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Latin America
Related: About this forumOperation Condor: the illegal state network that terrorised South America
Source: The Guardian
Operation Condor: the illegal state network that terrorised South America
During the cold war, eight US-backed military dictatorships jointly plotted the cross-border kidnap, torture, rape and murder of hundreds of their political opponents. Now some of the perpetrators are finally facing justice.
By Giles Tremlett
Thu 3 Sep 2020 06.00 BST
The last time Anatole Larrabeiti saw his parents, he was four years old. It was 26 September 1976, the day after his birthday. He remembers the shootout, the bright flashes of gunfire and the sight of his father lying on the ground, mortally wounded, outside their home in a suburb of Buenos Aires, Argentina, with their mother lying beside him. Then he was taken away by armed police, along with his 18-month-old sister, Victoria Eva.
-snip-
Today, he is a trim, smartly suited 47-year-old public prosecutor with hazel eyes and a shaven head. I have decided to live without hate, he said. But I want people to know.
What Larrabeiti wants people to know is that his family were victims of one of the 20th centurys most sinister international state terror networks. It was called Operation Condor, after the broad-winged vulture that soars above the Andes, and it joined eight South American military dictatorships Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay, Brazil, Peru and Ecuador into a single network that covered four-fifths of the continent.
It has taken decades to fully expose this system, which enabled governments to send death squads on to each others territory to kidnap, murder and torture enemies real or suspected among their emigrant and exile communities. Condor effectively integrated and expanded the state terror unleashed across South America during the cold war, after successive rightwing military coups, often encouraged by the US, erased democracy across the continent. Condor was the most complex and sophisticated element of a broad phenomenon in which tens of thousands of people across South America were murdered or disappeared by military governments in the 1970s and 80s.
Most Condor victims disappeared for ever. Hundreds were secretly disposed of some of them tossed into the sea from planes or helicopters after being tied up, shackled to concrete blocks or drugged so that they could barely move. Larrabeitis mother, Victoria, who was last seen in an Argentinian torture centre in 1976, is one of them. His father, Mario, who was a leftwing militant, probably died in the shootout when they were snatched by the police. Enough victims have survived, however, to tell stories that, when matched against a growing volume of declassified documents, amount to a single, ghastly tale.
-snip-
During the cold war, eight US-backed military dictatorships jointly plotted the cross-border kidnap, torture, rape and murder of hundreds of their political opponents. Now some of the perpetrators are finally facing justice.
By Giles Tremlett
Thu 3 Sep 2020 06.00 BST
The last time Anatole Larrabeiti saw his parents, he was four years old. It was 26 September 1976, the day after his birthday. He remembers the shootout, the bright flashes of gunfire and the sight of his father lying on the ground, mortally wounded, outside their home in a suburb of Buenos Aires, Argentina, with their mother lying beside him. Then he was taken away by armed police, along with his 18-month-old sister, Victoria Eva.
-snip-
Today, he is a trim, smartly suited 47-year-old public prosecutor with hazel eyes and a shaven head. I have decided to live without hate, he said. But I want people to know.
What Larrabeiti wants people to know is that his family were victims of one of the 20th centurys most sinister international state terror networks. It was called Operation Condor, after the broad-winged vulture that soars above the Andes, and it joined eight South American military dictatorships Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Bolivia, Paraguay, Brazil, Peru and Ecuador into a single network that covered four-fifths of the continent.
It has taken decades to fully expose this system, which enabled governments to send death squads on to each others territory to kidnap, murder and torture enemies real or suspected among their emigrant and exile communities. Condor effectively integrated and expanded the state terror unleashed across South America during the cold war, after successive rightwing military coups, often encouraged by the US, erased democracy across the continent. Condor was the most complex and sophisticated element of a broad phenomenon in which tens of thousands of people across South America were murdered or disappeared by military governments in the 1970s and 80s.
Most Condor victims disappeared for ever. Hundreds were secretly disposed of some of them tossed into the sea from planes or helicopters after being tied up, shackled to concrete blocks or drugged so that they could barely move. Larrabeitis mother, Victoria, who was last seen in an Argentinian torture centre in 1976, is one of them. His father, Mario, who was a leftwing militant, probably died in the shootout when they were snatched by the police. Enough victims have survived, however, to tell stories that, when matched against a growing volume of declassified documents, amount to a single, ghastly tale.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2020/sep/03/operation-condor-the-illegal-state-network-that-terrorised-south-america
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Operation Condor: the illegal state network that terrorised South America (Original Post)
Eugene
Sep 2020
OP
A lot of important information is covered in this article. It's so worth reading.
Judi Lynn
Sep 2020
#1
Judi Lynn
(160,517 posts)1. A lot of important information is covered in this article. It's so worth reading.
For anyone who doesn't know about wide-ranging, sadistic hit teams chasing leftists all over the globe to murder them, representing 8 different countries, with US support, this is the time and place to start learning about it.
Don't let what has deliberately been hidden from you slide, now that it's becoming far, far more accessible, all these many years later. It's important to know, it concerns your own country.
Thank you, Eugene. This material is a real learning source bringing forward information governments and powerful officials never wanted to see the light of day.