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National Reorganization Process

The National Reorganization Process (Spanish: Proceso de Reorganización Nacional, often simply el Proceso, "the Process") was the military dictatorship that ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983, in which it was supported by the United States until 1982. In Argentina it is often known simply as última junta militar ("last military junta"), última dictadura militar ("last military dictatorship") or última dictadura cívico-militar ("last civil–military dictatorship"), because there have been several in the country's history[2] and no others since it ended.

Argentine Republic
República Argentina
1976–1983
Anthem: Himno Nacional Argentino
Argentina shown in dark green
CapitalBuenos Aires
Common languagesSpanish
Religion
Roman Catholicism
GovernmentFederal republic under a military dictatorship
President of Argentina 
• 1976–81
Jorge Rafael Videla
• 1981
Roberto Eduardo Viola
• 1981–82
Leopoldo Galtieri
• 1982–83
Reynaldo Bignone
Historical eraCold War
24 March 1976
2 April – 14 June 1982
30 October 1983
Population
• 1975
25,865,776
• 1980
27,949,480
HDI (1980)0.665[1]
medium
CurrencyArgentine peso (1975–90)
ISO 3166 codeAR
The "first military junta" – Admiral Emilio Massera, Lieutenant General Jorge Videla and Brigadier General Orlando Agosti (from left to right) – observing the Independence Day military parade on Avenida del Libertador, 9 July 1978.

The Argentine Armed Forces seized political power during the March 1976 coup against the presidency of neutralist (non-Communist or non-Democratic) Isabel Perón, the successor and widow of former President Juan Perón, at a time of growing economic and political instability. Congress and democracy were suspended, political parties were banned, civil rights were limited, and free market and deregulation policies were introduced. The President of Argentina and his ministers were appointed from military personnel while Perónists and leftists were persecuted. The junta launched the Dirty War, a campaign of state terrorism against opponents involving torture, extrajudicial murder and systematic forced disappearances, with most victims being civilians. Public opposition due to civil rights abuses and inability to solve the worsening economic crisis in Argentina caused the junta to invade the Falkland Islands in April 1982. After starting and then losing the Falklands War against the United Kingdom in June, the junta began to collapse and finally relinquished power in 1983 with the election of President Raúl Alfonsín.

Members of the National Reorganization Process were prosecuted in the Trial of the Juntas in 1985, receiving sentences ranging from life imprisonment to court-martials for mishandling the Falklands War. They were pardoned by President Carlos Menem in 1989 but were re-arrested on new charges in the early 2000s. Almost all of the surviving junta members are currently serving sentences for crimes against humanity and genocide. Scholars generally characterize the regime as characteristic of neo-fascism.[3][4][5][6]

Background

 
Lieutenant General Jorge Rafael Videla swearing the Oath as he becomes the President of Argentina.

The military of Argentina has always been highly influential in Argentine politics, and Argentine history is laced with frequent and prolonged intervals of military rule. The popular Argentine leader, Juan Perón, three-time President of Argentina, was a colonel in the army who first came to political power in the aftermath of a 1943 military coup. He advocated a new policy dubbed Justicialism, a nationalist policy which he claimed was a "Third Position," an alternative to both capitalism and communism. After being re-elected to the office of president by popular vote, Perón was deposed and exiled by the Revolución Libertadora in 1955.

After a series of weak governments, and a seven-year military government, Perón returned to Argentina in 1973, following 18 years exile in Francoist Spain, amidst escalating political unrest, divisions in the Peronist movement, and frequent outbreaks of political violence. His return was marked by 20 June 1973 Ezeiza massacre, after which the right-wing of the Peronist movement became dominant.

Peron was democratically elected president in 1973, but died in July 1974. His vice president and third wife, Isabel Perón, succeeded him, but she proved to be a weak, ineffectual ruler. A number of revolutionary organizations – chief among them Montoneros, a group of far-left Peronists – escalated their wave of political violence (including kidnappings and bombings) against the campaign of harsh repressive and retaliatory measures enforced by the military and the police. In addition, right-wing paramilitary groups entered the cycle of violence, such as the Triple A death squad, founded by José López Rega, Perón's Minister of Social Welfare and a member of the P2 masonic lodge. The situation escalated until Mrs. Perón was overthrown. She was replaced on 24 March 1976 by a military junta led by Lieutenant General Jorge Rafael Videla.

Dirty War

Final report from the Military Government about forced disappearances. (In Spanish) Source: Channel 7. Argentine Public Television. (1983).

Official investigations undertaken after the end of the Dirty War by the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons documented 8,961[7] desaparecidos (victims of forced disappearance) and other human rights violations, noting that the correct number is bound to be higher. Many cases were never reported, when whole families disappeared, and the military destroyed many of its records months before the return of democracy.[7] Among the "disappeared" were pregnant women, who were kept alive until giving birth under often primitive circumstances in the secret prisons. The infants were generally illegally adopted by military or political families affiliated with the administration, and the mothers were generally killed. Thousands of detainees were drugged, loaded into aircraft, stripped naked and then thrown into the Rio de la Plata or the Atlantic Ocean to drown in what became known as "death flights."[8][9][10][11]

The film The Official Story (1984), which won the Oscar for the Best Foreign Language Film category in 1985, addresses this situation. The Argentine secret service SIDE (Secretaría de Inteligencia del Estado) also cooperated with the DINA in Pinochet's Chile and other South American intelligence agencies. Eight South American nations supported endeavours to eradicate left-leaning terrorist groups on the continent, known as Operation Condor, a United States-backed campaign of anti-democratic and political repression and state terror. It is estimated to have caused the deaths of more than 60,000 people. SIDE also trained – for example in the Honduran Lepaterique base – the Nicaraguan Contras who were fighting the Sandinista government there.

The regime shut down the legislature and restricted both freedom of the press and freedom of speech, adopting severe media censorship. The 1978 World Cup, which Argentina hosted and won, was used as a means of propaganda and to rally its people under a nationalist pretense.

Corruption, a failing economy, growing public awareness of the harsh repressive measures taken by the regime, and the military defeat in the Falklands War, eroded the public image of the regime. The last de facto president, Reynaldo Bignone, was forced to call for elections by the lack of support within the Army and the steadily growing pressure of public opinion. On 30 October 1983, elections were held, and democracy was formally restored on 10 December with President Raúl Alfonsín being sworn into office.

Economic policies

As Argentina's new de facto president, Videla faced a collapsing economy racked by soaring inflation. He largely left economic policies in the hands of Minister José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz, who adopted a free trade and deregulatory economic policy.[12]

Martínez de Hoz took measures to restore economic growth, reversing Peronism in favour of a free market economy. His economic measures were moderately successful.[13]

He enjoyed the personal friendship of David Rockefeller, who facilitated Chase Manhattan Bank and International Monetary Fund loans of nearly US$1 billion after of his arrival.[14]

He eliminated all price controls and the exchange controls regime. The black market and shortages disappeared.[15]

He freed exports (removed existing prohibitions and quotas and export taxes were repealed) and imports (removed existing prohibitions, quotas, and licenses and gradually reduced import tariffs).[16]

During his tenure, the foreign debt increased fourfold, and disparities between the upper and lower classes became much more pronounced.[17] The period ended in a tenfold devaluation and one of the worst financial crisis in Argentine history.[18]

Viola appointed Lorenzo Sigaut as Finance Minister, and it became clear that Sigaut were looking for ways to reverse some of the economic policies of Videla's minister José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz. Notably, Sigaut abandoned the sliding exchange rate mechanism and devalued the peso, after boasting that "they who gamble on the dollar, will lose". Argentines braced for a recession after the excesses of the sweet money years, which destabilized Viola's position.[19]

He appointed conservative economist and publisher Roberto Alemann as Economy Minister. Alemann inherited an economy in deep recession in the aftermath of José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz's economic policies of the late 1970s. Alemann slashed spending, began selling off government-owned industries (with only minor success), enacted a tight monetary policy, and ordered salaries frozen (amid 130% inflation).[20]

The Central Bank Circular 1050, which tied mortgage rates to the value of the US dollar locally, was maintained, however, leading to further deepening of the crisis; GDP fell by 5%, and business investment by 20% over the weakened levels of 1981.[21]

Bignone chose Domingo Cavallo to head the Argentine Central Bank. Cavallo inherited a foreign debt installment guarantee program that shielded billions of private debt from the collapse of the peso, costing the treasury billions. He instituted controls over the facility, such as the indexation of payments, but this move and the rescission of Circular 1050 threw the banking sector against him; Cavallo and Dagnino Pastore were replaced in August.[22]

The President of the Central Bank, Julio González del Solar, undid many of these controls, transferring billions more in private foreign debt to the Central Bank, though he stopped short of reinstating the hated "1050."[23]

Six years of intermittent wage freezes had left real wages close to 40% lower than during Perón's tenure, leading to growing labor unrest. Bignone's decision to restore limited rights of speech and right to assembly, including the right to strike, led to increased strike activity. Saúl Ubaldini, leader of the General Confederation of Labour, Argentina's largest labor union, was particularly active. The new Economy Minister, Jorge Wehbe, a banking executive with previous experience in the post, reluctantly granted two large, mandatory wage increases in late 1982.[23]

Foreign policy

U.S. support

 
Videla met with US President Jimmy Carter at the White House on 9 September 1977.

The United States provided military assistance to the junta and, at the start of the Dirty War, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger gave them a "green light" to engage in political repression of real or perceived opponents.[24][25][26]

The US Congress approved a request by the Ford Administration, to grant $50,000,000 in security assistance to the junta. In 1977 and 1978 the United States sold more than $120,000,000 in spare military parts to Argentina, and in 1977 the US Department of Defense granted $700,000 to train 217 Argentine military officers.[27]

In 1978, president Jimmy Carter secured a congressional cutoff of all US arms transfers for the human rights violations.[28]

 
Viola met with Ronald Reagan and Argentine Ambassador Jorge A. Aja Espil at the White House on March 17, 1981.

American-Argentine relations improved dramatically with Ronald Reagan, which 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.[29] However, relations soured after the U.S. supported the United Kingdom in the Falkland Wars.

The re-establishment of diplomatic ties allowed for CIA collaboration with the Argentine intelligence service in arming and training the Nicaraguan Contras against the Sandinista government. Argentina also provided security advisors, intelligence training and some material support to forces in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to suppress local rebel groups as part of a U.S.-sponsored program called Operation Charly.[30]

Military intervention in Central America

After attaining power in 1976, the National Reorganization Process formed close ties with the regime of Anastasio Somoza Debayle in Nicaragua among other right-wing dictatorships in Latin America. In 1977 at a meeting of the Conference of American Armies (CAA) held in the Nicaraguan capital city of Managua, junta members General Roberto Viola and Admiral Emilio Massera secretly pledged unconditional support of Somoza regime in its fight against left-wing subversion and agreed to send advisors and material support to Nicaragua to assist President Somoza's National Guard.[31][32]

Pursuant with these military agreements, Somoza's Guardsmen were sent to police and military academies in Argentina to undergo training and Argentina began to send arms and advisors to Nicaragua to bolster the National Guard, in addition to similar services being provided by the United States. According to an Argentine advisor with the Nicaraguan National Guard, the intelligence techniques used by the Somoza regime consisted of essentially the same "unconventional" methods which had been used in Argentina's Dirty War (torture, forced disappearance, extrajudicial killings).[33] Argentina's aid programs increased proportionate to the growth of the popular movement against the Somoza regime and the degree of isolation of the Somoza regime. Following the suspension of U.S. military aid and training in 1979, Argentina became one of the Somoza regime's principal sources of arms alongside Israel, Brazil and South Africa.[34][35]

In addition to providing arms and training to Somoza's National Guard, the Argentine junta also executed a number of Condor operations on Nicaraguan soil during the late-1970s, benefitting from close rapport between Argentine secret services and the Nicaraguan regime. The military in Argentina sent agents of the Batallón de Inteligencia 601 and the SIDE to Nicaragua in 1978 with the aim of apprehending and eliminating Argentine guerrillas fighting within the ranks of the Sandinistas. A special commando team from Argentina worked in conjunction with Somoza's OSN (Office of National Security) and its Argentine advisors with the objective of capturing exiled squadrons from the ERP and the Montoneros.[36]

Following the overthrow of Anastasio Somoza Debayle by the Sandinista Front, Argentina played a central role in the formation of the Contras. Shortly after the Sandinista victory in July 1979, agents from Argentine intelligence began to organize exiled members of Somoza's National Guard residing in Guatemala into an anti-Sandinista insurgency. Following the election of U.S. President Ronald Reagan, the Argentine government sought arrangements for the Argentine military to organize and train the contras in Honduras in collaboration with the Honduran government and the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.[37] Shortly thereafter, Argentina oversaw the relocation of Contra bases from Guatemala to Honduras.[38] There, some Argentine Special force units, such as Batallón de Inteligencia 601, began to train the Nicaraguan Contras, particularly at Lepaterique base alongside some members of the Honduran security forces.[39]

In August 1981, a CIA official met with Honduran military staff, Argentine military and intelligence advisors, and the Contra leadership and expressed his support for the contra operations. On November 1, 1981, the Director of the CIA William Casey met with the Chief of Staff of the Argentine military; the two purportedly agreed that Argentina would oversee the contras and the United States would provide money and weapons. In late-1981, President Reagan authorized the U.S. to support the contras by giving them money, arms, and equipment. This aid was transported and distributed to the Contras by way of Argentina. With new weapons and logistical support, the scale of Contra attacks increased and the ranks of the Contras swelled as recruitment became more feasible. By the end of 1982, the Contras were conducting attacks deeper inside Nicaragua than before.[40]

In the immediate aftermath of the Nicaraguan Revolution in 1979, the National Reorganization Process dispatched a large Argentine military mission to Honduras. At the time, General Gustavo Álvarez Martínez, a former student of Argentina's Colegio Militar de la Nación (class of 1961) and graduate of the School of the Americas, was commander of a branch of the Honduran security forces known as the Fuerza de Seguridad Publica (FUSEP). Álvarez Martínez was a proponent of the "Argentine Method," viewing it as an effective tool against subversion in the hemisphere, and sought increased Argentine military influence in Honduras.[41] Argentina's military program in Honduras expanded after 1981 when General Gustavo Álvarez Martínez, offered his country to the CIA and the Argentine military as a base for conducting operations opposing the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. By the end of 1981, 150 Argentine military advisors were active in Honduras training members of the Honduran security forces and providing training to the Nicaraguan Contras based in Honduras.[42] According to the NGO Equipo Nizkor, though the Argentine mission in Honduras was downgraded after the Falklands War, Argentine officers remained active in Honduras until 1984, some of them until 1986, well after the 1983 election of Raúl Alfonsín.[42]

Battalion 316's name indicated the unit's service to three military units and sixteen battalions of the Honduran army. This unit was charged with the task of carrying out political assassinations and torture of suspected political opponents of the government, effectively implementing the "Argentine Method" in Honduras. At least 184 suspected government opponents including teachers, politicians, and union bosses were assassinated by Battalion 316 during the 1980s.[43]

Argentina played a role in supporting the Salvadoran government during the El Salvador Civil War. As early as 1979, the National Reorganization Process supported the Salvadoran government militarily with intelligence training, weapons and counterinsurgency advisors. This support continued until well after the United States had established itself as the principal supplier of weapons to the Salvadoran security forces. According to secret documents from the Argentine military, the purpose of this aid was to strengthen inter-military relations between Argentina and El Salvador and "contribute to hardening [El Salvador's] position in the widening struggle against subversion, alongside other countries in the region."[44]

In fall of 1981, the administration of U.S. President Ronald Reagan requested that the high command of the Argentine military increase its assistance to El Salvador.[45] The Argentine government ratified an agreement by which U.S. intelligence would provide the Argentine government with intelligence and logistics support for an arms interdiction program to stem the flow of military supplies to the FMLN from Cuba and Nicaragua.[46] In addition to agreeing to coordinate arms interdiction operations, the Argentine General Directorate of Military Industries (DGFM) supplied El Salvador with light and heavy weapons, ammunition and military spare parts worth U.S.$20 million in February 1982.[47]

The military junta in Argentina was a prominent source of both material aid and inspiration to the Guatemalan military during the Guatemalan Civil War, especially during the final two years of the Lucas government. Argentina's involvement had initially began in 1980, when the Videla regime dispatched army and naval officers to Guatemala, under contract from President Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia, to assist the security forces in counterinsurgency operations. Argentine involvement in Guatemala expanded when, in October 1981, the Guatemalan government and the Argentine military junta formalized secret accords which augmented Argentine participation in government counterinsurgency operations. As part of the agreement, two-hundred Guatemalan officers were dispatched to Buenos Aires to undergo advanced military intelligence training, which included instruction in interrogation.[48]

Alleged French support

In 2003, French journalist Marie-Monique Robin documented that Valéry Giscard d'Estaing's government secretly collaborated with Videla's junta in Argentina and with Augusto Pinochet's regime in Chile.[49]

Green deputies Noël Mamère, Martine Billard and Yves Cochet passed a resolution in September 2003 for a Parliamentary Commission to be convened on the "role of France in the support of military regimes in Latin America from 1973 to 1984," to be held before the Foreign Affairs Commission of the National Assembly and presided over by Edouard Balladur. Apart from Le Monde, newspapers remained silent about this request.[50] Deputy Roland Blum, who was in charge of the commission, refused to let Marie-Monique Robin testify.

In December 2003, his staff published a 12-page document that said no agreement had been signed between France and Argentina about military forces. But, Marie-Monique Robin had sent them a copy of the document she found showing such an agreement.[51][52]

When Minister of Foreign Affairs Dominique de Villepin traveled to Chile in February 2004, he claimed that no cooperation between France and the military regimes had occurred.[53]

Relations with the Soviet Union

Despite the officially anti-Communist leanings of Videla's junta in the context of the Cold War, the regime maintained extensive trade and diplomatic ties with the Soviet Union. [54]

Legal moves by Baltasar Garzón and Peter Tatchell

Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón unsuccessfully attempted to question former United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as a witness in his investigations into the Argentine disappearances during one of Kissinger's visits to Britain, and Peter Tatchell was unable to have Kissinger arrested during the same visit for alleged war crimes under the Geneva Conventions Act.[55][56]

Aftermath

Following a decree of President Alfonsín mandating prosecution of the leaders of the Proceso for acts committed during their tenure, they were tried and convicted in 1985. (Juicio a las Juntas). In 1989, President Carlos Menem pardoned them during his first year in office, which was highly controversial. He said the pardons were part of healing the country. The Argentine Supreme Court declared amnesty laws unconstitutional in 2005. As a result, the government resumed trials against military officers who had been indicted for actions during the Dirty War.[57]

Adolfo Scilingo, an Argentine naval officer during the junta, was tried for his role in jettisoning drugged and naked political dissidents from military aircraft to their deaths in the Atlantic Ocean during the junta years. He was convicted in Spain in 2005 of crimes against humanity and sentenced to 640 years in prison. The sentence was later raised to 1084 years.

Cristian Von Wernich, a Catholic priest and former chaplain of the Buenos Aires Province Police, was arrested in 2003 on accusations of torture of political prisoners in illegal detention centers. He was convicted at trial, and on 9 October 2007, the Argentine court sentenced him to life in prison.

On March 25, 2013, Federal Criminal Oral Court No. 1 of La Plata rendered decision on a public trial for crimes committed during the civilian-military dictatorship in Argentina (1976–1983) in the network of clandestine detention, torture and extermination centers ("clandestine centers") known as the "Camps Circuit".[58] By conventional view, genocide requires intention to destroy a group in whole or in part. Where the intention is to destroy a group in part, that part must be "substantial", either in the numerical sense, or in the sense of being important to the physical survival of the group.[58] The facts being prosecuted involves attacks against "subversive elements", which does not appear, on first sight, to be a "substantial" part of the group defined by nationality, by sheer numerical representation. This decision is significant in adopting the theory, originating from genocide scholar Daniel Feierstein, that the targeted victims are significant to the national group, as their destruction fundamentally altered the social fabric of the nation.[58]

A major trial, nicknamed "the ESMA mega-trial", of 63 people accused of crimes against humanity (lesa humanidad) during the 1976–1983 dictatorship, including those involved in death flights, was reaching its close in July 2015. 830 witnesses and 789 victims were heard.[59] There had been two previous trials after the Supreme Court struck down an amnesty the military dictatorship had granted its members; in the first the one accused committed suicide before a verdict was reached; in a 2009 trial twelve defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment.

In December 2018, two former executives of a local Ford Motor Company plant near Buenos Aires, Pedro Muller and Hector Sibilla, were convicted for their involvement in the abduction and torture of 24 workers during the reign of the military junta. Lawyers involved in the case say this is the first time former executives of a multinational corporation operating in Argentina under the military junta have been convicted of crimes against humanity.[60]

Commemoration

 
Argentines commemorate victims of military dictatorship, 24 March 2017

In 2002, the Argentine Congress declared the date of 24 March as the Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice, in commemoration for the victims of the dictatorship. In 2006, thirty years after the coup d'état that started the Proceso, the Day of Memory was declared a national public holiday. The anniversary of the coup was remembered by massive official events and demonstrations throughout the country.

Presidents of Argentina, 1976–1983

29 March 1976 – 29 March 1981.

29 March – 11 December 1981.

11 – 22 December 1981.

22 December 1981 – 18 June 1982.

18 June – 1 July 1982.

1 July 1982 – 10 December 1983.

Military juntas

During the Process, there were four successive military juntas, each consisting of the heads of the three branches of the Argentine Armed Forces:

Commander-in-Chief of the Army Commander-in-Chief of the Navy Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force
First Junta (1976–1978)

Lieutenant General Jorge Videla

Admiral Emilio Massera
Brigadier General[61] Orlando Agosti
Second Junta (1978–1981)

Lieutenant General Roberto Viola

Admiral Armando Lambruschini

Brigadier General Omar Graffigna
Third Junta (1981–1982)

Lieutenant General Leopoldo Galtieri

Admiral Jorge Anaya
Brigadier General Basilio Lami Dozo
Fourth Junta (1982–1983)

Lieutenant General Cristino Nicolaides

Admiral Rubén Franco
Brigadier General Augusto Hughes

See also

References

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  50. ^ "MM. Giscard d'Estaing et Messmer pourraient être entendus sur l'aide aux dictatures sud-américaines". Le Monde. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  51. ^ " Série B. Amérique 1952–1963. Sous-série : Argentine, n° 74. Cotes : 18.6.1. mars 52-août 63 ".
  52. ^ "N° 1295 – Rapport de M. Roland Blum sur la proposition de résolution de M. Noël MAMÈRE et plusieurs de ses collègues 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 (1060)". Assemblee-nationale.fr. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  53. ^ "Argentine : M. de Villepin défend les firmes françaises". Le Monde. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  54. ^ "La alianza entre la Junta argentina y la URSS". Libertad Digital. 24 March 2019.
  55. ^ "Spanish judge seeks Kissinger". CNN. 18 April 2002.
  56. ^ "Kissinger: Mistakes were made". CNN. 24 April 2002.
  57. ^ "Americas | Argentine amnesty laws scrapped". BBC News. 15 June 2005. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  58. ^ a b c Riveiro, María Belén; Rosende, Luciana; Zylberman, Lior (Spring 2013). "Genocide on Trial: Case Note and Extracts of "Circuito Camps" Judgment". Genocide Studies and Prevention. 8 (1): 57–66. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  59. ^ starMedia: Trial for crimes against humanity in Argentina reaching its close, 7 July 2015 (in Spanish)
  60. ^ Garrison, Cassandra; Misculin, Nicolas (11 December 2018). "Ex-Ford Argentina executives convicted in torture case; victims may sue in U.S." Reuters. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  61. ^ The rank of brigadier-general in the Argentine Air Force is equivalent to 3-star or 4-star rank.

Books

External links

  • HIJOS Association. Sons and daughters of the victims from the dictatorship trying to find their roots and history
  • Inter-American Commission on Human Rights report on Argentina
  • Horacio Verbitsky, OpenDemocracy.net, 28 July 2005, "Breaking the silence: the Catholic Church in Argentina and the 'dirty war'"
  • The Dirty War in Argentina – George Washington University's National Security Archive page on the Dirty War, featuring numerous recently declassified documents which clearly demonstrate Kissinger's knowledge and complacency in the junta's human rights abuses

national, reorganization, process, spanish, proceso, reorganización, nacional, often, simply, proceso, process, military, dictatorship, that, ruled, argentina, from, 1976, 1983, which, supported, united, states, until, 1982, argentina, often, known, simply, úl. The National Reorganization Process Spanish Proceso de Reorganizacion Nacional often simply el Proceso the Process was the military dictatorship that ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983 in which it was supported by the United States until 1982 In Argentina it is often known simply as ultima junta militar last military junta ultima dictadura militar last military dictatorship or ultima dictadura civico militar last civil military dictatorship because there have been several in the country s history 2 and no others since it ended Argentine RepublicRepublica Argentina1976 1983Flag Coat of armsAnthem Himno Nacional Argentino source source track track track track track track Argentina shown in dark greenCapitalBuenos AiresCommon languagesSpanishReligionRoman CatholicismGovernmentFederal republic under a military dictatorshipPresident of Argentina 1976 81Jorge Rafael Videla 1981Roberto Eduardo Viola 1981 82Leopoldo Galtieri 1982 83Reynaldo BignoneHistorical eraCold War 1976 Argentine coup d etat24 March 1976 Falklands War2 April 14 June 1982 1983 Argentine general election30 October 1983Population 197525 865 776 198027 949 480HDI 1980 0 665 1 mediumCurrencyArgentine peso 1975 90 ISO 3166 codeARPreceded by Succeeded by1976 Argentine coup d etat 1983 Argentine general electionThe first military junta Admiral Emilio Massera Lieutenant General Jorge Videla and Brigadier General Orlando Agosti from left to right observing the Independence Day military parade on Avenida del Libertador 9 July 1978 The Argentine Armed Forces seized political power during the March 1976 coup against the presidency of neutralist non Communist or non Democratic Isabel Peron the successor and widow of former President Juan Peron at a time of growing economic and political instability Congress and democracy were suspended political parties were banned civil rights were limited and free market and deregulation policies were introduced The President of Argentina and his ministers were appointed from military personnel while Peronists and leftists were persecuted The junta launched the Dirty War a campaign of state terrorism against opponents involving torture extrajudicial murder and systematic forced disappearances with most victims being civilians Public opposition due to civil rights abuses and inability to solve the worsening economic crisis in Argentina caused the junta to invade the Falkland Islands in April 1982 After starting and then losing the Falklands War against the United Kingdom in June the junta began to collapse and finally relinquished power in 1983 with the election of President Raul Alfonsin Members of the National Reorganization Process were prosecuted in the Trial of the Juntas in 1985 receiving sentences ranging from life imprisonment to court martials for mishandling the Falklands War They were pardoned by President Carlos Menem in 1989 but were re arrested on new charges in the early 2000s Almost all of the surviving junta members are currently serving sentences for crimes against humanity and genocide Scholars generally characterize the regime as characteristic of neo fascism 3 4 5 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Dirty War 3 Economic policies 4 Foreign policy 4 1 U S support 4 2 Military intervention in Central America 4 3 Alleged French support 4 4 Relations with the Soviet Union 5 Legal moves by Baltasar Garzon and Peter Tatchell 6 Aftermath 7 Commemoration 8 Presidents of Argentina 1976 1983 9 Military juntas 10 See also 11 References 12 Books 13 External linksBackground EditFurther information History of Argentina Lieutenant General Jorge Rafael Videla swearing the Oath as he becomes the President of Argentina The military of Argentina has always been highly influential in Argentine politics and Argentine history is laced with frequent and prolonged intervals of military rule The popular Argentine leader Juan Peron three time President of Argentina was a colonel in the army who first came to political power in the aftermath of a 1943 military coup He advocated a new policy dubbed Justicialism a nationalist policy which he claimed was a Third Position an alternative to both capitalism and communism After being re elected to the office of president by popular vote Peron was deposed and exiled by the Revolucion Libertadora in 1955 After a series of weak governments and a seven year military government Peron returned to Argentina in 1973 following 18 years exile in Francoist Spain amidst escalating political unrest divisions in the Peronist movement and frequent outbreaks of political violence His return was marked by 20 June 1973 Ezeiza massacre after which the right wing of the Peronist movement became dominant Peron was democratically elected president in 1973 but died in July 1974 His vice president and third wife Isabel Peron succeeded him but she proved to be a weak ineffectual ruler A number of revolutionary organizations chief among them Montoneros a group of far left Peronists escalated their wave of political violence including kidnappings and bombings against the campaign of harsh repressive and retaliatory measures enforced by the military and the police In addition right wing paramilitary groups entered the cycle of violence such as the Triple A death squad founded by Jose Lopez Rega Peron s Minister of Social Welfare and a member of the P2 masonic lodge The situation escalated until Mrs Peron was overthrown She was replaced on 24 March 1976 by a military junta led by Lieutenant General Jorge Rafael Videla Dirty War EditMain article Dirty War source source source source source source Final report from the Military Government about forced disappearances In Spanish Source Channel 7 Argentine Public Television 1983 Official investigations undertaken after the end of the Dirty War by the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons documented 8 961 7 desaparecidos victims of forced disappearance and other human rights violations noting that the correct number is bound to be higher Many cases were never reported when whole families disappeared and the military destroyed many of its records months before the return of democracy 7 Among the disappeared were pregnant women who were kept alive until giving birth under often primitive circumstances in the secret prisons The infants were generally illegally adopted by military or political families affiliated with the administration and the mothers were generally killed Thousands of detainees were drugged loaded into aircraft stripped naked and then thrown into the Rio de la Plata or the Atlantic Ocean to drown in what became known as death flights 8 9 10 11 Further information Dirty War Casualty estimates The film The Official Story 1984 which won the Oscar for the Best Foreign Language Film category in 1985 addresses this situation The Argentine secret service SIDE Secretaria de Inteligencia del Estado also cooperated with the DINA in Pinochet s Chile and other South American intelligence agencies Eight South American nations supported endeavours to eradicate left leaning terrorist groups on the continent known as Operation Condor a United States backed campaign of anti democratic and political repression and state terror It is estimated to have caused the deaths of more than 60 000 people SIDE also trained for example in the Honduran Lepaterique base the Nicaraguan Contras who were fighting the Sandinista government there The regime shut down the legislature and restricted both freedom of the press and freedom of speech adopting severe media censorship The 1978 World Cup which Argentina hosted and won was used as a means of propaganda and to rally its people under a nationalist pretense Corruption a failing economy growing public awareness of the harsh repressive measures taken by the regime and the military defeat in the Falklands War eroded the public image of the regime The last de facto president Reynaldo Bignone was forced to call for elections by the lack of support within the Army and the steadily growing pressure of public opinion On 30 October 1983 elections were held and democracy was formally restored on 10 December with President Raul Alfonsin being sworn into office Economic policies EditAs Argentina s new de facto president Videla faced a collapsing economy racked by soaring inflation He largely left economic policies in the hands of Minister Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz who adopted a free trade and deregulatory economic policy 12 Martinez de Hoz took measures to restore economic growth reversing Peronism in favour of a free market economy His economic measures were moderately successful 13 He enjoyed the personal friendship of David Rockefeller who facilitated Chase Manhattan Bank and International Monetary Fund loans of nearly US 1 billion after of his arrival 14 He eliminated all price controls and the exchange controls regime The black market and shortages disappeared 15 He freed exports removed existing prohibitions and quotas and export taxes were repealed and imports removed existing prohibitions quotas and licenses and gradually reduced import tariffs 16 During his tenure the foreign debt increased fourfold and disparities between the upper and lower classes became much more pronounced 17 The period ended in a tenfold devaluation and one of the worst financial crisis in Argentine history 18 Viola appointed Lorenzo Sigaut as Finance Minister and it became clear that Sigaut were looking for ways to reverse some of the economic policies of Videla s minister Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz Notably Sigaut abandoned the sliding exchange rate mechanism and devalued the peso after boasting that they who gamble on the dollar will lose Argentines braced for a recession after the excesses of the sweet money years which destabilized Viola s position 19 He appointed conservative economist and publisher Roberto Alemann as Economy Minister Alemann inherited an economy in deep recession in the aftermath of Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz s economic policies of the late 1970s Alemann slashed spending began selling off government owned industries with only minor success enacted a tight monetary policy and ordered salaries frozen amid 130 inflation 20 The Central Bank Circular 1050 which tied mortgage rates to the value of the US dollar locally was maintained however leading to further deepening of the crisis GDP fell by 5 and business investment by 20 over the weakened levels of 1981 21 Bignone chose Domingo Cavallo to head the Argentine Central Bank Cavallo inherited a foreign debt installment guarantee program that shielded billions of private debt from the collapse of the peso costing the treasury billions He instituted controls over the facility such as the indexation of payments but this move and the rescission of Circular 1050 threw the banking sector against him Cavallo and Dagnino Pastore were replaced in August 22 The President of the Central Bank Julio Gonzalez del Solar undid many of these controls transferring billions more in private foreign debt to the Central Bank though he stopped short of reinstating the hated 1050 23 Six years of intermittent wage freezes had left real wages close to 40 lower than during Peron s tenure leading to growing labor unrest Bignone s decision to restore limited rights of speech and right to assembly including the right to strike led to increased strike activity Saul Ubaldini leader of the General Confederation of Labour Argentina s largest labor union was particularly active The new Economy Minister Jorge Wehbe a banking executive with previous experience in the post reluctantly granted two large mandatory wage increases in late 1982 23 Foreign policy EditU S support Edit Videla met with US President Jimmy Carter at the White House on 9 September 1977 The United States provided military assistance to the junta and at the start of the Dirty War Secretary of State Henry Kissinger gave them a green light to engage in political repression of real or perceived opponents 24 25 26 The US Congress approved a request by the Ford Administration to grant 50 000 000 in security assistance to the junta In 1977 and 1978 the United States sold more than 120 000 000 in spare military parts to Argentina and in 1977 the US Department of Defense granted 700 000 to train 217 Argentine military officers 27 In 1978 president Jimmy Carter secured a congressional cutoff of all US arms transfers for the human rights violations 28 Viola met with Ronald Reagan and Argentine Ambassador Jorge A Aja Espil at the White House on March 17 1981 American Argentine relations improved dramatically with Ronald Reagan which 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 29 However relations soured after the U S supported the United Kingdom in the Falkland Wars The re establishment of diplomatic ties allowed for CIA collaboration with the Argentine intelligence service in arming and training the Nicaraguan Contras against the Sandinista government Argentina also provided security advisors intelligence training and some material support to forces in Guatemala El Salvador and Honduras to suppress local rebel groups as part of a U S sponsored program called Operation Charly 30 Military intervention in Central America Edit After attaining power in 1976 the National Reorganization Process formed close ties with the regime of Anastasio Somoza Debayle in Nicaragua among other right wing dictatorships in Latin America In 1977 at a meeting of the Conference of American Armies CAA held in the Nicaraguan capital city of Managua junta members General Roberto Viola and Admiral Emilio Massera secretly pledged unconditional support of Somoza regime in its fight against left wing subversion and agreed to send advisors and material support to Nicaragua to assist President Somoza s National Guard 31 32 Pursuant with these military agreements Somoza s Guardsmen were sent to police and military academies in Argentina to undergo training and Argentina began to send arms and advisors to Nicaragua to bolster the National Guard in addition to similar services being provided by the United States According to an Argentine advisor with the Nicaraguan National Guard the intelligence techniques used by the Somoza regime consisted of essentially the same unconventional methods which had been used in Argentina s Dirty War torture forced disappearance extrajudicial killings 33 Argentina s aid programs increased proportionate to the growth of the popular movement against the Somoza regime and the degree of isolation of the Somoza regime Following the suspension of U S military aid and training in 1979 Argentina became one of the Somoza regime s principal sources of arms alongside Israel Brazil and South Africa 34 35 In addition to providing arms and training to Somoza s National Guard the Argentine junta also executed a number of Condor operations on Nicaraguan soil during the late 1970s benefitting from close rapport between Argentine secret services and the Nicaraguan regime The military in Argentina sent agents of the Batallon de Inteligencia 601 and the SIDE to Nicaragua in 1978 with the aim of apprehending and eliminating Argentine guerrillas fighting within the ranks of the Sandinistas A special commando team from Argentina worked in conjunction with Somoza s OSN Office of National Security and its Argentine advisors with the objective of capturing exiled squadrons from the ERP and the Montoneros 36 Following the overthrow of Anastasio Somoza Debayle by the Sandinista Front Argentina played a central role in the formation of the Contras Shortly after the Sandinista victory in July 1979 agents from Argentine intelligence began to organize exiled members of Somoza s National Guard residing in Guatemala into an anti Sandinista insurgency Following the election of U S President Ronald Reagan the Argentine government sought arrangements for the Argentine military to organize and train the contras in Honduras in collaboration with the Honduran government and the U S Central Intelligence Agency 37 Shortly thereafter Argentina oversaw the relocation of Contra bases from Guatemala to Honduras 38 There some Argentine Special force units such as Batallon de Inteligencia 601 began to train the Nicaraguan Contras particularly at Lepaterique base alongside some members of the Honduran security forces 39 In August 1981 a CIA official met with Honduran military staff Argentine military and intelligence advisors and the Contra leadership and expressed his support for the contra operations On November 1 1981 the Director of the CIA William Casey met with the Chief of Staff of the Argentine military the two purportedly agreed that Argentina would oversee the contras and the United States would provide money and weapons In late 1981 President Reagan authorized the U S to support the contras by giving them money arms and equipment This aid was transported and distributed to the Contras by way of Argentina With new weapons and logistical support the scale of Contra attacks increased and the ranks of the Contras swelled as recruitment became more feasible By the end of 1982 the Contras were conducting attacks deeper inside Nicaragua than before 40 In the immediate aftermath of the Nicaraguan Revolution in 1979 the National Reorganization Process dispatched a large Argentine military mission to Honduras At the time General Gustavo Alvarez Martinez a former student of Argentina s Colegio Militar de la Nacion class of 1961 and graduate of the School of the Americas was commander of a branch of the Honduran security forces known as the Fuerza de Seguridad Publica FUSEP Alvarez Martinez was a proponent of the Argentine Method viewing it as an effective tool against subversion in the hemisphere and sought increased Argentine military influence in Honduras 41 Argentina s military program in Honduras expanded after 1981 when General Gustavo Alvarez Martinez offered his country to the CIA and the Argentine military as a base for conducting operations opposing the Sandinista government in Nicaragua By the end of 1981 150 Argentine military advisors were active in Honduras training members of the Honduran security forces and providing training to the Nicaraguan Contras based in Honduras 42 According to the NGO Equipo Nizkor though the Argentine mission in Honduras was downgraded after the Falklands War Argentine officers remained active in Honduras until 1984 some of them until 1986 well after the 1983 election of Raul Alfonsin 42 Battalion 316 s name indicated the unit s service to three military units and sixteen battalions of the Honduran army This unit was charged with the task of carrying out political assassinations and torture of suspected political opponents of the government effectively implementing the Argentine Method in Honduras At least 184 suspected government opponents including teachers politicians and union bosses were assassinated by Battalion 316 during the 1980s 43 Argentina played a role in supporting the Salvadoran government during the El Salvador Civil War As early as 1979 the National Reorganization Process supported the Salvadoran government militarily with intelligence training weapons and counterinsurgency advisors This support continued until well after the United States had established itself as the principal supplier of weapons to the Salvadoran security forces According to secret documents from the Argentine military the purpose of this aid was to strengthen inter military relations between Argentina and El Salvador and contribute to hardening El Salvador s position in the widening struggle against subversion alongside other countries in the region 44 In fall of 1981 the administration of U S President Ronald Reagan requested that the high command of the Argentine military increase its assistance to El Salvador 45 The Argentine government ratified an agreement by which U S intelligence would provide the Argentine government with intelligence and logistics support for an arms interdiction program to stem the flow of military supplies to the FMLN from Cuba and Nicaragua 46 In addition to agreeing to coordinate arms interdiction operations the Argentine General Directorate of Military Industries DGFM supplied El Salvador with light and heavy weapons ammunition and military spare parts worth U S 20 million in February 1982 47 The military junta in Argentina was a prominent source of both material aid and inspiration to the Guatemalan military during the Guatemalan Civil War especially during the final two years of the Lucas government Argentina s involvement had initially began in 1980 when the Videla regime dispatched army and naval officers to Guatemala under contract from President Fernando Romeo Lucas Garcia to assist the security forces in counterinsurgency operations Argentine involvement in Guatemala expanded when in October 1981 the Guatemalan government and the Argentine military junta formalized secret accords which augmented Argentine participation in government counterinsurgency operations As part of the agreement two hundred Guatemalan officers were dispatched to Buenos Aires to undergo advanced military intelligence training which included instruction in interrogation 48 Alleged French support Edit In 2003 French journalist Marie Monique Robin documented that Valery Giscard d Estaing s government secretly collaborated with Videla s junta in Argentina and with Augusto Pinochet s regime in Chile 49 Green deputies Noel Mamere Martine Billard and Yves Cochet passed a resolution in September 2003 for a Parliamentary Commission to be convened on the role of France in the support of military regimes in Latin America from 1973 to 1984 to be held before the Foreign Affairs Commission of the National Assembly and presided over by Edouard Balladur Apart from Le Monde newspapers remained silent about this request 50 Deputy Roland Blum who was in charge of the commission refused to let Marie Monique Robin testify In December 2003 his staff published a 12 page document that said no agreement had been signed between France and Argentina about military forces But Marie Monique Robin had sent them a copy of the document she found showing such an agreement 51 52 When Minister of Foreign Affairs Dominique de Villepin traveled to Chile in February 2004 he claimed that no cooperation between France and the military regimes had occurred 53 Relations with the Soviet Union Edit Despite the officially anti Communist leanings of Videla s junta in the context of the Cold War the regime maintained extensive trade and diplomatic ties with the Soviet Union 54 Legal moves by Baltasar Garzon and Peter Tatchell EditSpanish judge Baltasar Garzon unsuccessfully attempted to question former United States Secretary of State Henry Kissinger as a witness in his investigations into the Argentine disappearances during one of Kissinger s visits to Britain and Peter Tatchell was unable to have Kissinger arrested during the same visit for alleged war crimes under the Geneva Conventions Act 55 56 Aftermath EditFollowing a decree of President Alfonsin mandating prosecution of the leaders of the Proceso for acts committed during their tenure they were tried and convicted in 1985 Juicio a las Juntas In 1989 President Carlos Menem pardoned them during his first year in office which was highly controversial He said the pardons were part of healing the country The Argentine Supreme Court declared amnesty laws unconstitutional in 2005 As a result the government resumed trials against military officers who had been indicted for actions during the Dirty War 57 Adolfo Scilingo an Argentine naval officer during the junta was tried for his role in jettisoning drugged and naked political dissidents from military aircraft to their deaths in the Atlantic Ocean during the junta years He was convicted in Spain in 2005 of crimes against humanity and sentenced to 640 years in prison The sentence was later raised to 1084 years Cristian Von Wernich a Catholic priest and former chaplain of the Buenos Aires Province Police was arrested in 2003 on accusations of torture of political prisoners in illegal detention centers He was convicted at trial and on 9 October 2007 the Argentine court sentenced him to life in prison On March 25 2013 Federal Criminal Oral Court No 1 of La Plata rendered decision on a public trial for crimes committed during the civilian military dictatorship in Argentina 1976 1983 in the network of clandestine detention torture and extermination centers clandestine centers known as the Camps Circuit 58 By conventional view genocide requires intention to destroy a group in whole or in part Where the intention is to destroy a group in part that part must be substantial either in the numerical sense or in the sense of being important to the physical survival of the group 58 The facts being prosecuted involves attacks against subversive elements which does not appear on first sight to be a substantial part of the group defined by nationality by sheer numerical representation This decision is significant in adopting the theory originating from genocide scholar Daniel Feierstein that the targeted victims are significant to the national group as their destruction fundamentally altered the social fabric of the nation 58 A major trial nicknamed the ESMA mega trial of 63 people accused of crimes against humanity lesa humanidad during the 1976 1983 dictatorship including those involved in death flights was reaching its close in July 2015 830 witnesses and 789 victims were heard 59 There had been two previous trials after the Supreme Court struck down an amnesty the military dictatorship had granted its members in the first the one accused committed suicide before a verdict was reached in a 2009 trial twelve defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment In December 2018 two former executives of a local Ford Motor Company plant near Buenos Aires Pedro Muller and Hector Sibilla were convicted for their involvement in the abduction and torture of 24 workers during the reign of the military junta Lawyers involved in the case say this is the first time former executives of a multinational corporation operating in Argentina under the military junta have been convicted of crimes against humanity 60 Commemoration Edit Argentines commemorate victims of military dictatorship 24 March 2017 In 2002 the Argentine Congress declared the date of 24 March as the Day of Remembrance for Truth and Justice in commemoration for the victims of the dictatorship In 2006 thirty years after the coup d etat that started the Proceso the Day of Memory was declared a national public holiday The anniversary of the coup was remembered by massive official events and demonstrations throughout the country Presidents of Argentina 1976 1983 EditJorge Rafael Videla29 March 1976 29 March 1981 Roberto Eduardo Viola29 March 11 December 1981 Carlos Lacoste Interim 11 22 December 1981 Leopoldo Galtieri22 December 1981 18 June 1982 Alfredo Oscar Saint Jean Interim 18 June 1 July 1982 Reynaldo Bignone1 July 1982 10 December 1983 Military juntas EditDuring the Process there were four successive military juntas each consisting of the heads of the three branches of the Argentine Armed Forces Commander in Chief of the Army Commander in Chief of the Navy Commander in Chief of the Air ForceFirst Junta 1976 1978 Lieutenant General Jorge Videla Admiral Emilio Massera Brigadier General 61 Orlando AgostiSecond Junta 1978 1981 Lieutenant General Roberto Viola Admiral Armando Lambruschini Brigadier General Omar GraffignaThird Junta 1981 1982 Lieutenant General Leopoldo Galtieri Admiral Jorge Anaya Brigadier General Basilio Lami DozoFourth Junta 1982 1983 Lieutenant General Cristino Nicolaides Admiral Ruben Franco Brigadier General Augusto HughesSee also Edit Argentina portalH I J O S Hijos e Hijas por la Identidad y la Justicia contra el Olvido y el Silencio History of Argentina Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo Theory of the two demonsReferences Edit Human Development Report 2014 PDF hdr undp org Accueil Sciences Po Violence de masse et Resistance Reseau de recherche sciencespo fr Retrieved 5 November 2020 Rizki Cole 1 October 2020 No State Apparatus Goes to Bed Genocidal Then Wakes Up Democratic Radical History Review 2020 138 82 107 doi 10 1215 01636545 8359271 ISSN 0163 6545 S2CID 224990803 On March 24 1976 the Argentine military staged a coup d etat and established a fascist dictatorship that perpetrated genocide for seven years The use of the Nazi Fascist Discourse by Argentinean Governments Report on Anti semitism in Argentina Social Research Center of DAIA 2006 Global Latin America into the twenty first century Matthew C Gutmann Jeff Lesser Oakland California 2016 ISBN 978 0 520 96594 2 OCLC 943710572 It was a sacrifice of some questionable lives to preserve the Proceso the National Process of Reorganization to make Argentina conform to a right wing fascist version of Catholicism a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Finchelstein Federico 2014 The ideological origins of the dirty war fascism populism and dictatorship in twentieth century Argentina Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 993024 1 OCLC 863194632 The Last Military dictatorship in Argentina 1976 1983 was many things Outside its concentration camps it presented the facade of a typical authoritarian state Within them however it was fascist a b Nunca mas Desaparecidos org Retrieved 22 February 2015 Thomas C Wright 2006 State Terrorism in Latin America Chile Argentina and International Human Rights Latin American Silhouettes Rowman amp Littlefield p 160 ISBN 0742537218 Calvin Sims 13 March 1995 Argentine Tells of Dumping Dirty War Captives Into Sea The New York Times Retrieved 23 September 2015 Ed Stocker 27 November 2012 Victims of death flights Drugged dumped by aircraft but not forgotten The Independent Retrieved 23 September 2015 Teresa Bo 29 November 2012 Argentina holds death flights trial Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Al Jazeera America Retrieved 23 September 2015 Jorge Rafael Videla president of Argentina Britannica Argentina Military government 1966 73 Britannica Lo que pienso de Martinez de Hoz 6 November 2017 Alemann Juan Los anios de Martinez de Hoz por Juan Alemann The Years of Martinez de Hoz by Juan Alemann PDF La Nacion in Spanish Jose Alfredo Martinez de Hoz Biografia Lewis Paul The Crisis of Argentine Capitalism University of North Carolina Press 1990 Argentina From Insolvency to Growth World Bank Press 1993 La nueva politica economica argentina se basa en la modificacion del esquema de cambios de la moneda Segun Lorenzo Sigaut el nuevo ministro de Economia El Pais reproduccion del articulo publicado el 8 de abril de 1981 in Spanish Lewis Paul The Crisis of Argentine Capitalism University of North Carolina Press 1990 Argentina From Insolvency to Growth World Bank Press 1993 de Pablo Juan Carlos June 1999 Economists and Economic Policy Argentina since 1958 PDF UCEMA a b Todo Argentina 1982 in Spanish Blakeley Ruth 2009 State Terrorism and Neoliberalism The North in the South Routledge pp 96 97 ISBN 978 0 415 68617 4 McSherry J Patrice 2011 Chapter 5 Industrial repression and Operation Condor in Latin America In Esparza Marcia Henry R Huttenbach Daniel Feierstein eds State Violence and Genocide in Latin America The Cold War Years Critical Terrorism Studies Routledge pp 107 ISBN 978 0415664578 Borger Julian 2004 Kissinger backed dirty war against left in Argentina The Guardian Retrieved 29 July 2020 On 30th Anniversary of Argentine Coup New Declassified Details on Repression and U S Support for Military Dictatorship Gwu edu Retrieved August 6 2010 William Michael Schmidli Human rights and the Cold War the campaign to halt the Argentine dirty war Cold war history 2012 12 2 pp 345 365 online Rossinow pp 73 77 79 Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura Clarin March 24 2006 in Spanish Duhalde El estado terrorista argentino p 118 Bardini Roberto 1988 Monjes mercenarios y mercaderes La red secreta de apoyo a los Contras Mexico City Alpa Corral pp 103 5 Interview with former Argentine military advisor Carlos Alberto Lobo in Siete Dias March 13 1983 pages 74 76 Oscar R Cardoso Richardo Kirschbaum Eduardo van der Kooy Malvinas la trama secreta 1983 p 27 Joselovsky El ejercito del Proceso p 63 Dickey Christopher 1987 With the Contras A Reporter in the Wilds of Nicaragua New York Simon and Schuster pp 54 55 Mendez Juan E 1987 Truth and Partial Justice in Argentina p 7 Kornbluh Peter 1987 Nicaragua The Price of Intervention Washington Institute for Political Studies p 127 ISBN 9780897580403 Capitulos desconocidos de los mercenarios chilenos en Honduras camino de Iraq Archived 27 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine La Nacion September 25 2005 URL accessed on February 14 2007 in Spanish Nicaragua U S Support for the Contras Brown University Michael Dobbs The Washington Post 21 March 2005 Negroponte s Time In Honduras at Issue archived at 1 a b Equipo Nizkor LA APARICION DE OSAMENTAS EN UNA ANTIGUA BASE MILITAR DE LA CIA EN HONDURAS REABRE LA PARTICIPACION ARGENTINO NORTEAMERICANA EN ESE PAIS Margen in Spanish Valladares Lanza Leo Susan C Peacock IN Search of Hidden Truths An Interim Report on Declassification by the National Commissioner for Human Rights in Honduras Archived from the original on 5 August 2009 Retrieved 2 August 2009 General Directorate of Military Industries DGFM Financiation de venta de material belico a las Republica de El Salvador secret memorandum from General Augusto J B Alemanzor to the Commander in Chief of the Army General Leopoldo F Faltieri January 18 1982 Military Diplomacy Tilts Argentine Foreign Policy towards Washington Latin America Weekly Report Page 1 11 September 1981 Che Galtieri Plans his Own Vietnam Latin America Weekly Report 9 October 1981 Central Bank of the Republic of Argentina BCRA the directorate s secret session Acta no S 2 February 11 1982 Duhalde El estado terrorista argentino pp 122 123 Marie Monique Robin Escadrons de la mort l ecole francaise Presentation Algeria watch org Retrieved 22 February 2015 MM Giscard d Estaing et Messmer pourraient etre entendus sur l aide aux dictatures sud americaines Le Monde Retrieved 22 February 2015 Serie B Amerique 1952 1963 Sous serie Argentine n 74 Cotes 18 6 1 mars 52 aout 63 N 1295 Rapport de M Roland Blum sur la proposition de resolution de M Noel MAMERE et plusieurs de ses collegues tendant a la creation d une commission d enquete sur le role de la France dans le soutien aux regimes militaires d Amerique latine entre 1973 et 1984 1060 Assemblee nationale fr Retrieved 22 February 2015 Argentine M de Villepin defend les firmes francaises Le Monde Retrieved 22 February 2015 La alianza entre la Junta argentina y la URSS Libertad Digital 24 March 2019 Spanish judge seeks Kissinger CNN 18 April 2002 Kissinger Mistakes were made CNN 24 April 2002 Americas Argentine amnesty laws scrapped BBC News 15 June 2005 Retrieved 22 February 2015 a b c Riveiro Maria Belen Rosende Luciana Zylberman Lior Spring 2013 Genocide on Trial Case Note and Extracts of Circuito Camps Judgment Genocide Studies and Prevention 8 1 57 66 Retrieved 30 June 2020 starMedia Trial for crimes against humanity in Argentina reaching its close 7 July 2015 in Spanish Garrison Cassandra Misculin Nicolas 11 December 2018 Ex Ford Argentina executives convicted in torture case victims may sue in U S Reuters Retrieved 12 December 2018 The rank of brigadier general in the Argentine Air Force is equivalent to 3 star or 4 star rank Books EditGalasso Norberto 2011 Historia de la Argentina vol I amp II in Spanish Buenos Aires Colihue ISBN 978 9505634781 External links EditHIJOS Association Sons and daughters of the victims from the dictatorship trying to find their roots and history Inter American Commission on Human Rights report on Argentina Horacio Verbitsky OpenDemocracy net 28 July 2005 Breaking the silence the Catholic Church in Argentina and the dirty war The Dirty War in Argentina George Washington University s National Security Archive page on the Dirty War featuring numerous recently declassified documents which clearly demonstrate Kissinger s knowledge and complacency in the junta s human rights abuses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Reorganization Process amp oldid 1131624949, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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