinger claimed that: "At any rate, the notion of Hill as a passionate human rights advocate is news to all his former associates." Ironically, Kissinger's posthumous lampooning of Hill (who had died in 1978) as human rights advocate was later shown to be false by none other than once and future Kissinger aide Henry Shlaudeman, later ambassador to Buenos Aires, who told William E. Knight, an oral historian working for the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training (ADST) Foreign Affairs Oral History Project: "It really came to a head when I was Assistant Secretary, or it began to come to a head, in the case of Argentina where the dirty war was in full flower. Bob Hill, who was Ambassador then in Buenos Aires, a very conservative Republican politician -- by no means liberal or anything of the kind, began to report quite effectively about what was going on, this slaughter of innocent civilians, supposedly innocent civilians -- this vicious war that they were conducting, underground war.

"He, at one time in fact, sent me a back-channel telegram saying that the Foreign Minister, who had just come for a visit to Washington and had returned to Buenos Aires, had gloated to him that Kissinger had said nothing to him about human rights. I don't know -- I wasn't present at the interview."[235]

7 August 1979 US embassy in Argentina memorandum of the conversation with "Jorge Contreras", director of Task Force 7 of the "Reunion Central" section of the 601 Army Intelligence Unit, which gathered members from all parts of the Argentine Armed Forces. Subject: "Nuts and Bolts of the Government's Repression of Terrorism-Subversion." Original document on the National Security Archives' website.

State Department documents obtained in 2003 during the George W. Bush Administration by the National Security Archive under the Freedom of Information Act show that in October 1976, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and high-ranking US officials gave their full support to the Argentine military junta and urged them to hurry up and finish their actions before the US Congress cut military aid.[228] On 5 October 1976 Kissinger met with Argentina's Foreign Minister and stated:

Look, our basic attitude is that we would like you to succeed. I have an old-fashioned view that friends ought to be supported. What is not understood in the United States is that you have a civil war. We read about human rights problems but not the context. The quicker you succeed the better... The human rights problem is a growing one. Your Ambassador can apprise you. We want a stable situation. We won't cause you unnecessary difficulties. If you can finish before Congress gets back, the better. Whatever freedoms you could restore would help.[228]

The US was also a key provider of economic and military assistance to the Videla regime during the earliest and most intense phase of the repression. In early April 1976, the US Congress approved a request by the Ford Administration, written and supported by Henry Kissinger, to grant $50,000,000 in security assistance to the junta.[236] At the end of 1976, Congress granted an additional $30,000,000 in military aid, and recommendations by the Ford Administration to increase military aid to $63,500,000 the following year were also considered by congress.[237] US assistance, training and military sales to the Videla regime continued under the successive Carter Administration up until at least 30 September 1978 when military aid was officially called to a stop within section 502B of the Foreign Assistance Act.

In 1977 and 1978 the United States sold more than $120,000,000 in military spare parts to Argentina, and in 1977 the US Department of Defense was granted $700,000 to train 217 Argentine military officers.[238] By the time the International Military Education and Training (IMET) program was suspended to Argentina in 1978, total US training costs for Argentine military personnel since 1976 totalled $1,115,000. The Reagan Administration, whose first term began in 1981, however, asserted that the previous Carter Administration had weakened US diplomatic relationships with Cold War allies in Argentina, and reversed the previous administration's official condemnation of the junta's human rights practices. The re-establishment of diplomatic ties allowed for CIA collaboration with the Argentine intelligence service in training and arming the Nicaraguan Contras against the Sandinista government. The 601 Intelligence Battalion, for example, trained Contras at Lepaterique base, in Honduras.[239]

Cuban involvement with the guerrillas

During the height of Argentine left-wing terrorism, the Cubans used their embassy in Buenos Aires to maintain direct contact with Argentine guerrillas. In 1973, the Montoneros merged with the Cuban-backed FAR (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias or Armed Revolutionary Forces) that in 1972 had planted a bomb in the Sheraton hotel in Buenos Aires that killed a Canadian tourist.[240] On 13 February 1974, a clandestine meeting was held in Mendoza, Argentina, and the Junta de Coordinacion Revolucionaria (JCR or Junta of Revolutionary Coordination) was formed. The JCR consisted of four guerrilla groups: the Uruguayan Tupamaros (MLN-T), the Chilean Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR) and the Bolivian Revolutionary Army (ELN). The ERP guerrillas maintained a guerrilla warfare training school, an arms factory, and a false documentation center in Argentina. These were all closed down in 1975 by Argentine security forces. In 1976, ERP guerrillas started receiving training in Cuba on an 1800 hectare (7 square miles) estate near Guanabo as well as at another site in Pinar del Rio.[241] In July 2008, Fidel Castro admitted that he backed left-wing radicals and guerrilla forces in Argentina in order to start an armed revolution: "The only place where we didn't promote a revolution was in Mexico. In the rest (of Latin America) we tried, without exception." [242]

"French Connection"

Investigating French military influence in Argentina, in 2003 French journalist Marie-Monique Robin found the original document proving that a 1959 agreement between Paris and Buenos Aires initiated a "permanent French military mission" in Argentina, and reported on it. (She found the document in the archives of the Quai d'Orsay, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.) The mission was formed of veterans who had fought in the Algerian War, and it was assigned to the offices of the chief of staff of the Argentine Armed Forces. It was continued until 1981, date of the election of socialist François Mitterrand.[243]

After release of her documentary film, Escadrons de la mort, l’école française in 2003, which explored the French connection with South American nations, in August 2003 Robin said in an interview with L'Humanité newspaper: "French have systematized a military technique in urban environment which would be copied and pasted to Latin American dictatorships."[244] She noted that the French military had systematized the methods they used to suppress the insurgency during the 1957 Battle of Algiers and exported them to the War School in Buenos Aires.[243] Roger Trinquier's famous book on counter-insurgency had a very strong influence in South America. In addition, Robin said she was shocked to learn that the DST French intelligence agency gave DINA the names of refugees who returned to Chile (Operation Retorno) from France during their counterinsurgency. All of these Chileans have been killed. "Of course, this puts in cause [sic- this makes responsible] the French government, and Giscard d'Estaing, then President of the Republic. I was very shocked by the duplicity of the French diplomatic position which, on one hand, received with open arms the political refugees, and, on the other hand, collaborated with the dictatorships."[244]

In response, on 10 September 2003 Green members of parliament Noël Mamère, Martine Billard and Yves Cochet filed a request to form a Parliamentary Commission to examine the "role of France in the support of military regimes in Latin America from 1973 to 1984" before the Foreign Affairs Commission of the National Assembly, presided by Edouard Balladur (UMP). Apart from Le Monde, French newspapers did not report this request.[245] UMP deputy Roland Blum, in charge of the Commission, refused to let Marie-Monique Robin testify on this topic. The Commission in December 2003 published a 12-page report claiming that the French had never signed a military agreement with Argentina.[246][247]

When Minister of Foreign Affairs Dominique de Villepin travelled to Chile in February 2003, he claimed that no co-operation between France and the military regimes had occurred.[248] People in Argentina were outraged when they saw the 2003 film, which included three generals defending their actions during the Dirty War. Due to public pressure, "President Néstor Kirchner ordered the military to bring charges against the three for justifying the crimes of the dictatorship." They were Albano Hargindeguy, Reynaldo Bignone, and Ramón Genaro Díaz Bessone.[249]

The next year, Robin published her book under the same title: Escadrons de la mort : l’école française (Death Squads: The French School, 2004), revealing more material. She showed how Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's government secretly collaborated with Videla's junta in Argentina and with Augusto Pinochet's regime in Chile.[250][251] Alcides Lopez Aufranc was among the first Argentine officers to go in 1957 to Paris to study for two years at the Ecole de Guerre military school, two years before the Cuban Revolution and when no Argentine guerrillas existed.[243]

"In practice, declared Robin to Página/12, the arrival of the French in Argentina led to a massive extension of intelligence services and of the use of torture as the primary weapon of the anti-subversive war in the concept of modern warfare."[243]

The annihilation decrees signed by Isabel Perón had been inspired by French texts. During the Battle of Algiers, the police forces were put under the authority of the Army. 30,000 persons were "disappeared: in Algeria. Reynaldo Bignone, named President of the Argentine junta in July 1982, said in Robin's film: "The March 1976 order of battle is a copy of the Algerian battle."[243] The same statements were made by Generals Albano Harguindeguy, Videla's Interior Minister, and Diaz Bessone, former Minister of Planification and ideologue of the junta.[252] The French military would transmit to their Argentine counterparts the notion of an "internal enemy" and the use of torture, death squads, and "quadrillages" (grids).

Marie-Monique Robin also demonstrated that since the 1930s, there had been ties between the French far right and Argentina, in particular through the Catholic fundamentalist organisation Cité catholique, created by Jean Ousset, a former secretary of Charles Maurras, the founder of the royalist Action Française movement. La Cité edited a review, Le Verbe, which influenced militaries during the Algerian War, notably by justifying the use of torture. At the end of the 1950s, the Cité catholique founded groups in Argentina and organised cells in the Army. It greatly expanded during the government of General Juan Carlos Onganía, in particular in 1969.[243] The key figure of the Cité catholique in Argentina was priest Georges Grasset, who became Videla's personal confessor. He had been the spiritual guide of the Organisation armée secrète (OAS), the pro-French Algeria terrorist movement founded in Franquist Spain.

Robin believes that this Catholic fundamentalist current in the Argentine Army contributed to the importance and length of the French-Argentine co-operation. In Buenos Aires, Georges Grasset maintained links with Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, founder of Society of St. Pius X in 1970, who was excommunicated in 1988. The Society of Pius-X has four monasteries in Argentina, the largest one in La Reja. A French priest from there said to Marie-Monique Robin: "To save the soul of a Communist priest, one must kill him." Luis Roldan, former Under Secretary of Cult under Carlos Menem, President of Argentina from 1989 to 1999, was presented by Dominique Lagneau, the priest in charge of the monastery, to Robin as "Mr. Cité catholique in Argentina". Bruno Genta and Juan Carlos Goyeneche represent this ideology.[243]

Antonio Caggiano, archbishop of Buenos Aires from 1959 to 1975, wrote a prologue to Jean Ousset's 1961 Spanish version of Le Marxisme-léninisme. Caggiano said that "Marxism is the negation of Christ and his Church" and referred to a Marxist conspiracy to take over the world, for which it was necessary to "prepare for the decisive battle".[253] Together with President Arturo Frondizi (Radical Civic Union, UCR), Caggiano inaugurated the first course on counter-revolutionary warfare in the Higher Military College. (Frondizi was eventually overthrown for being "tolerant of Communism").

By 1963, cadets at the Navy Mechanics School started receiving counter-insurgency classes. They were shown the film The Battle of Algiers, which showed the methods used by the French Army in Algeria. Caggiano, the military chaplain at the time, introduced the film and added a religiously oriented commentary to it. On 2 July 1966, four days after President Arturo Umberto Illia was removed from office and replaced by the dictator Juan Carlos Onganía, Caggiano declared: "We are at a sort of dawn, in which, thanks to God, we all sense that the country is again headed for greatness."

Argentine Admiral Luis María Mendía, who had started the practice of "death flights", testified in January 2007 before Argentine judges, that a French intelligence agent, Bertrand de Perseval, had participated in the abduction of the two French nuns, Léonie Duquet and Alice Domont. Perseval, who lives today in Thailand, denied any links with the abduction. He has admitted being a former member of the OAS, and having escaped from Argentina after the March 1962 Évian Accords put an end to the Algerian War (1954–62).

During the 2007 hearings, Luis María Mendía referred to material presented in Robin's documentary, titled The Death Squads – the French School (2003). He asked the Argentine Court to call numerous French officials to testify to their actions: former French president, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, former French premier Pierre Messmer, former French embassador to Buenos Aires Françoise de la Gosse, and all officials in place in the French embassy in Buenos Aires between 1976 and 1983.[254] Besides this "French connection", María Mendía also charged former head of state Isabel Perón and former ministers Carlos Ruckauf and Antonio Cafiero, who had signed the "anti-subversion decrees" before Videla's 1976 coup d'état. According to Graciela Dalo, a survivor of the ESMA interrogations, Mendía was trying to establish that these crimes were legitimate, as the 1987 Obediencia Debida Act claimed them to be, and further, that the ESMA actions had been committed under Isabel Perón's "anti-subversion decrees" (which would give them a formal appearance of legality, although torture is forbidden by the Argentine Constitution).[255] Alfredo Astiz also referred to the "French connexion" when testifying in court.[256]

PLO Connection

The first meeting with the Montoneros and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) representatives took place in 1971, when Montoneros comandante Rodolfo Galimberti entered into agreement with Saad Chedid, president of the Center for Arabic Studies in Argentina, to obtain open support for the Palestinian cause within the Peronist movement. In August 1972, Galimberti made his first trip to Lebanon and received the backing from the exiled Juan Perón in Spain.

By late 1972, the first batch of Montoneros started receiving terrorist training in Lebanon. Upon completion of training, they served as political contacts in Europe before setting up administrative headquarters to handle logistics, falsify documents, and traffic arms. The PLO-Montoneros alliance was made public in 1977 when Montoneros commanders Mario Firmenich and Fernando Vaca Narvaja flew to Beirut to meet and be photographed with PLO leader Yasser Arafat. At that time, Arafat and the PLO were receiving much financial and political support from left-wing governments and political parties worldwide.[257]

When the PLO split and Al Fatah was formed, the new militant wing offered the Montoneros further training camps in Lebanon, military instructors, and heavy weaponry in return for the installation in Southern Lebanon of a plastic explosives factory that had been pioneered by an Argentine civilian supporter of the Montoneros with a PhD in chemical engineering.[258]

In January 1979, the Montoneros leadership publicly announced through its Evita Montonera magazine that it was ready to launch a counteroffensive in Argentina and topple the Military Junta, with the help of the various trade unions and affiliated workers. As a precursor to their final attacks, the Montoneros had targeted the World Cup Football Tournament being held in Argentina in 1978, launching a number of bomb attacks.

The Montoneros commanders had carefully studied the strategy that made possible the Sandinista victory in July 1979 in Nicaragua. Firmenich had even travelled to Managua to study in person the lessons of the Nicaraguan Revolution. As Firmenich declared on the eve of the Sandinista victory: "the solution to the crisis experienced in Argentina is to do what is being done in Nicaragua."[259] The comandante of the Montoneros commandos (Tropas Especiales de Infantería or TEI) selected to take part in the infiltration in the work factories, Raúl Yager, explained that the purpose of the infiltrations was to assist in promoting open street battles. The conditions were ripe for a revolution, he believed, because the trade union protests had already gained momentum.[260]

In late 1979, the Montoneros launched their "strategic counteroffensive" in Argentina, and the forewarned security forces killed more than one hundred of the exiled Montoneros, who had been sent back to Argentina with false passports after receiving special forces training in PLO camps in Lebanon.[261]

The Montoneros TEI teams that were successfully infiltrated destroyed with bombs the homes of Juan Alemann (Secretary of Housing) on 21 June and Guillermo Walter Klein (Vice Minister of the Economy), after killing the two policemen (Hugo Cardacci and Julio Morenoon) on sentry duty outside, trapping his daughter Marina in the debris on 27 September.[262] The Montoneros also targeted businessman Francisco Soldati and his chauffeur, both shot dead by Montoneros disguised as policemen in downtown Buenos Aires on 13 November.

According to France's intelligence service Deuxième Bureau, the explosives technology utilized in these attacks would allow the 1983 Beirut barracks bombings to take place that would result in the deaths of 299 US and French peacekeepers in Lebanon.[263]

Truth commission, decrees revoked

The junta relinquished power in 1983. After democratic elections, president elect Raúl Alfonsín created the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP) in December 1983, led by writer Ernesto Sábato, to collect evidence about the Dirty War crimes. The gruesome details, including documentation of the disappearance of nearly 9,000 people, shocked the world. Jorge Rafael Videla, head of the junta, was among the generals convicted of human rights crimes, including forced disappearances, torture, murders and kidnappings. President Alfonsín ordered that the nine members of the military junta be judicially charged, during the 1985 Trial of the Juntas, together with guerrilla leaders Mario Firmenich, Fernando Vaca Narvaja, Rodolfo Galimberti, Roberto Perdía, and Enrique Gorriarán Merlo. As of 2010, most of the military officials are in trial or jail. In 1985, Videla was sentenced to life imprisonment at the military prison of Magdalena. Several senior officers also received jail terms. In the Prologue to the Nunca Más report ("Never Again"), Ernesto Sábato wrote:

From the moment of their abduction, the victims lost all rights. Deprived of all communication with the outside world, held in unknown places, subjected to barbaric tortures, kept ignorant of their immediate or ultimate fate, they risked being either thrown into a river or the sea, weighted down with blocks of cement, or burned to ashes. They were not mere objects, however, and still possessed all the human attributes: they could feel pain, could remember a mother, child or spouse, could feel infinite shame at being raped in public...[177]

Reacting to the human rights trials, hardliners in the Argentine army staged a series of uprisings against the Alfonsín government. They barricaded themselves in several military barracks demanding an end of the trials. During Holy Week (Semana Santa) of April 1987, Lieutenant-Colonel Aldo Rico (commander of the 18th Infantry Regiment in Misiones province) and several junior army officers, barricaded themselves in the Campo de Mayo army barracks. The military rebels, who were called the carapintadas, called for an end to the trials and the resignation of army chief of staff General Héctor Ríos Ereñú. Rico believed that the Alfonsin government would be unwilling or unable to put down the uprising. He was correct, as the Second Army Corps commander's orders to surround the barracks were ignored by his subordinates. Alfonsin called on the people to come to the Plaza de Mayo to defend democracy, and hundreds of thousands responded.

After a helicopter visit by Alfonsin to Campo de Mayo, the rebels finally surrendered. There were denials of a deal but several generals were forced into early retirement and General Jose Dante Caridi was soon replaced Erenu as commander of the army. In January 1988, a second military rebellion took place when Rico refused to accept the detention orders issued by a military court for having led the previous uprising. This time he set up base in the 4th Infantry Regiment in Monte Caseros and repudiated Caridi's calls to hand himself in. Rico again demanded an end to the human rights trials saying the promises of Alfonsin to the rebels had not been fulfilled. Caridi ordered several army units to suppress the rebellion. Their advance to the Monte Caseros barracks was slowed down by the rains and the news that rebel soldiers had laid mines that had wounded three loyal officers. Nevertheless, Rico's forces were defeated after a three-hour battle. They surrendered on 17 January 1988 and 300 rebels were arrested, and sentenced to jail.

A third uprising took place in December 1988. This time the uprising was led by Lieutenant-Colonel Mohammed Alí Seineldín and was supported by 1,000 rebel troops. This uprising proved successful. Several of the demands of Seineldin and his followers were met. Caridi was forced into retirement and replaced by General Francisco Gassino, who had served in the Falklands/Malvinas War and was held in high esteem by the carapintadas. On 5 October 1989 as part of a sweeping reform, the newly elected president, Carlos Menem, pardoned those convicted in the human right trials and the rebel leaders imprisoned for taking part in the military uprisings. Menem also pardoned the leftist guerrilla commanders accused of terrorism.[264] In a televised address to the nation, President Menem said, "I have signed the decrees so we may begin to rebuild the country in peace, in liberty and in justice ... We come from long and cruel confrontations. There was a wound to heal."[265]

Commemoration in Argentina

Some viewed the pardons as a pragmatic decision of national reconciliation. Others condemned them as unconstitutional, noting that the constitutionally acknowledged right of the president to pardon does not extend to those who have not yet been convicted – which was the situation in the case of some military officials. Others consider that this presidential privilege is inappropriate for modern times, a relic of monarchic rule that should be abolished. Archbishop Desmond Tutu, winner of the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize and chairman of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission that advocated for forgiveness and reconciliation, said: "without forgiveness there is no future".[266] Lieutenant-General Félix Martín Bonnet, who was then commander of the Argentine Army, welcomed the pardons as an "inspiration of the armed forces, not only because those who had been their commanders were deprived of their freedom, but because many of their present members fought, and did so, in fulfillment of express orders."[267] In September 1999, in the aftermath of the bloodshed witnessed in the break-up from Indonesia, the East Timorese leader, Xanana Gusmao, also called for reconciliation. Not everyone agreed with his decision.[268]

Foreign governments whose citizens were victims of the Dirty War (which included citizens of Czechoslovakia,[269] Italy,[270] Sweden,[271] Finland,[272] Germany,[273] the United States,[274] the United Kingdom,[275] Paraguay,[276] Bolivia,[277] Spain,[278] Chile,[278] Uruguay,[278] Peru,[279] and several other nations) are pressing individual cases against the former military regime. France has sought the extradition of Captain Alfredo Astiz for the kidnapping and murder of its nationals, among them nuns Léonie Duquet and Alice Domon. Adolfo Scilingo, a former Argentine naval officer, was convicted in Spain, on 19 April 2005, to 640 years on charges of crimes against humanity. In 1998, Videla received a prison sentence for his role in the kidnapping of eleven children during the regime and for the forgery of the children's identity documents (the "stolen babies", kidnapped from the parents arrested, and raised by military families). Videla served much of his sentence under house arrest before being imprisoned in Marcos Paz prison late in 2010 after convictions on new human-rights charges; he died in that prison in May, 2013.

Pirámide de Mayo covered with photos of the desaparecidos by the Asociación Madres de Plaza de Mayo in 2004.

In 1986 and 1987, Congress passed the Pardon Laws, the Final Line and Due Obedience, which ended prosecutions of military and security officers for crimes committed during the military dictatorship. The Ley de Punto Final had been voted on 24 December 1986, under Alfonsín's presidency. It extinguished any charges for human rights violations for all acts preceding 12 December 1983.[280] The military had pressed for the legislation under threat of another coup. Under the presidency of Carlos Menem, the military, police and left-wing guerrilla commanders[281] accused of killings and torture during Argentina's "dirty war" of the 1970s could not be prosecuted for their crimes. These amnesty laws were long unpopular with surviving victims of the Dirty War and their families. In October 2002, DaimlerChrysler announced an external investigation into claims made by Amnesty International that 14 union activists had been handed over to Argentina's military during the Dirty War.[282]

Continuing controversies

On 23 January 1989, a heavily armed group of around 40 guerrillas, a faction of the Movimiento Todos por la Patria (MTP or All for the Fatherland Movement), attacked the La Tablada army barracks on the outskirts of Buenos Aires to "prevent" a military coup. The attack resulted in fierce fighting, with 28 of the guerrillas killed, five "disappeared" and 13 imprisoned. Eleven police and military died, and 53 were wounded in the fighting. President Raúl Alfonsín declared that the attack, with the goal of sparking a massive popular uprising, could have led to civil war.[283] The guerrillas claimed to have acted to prevent a military coup.[284] Among the dead at La Tablada was Jorge Baños, a human rights lawyer who had joined the guerrillas. The claim that the MTP attacked to prevent a military coup has been disproven.[285]

In 1992 and 1994, two bombs devastated the Argentine Jewish community in Buenos Aires. On 17 March 1992, 29 people were killed and 242 injured when a car bomb exploded at the Israeli Embassy in the capital. On 18 July 1994, a bomb exploded in front of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, killing 86 people and wounding several hundred. While the two cases, which are thought to be related, have been officially under investigation for over 17 years, little progress has been made.

Initial suspects in the attack included policemen and ex-carapintadas.[286] They were later acquitted in 2004. Federal judge Juan José Galeano, who was in charge of the case, was impeached and removed from his post for having paid $400,000 to a suspect, Carlos Telleldín, to falsely accuse police officers of being involved in the plot.[287]

Michael Soltys wrote an editorial suggesting that President Cristina Kirchner was reluctant to define the AMIA terrorist attack as a crime against humanity since the charge could be used against former Montoneros members serving in her administration who may have been linked to earlier armed attacks characterized as terrorism.[288] In 2009, George Karim Chaya, a journalist and political analyst, told relatives of victims of left-wing guerrilla attacks that both attacks were conducted by Hezbollah and Montoneros terrorists,[289][290] but this has not been proven. In March 2017, Argentine politician Claudia Rucci repeated the claims and made available a photo showing Montoneros field commander Roberto Perdía celebrating Al Quds Day with Sheik Abdul Karim Paz of the Hezbollah, strict follower of the teachings of the Ayatollah Khomeini.[291] The Simon Wiesenthal Center, angered by the event, called for the immediate dismissal of the Cristina Fernández de Kirchner government official who was present: "The presence of an undersecretary of state at this hate fest could be construed as an official endorsement of its position by the Argentine authorities. The government must promptly disassociate itself from this Al Quds Day event by publicly condemning it."[292]

In 2002, Máxima, daughter of Jorge Zorreguieta, a civilian cabinet minister of Argentina during the early phase of the Dirty War, married Willem-Alexander, crown prince of the Netherlands. All Holland had wrestled in controversy over her suitability; ultimately the marriage took place without the presence of her parents. Máxima thus became Queen when her husband ascended to the throne in 2013.

In 2013, former Montoneros field commander Luis Labraña claimed he "invented" the number of 30,000 in order to obtain funds from the international community for the Mothers of The Plaza de Mayo.[293] In August 2016, Argentine president Mauricio Macri was widely condemned by human rights group for calling into question the number of 30,000 disappeared and for referring to the period as a "Dirty War".[294]

During the Argentine Bicentennial Independence Celebrations (on 9 July 2016), former Colonel Carlos Carrizo Salvadores drew criticism from the left for leading the march of Malvinas War veterans and Veterans of Operation Independence, the counterinsurgency campaign in Northern Argentina. Carrizo Salvadores had been sentenced to life imprisonment in 2013 for his part as a paratrooper captain in the so-called Rosario Chapel Massacre in Catamarca Pronvince but was acquitted under the new government of Mauricio Macri.[295]

Repeal of Pardon Laws and renewal of prosecutions

Under Néstor Kirchner's term as president, in 2003 the Argentine Congress revoked the longstanding amnesty laws, also called the "Pardon Laws." In 2005 the Argentine Supreme Court ruled these laws were unconstitutional.[296] The government re-opened prosecution of war crimes. From then through October 2011, 259 persons were convicted for crimes against humanity and sentenced in Argentine courts, including Alfredo Astiz, a notorious torturer, that month.

In 2006, 24 March was designated as a public holiday in Argentina, the Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice. That year, on the 30th anniversary of the coup, a huge crowd filled the streets to remember what happened during the military government, and ensure it did not happen again.

In 2006, the government began its first trials of military and security officers since the repeal of the "Pardon Laws." Miguel Etchecolatz, the police commissioner of the province of Buenos Aires in the 1970s, faced trial on charges of illegal detention, torture and homicide. He was found guilty of six counts of murder, six counts of unlawful imprisonment, and seven counts of torture, and sentenced in September 2006 to life imprisonment.[297]

In February 2006, some former Ford Argentine workers sued the US-based company, alleging that local managers worked with the security forces to detain union members on the premises and torture them. The civil suit against Ford Motor Company and Ford Argentina called for four former company executives and a retired military officer to be questioned.[298] According to Pedro Norberto Troiani, one of the plaintiffs, 25 employees were detained in the plant, located 40 miles (60 km) from Buenos Aires. Allegations have surfaced since 1998 that Ford officials were involved in state repression, but the company has denied the claims. Army personnel were reported to have arrived at the plant on the day of the military coup, 24 March 1976, and "disappearances" immediately started.[298]

Since her rise to office in 2007, President Cristina Kirchner has continued prosecution of military and security officers responsible for the "disappearances." The effort to prosecute junior officers has divided Argentine politicians.

On the other hand, Nora Ginzburg, a federal legislator, suggests that leftist guerrillas should also be prosecuted. Based on 677 affidavits concerning civilians and servicemen killed in leftist guerrilla attacks, Ginzburg wrote in the Nueva Provincia newspaper, "The subversive terrorists committed their killings in a systematic manner. They possessed a military structure, specific units, and had their flag and logo."[299]

On 14 December 2007, some 200 ex-soldiers who fought against the rural guerrillas in Tucumán province demanded an audience with the governor of Tucumán Province, José Jorge Alperovich, claiming they too were victims of the "Dirty War." They demanded a government-sponsored military pension as veterans of the counter-insurgency campaign in northern Argentina.[300]

In February 2010, a German court issued an international arrest warrant for former dictator Jorge Videla in connection with the death of 20-year-old Rolf Stawowiok in Argentina. He was a German citizen born in Argentina while his father was doing development work there. Rolf Stawowiok disappeared on 21 February 1978, after leaving the Argentine factory where he was working as a chemist. His father, Desiderius Stawowiok, said that Rolf was not active in the Argentine underground but was a sympathiser of the urban Montoneros guerrillas. They were largely destroyed under Videla.[301] In earlier cases, France, Italy, and Spain had requested extradition of the Navy captain Alfredo Astiz for war crimes related to his work with ESMA, but were never successful.[302]

Casualty estimates

The New York Times reporter David Vidal wrote on 5 January 1979 that the number of disappeared in Latin America as a whole now numbered 30,000.[303] The Christian Science Monitor and The Boston Globe soon followed suit with similar stories, claiming 30,000 people had disappeared under military dictatorships in Latin America and not only in Argentina.[304][305] The Los Angeles Times repeated the claims of 30,000 Latin Americans and not just Argentines, disappeared in a new article published in October 1979[306] and November[307] of that year. The Nunca Más report issued by the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP) in 1984, identified 8,961 persons "disappeared" between 1976 and 1983, in a case by case verification, and another list of 1,300 victims seen alive in clandestine detention centres. The report explains that they are "open lists", because "we know also that many disappearings had not been denounced".[308]

In 1977, General Albano Harguindeguy, Interior Minister, admitted that 5,618 people disappeared in the form of PEN detenidos-desaparecidos were being held in detention camps throughout Argentina.[309] According to a secret cable from DINA (Chilean secret police) in Buenos Aires, an estimate by the Argentine 601st Intelligence Battalion in mid-July 1978, which started counting victims in 1975, gave the figure of 22,000 persons – this document was first published by John Dinges in 2004.[310]

The total number of disappeared in the form of PEN prisoners was 8,625 and of these disappeared 157 were killed after being released from detention.[209] Human Rights Groups in Argentina often cite a figure of 30,000 disappeared, Amnesty International estimates 20,000 while other observers think 12,000 is a more accurate figure.[67] In 1988, the Asamblea por los Derechos Humanos (APDH or Assembly for Human Rights) published its findings on the disappearances and stated that 12,261 people were killed or disappeared during the Dirty War.[71] The Montoneros admitted losing 5,000 guerrillas killed,[24] and the ERP admitted 5,000 of their own guerrillas had been killed.[25] By comparison, Argentine security forces cite 523 deaths of their own between 1969 and 1975[311] and 205 deaths between 1976 and 1978.[99]

There is no agreement on the number of detenidos-desaparecidos. In a 2009 interview with the Buenos Aires daily newspaper Clarín, Graciela Fernández Meijide, who formed part of the 1984 truth commission, claimed that the documented number of Argentines killed or disappeared was closer to 9,000.[312] Between 1969 and 1979, left-wing guerrillas accounted for 3,249 kidnappings and murders and 5,215 bombings.[313] CONADEP also recorded 458 assassinations (attributed to the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance) and about 600 forced disappearances during the period of democratic rule between 1973 and 1976.[95][314]

In a final report televised on 28 April 1983 as the military prepared their departure, the ruling junta officially declared that the disappeared were all dead but said the military junta had saved the nation by their actions. Human Rights Group, such as the Argentinian League for Human Rights, condemned the junta's final report and claimed at the time, that between 6,000 and 15,000 people had disappeared in Argentina between 1975 and 1979.[315] Some 11,000 Argentines have applied for and received up to US$200,000 each as monetary compensation for the loss of loved ones during the military dictatorship.[39] In more recent times, journalist Alfonso Daniels put forward the claim in an article he wrote for the Daily Telegraph that over 30,000 Argentines disappeared.[316]

Participation of members of the Catholic Church on both sides

On 15 April 2005, a human rights lawyer filed a criminal complaint against Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio (now Pope Francis) accusing him of conspiring with the junta in 1976 to kidnap two Jesuit priests. So far, no hard evidence has been presented linking the cardinal to this crime. It is known that the cardinal headed the Society of Jesus of Argentina in 1976 and had asked the two priests to leave their pastoral work following conflict within the Society over how to respond to the new military dictatorship, with some priests advocating a violent overthrow. The cardinal's spokesman flatly denied the allegations.[317]

A priest, Christian von Wernich, was chaplain of the Buenos Aires Province Police while it was under the command of General Ramón Camps during the dictatorship, with the rank of inspector. On 9 October 2007 he was found guilty of complicity in 7 homicides, 42 kidnappings, and 32 instances of torture, and sentenced to life imprisonment.

Some Catholic priests sympathised with and helped the Montoneros. Radical priests, including Father Alberto Carbone, who was eventually indicted in the murder of Aramburu, preached Marxism and presented the early Church fathers as model revolutionaries in an attempt to legitimise the violence.[318] A Catholic youth leader, Juan Ignacio Isla Casares, with the help of the Montoneros commander Eduardo Pereira Rossi (nom de guerre "El Carlón") was the mastermind behind the ambush and killing of five policemen near San Isidro Cathedral on 26 October 1975.[319]

Mario Firmenich, who later became the leader of the Montoneros, was the ex-president of the Catholic Action Youth Group and a former seminarian himself.[320] The Montoneros had ties with the Third World Priest Movement and a Jesuit priest, Father Carlos Mugica, SJ.[321] The Third World Priest Movement believed that the Church could not remain neutral in the conflict between the Peronist and anti-Peronists and a number of priests participated in the armed struggle.[322]

Art, entertainment, and media

Books

Films

See also

References

  1. McSherry, J. Patrice (2011). "Chapter 5: "Industrial repression" and Operation Condor in Latin America". In Esparza, Marcia; Henry R. Huttenbach; Daniel Feierstein. State Violence and Genocide in Latin America: The Cold War Years (Critical Terrorism Studies). Routledge. p. 107. ISBN 0415664578.
  2. Greg Grandin (2011). The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War. University of Chicago Press. p. 75. ISBN 9780226306902
  3. Walter L. Hixson (2009). The Myth of American Diplomacy: National Identity and U.S. Foreign Policy. Yale University Press. p. 223. ISBN 0300151314
  4. Prizel, Ilya - Latin America through Soviet Eyes: The Evolution of Soviet Perceptions during the Brezhnev Era 1964-1982 Cambridge University Press. p. 173-176 (1990). ISBN 0521373034
  5. "Militares Muertos Durante la Guerra Sucia".
  6. Gambini, Hugo (2008). Historia del peronismo. La violencia (1956-1983). Buenos Aires: Javier Vergara Editor. pp. 198/208.
  7. Ben Norton (May 28, 2015). "Victims of Operation Condor, by Country".
  8. Belen Fernandez (August 30, 2014). "Reappearing the disappeared of Operation Condor". Al Jazeera.
  9. The justification for the Dirty War was the armed actions of the Montoneros and the ERP. From 1969 to 1979, there were 239 kidnappings and 1,020 murders by the guerrillas. During the same period, however, the military kidnapped 7,844 and murdered 7,850. The Psychology of Genocide and Violent Oppression: A Study of Mass Cruelty from Nazi Germany to Rwanda, Richard Morrock, William Marchak, p. 184, McFarland, 2010
  10. On July 1, 1974, the elderly President Perón died of heart failure and the fragile political settlement he had forged foundered. In the midst of rising political violence and economic inflation his widow Isabel assumed the presidency. Guerrilla warfare resumed against the army and police and, to a lesser degree, against union leaders and politicians. The ERP began a drive for control of Tucumán, and the Montoneros stormed an army garrison in Formosa. In 1974 the AAA murdered seventy intellectuals and lawyers, by 1975 it was assassinating fifty per week. Revolutionizing Motherhood: The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Marguerite Guzman Bouvard, p. 22, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2002
  11. The ERP continued to do battle with military forces and their emissaries even while Perón was in power, but during the second half of 1975 the ERP suffered numerous defeats during assaults on military arsenals. God's Assassins: State Terrorism in Argentina in the 1970s, Patricia Marchak, William Marchak, p. 120, McGill-Queen's Press, 1999,, 2002
  12. Right-wing violence was also on the rise, and an array of death squads was formed from armed sections of the large labor unions, parapolice organizations within the federal and provincial police; and the AAA (Alianza Anticomunista Argentina), founded by Perón's secretary of social welfare, López Rega, with the participation of the federal police. Revolutionizing Motherhood: The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Marguerite Guzman Bouvard, p. 22, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2002
  13. The ERP and Montoneros began to resemble regular armies, while the Argentine national army responded by mimicking not only the operational organization but also the culture of guerrilla warfare. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, p. 148, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011
  14. What is certain is that, in spite of a spate of spectacular bombings and killings in 1975, the Montoneros committed military and political suicide faster than virtually any other Latin American guerrilla group. They lost eighty percent of their fighters and much of their leadership in 1976. Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations, Iain Guest, p. 19, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990
  15. In Argentina urban guerrilla warfare began on a major scale in 1970 with operations by the People's Revolutionary Army (E.R.P.) and the Montoneros. States of Violence: Nature of Terrorism and Guerilla Warfare, Ashima Jahangir, p. 66, Dominant, 2000
  16. In 1976 military intervention quickly crushed the Montoneros, the ERP and all other groups that had hoped to make a revolution. Political Parties & Terror, Ami Pedahzur, Leonard Weinberg, p. 60, Routledge, 2013
  17. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, p. 145, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007
  18. Marguerite Guzmán Bouvard, Revolutionizing Motherhood: The Mothers of the Plaza De Mayo, p. 22, Rowman & Littlefield, 1994
  19. "Argentina's Guerrillas Still Intent On Socialism", Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 7 March 1976
  20. "Argentina's Dirty War - Alicia Patterson Foundation". aliciapatterson.org. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  21. The army estimated Montonero troops to be about 30,000 strong, with another 150,000 people active in the mass front organization and support networks at the beginning of 1975. Reframing the Transitional Justice Paradigm: Women's Affective Memories in Post-Dictatorial Argentina, Jill Stockwell, p. 18, Springer Science & Business Media, 29 Jan 2014
  22. In the outlying provinces the Montoneros and the ERP killed hundreds. With about 5,000 heavily armed fighters and around 60,000 sympathizers in the ERP, plus 25,000 armed Montoneros backed by up to 250,000 sympathizers, the revolutionaries were a serious threat. The ERP actually took over parts of Tucuman province, and in 1975 the army launched full-scale military operations against them. Despite their ideological differences, the ERP and Montoneros became allies. Modern Tyrants: The Power and Prevalence of Evil in Our Age, Daniel Chirot, p. 282, Princeton University Press, 1996
  23. "Orphaned in Argentina's dirty war, man is torn between two families", The Washington Post, 11 February 2010
  24. 1 2 3 "El ex líder de los Montoneros entona un «mea culpa» parcial de su pasado" Archived 6 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine., El Mundo, 4 May 1995
  25. 1 2 3 A 32 años de la caída en combate de Mario Roberto Santucho y la Dirección Histórica del PRT-ERP. Cedema.org.
  26. 1 2 ''Determinants Of Gross Human Rights Violations By State And State-Sponsored Actors In Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, And Argentina (1960–1990)', Wolfgang S. Heinz & Hugo Frühling, p. 626, Springer, 1999, Google Books
  27. 1 2 Robben, Antonius C. G. M. (September 2005). "Anthropology at War?: What Argentina's Dirty War Can Teach Us". Anthropology News. Retrieved 20 October 2013.(subscription required)
  28. "Although the Montoneros reported some 600 armed actions in 1977, their offensive capacity actually declined." Argentina, 1943-1987: The National Revolution and Resistance, Donald Clark Hodges, p. 217, University of New Mexico Press, 1988
  29. Alexander Mikaberidze (2013). Atrocities, Massacres, and War Crimes: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 28 & 29. ISBN 1598849255
  30. "In late 1979, Amnesty International accused the Videla government of continuing to hold 3,000 political prisoners and of being responsible for the disappearance of 15,000 to 20,000 citizens since the 1976 coup." Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America, Lars Schoultz, p. 348, Princeton University Press, 2014
  31. "In the same year, a study mission of the New York City Bar Association listed the total, at approximately 10,000." Human Rights and United States Policy Toward Latin America, Lars Schoultz, p. 348, Princeton University Press, 2014
  32. "Para un organismo oficial, los desaparecidos en la última dictadura fueron 6.348". lacapitalmdp.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  33. Goñi, Uki (9 August 2016). "Kissinger hindered US effort to end mass killings in Argentina, according to files". Retrieved 16 March 2017 via The Guardian.
  34. "Durante la vigencia del estado de sitio entre noviembre de 1974 y octubre de 1983, los organismos de derechos humanos denunciaron la existencia de 12 mil presos politicos legales en las distintas cárceles de 'maxima seguridad' a lo largo de todo el territorio de Argentina."Entre resistentes e “irrecuperables”: Memorias de ex presas y presos políticos (1974-1983), p. 13. Archived 24 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  35. 1 2 3 "Hablan de 30.000 desaparecidos y saben que es falso". lanacion.com.ar. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  36. 1 2 Obituary The Guardian, Thursday 2 April 2009
  37. Estimate of Deaths and Disappearances by 601st Intelligence Battalion (PDF). DINA Headquarters, Buenos Aires, Argentina. July 1978. pp. A8.
  38. 1 2 "Una duda histórica: no se sabe cuántos son los desaparecidos", Clarin, 10 June 2003
  39. 1 2 Wright, Thomas C. State terrorism in Latin America, p. 158, Rowman & Littlefield, 2007
  40. The Montoneros established fronts in universities and shantytowns and assassinated union leaders, while the ERP prepared for renewed guerrilla warfare. Revolutionizing Motherhood: The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, Marguerite Guzman Bouvard, p. 22, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2002
  41. 1 2 In February 1975, the foundation was laid for a systematic assault on the revolutionary left by a secret decree ordering the Army to annihilate the encampments of Marxist insurgents in Tucumán. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, p. 145, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011
  42. National Geographic, Volume 170, p. 247, National Geographic Society, 1986
  43. "Desaparecidos: Militares Muertos Durante la Guerra Sucia". desaparecidos.org. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  44. "Abuelas elogió la decisión de Obama de desclasificar archivos de la dictadura y deslizó algunas críticas - Política - INFOnews". 29 March 2016. Archived from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  45. ""No fue una guerra sucia ni limpia, fue terrorismo de Estado", 11 August 2016". minutouno.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  46. WebCite query result
  47. Salas, Ernesto, Uturuncos. El origen de la guerrilla peronista, Biblos, Buenos Aires, 2003, ISBN 950-786-386-9
  48. 1 2 Wright, Thomas C. Latin America in the era of the Cuban Revolution, p. 105, Praeger (2001)
  49. Amstutz, Mark R. The Healing of Nations: The Promise and Limits of Political Forgiveness, p. 250.
  50. Los 70, Violencia en la Argentina. p. 119. Ejército Argentino. (Círculo militar, 2001)
  51. "Profile of the Montoneros", 'El Historiador, Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  52. Nancy Scheper-Hughes (1987). Child Survival: Anthropological Perspectives on the Treatment and Maltreatment of Children. Springer. p. 228. ISBN 978-1-55608-028-9.
  53. "The assassination of members thus generated a very real panic among the remaining officers. A naval officer told of having his wife stand at their apartment window with a rifle to guard him each morning as he drove away. Others recounted their constant fear and insecurity, never knowing when they or a friend might be the object of an attack. If the guerrillas wanted to assure that the military took them seriously, they certainly succeeded." Military Rebellion in Argentina, Deborah Norden, p. 58, University of Nebraska Press, 1996
  54. Atkins, Stephen E. Encyclopedia of Modern Worldwide Extremists and Extremist Groups, p. 202, Greenwood Press (2004)
  55. "18 killed in Argentina after bombing", The Gazette (Montreal), 11 November 1976
  56. ''The Free-Lance Star'' (17 October 1972). Google News.com (17 October 1972).
  57. "Stealing funds – Isabel Peron cleared of charge". Daily News. 31 December 1975.
  58. "Admiral's child killed by bomb in Buenos Aires", St. Petersburg Times. 2 August 1976
  59. “Todos podíamos odiar, pero lo que queremos es sonreír cada día” Archived 24 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine., Tribuna de Salamanca (12 February 2010) http://web.archive.org/web/20110724113340/http://www.tribuna.net/noticia/49331/LOCAL/%E2%80%9Ctodos-pod%C3%ADamos-odiar-queremos-sonre%C3%ADr-d%C3%ADa%E2%80%9D.html
  60. "Top Guerrilla Is Extradited To Argentina", The New York Times. (31 October 1995).
  61. "Newly public U.S. documents detail struggle over Argentina’s ‘dirty war’". mcclatchydc.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  62. 1 2 "Newly declassified papers reveal U.S. tensions regarding Argentina’s ‘dirty war’". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  63. hg-JJ-egb, teleSUR /. "Jimmy Carter Offered Fawning Praise of Argentine Dirty War". telesurtv.net. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  64. "Durante la vigencia del estado de sitio entre noviembre de 1974 y octubre de 1983, los organismos de derechos humanos denunciaron la existencia de 12 mil presos politicos legales en las distintas cárceles de 'maxima seguridad' a lo largo de todo el territorio de Argentina." Entre resistentes e “irrecuperables”: Memorias de ex presas y presos políticos (1974-1983). Archived 24 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  65. Walter L. Hixson (2009). The Myth of American Diplomacy: National Identity and U.S. Foreign Policy Archived 24 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine.. Yale University Press. p. 223. ISBN 0300151314
  66. Guest, Iain. Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations, p. 498, University of Pennsylvania Press (1990)
  67. 1 2 3 The Politics of the Past in an Argentine Working-Class Neighbourhood, Lindsay DuBois, p. 246, University of Toronto Press (2005)
  68. Sonia Cardenas, Conflict and Compliance: State Responses to International Human Rights Pressure, p. 52, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007
  69. "Argentina", National Security Archive, George Washington University (in Spanish)
  70. "Argentina: In Search of the Disappeared", Time
  71. 1 2 Las Cifras de la Guerra Sucia : Investigacion a Cargo de Graciela Fernandez Meijide, Ricardo Snitcofsky, Elisa Somoilovich y Jorge Pusajo, p. 32, Asamblea Permanente por los Derechos Humanos (1988)
  72. <quote>While the initial report from the 1984 investigative commission cited a dirty war death toll of at least 9,000, officials subsequently updated the figure to 13,000, but most human rights groups in Argentina today say the actual number is closer to 30,000.</quote> "Argentines Argue Over How Many Were Killed by Junta", LAHT
  73. PBS News Hour, 16 October 1997, et al. "Argentina Death Toll", Twentieth Century Atlas
  74. Argentine Economy, Issue 33, p. 27, Consejo Técnico de Inversiones S.A., 1994.
  75. 1 2 Condenaron a Etchecolatz a reclusión perpetua, La Nación (19 September 2006)
  76. Anastasia, Mary. (3 January 2011) Argentina's Forgotten Terror Victims. Thousands suffered in the leftist rampage that precipitated the 1976 military coup. The Wall Street Journal.
  77. La Crisis Argentina, 1966–1976: Notas y Documentos Sobre una época de Violencia Política, Alejandro García, p. 32, EDITUM, 1994
  78. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, Preface xi, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007
  79. Alicia S. García, Doctrina de la Seguridad Nacional, vol. 1, pp. 85–97, Centro Editor de America Latina, 1991
  80. Argentina's "Dirty War": An Intellectual Biography, Donald Clark Hodges, p. 27, University of Texas Press, 1991
  81. 1 2 "Julio Strassera's prosecution" Archived 16 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine., 1985 Trial of the Juntas (Juicio a las Juntas Militares)
  82. "El Estado de necesidad"; Documents of the Trial of the Juntas at Desaparecidos.org.
  83. Amar al enemigo, Javier Vigo Leguizamón, p. 68, Ediciones Pasco, 2001
  84. "Firmenich alleged that some 5,000 Montoneros had fallen during the period of repression." Yearbook on International Communist Affairs Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, pg. 48, Stanford University., 1985
  85. "Firmenich dijo que no mató "a nadie inútilmente" LR21.com, 7 August 2001". Larepublica.com.uy. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  86. State Terrorism in Latin America: Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights, Thomas C. Wright, p. 158, Rowman & Littlefield, 2007
  87. Phayer, Michael. 2008, p. 173. Pius XII, The Holocaust, and the Cold War. Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-34930-9.
  88. Moreno, Hugo. Le désastre argentin. Péronisme, politique et violence sociale (1930–2001), Editions Syllepses, Paris p. 109 (2005) (in French)
  89. MacLachlan, Colin M. Argentina: What Went Wrong, p. 138. (Praeger Publishers)
  90. Lewis, Paul H. Guerrillas and generals: the "Dirty War" in Argentina, Praeger, p. 84
  91. Guerrillas & Generals. The Dirty War In Argentina, Paul H. Lewis, Page 84, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001
  92. Gabriela Nouzeilles & Graciela R. Montaldo (2002). The Argentina Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Duke University Press. p. 382. ISBN 978-0-8223-2914-5.
  93. Copamiento del Comando de Sanidad por el Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo. Cedema.org.
  94. 1 2 Servetto, Alicia. "El derrumbe temprano de la democracia en Córdoba: Obregón Cano y el golpe policial" (1973–1974) Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine., Estudios Sociales, n°17, Segundo Semestre 1999, revised paper of a 1997 Conference at the National University of La Pampa
  95. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Argenpress, 10 April 2006. Represión en Argentina y memoria larga Archived 4 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  96. VIOLENCIA POLÍTICA GOBIERNO DEL TENIENTE GENERAL ALEJANDRO AGUSTÍN LANUSSE
  97. Por amor al odio: La tragedia de la subversión en la Argentina, Carlos Manuel Acuña, p. 606, Ediciones del Pórtico, 2000.
  98. The problems of U.S. businesses operating abroad in terrorist environments, S. W. Purnell, Eleanor Sullivan Wainstein, p. 76, Rand 1981. Google Books.
  99. 1 2 3 4 Thomas C. Wright (2007). State Terrorism in Latin America: Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-7425-3721-7.
  100. Masters of war: Latin America and United States aggression from the Cuban revolution through the Clinton years, Clara Nieto, Page 234, Seven Stories Press, 2011
  101. Paul H. Lewis (2002). Guerrillas and Generals: The Dirty War in Argentina. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-275-97360-5.
  102. "Argentine Rebels Hold Garrison 7 Hours", Lewiston Morning Tribune (21 January 1974).
  103. Robert L. Scheina (2003). Latin America's Wars: The Age of the Professional Soldier, 1900–2001. Brassey's. p. 297. ISBN 978-1-57488-452-4.
  104. "Ataque a la Fabrica de Polvoras y Explosivos Villa Maria Cordoba" Archived 31 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine.. Periodismodeverdad.com.ar (18 August 2009).
  105. "Argentine police chief, wife slain in guerrilla bomb blast", The Morning Record (2 November 1974).
  106. 30.000 Desaparecidos, Guillermo Rojas, p. 244, Editorial Santiago Apóstol, 2003
  107. Cronica de La Subversion en La Argentina (Revised & Updated, 1983)
  108. Paul H. Lewis, Guerrillas & Generals: The "Dirty War" in Argentina, Praeger Paperback, 2001, p. 126.
  109. John Keegan, World Armies|page=22, Macmillan, 1983
  110. TUCUMAN 1975: Avión del Ejército Argentino es derribado con ametralladoras antiaéreas Archived 6 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.. Apropol.org.ar.
  111. [E]l comando general del Ejército procederá a ejecutar todas las operaciones militares que sean necesarias a efectos de neutralizar o aniquilar el accionar de los elementos subversivos que actúan en la provincia de Tucumán (in Spanish)
  112. Decree No. 261/75 Archived 15 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine.. NuncaMas.org, Decretos de aniquilamiento.
  113. Facts on File, p. 126 (1975)
  114. English, Adrian J. Armed Forces of Latin America: Their Histories, Development, Present Strength, and Military Potential, Jane's Information Group, 1984, p. 33
  115. "French doctrine and methods in Algeria influenced Argentina during its 'Dirty War'." Human Rights and Wrongs, Helen Fein, p. 76, Routledge, 2015
  116. "Police chief Ramón Camps ... wrote later that the battle against subversion had been a logical extension of French antiguerrilla efforts in Algeria and the U.S. campaign against communism in Vietnam." Argentina Awakes From Its Nightmare, Mother Jones Magazine, March 1985
  117. Martha Crenshaw (1995). Terrorism in Context. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-271-01015-1.
  118. "Argentina to answer rebels 'with the language of guns'", The Gazette (Montreal), 8 October 1975.
  119. "Argentine troops rout rebel raid", Sydney Morning Herald, 7 October 1975.
  120. The tit-for-tat killings fed into the violence-trauma-violence dynamic that became increasingly harder to stop as more deaths fell on both sides. Such tragic victims as Captain Viola's three-year-old daughter made growing numbers of officers emotionally ripe for a return to arms and convinced them that the guerrillas could only be stopped by out-terrorizing them. Political Violence and Trauma in Argentina, Antonius C. G. M. Robben, p. 148, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011
  121. ''Guerrillas & Generals: The "Dirty War" in Argentina'', ibid. Google.co.uk.
  122. Troops fight off guerrillas, The Rock Hill Herald, 22 December 1975
  123. Monte Chingolo: Voces de Resistencia Archived 30 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  124. "ARGENTINA: Hanging from the Cliff". Time, Monday, 5 January 1976
  125. "Police fight off guerrillas in Argentina; 56 killed", The Windsor Star (24 December 1975).
  126. "Argentine theatre hit by bomb" The Spokesman-Review 31 December 1975
  127. Decree No. 2770/75 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.. NuncaMas.org, Decretos de aniquilamiento.
  128. Decree No. 2771/75 Archived 9 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine.. NuncaMas.org, Decretos de aniquilamiento.
  129. Decree No. 2772/75 Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine.. NuncaMas.org, Decretos de aniquilamiento.
  130. The Argentina Reader: History, Culture, Politics, Gabriela Nouzeilles & Graciela R. Montaldo, p. 382, Duke University Press, 2002
  131. The problems of U.S. businesses operating abroad in terrorist environments, S. W. Purnell, Eleanor Sullivan Wainstein, p. 80, Rand 1981.
  132. "Terrorism" by Yonah Alexander, p. 224, Crane, Russak (1977)
  133. Guerrillas and Generals: the "Dirty War" in Argentina, ibid., p. 57
  134. The problems of U.S. businesses operating abroad in terrorist environments, S. W. Purnell, Eleanor Sullivan Wainstein, p. 75, Rand 1981. Google Books.
  135. "Terrorists Gun Down Ford Executive in Argentina" . The Palm Beach Post (22 November 1973). Google News.com (22 November 1973).
  136. Anderson, Lee. Schooling and citizenship in a global age: An exploration of the meaning and significance of global education, p. 209, Indiana University (1979)
  137. "Anti foreign violence hits Argentina". Bangor Daily News (26 June 1974).
  138. "The problems of U.S. businesses operating abroad in terrorist environments", S. W. Purnell & Eleanor Sullivan Wainstein, p. 77, Rand (1981). Google Books.
  139. "Linke Guerrilleros entführten den Mercedes-Direktor Metz – weil Mercedes Unimogs produziert". Der Spiegel.
  140. Rubin, Barry M. & Judith C. Chronologies of Modern Terrorism, p. 113, M.E. Sharpe (2007)
  141. "Political Terrorism, 1974–78", Volume 2, p. 110, Facts on File, inc. (1978)
  142. Facts on File, inc., ibid.
  143. "Argentine army resists takeover to trap would-be rebels", Paul Hoeffel, The Boston Globe, 18 January 1976
  144. "5 Policemen Dead In Argentina Violence". Times-Union (21 August 1975).
  145. Peronist Guerrillas Burn Train Near Buenos Aires, The New York Times, 14 January 1976
  146. "Guerrilla Raid Foiled". page 8, Spokane Daily Chronicle (2 February 1976).
  147. Lewis, Paul. (2002). Guerrillas and Generals: the Dirty War in Argentina, p. 125, Greenwood Publishing Group.
  148. "The Telegraph-Herald - Google News Archive Search". google.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  149. "A Monopoly of Force". Time. (18 October 1976).
  150. 1 2 3 Automotores Orletti el taller asesino del Cóndor Archived 16 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine., Juventud Rebelde, 3 January 2006 (mirrored on El Correo.eu.org (in Spanish) / (in French)
  151. Marie-Monique Robin, 2004. Escadrons de la mort, l'école française. La Découverte; ISBN 2-7071-4163-1 (Spanish translation, 2005: Los Escuadrones De La Muerte/The Death Squadron. Sudamericana; ISBN 950-07-2684-X
  152. 1 2 Stephen E. Atkins (2004). Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 202. ISBN 978-0-313-32485-7.
  153. 12 DE SEPTIEMBRE: "Día del Policía Santafesino Caído en Actos de Servicio" Archived 20 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.. Apropol.org.ar.
  154. http://web.archive.org/web/20080304073718/http://ar.geocities.com/ciudadanosalerta/terrorismo/12-09-1976.html UNA "TRAVESURA" DE LOS JOVENES IDEALISTAS (12 September 1976)
  155. "Troops Clash With Guerrillas". Sarasota Herald-Tribune (29 September 1976).
  156. Argentina's chief escapes blasts, Eugene Resister-Guard, 3 October 1976. Google News.
  157. "Hope from a Clockwork Coup". Time. 11 April 1977.
  158. Wolfgang S. Heinz & Hugo Frühling (1999). of Gross Human Rights Violations by State and State-sponsored Actors in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, and Argentina: 1960–1990. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. pp. 236–237. ISBN 978-90-411-1202-6.
  159. Suspected death squad cars found at Argentine base.. Reuters.
  160. Martín Almada, "Paraguay: The Forgotten Prison, the Exiled Country"
  161. Stella Calloni. Los Archivos del Horror del Operativo Cóndor available here (in Spanish)
  162. Visit by Guillermo Novo Sampol to Chile in 1976, 1 and 2, on the National Security Archive website
  163. [Relatives of Missing Latins Press Drive for Accounting; 30,000 Reported Missing. David Vidal, The New York, 5 January 1979.]
  164. "Latin America's 'Disappeared' victims", The Christian Science Monitor, 23 January 1979
  165. "Latin American bishops debating church's role", The Christian Science Monitor, 8 February 1979
  166. "A Voice of 'the Disappeared'", Los Angeles Times, 21 October 1979
  167. "Political Prisoners' Plight in Latin America Told", Los Angeles Times, 5 November 1979
  168. "The got to 'Che' so sister fights on to save kid brother", Christian Williams, Page 76. The Gazette (Montreal). 21 May 1980)
  169. [ARGENTINA SETS UP INQUIRY FOR 6,000 WHO DISAPPEARED, The New York Times, 17 December 1983]
  170. "Argentina: Arrest of Army Chief Hailed". Human Rights Watch. (12 July 2002).
  171. ARGENTINA STILL FACING ISOLATION OVER HUMAN-RIGHTS ABUSE. Miami Herald, 7 May 1983
  172. Terra Actualidad, 18 March 2006. Ramón Camps: el peor de todos Archived 8 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  173. Thomas C. Wright (2006). State Terrorism in Latin America: Chile, Argentina, and International Human Rights (Latin American Silhouettes). Rowman & Littlefield. p. 160. ISBN 0742537218
  174. Calvin Sims (March 13, 1995). Argentine Tells of Dumping 'Dirty War' Captives Into Sea. The New York Times. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  175. Ed Stocker (November 27, 2012). Victims of 'death flights': Drugged, dumped by aircraft – but not forgotten. The Independent. Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  176. Alaniz, Rogelio. "La masacre de Margarita Belén". El Litoral. 08/12/2010.
  177. 1 2 The Victims: Abducted, Tortured, Vanished (list of victims) (in English) / (in Spanish)
  178. Argentina begins tomorrow in landmark trial for stealing babies todonoticia.com. Todanoticia.com (27 February 2011).
  179. Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo Archived 7 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine.'s website (in English)
  180. "Bombing of Police Station in Argentina Kills 3", The New York Times, 29 January 1977
  181. "Crowded city bus bombed". Gadsden Times (19 February 1977).
  182. "Terrorists aim at tourists", Star-News, 28 March 1977.
  183. BOMB PLACED IN CONDOR BUILDING. Documentos desclasificados por el Departamento de Estado Norteamericano Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine.. Desclasificados.com.ar.
  184. Terrorists Kill Executive, Reading Eagle, 11 April 1977. Google News.com (11 April 1977).
  185. 6 Terrorists Slain, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 1 August 1977. Google News.
  186. "Buenos Aires police at war with leftists". Bangor Daily News (2 March 1978).
  187. Susan Eckstein & Manuel A. Garretón Merino (2001). Power and Popular Protest: Latin American Social Movements. University of California Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-520-22705-7.
  188. Paul H. Lewis (2005). Authoritarian regimes in Latin America: Dictators, Despots, and Tyrants. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-7425-3739-2.
  189. "STATE DEPARTMENT OPENS FILES ON ARGENTINA'S DIRTY WAR". National Security Archive. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  190. "Memorandum on Torture and Disappearance in Argentina, May 31, 1978" (PDF). Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  191. Argentine general surrenders after show of force. Lakeland Ledger. 1 October 1979. Google News.com (1 October 1979).
  192. Cecilia Menjívar & Néstor Rodriguez. "When States Kill: Latin America, the U.S., and Technologies of Terror". University of Texas Press, 2005. p. 317.
  193. Banker murdered by gang, The Spokesman-Review, 9 November 1979. Google News.
  194. "Lo que sabía el 601". Pagina12.com.ar.
  195. "ARGENTINA: In Search of the Disappeared". Time. (24 September 1979).
  196. "Foto: La muerte de Somoza". ultimahora.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  197. From Vietnam to El Salvador: The Saga of the FMLN Sappers and other Guerrilla Special Forces in Latin America, David E. Spencer, p. 134, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996
  198. "Prescribe la causa por maltratos en Malvinas" El Tribuno (16 May 2011)
  199. "Escándalo Malvinas: cómo se inventaron denuncias sobre torturas - Tribuna de Periodistas". periodicotribuna.com.ar. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  200. Iain Guest (1990). Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-8122-1313-3.
  201. Beckett, William & Pimlott, John. (1985). Armed Forces & Modern Counter-insurgency, p. 122, Technology & Engineering
  202. Susan Eckstein & Manuel Antonio Garretón Merino (2001). Power and Popular Protest: Latin American Social Movements. University of California Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-520-22705-7.
  203. [For God and Fatherland: Religion and Politics in Argentina, Michael A. Burdick, p.193, SUNY Press, 1995]
  204. Disappearing Acts: Spectacles of Gender and Nationalism in Argentina's "Dirty War", Di Taylor, p.85, Duke University Press, 1997
  205. Carlos H. Waisman & Raanan Rein (2006). Spanish and Latin American Transitions to Democracy. Sussex Academic Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-1-84519-136-8.
  206. Anthony W. Pereira (2005). Political Injustice: Authoritarianism and the Rule of Law in Brazil, Chile, and Argentina. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-8229-5885-7.
  207. Pablo De Greiff (2006). The Handbook of Reparations: The International Center for Transitional Justice. Oxford University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-19-929192-2.
  208. Iain Guest (1990). Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 498. ISBN 978-0-8122-1313-3.
  209. 1 2 Anthony W. Pereira (2005). Political Injustice: Authoritarianism and the Rule of Law in Brazil, Chile, and Argentina. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-8229-5885-7.
  210. Iain Guest (1990). Behind the Disappearances: Argentina's Dirty War Against Human Rights and the United Nations. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 100. ISBN 0-8122-1313-0.
  211. Human Rights from Exclusion to Inclusion: Principles and Practice, Theo Van Boven, p. 429, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2000. Google Books.com (3 September 1987).
  212. Argentina's Dirty War Still Haunts Youngest Victims. Heard on National Public Radio. NPR.org (27 February 2010).
  213. Sylvia Horwitz Photography. Desaparecidos: Mothers of the Disappeared. Sylviahorwitz.com.
  214. ''San Jose Mercury News''. ARGENTINES CONTINUE 22-YEAR QUEST FOR JUSTICE. Webcache.googleusercontent.com (29 November 1998).
  215. Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs.. Mfa.gov.il.
  216. C.V, DEMOS, Desarrollo de Medios, S. A. de. "La Jornada: Identifican al menor número 99 de los desaparecidos por la dictadura argentina". unam.mx. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  217. Dirty War adoption couple jailed. BBC News (4 April 2008).
  218. Tibio fallo por el robo de un bebé durante la dictadura argentina Archived copy at WebCite (15 June 2009).. Elperiodico.com.
  219. Norden, Deborah L. (1996). Military Rebellion in Argentina: Between Coups and Consolidation. University of Nebraska Press. p. 89. ISBN 0803283695. Retrieved Dec 2013. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  220. Women and war: a historical encyclopedia from antiquity to the present, Volume 1, by Bernard A. Cook, p. 25.
  221. Bonner, Michelle D. Sustaining human rights: women and Argentine human rights organizations, p. 89.
  222. Bonafini: el peso de lo irracional, Diario La Nación, 08/04/2004.
  223. "Mothers of Plaza de Mayo group queried for money laundering and fraud". South Atlantic News Agency. 13 September 2011.
  224. "Hebe de Bonafini perdió el rumbo por completo", Diario Hoy en la noticia, 26 January 2012.
  225. Hearing of Stefano Delle Chiaie on 22 July 1997 before the Italian Parliamentary Commission on Terrorism headed by senator Giovanni Pellegrino (in Italian)
  226. "Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura", Clarín, 24 March 2006 (in Spanish)
  227. Argentine Military Believed U.S. Gave Go-Ahead for Dirty War, National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 73 – Part II, CIA classified documents released in 2002.
  228. 1 2 3 Evans, Michael. "The Dirty War in Argentina". gwu.edu. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  229. Andersen, Martin Edwin. "Andersen: Will Obama declassify 'dirty war' docs?". cnn.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  230. Andersen, Martin Edwin (October 31, 1987). "Kissinger and the 'Dirty War,'". The Nation. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
  231. Osorio, Carlos; Costar, Kathleen, eds. (August 27, 2004). "Kissinger to the Argentine Generals in 1976: 'If There Are Things That Have To Be Done, You Should Do Them Quickly'". National Security Archive. Retrieved November 25, 2011.
  232. Campbell, Duncan (December 5, 2003). "Kissinger Approved Argentinian 'Dirty War'". The Guardian. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  233. Hitchens, Christopher (December 2004). "Kissinger Declassified". Vanity Fair. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
  234. Corn, David (January 14, 2014). "New Memo: Kissinger Gave the 'Green Light' for Argentina's Dirty War". Mother Jones. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
  235. Foreign Affairs Oral History Project, ed. (May 24, 1993). "Ambassador Harry W. Shlaudeman" (PDF). The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
  236. On 30th Anniversary of Argentine Coup: New Declassified Details on Repression and U.S. Support for Military Dictatorship. Gwu.edu. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  237. wilsoncenter.org on Google Cache. Google.
  238. Guest, 1990; pg. 166
  239. "Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura", Clarín, 24 March 2006 (in Spanish)
  240. ''Spokane Daily Chronicle'' 18 October 1972. Google News.com (18 October 1972).
  241. Latin American Terrorism: The Cuban Connection Archived 14 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  242. "Página/12". pagina12.com.ar. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  243. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Argentine – 'Escadrons de la mort, l’école française' ", interview with Marie-Monique Robin published by RISAL, 22 October 2004 available in French & Spanish (“Los métodos de Argel se aplicaron aquí”, Página/12, 13 October 2004
  244. 1 2 L’exportation de la torture Archived 5 July 2005 at the Wayback Machine., interview with Marie-Monique Robin in L'Humanité, 30 August 2003 (in French)
  245. MM. Giscard d'Estaing et Messmer pourraient être entendus sur l'aide aux dictatures sud-américaines, Le Monde, 25 September 2003 (in French)
  246. « Série B. Amérique 1952–1963. Sous-série : Argentine, n° 74. Cotes : 18.6.1. mars 52-août 63 ».
  247. Rapport Fait Au Nom de La Commission des Affaires Étrangères Sur La Proposition de Résolution (n° 1060), tendant à la création d'une commission d'enquête sur le rôle de la France dans le soutien aux régimes militaires d'Amérique latine entre 1973 et 1984, par M. Roland BLUM, French National Assembly (in French)
  248. Argentine : M. de Villepin défend les firmes françaises, Le Monde, 5 February 2003 (in French)
  249. J. Patrice McSherry, Review: Death Squadrons: The French School. Directed by Marie-Monique Robin., The Americas 61.3 (2005) 555-556, via Project MUSE, accessed 30 April 2016
  250. Marie-Monique Robin, Escadrons de la mort : l’école française, Paris: Éditions La Découverte, 2004. ISBN 2-7071-4163-1
  251. Conclusion of Marie-Monique Robin's Escadrons de la mort, l'école française (in French)
  252. "Torture : l’école française", Marie-Monique Robin, interview first published by Rouge, September 2005 (in French)
  253. Antonio Caggiano, Introduction to Jean Ousset, Le Marsisme-léninisme (1961 Spanish edition.
  254. "Disparitions : un ancien agent français mis en cause", Le Figaro, 6 February 2007 (in French)
  255. “Impartí órdenes que fueron cumplidas”, Página/12, 2 February 2007 (in Spanish)
  256. Astiz llevó sus chicanas a los tribunales, Página/12, 25 January 2007 (in Spanish)
  257. "By the end of 1972, the first group of Montoneros would be receiving terrorist training in Lebanon. At first they served as political contacts with a group of Palestinians in Europe. Later they signed an agreement to handle logistics, falsify documents, and traffic arms. The cooperation between the Montoneros and the PLO was made public in 1977 when Montonero comandantes Mario Firmenich and Fernando Vaca Narvaja flew to Beirut to meet and be photographed with Yasser Arafat. At that time, Arafat and the PLO were receiving financial and political support from far-left political parties worldwide." The War of All the People: The Nexus of Latin American Radicalism and Middle Eastern Terrorism, Jon B. Perdue, Potomac Books, Inc, 2012
  258. "When the PLO split and Fatah was formed, the new militant wing offered the Montoneros training camps in Lebanon, military instructors, and heavy weaponry in return for the installation in southern Lebanon of a plastic explosives laboratory that had been developed by a Montonero supporter with a PhD in chemical engineering." The War of All the People: The Nexus of Latin American Radicalism and Middle Eastern Terrorism, Jon B. Perdue, Potomac Books, Inc, 2012
  259. Argentina's "Dirty War": An Intellectual Biography, Donald C. Hodges, University of Texas Press, 2011
  260. "Thus Raúl Yager explained that the purpose of the armed counteroffensive was to assist in promoting a mass insurrection. The conditions were propitious for insurrection, he believed, because the trade union counteroffensive was under way." Argentina's "Dirty War": An Intellectual Biography, Donald C. Hodges, p. 206, University of Texas Press, 2011
  261. "Montoneros". elortiba.org. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  262. CELTYV. "CELTYV - Centro de Estudios Legales sobre el Terrorismo y sus Víctimas". victimasdeargentina.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  263. "And according to France's intelligence service Deuxième Bureau, the 1983 bombing in Beirut that killed 299 U.S. and French servicemen was carried out with the explosives technology developed by the Montoneros." The War of All the People: The Nexus of Latin American Radicalism and Middle Eastern Terrorism, Jon B. Perdue, Potomac Books, Inc, 2012
  264. "Twenty years on, amnesty end". International Justice Tribune. 27 June 2005.
  265. "Pardon of Argentine Officers Angers Critics of the Military". The New York Times. (9 October 1989).
  266. 'Nonviolence: The Way of the Cross, By Kayyalathu Kurian Kuriakose, p. 212, Xulon Press, 2004
  267. Determinants of gross human rights violations by state and state-sponsored actors in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, and Argentina, 1960–1990, Wolfgang S. Heinz & Hugo Frühling, Page 721, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1999
  268. Xanana Gusmao calls for reconciliation in East Timor, By Bronwyn Adcock, The World Today Archive – Wednesday, 22 September 1999. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.au (22 September 1999).
  269. "Desaparecidos". Google.
  270. "Desaparecidos". Desaparecidos.
  271. "Jorge Acosta and the murder of Dagmar Hagelin". Yendor.com.
  272. "Desaparacidos". Desaparecidos.org.
  273. Admservice. "Argentina rejects 'Dirty War' extradition requests". Latinamericanstudies.org.
  274. "Desaparecidos". Desaparecidos.
  275. "Desaparecidos". Google.
  276. "Desparacidos". Desaparecidos.org.
  277. "Desaparecidos". Desaparecidos.
  278. 1 2 3 "Desaparecidos". Desaparecidos.
  279. "Desaparecidos". Desaparecidos.
  280. BBC News, 15 June 2005. "Argentine amnesty laws scrapped"
  281. "Top Guerrilla Is Extradited To Argentina". By Calvin Sims. The New York Times, 31 October 1995
  282. "Argentina checks Ford's 'military ties'", BBC News, 6 November 2002
  283. The Politics of Human Rights in Argentina: Protest, Change, and Democratization, Alison Brysk, p. 119, Stanford University Press, 1994
  284. "La Tablada – the Guerrillas' Last Stand", The Argentine Times
  285. "Ataque a La Tablada: Gorriarán Merlo, el MTP y la agonía de la guerrilla". urgente24.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  286. "Galeano apunta ahora a los carapintadas". Lanacion.com.ar (16 April 1996).
  287. Alexei Barrionuevo, "Inquiry on 1994 Blast at Argentina Jewish Center Gets New Life", The New York Times, 18 July 2009, accessed 12 June 2013
  288. Michael Soltys, "Commentary", Buenos Aires Herald
  289. "Montoneros: Conexion local de los atentados a la Embajada de Israel y la AMIA", La historia paralela
  290. Presentacion De Nuevo Libro Sobre Montoneros – Celtyv Invitado A Disertar. Victimasdeargentina.org.
  291. "Más indicios de la conexión de Irán con Montoneros y Quebracho - Diario Hoy". diariohoy.net. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  292. "Argentina urged to remove anti-Israel official". timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  293. ex Montonero: “Lo de los 30 mil desaparecidos lo inventé yo”
  294. País, Ediciones El (11 August 2016). "Mauricio Macri reactiva la polémica por el número de desaparecidos en Argentina". elpais.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  295. "Identifican a uno de los genocidas que marchó el 9 de Julio en Tucumán". laizquierdadiario.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  296. "La Corte declaró la nulidad de los indultos de Menem". Infobae. 14 July 2007. Retrieved 11 February 2010.
  297. Klein, Naomi. The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, Macmillan, 2007 ISBN 978-0-8050-7983-8. pp. 100–102
  298. 1 2 "Ford sued over Argentine abuses", BBC News, 24 February 2006
  299. "Piden que el Estado indemnice a víctimas de las guerrillas" Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine., La Nueva Provincia, 9 March 2008 (in Spanish)
  300. "Ex soldados exigen una pensión" Archived 8 August 2007 at Archive.is, El Siglo, 15 December 2007
  301. "Arrest warrant for ex-dictator" , IOL: News for South Africa and the World, 25 January 2010
  302. Sam Ferguson, "Argentina's 'Blond angel of death' convicted for role in dirty war", The Christian Science Monitor, 27 October 2011, accessed 12 June 2013
  303. Vidal, David. "Relatives of Missing Latins Press Drive for Accounting; 30,000 Reported Missing". The New York Times, 5 January 1979.
  304. "Latin America's 'Disappeared' victims", The Christian Science Monitor, 23 January 1979.
  305. Latin American bishops debating church's role, The Christian Science Monitor, 8 February 1979.
  306. A Voice of 'the Disappeared', Los Angeles Times, 21 October 1979.
  307. "Political Prisoners' Plight in Latin America Told", Los Angeles Times, 5 November 1979.
  308. CONADEP, Informe Nunca Más, Capítulo II (Víctimas-Advertencia), EUDEBA: Buenos Aires, 1984.
  309. Power and Popular Protest: Latin American Social Movements, Susan Eckstein & Manuel A. Garretón Merino, p. 244. University of California Press, 2001. Google Books.
  310. "On 30th Anniversary of Argentine Coup: New Declassified Details on Repression and U.S. Support for Military Dictatorship". gwu.edu. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  311. Lewis, Paul H. ''Guerrillas and generals: the "Dirty War" in Argentina'', p. 53, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001. Google Books.
  312. "Argentines Argue Over How Many Were Killed by Junta". Laht.com.
  313. La Otra Parte de La Verdad: La Respuesta a Los Que Han Ocultado y Deformado La Verdad Historica Sobre La Decada del '70 y El Terrorismo, Nicolás Márquez, Page 83, 2004
  314. "L'ancienne présidente argentine Isabel Peron arrêtée à Madrid, à la demande de Buenos Aires", Le Monde, 13 January 2007 (in French)
  315. "Argentina junta says crackdown justified despite 'deadly errors'". The Deseret News. 29 April 1983.
  316. Daniels, Alfonso. (17 May 2008) "Argentina's dirty war: the museum of horrors". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  317. Press, From Associated (17 April 2005). "Argentine Cardinal Named in Kidnap Lawsuit". Retrieved 16 March 2017 via LA Times.
  318. MacLachlan, Colin M. Argentina: What Went Wrong (Praeger Publishers). p. 136
  319. Rojas, Guillermo. 30,000 desaparecidos. realidad, mito y dogma : historia verdadera y manipulación ideologica. p. 246 (Santiago Apóstol: 2003).
  320. Modern Tyrants: the power and prevalence of evil in our age, Daniel Chirot, p. 281. Google Books.com (15 April 1996).
  321. Encyclopedia of modern worldwide extremists and extremist groups, Stephen E. Atkins, p. 201
  322. Masters of War: Latin America and United States Aggression from the Cuban Revolution through the Clinton Years, Clara Nieto and Chris Brandt, p. 163, Seven Stories Press (2003)
  323. "libremedia.home". libremedia.com. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  324. The Disappeared – a film by Peter Sanders. Thedisappearedmovie.com. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  325. Video, ISBN 950-07-2684-X
  326. Nuestros Desaparecidos. Our Disappeared (21 September 2009). Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  327. Night of the Pencils (1986), Internet Movie Database
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dirty War in Argentina.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.