Everything about Operation Condor totally explained
For other uses of Operation Condor, please see Operation Condor (disambiguation)
Operation Condor () was a campaign of political repressions involving
assassination and
intelligence operations officially implemented in 1975 by the
right-wing dictatorships of the
Southern Cone of
South America. The program aimed to deter
left-wing influence and ideas and to control active or potential opposition movements against the usually conservative
governments. Due to its clandestine nature, the precise number of deaths directly attributable to Operation Condor will likely never be known, but it's reported to have caused thousands of victims, possibly even more.
Condor's key members were the right-wing military governments in
Argentina,
Chile,
Uruguay,
Paraguay,
Bolivia and
Brazil, with
Ecuador and
Peru joining later in more peripheral roles. These nations were ruled by dictators such as
Jorge Rafael Videla,
Augusto Pinochet,
Ernesto Geisel,
Hugo Banzer, and
Alfredo Stroessner. The operation was jointly conducted by the intelligence and security services of these nations during the mid-1970s with support provided by the
United States of America.
History
On 25 November 1975, leaders of the military intelligence services of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay met, with
Manuel Contreras, chief of
DINA (the Chilean secret police), in Santiago de Chile, officially creating the Plan
Condor . However, cooperation between various security services, in the aim of "eliminating Marxist subversion", previously existed before this meeting and
Pinochet's coup d'état. Thus, during the Xth
Conference of American Armies held in
Caracas on
September 3,
1973, Brazilian General
Breno Borges Fortes, head of the Brazilian army, proposed to "extend the exchange of information" between various services in order to "struggle against subversion". Furthermore, in March 1974, representatives of the police forces of Chile, Uruguay and Bolivia met with
Alberto Villar, deputy chief of the
Argentine Federal Police and co-founder of the
Triple A death squad, to implement cooperation guidelines in order to destroy the "subversive" threat represented by the presence of thousands of political exilees in Argentina
Operation
Condor, which took place in the context of the
Cold War, was given at least tacit approval by the United States which feared a
Marxist revolution in the region. The targets were officially leftist
guerrillas (such as the
MIR, the
Montoneros or the
ERP, the
Tupamaros, etc.) but in fact included all kinds of political opponents, including their families and others, as reported by the
Valech Commission. The Argentine "
Dirty War", for example, which resulted in approximatively 30,000 victims according to most estimates, targeted many trade-unionists, relatives of activists, etc.
From 1976 onwards, the Chilean DINA and its Argentine counterpart, SIDE, were its front-line troops. The infamous "
death flights", theorized in Argentina by
Luis María Mendía — and also used during the
Algerian War (1954–1962) by French forces — were widely used, in order to make the corpses, and therefore evidence, disappear. There were also many cases of child abduction.
On
December 22,
1992 a significant amount of information about Operation
Condor came to light when
José Fernández, a Paraguayan judge, visited a police station in the
Lambaré suburb of
Asunción to look for files on a former political prisoner. Instead he found what became known as the "
terror archives", detailing the fates of thousands of Latin Americans secretly kidnapped, tortured and killed by the security services of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. Some of these countries have since used portions of this archive to prosecute former military officers. The archives counted 50,000 persons murdered, 30,000 "
desaparecidos" and 400,000 incarcerated.
According to these archives other countries such as
Peru cooperated to varying extents by providing intelligence information in response to requests from the security services of the
Southern Cone countries. Even though Peru were not at the secret November 1975 meeting in
Santiago de Chile there's evidence of its involvement. For instance, in June 1980, Peru was known to have been collaborating with Argentine agents of
601 Intelligence Battalion in the kidnapping, torture and disappearance of a group of
Montoneros living in exile in
Lima.
The "
terror archives" also revealed Colombia's and Venezuela's greater or lesser degree of cooperation (
Luis Posada Carriles was probably at the meeting that ordered
Orlando Letelier's car bombing). It has been alleged that a Colombian paramilitary organization known as
Alianza Americana Anticomunista may have cooperated with Operation
Condor. Brazil signed the agreement later (June 1976), and refused to engage in actions outside Latin America.
Mexico, together with
Costa Rica,
Canada,
France, the
U.K.,
Spain and
Sweden received many people fleeing from the terror regimes. Operation
Condor officially ended with the ousting of the Argentine dictatorship in 1983, although the killings continued for some time after that.
Notable cases and prosecution
Argentina
The
Argentine Dirty War was carried on simultaneously with and overlapping Operation
Condor. The Argentine
SIDE cooperated with the Chilean DINA in numerous cases of
desaparecidos. Chilean General
Carlos Prats, Uruguayan former MPs
Zelmar Michelini,
Héctor Gutiérrez Ruiz and the ex-president of Bolivia,
Juan José Torres, were assassinated in the Argentine capital.
The SIDE also assisted Bolivian general
Luis Garcia Meza Tejada's
Cocaine Coup in Bolivia, with the help of Gladio operative
Stefano Delle Chiaie and Nazi war criminal
Klaus Barbie (see also
Operation Charly). The
Madres de la Plaza de Mayo, a group of mothers who had lost their children to the dictatorship, started demonstrating each Sunday on
Plaza de Mayo from April 1977, in front of the
Casa Rosada in Buenos Aires, the seat of the government, to reclaim their children from the
junta. The Mothers continue their struggle for
justice to this day (2007).
The
National Commission for Forced Disappearances (CONADEP), led by writer
Ernesto Sabato, was created in 1983. Two years later, the
Juicio a las Juntas (Trial of the Juntas) largely succeeded in proving the crimes of the various
juntas which had formed the self-styled
National Reorganization Process. Most of the top officers who were tried were sentenced to
life imprisonment:
Jorge Rafael Videla,
Emilio Eduardo Massera,
Roberto Eduardo Viola,
Armando Lambruschini,
Raúl Agosti,
Rubén Graffigna,
Leopoldo Galtieri,
Jorge Anaya and
Basilio Lami Dozo. However,
Raúl Alfonsín's government passed two
amnesty laws protecting military officers involved in human rights abuses: the 1986
Ley de Punto Final (
law of closure) and the 1987
Ley de Obediencia Debida (
law of due obedience). President
Carlos Menem then
pardoned the leaders of the
junta in 1989–1990. Following continuous protests by the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo and other associations, the amnesty laws were repealed by the
Argentine Supreme Court nearly twenty years later, in June 2005.
In Argentina DINA's civil agent Enrique Arancibia Clavel, prosecuted for
crimes against humanity in 2004, was condemned to life imprisonment for his part in General Prat's murder. In 2003, federal judge Maria Servini de Cubria requested the extradition from Chile of Mariana Callejas, who was
Michael Townley's wife (himself a U.S. expatriate and DINA agent), and Cristoph Willikie, a retired colonel from the Chilean army—all three of them are accused of this murder. Chilean appeal court judge Nibaldo Segura refused extradition in July 2005 on the grounds that they'd already been prosecuted in Chile.
(External Link
)
It has been claimed that Italian terrorist
Stefano Delle Chiaie—also an operative of
Gladio "stay-behind" secret NATO paramilitary organization—was involved in the murder of General Prats. He and fellow extremist
Vincenzo Vinciguerra testified in Rome in December 1995 before judge María Servini de Cubría that DINA agents Enrique Arancibia Clavel and Michael Townley were directly involved in this assassination.
(External Link
)
Brazil
In Brazil, president
Fernando Henrique Cardoso ordered in 2000 the release of some military files concerning Operation
Condor.
Italian attorney general Giancarlo Capaldo, who is investigating the disappearances of Italian citizens, probably by a mixture of Argentine, Chilean, Paraguayan and Brazilian military, accused 11 Brazilians of involvement. However, according to the official statement, "they couldn't confirm nor deny that Argentine, Brazilian, Paraguayan and Chilean militaries will be submitted to a trial before December." As of August 2006, nobody in Brazil has been convicted of human rights violations during the
21 years of military dictatorship there.
On April 26, 2000 former governor of Rio de Janeiro
Leonel Brizola alleged that ex-presidents of Brazil
João Goulart and
Juscelino Kubitschek were assassinated as part of Operation
Condor, and requested the opening of investigations on their deaths. Goulart died of a heart attack and Kubitschek a car accident.
The Kidnapping of the Uruguayans
The Condor Operation expanded the covered-up repression from Uruguay to Brazil in an event that happened in November 1978 and later known as "o Sequestro dos Uruguaios´, that is, "the Kidnapping of the Uruguayans". In that occasion, under consent of the Brazilian military regime, high officers of the Uruguayan army secretly crossed the frontier, heading to Porto Alegre, capital of the State of Rio Grande do Sul. There they kidnapped a militant couple of the Uruguayan political opposition, Universindo Rodriguez and Lilian Celiberti, along with her two children, Camilo and Francesca, 8 and 3 years old.
The illegal operation failed when two Brazilian journalists – the reporter Luiz Cláudio Cunha and the photographer Joao Baptista Scalco, from Veja Magazine, were warned by an anonymous phone call about the disappearance of the Uruguayan couple. The two journalists decided to check the information and headed to the appointed address: an apartment in the borough of Menino Deus in Porto Alegre . There, they were mistakenly taken as other members of the Uruguayan opposition by the armed men who had arrested Lilian. Universindo and the children had already been clandestinely taken to Uruguay . The unexpected arrival of the journalists disclosed the secret operation which had to be suddenly suspended. Lillian was then taken back to Montevideo. The failure of the operation avoided the murder of the four Uruguayans. The news of a political kidnapping made headlines in the Brazilian press and became an international scandal which embarrassed the military governments of Brazil and Uruguay. A few days after, the children were taken to their maternal grand-parents in Montevideo. Universindo as well as Lilian were imprisoned and tortured in Brazil and then taken to military prisons in Uruguay where they remained during the next five years. After the Uruguayan re-democratization in 1984, the couple was released and then confirmed all the details of the kidnapping.
In 1980, two inspectors of DOPS (Department of Political and Social Order, an official police branch in charge of the political repression during the military regime) were convicted by the Brazilian Justice as the armed men who had arrested the journalists in Lilian's apartment in Porto Alegre. They were João Augusto da Rosa and Orandir Portassi Lucas (a former football player of Brazilian teams known as Didi Pedalada), both identified later as participants in the kidnapping operation by the reporters and the Uruguayan couple — which surely confirmed the involvement of the Brazilian Government in the Condor Operation. In 1991, through the initiative of Governor Pedro Simon, the State of Rio Grande do Sul officially recognized the kidnapping of the Uruguayans and compensated them for this, inspiring the democratic government of the President Luis Alberto Lacalle in Uruguay to do the same a year later .
Police officer Pedro Seelig, the head of the DOPS at the time of the kidnapping, was identified by the Uruguayan couple as the man in charge of the operation in Porto Alegre. When Seelig was denounced to the Brazilian Justice, Universindo and Lílian were in prison in Uruguay and they were prevented from testifying against him. The Brazilian policeman was then cleared of all charges due to alleged lack of evidences. Lilian and Universindo's later testimony also proved that four officers of the secret Uruguayan Counter-information Division – two majors and two captains – took part in the operation under consent of the Brazilian authorities. One of these officers, Captain Glauco Yanonne, was himself responsible for torturing Universindo Dias in the DOPS headquarters in Porto Alegre . Even though Universindo and Lilian recognized the Uruguayan military men who had arrested and tortured them, not a single one of them was prosecuted by the Justice in Montevideo. This was due to the Law of Impunity which guaranteed amnesty to all Uruguayan people involved in political repression.
The investigative journalism of the Veja Magazine awarded Cunha and Scalco with the 1979 Esso Prize, the most important prize of the Brazilian Press . Hugo Cores, a former Uruguayan political prisoner who was living in Sao Paulo at the time of the kidnapping and was the author of the anonymous phone call to Cunha, spoke the following to the Brazilian press in 1993: "All the Uruguayans kidnapped abroad, around 180 people, are missing to this day. The only ones who managed to survive are Lilian, her children, and Universindo".
The kidnapping of the Uruguayans in Porto Alegre entered into history as the only failure with international repercussion in the whole Operation Condor, among several hundreds of clandestine actions from the Latin America Southern Cone dictatorships, who were responsible for thousands of killed and missing people in the period between 1975 and 1985. Analyzing the political repression in the region during that decade, the Brazilian journalist Nilson Mariano estimates the number of killed and missing people as: 297 in Uruguay, 366 in Brazil, 2,000 in Paraguay, 3,196 in Chile and 30,000 in Argentina. The so-called "Terror Files" (Portuguese: "Arquivos do Terror") – a whole set of 60,000 documents, weighting 4 tons and making 593,000 microfilmed pages which were discovered by a former Paraguayan political prisoner Marti Almada, in Lambare, Paraguay, in 1992 - provides even higher numbers: the total result of Southern Cone Operation Condor had left up to 50,000 killed, 30,000 missing and 400,000 arrested.
Chile
When
Augusto Pinochet was arrested in London in 1998 in response to Spanish magistrate
Baltasar Garzón's request for his
extradition to Spain, information concerning
Condor was revealed. One of the lawyers who asked for his extradition talked about an attempt to assassinate
Carlos Altamirano, leader of the
Chilean Socialist Party: it was claimed that Pinochet met Italian terrorist
Stefano Delle Chiaie during
Franco's funeral in Madrid in 1975 in order to have Altamirano murdered. But as with
Bernardo Leighton, who was shot in Rome in 1975 after a meeting the same year in Madrid between Stefano Delle Chiaie, former CIA agent
Michael Townley and anti-Castrist
Virgilio Paz Romero, the plan ultimately failed.
Chilean judge
Juan Guzmán Tapia eventually established a
precedent concerning the crime of "permanent kidnapping": since the bodies of victims kidnapped and presumably murdered couldn't be found, he deemed that the kidnapping was deemed to continue, rather than to have occurred so long ago that the perpetrators were protected by an amnesty decreed in 1978 or by the Chilean
statute of limitations. Ironically, the perpetrators' success in hiding evidence of their crimes frustrated their attempts to escape from justice.
General Carlos Prats
General
Carlos Prats and his wife were killed by the Chilean DINA on
September 30,
1974 by a car bombing in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where they lived in exile. In Chile the judge investigating this case,
Alejandro Solís, definitively terminated the prosecution of Pinochet for this particular case after the
Chilean Supreme court rejected a demand to revoke his immunity from prosecution in January 2005. The leaders of DINA, including chief Manuel Contreras, ex-chief of operation and retired general Raúl Itturiaga Neuman, his brother Roger Itturiaga, and ex-brigadeers
Pedro Espinoza Bravo and José Zara, are accused in Chile of this assassination. DINA agent
Enrique Arancibia Clavel has been convicted in Argentina for the murder.
Bernardo Leighton
Bernardo Leighton and his wife were severely injured by gunshots on
October 5,
1976 while in exile in Rome. According to the
National Security Archive and Italian attorney general Giovanni Salvi, in charge of former DINA head Manuel Contreras' prosecution, Stefano Delle Chiaie met with Michael Townley and
Virgilio Paz Romero in Madrid in 1975 to plan the murder of Bernardo Leighton with the help of
Franco's secret police.
Orlando Letelier
Another target was
Orlando Letelier, a former minister of the Chilean
Allende government who was assassinated by a car bomb explosion in Washington, D.C. on
September 21,
1976. His assistant,
Ronni Moffitt, a U.S. citizen, also died in the explosion. Michael Townley, General Manuel Contreras, former head of the DINA, and Brigadier Pedro Espinoza Bravo, also formerly of DINA, were convicted for the murders. In 1978, Chile agreed to hand over Townley to the US, in order to reduce the tension about Letelier's murder. Townley, however, was freed under the witness protection program. The US is still waiting for Manuel Contreras and Pedro Espinoza to be extradited.
In an article published
17 December 2004 in the
Los Angeles Times, Francisco Letelier, the son of Orlando Letelier, wrote that his father's assassination was part of Operation
Condor, described as "an intelligence-sharing network used by six South American dictators of that era to eliminate dissidents." Augusto Pinochet has been accused of being a participant in Operation
Condor. Francisco Letelier declared, "My father's murder was part of
Condor."
Michael Townley has accused Pinochet of being responsible for Orlando Letelier's death. Townley confessed that he'd hired five anti-Castro Cuban exiles to booby-trap Letelier's car. According to Jean-Guy Allard, after consultations with the terrorist organization
CORU's leadership, including
Luis Posada Carriles and
Orlando Bosch, those elected to carry out the murder were Cuban-Americans José Dionisio "Bloodbath" Suárez, Virgilio Paz Romero, Alvin Ross Díaz, and brothers Guillermo and Ignacio Novo Sampoll. According to the
Miami Herald, Luis Posada Carriles was at this meeting that decided on Letelier's death and also about the
Cubana Flight 455 bombing.
Operation Silencio
Operation Silencio (
Operation Silence) was an operation to impede investigations by Chilean judges by removing witnesses from the country, starting about a year before the "
terror archives" were found in Paraguay.
In April 1991 Arturo Sanhueza Ross, linked to the murder of
MIR leader
Jecar Neghme in 1989, left the country. According to the
Rettig Report, Jecar Neghme's death was carried out by Chilean intelligence agents . In September 1991 Carlos Herrera Jiménez, who killed trade-unionist
Tucapel Jiménez, flew away. In October 1991
Eugenio Berríos, a chemist who had worked with DINA agent Michael Townley, was escorted from Chile to Uruguay by Operation
Condor agents, in order to escape testifying in the Letelier case. He used Argentinian, Uruguayan, Paraguayan and Brazilian passports, raising concerns that Operation
Condor wasn't dead. In 1995 Berríos was found dead in El Pinar, near
Montevideo (Uruguay), his murderers having tried to make the identification of his body impossible.
In January 2005, Michael Townley, who now lives in the USA under the witness protection program, acknowledged to agents of Interpol Chile links between DINA and the detention and torture center
Colonia Dignidad,
(External Link
) which was founded in 1961 by
Paul Schäfer, a Nazi accused of child-abuse and torture, arrested in March 2005 in Buenos Aires. Townley also revealed information about Colonia Dignidad and the Army's Bacteriological Warfare Laboratory. This last laboratory would have replaced the old DINA's laboratory on Via Naranja de lo Curro street, where Michael Townley worked with the chemical assassin Eugenio Berríos. The toxin that allegedly killed Christian-Democrat
Eduardo Frei Montalva may have been made in this new lab in Colonia Dignidad, according to the judge investigating the case.
U.S. Congressman Edward Koch
In February 2004
John Dinges, a reporter, published
The Condor Years: How Pinochet and His Allies Brought Terrorism to Three Continents (The New Press, 2004). In this book he reveals how Uruguayan military officials threatened to assassinate US Congressman
Edward Koch in mid-1976. In late July 1976, the CIA station chief in Montevideo received information about it, but recommended that the Agency take no action because the Uruguayan officers (among them Colonel José Fons, who was at the November 1975 secret meeting in Santiago, Chile, and Major José Nino Gavazzo, who headed a team of intelligence officers working in Argentina in 1976, where he was responsible for more than 100 Uruguayans' deaths) had been drinking when the threat was made. In an interview for the book, Koch said that
George H.W. Bush, CIA's director at the time, informed him in October 1976 — more than two months afterward, and after Orlando Letelier's murder — that "his sponsorship of legislation to cut off US military assistance to Uruguay on human rights grounds had provoked secret police officials to 'put a contract out for you'". In mid-October 1976, Koch wrote to the Justice Department asking for FBI protection. None was provided for him. In late 1976, Colonel Fons and Major Gavazzo were assigned to prominent diplomatic posts in Washington, DC, but the State Department forced the Uruguayan government to withdraw their appointments, with the public explanation that "Fons and Gavazzo could be the objects of unpleasant publicity." Koch only became aware of the connections between the threats in 2001.
Other cases
The Chilean leader of the
MIR, Edgardo Enríquez, was "disappeared" in Argentina, as well as another MIR leader, Jorge Fuentes; Alexei Jaccard, Chilean and Swiss, Ricardo Ramírez and a support network to the Communist party dismantled in Argentina in 1977. Cases of repression against German, Spanish, Peruvians citizens and Jewish people were also reported. The assassinations of former Bolivian president
Juan José Torres and former Uruguayan deputies
Héctor Gutiérrez and
Zelmar Michelini in Buenos Aires in 1976 was also part of
Condor. The DINA entered into contact even with Croatian terrorists, Italian neofascists and the Shah's
SAVAK to locate and assassinate dissidents.
Operation
Condor was at its peak in 1976. Chilean exiles in Argentina were threatened again, and again had to go underground or into exile. Chilean General
Carlos Prats had already been assassinated by the Chilean
DINA in Buenos Aires in 1974, with the help of former CIA agent
Michael Townley. Cuban diplomats were also assassinated in Buenos Aires in the infamous
Automotores Orletti torture center, one of the 300 clandestine prisons of the dictatorship. These centers were managed by the
Grupo de Tareas 18 headed by convicted armed robber Aníbal Gordon, who reported directly to 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 there fort wo months, identified Chilean, Uruguayan, Paraguayan and Bolivian prisoners who were interrogated by agents from their own countries. It is there that the 19-year-old daughter-in-law of poet
Juan Gelman was tortured with her husband, before being transported to Montevideo where she delivered a baby which was immediately stolen by Uruguayan military officers.
According to
John Dinges's book
Los años del Cóndor Chilean
MIR prisoners in the Orletti center told José Luis Bertazzo that they'd 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 travelled from Miami to interrogate them. The two Cuban diplomats, charged with the protection of Cuban ambassador to Argentina
Emilio Aragonés, had been kidnapped on August 9, 1976 at the corner of calle Arribeños and Virrey del Pino by 40 armed SIDE agents who blocked the street with their
Ford Falcons, the cars used by the security forces during the dictatorship. According to Dinges the
FBI and the
CIA were informed of their arrest. He quotes a cable sent by FBI agent in Buenos Aires
Robert Scherrer on September 22, 1976 in which he mentioned in passing that
Michael Townley, later convicted for the assassination on September 21, 1976 of former Chilean minister
Orlando Letelier in Washington D.C., had taken part to the interrogatories of the two Cubans. The former head of the DINA confirmed to Argentine federal judge María Servini de Cubría in Santiago de Chile on December 22, 1999 that Michael Townley and Cuban
Guillermo Novo Sampoll were present in the Orletti center, having travelled from Chile to Argentina on August 11, 1976, and "cooperated in the torture and assassination of the two Cuban diplomats." Anti-
Castro Cuban terrorist
Luis Posada Carriles also boasted in his autobiography, "Los caminos del guerrero", of the murder of the two young men.
A 1978 cable from the US ambassador to Paraguay,
Robert White, to the
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, was published on
March 6,
2001 by the
New York Times. The document was released in November 2000 by the
Clinton administration under the Chile Declassification Project. In the cable Ambassador White reported a conversation with General
Alejandro Fretes Davalos, chief of staff of Paraguay's armed forces, who informed him that the South American intelligence chiefs involved in
Condor "[kept] in touch with one another through a U.S. communications installation in the Panama Canal Zone which cover[ed] all of Latin America". According to Davalos, this installation was "employed to co-ordinate intelligence information among the southern cone countries". Robert White feared that the US connection to
Condor might be publicly revealed at a time when the assassination in the U.S.A. of Chilean former minister
Orlando Letelier and his American assistant
Ronni Moffitt was being investigated. White cabled that "it would seem advisable to review this arrangement to insure that its continuation is in US interest."
The "information exchange" (via
telex) included
torture techniques (for example near-drowning, and playing recordings of victims who were being tortured to their families).
This demonstrates that the US facilitated communications for Operation
Condor, and has been called by
J. Patrice McSherry (Long Island Univ.) "another piece of increasingly weighty evidence suggesting that U.S. military and intelligence officials supported and collaborated with
Condor as a secret partner or sponsor."
It has been argued that while the US wasn't a key member, it "provided organizational, intelligence, financial and technological assistance to the operation."
(External Link
)
Material declassified in 2004 states that
"The declassified record shows that Secretary Kissinger was briefed on Condor and its 'murder operations' on August 5, 1976, in a 14-page report from Shlaudeman. 'Internationally, the Latin generals look like our guys,' Shlaudeman cautioned. 'We are especially identified with Chile. It can't do us any good.' Shlaudeman and his two deputies, William Luers and Hewson Ryan, recommended action. Over the course of three weeks, they drafted a cautiously worded demarche, approved by Kissinger, in which he instructed the U.S. ambassadors in the Southern Cone countries to meet with the respective heads of state about Condor. He instructed them to express 'our deep concern' about 'rumors' of 'plans for the assassination of subversives, politicians and prominent figures both within the national borders of certain Southern Cone countries and abroad.'"(External Link
)
Ultimately, the demarche was never delivered. Kornbluh and Dinges suggest that the decision not to send Kissinger's order was due to a cable sent by Assistant Secretary Harry Shlaudeman to his deputy in D.C which states "you can simply instruct the Ambassadors to take no further action, noting that there have been no reports in some weeks indicating an intention to activate the Condor scheme."McSherry, adds, "According to [U.S.Ambassador to Paraguay Robert] White, instructions from a secretary of state can't be ignored unless there's a countermanding order received via a secret (CIA) backchannel."
Kornbluh and Dinges conclude that "The paper trail is clear: the State Department and the CIA had enough intelligence to take concrete steps to thwart Condor assassination planning. Those steps were initiated but never implemented." Shlaudeman's deputy Hewson Ryan later acknowledged in an oral history interview that the State Department was "remiss" in its handling of the case. "We knew fairly early on that the governments of the Southern Cone countries were planning, or at least talking about, some assassinations abroad in the summer of 1976. ... Whether if we'd gone in, we might have prevented this, I don't know," he stated in reference to the Letelier-Moffitt bombing. "But we didn't."
Henry Kissinger
Henry Kissinger,
Secretary of State in the
Nixon and
Ford administrations, was closely involved diplomatically with the
Southern Cone governments at the time and well aware of the
Condor plan. According to the French newspaper
L'Humanité the first cooperation agreements were signed between the CIA and anti-
Castro groups, fascist movements such as the
Triple A set up in Argentina by
Juan Perón and
Isabel Martínez de Perón's "personal secretary"
José López Rega, and
Rodolfo Almirón (arrested in Spain in 2006).
On
May 31,
2001 French judge
Roger Le Loire requested that a summons be served on
Henry Kissinger while he was staying at the
Hôtel Ritz in
Paris. Loire wanted to question Kissinger as a witness for alleged U.S. involvement in Operation Condor and for possible US knowledge concerning the "disappearances" of 5 French nationals in Chile during military rule. Kissinger left Paris that evening, and Loire's inquiries were directed to the U.S. State Department.
In July 2001 the Chilean high court granted investigating judge
Juan Guzmán the right to question Kissinger about the 1973 killing of American journalist
Charles Horman, whose execution at the hands of the Chilean military following the coup was dramatized in the 1982
Costa-Gavras film,
Missing. The judge’s questions were relayed to Kissinger via diplomatic routes but were not answered.
In August 2001 Argentine Judge Rodolfo Canicoba sent a
letter rogatory to the US State Department, in accordance with the
Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), requesting a deposition by Kissinger to aid the judge's investigation of Operation
Condor.
On
September 10,
2001 a civil suit was filed in a Washington, D.C., federal court by the family of Gen.
René Schneider, murdered former Commander-in-Chief of the Chilean Army, asserting that Kissinger ordered Schneider's murder because he refused to endorse plans for a military coup. Schneider was killed by coup-plotters loyal to General
Roberto Viaux in a botched kidnapping attempt, but U.S. involvement with the plot is disputed, as declassified transcripts show that Nixon and Kissinger had ordered the coup "turned off" a week before the killing, fearing that Viaux had no chance. As part of the suit Schneider’s two sons are attempting to sue Kissinger and then-CIA director
Richard Helms for $3 million.
On
September 11,
2001, the 28th anniversary of the Pinochet coup, Chilean human rights lawyers filed a criminal case against Kissinger along with
Augusto Pinochet, former Bolivian general and president
Hugo Banzer, former Argentine general and dictator
Jorge Rafael Videla, and former Paraguayan president
Alfredo Stroessner for alleged involvement in Operation
Condor. The case was brought on behalf of some fifteen victims of Operation
Condor, ten of whom were Chilean.
In late 2001 the Brazilian government canceled an invitation for Kissinger to speak in
São Paulo because it couldn't guarantee his immunity from judicial action.
On
February 16,
2007, a request for the extradition of Kissinger was filed at the Supreme Court of
Uruguay on behalf of Bernardo Arnone, a political activist who was kidnapped, tortured and disappeared by the dictatorial regime in 1976.
The "French connection"
French journalist
Marie-Monique Robin found in the archives of the
Quai d'Orsay, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the original document proving that a 1959 agreement between Paris and Buenos Aires set up a "permanent French military mission" of officers who had fought in the
Algerian War, and which was located in the offices of the chief of staff of the Argentine Army. It continued until
socialist François Mitterrand was elected President of France in 1981. 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.. The first Argentine officers, among them
Alcides Lopez Aufranc, went to Paris to attend two-year courses at the
Ecole de Guerre military school in 1957, two years before the
Cuban Revolution and when no Argentine guerrilla movement existed. However, Deputy
Roland Blum, in charge of the Commission, refused to hear Marie-Monique Robin, and in December 2003 published a 12-page report described by Robin as being in the utmost bad faith. It claimed that no agreement had been signed, despite the agreement found by Robin in the
Quai d'Orsay
When Minister of Foreign Affairs
Dominique de Villepin traveled to Chile in February 2004 he claimed that there had been no cooperation between France and the military regimes.
Reporter Marie-Monique Robin said to
L'Humanité newspaper: "The French have systematized a military technique in the urban environment which would be copied and pasted to Latin American dictatorships.". The methods employed during the 1957
Battle of Algiers were systematized and exported to the War School in Buenos Aires. Besides this "French connection" he's also accused former head of state
Isabel Peron and former ministers
Carlos Ruckauf and
Antonio Cafiero, who had signed the "anti-subversion decrees" before Videla's 1976 coup d'état. According to
ESMA survivor Graciela Daleo, this is another tactic which claims that these crimes were legitimised by the 1987
Obediencia Debida law, and that they were also covered by Isabel Peron's "anti-subversion decrees" (which, if true, would give them a veneer of legality, despite torture being forbidden by the Argentine Constitution)
Alfredo Astiz also referred before the courts to the "French connection".
Legal actions
Chilean judge
Juan Guzman, who had arraigned Pinochet at his return to Chile after his arrest in London, started procedures against some 30 torturers, including former head of the DINA
Manuel Contreras, for the disappearance of 20 Chilean victims of the
Condor plan.
In Argentina the
CONADEP human rights commission led by writer
Ernesto Sabato investigated human rights abuses during the "Dirty War", and the 1985
Trial of the Juntas found top officers who ran the military governments guilty of acts of
state terrorist. However, the amnesty laws (
Ley de Obediencia Debida and
Ley de Punto Final) put an end to the trials until the amnesties themselves were repealed by the
Argentine Supreme Court in 2003. Criminals such as
Alfredo Astiz, sentenced in absentia in France for the disappearance of the two French nuns Alice Domont and
Léonie Duquet will now have to answer for their involvement in
Condor.
Chilean
Enrique Arancibia Clavel was condemned in Argentina for the assassination of Carlos Prats and of his wife.
Former Uruguayan president
Juan María Bordaberry, his minister of Foreign Affairs and six military officers, responsible for the disappearance in Argentina in l976 of opponents to the Uruguayan regime, were arrested in 2006.
On 3 August, 2007 General
Raúl Iturriaga, former head of DINA, was captured in the Chilean town of
Viña del Mar on the Pacific coast. He had previously been a fugitive from a five-year jail term, after being sentenced for the kidnapping of
Luis Dagoberto San Martin, a 21-year-old opponent of Pinochet. Martín had been captured in 1974 and taken to a DINA detention centre, from which he "disappeared." Iturriaga was also wanted in Argentina for the assassination of General Prats
[.]
According to French newspaper L'Humanité "in most of those countries legal action against the authors of crimes of 'lese-humanity' from the 1970s to 1990 owes more to flaws in the amnesty laws than to a real will of the governments in power, which, on the contrary, wave the flag of 'national reconciliation'. It is sad to say that two of the pillars of the Condor Operation, Alfredo Stroessner and Augusto Pinochet, never paid for their crimes and died without ever answering charges about the 'disappeared' - who continue to haunt the memory of people who had been crushed by fascist brutality.".
Further Information
Get more info on 'Operation Condor'.
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