Operation Charly

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Operation Charly (Spanish: Operación Charly), was allegedly the code-name given to a program during the 1970s and 1980s undertaken by the

Argentine military with the agreement of the United States Department of Defense, or was led by the US and used the Argentinians as a proxy.[1]

The exportation of the "Argentine" method to Central America

Argentina's military involvement in Central America began during the

Bogotá, Colombia, junta leader General Roberto Eduardo Viola offered a proposition calling for a joint Latin American effort against, on his words, "leftist subversion", citing this as "the greatest military threat in the region".[2] Pursuant with this plan (referred to as the "Viola Plan"), Argentina expanded its counterinsurgency and military assistance to El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras
at the behest of the military leadership in those countries.

The role of Argentina in Central America reached its zenith in the early 1980s with National Reorganization Process's involvement in covertly directing the Contra rebellion in Nicaragua in conjunction with the CIA. In December 1981, General Leopoldo Galtieri, in a palace revolution, replaced General Viola as the head of Argentina's military junta. A few days before assuming power, Galtieri exposed in a speech in Miami the Argentine government's decision to constitute itself as an unconditional ally of the US in the "world struggle against Communism": "Argentina and the United States will march together in the ideological war which is starting in the world" [sic].[3] At one point, beginning in early-1982, plans were underway between the United States and the Argentine junta for the creation of a large Latin American military force, which would be directed by an Argentine officer, with the initial aim of landing in El Salvador and pushing the revolutionaries to Honduras to exterminate them, and then to invade Nicaragua and topple the Sandinista regime. The operation would have been protected by a remodelling of the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance (TIAR).

Within the framework of Operation Charly, the Argentine military also implemented, with the help of the Reagan Administration, a series of arms interdiction programs in Central America to disrupt the supply of weapons to the insurgencies in the region.

Leslie Gelb explained that "Argentina would be responsible, with funds from North American intelligence, of attacking the flux of equipment which was transiting Nicaragua to El Salvador and Guatemala [4]
".

Operation Charly was executed by a group of military figures who had already taken part in

Martha Honey documented the exportation of "social control techniques" which the Argentine army had "brutally perfected" in Argentina to Central American countries.[5]
Among the
Battle of Algiers, and then by their US counterparts.[7][8]

According to Noam Chomsky, starting in 1979, the Argentine military established covert military centers in Panama, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala and Nicaragua. Among others examples, Noam Chomsky says the death squads which began to act in Honduras in 1980 were attributed to the importation of the "Argentine method".[9][improper synthesis?]

In July 1980, the Grupo de Tareas Exterior (GTE, External Operations Group) headed by

war criminal Klaus Barbie. The Argentine secret services hired 70 foreign agents to assist in the coup.[6][10] The cocaine trade helped fund the covert operations.[6]

Ariel Armony, president of the Goldfarb Center in the

civilian population were erased, while national frontiers were subordinated to "ideological frontiers" of the East-West conflict." In particular, the Argentine military was not satisfied with "annihilating" the opposition in the country, but repealed any distinction between internal and external policy.[6]

Argentine military intervention in Central America (1977–1986)

Nicaragua

After attaining power in 1976, the

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.[11][12]

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).[13] 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.[14][15]

In addition to providing arms and training to Somoza's National Guard, the Argentine junta also executed a number of

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.[16]

Following the overthrow of

Contras, particularly at Lepaterique base alongside some members of the Honduran security forces.[19]

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.[20]

Honduras

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.[21] 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.[22] 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.[22]

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.[23]

El Salvador

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 principle 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."[24]

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.

FMLN from Cuba and Nicaragua.[26] 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.[27]

Guatemala

The military junta in

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.[28] In addition to working with the regular security forces, Argentine military advisors as well as a squadron of the Batallón de Inteligencia 601 worked directly with the Lucas government's paramilitary death squads, most notably the Ejercito Secreto Anticommunista (ESA).[29]

Technical support from Argentina played a crucial role in the success of the army's urban counterinsurgency campaign carried out in Guatemala City in July 1981. By way of the Guatemalan military's new computer service (installed by Tadiran Electronics Industries Ltd. of Israel), Argentine advisors introduced a data analysis system developed during the "Dirty War" in Argentina, which was used to monitor electrical and water usage to pinpoint the coordinates of guerrilla safe-houses.[30] Due in part to this support, a number of clandestine "safe-houses" operated by the insurgents were subsequently infiltrated and a clandestine network of the Organizacion del Pueblo en Armas (ORPA) was destroyed in Guatemala City. Argentine military advisors also participated in the Guatemalan army's rural scorched-earth campaign in the Guatemalan highlands in 1981 code-named "Operation Ash 81."[31]

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Giandoni, William (December 4, 1979). "Marxist Threat Unites Latins". Beaver County Times.
  3. ^ Miami Herald, December 2, 1981
  4. New York Times
    , April 8, 1983
  5. .
  6. ^ a b c d Seoane, María (March 24, 2006). "Los secretos de la guerra sucia continental de la dictadura". Clarín (in Spanish). (in Spanish)
  7. Página/12
    , October 13, 2004
  8. ^ Conclusion of Marie-Monique Robin's Escadrons de la mort, l'école française (in French)
  9. Trinity College. p. 7. Archived from the original
    (PDF) on July 5, 2008. Retrieved September 8, 2008.
  10. ^ "Hearing before the Italian Parliamentary Commission on Terrorism". July 22, 1997. of Stefano Delle Chiaie, headed by senator Giovanni Pellegrino (in Italian)
  11. ^ Duhalde. El estado terrorista argentino. p. 118.
  12. ^ Bardini, Roberto (1988). Monjes, mercenarios y mercaderes: La red secreta de apoyo a los Contras. Mexico City: Alpa Corral. pp. 103–5.
  13. ^ Interview with former Argentine military advisor Carlos Alberto Lobo, in Siete Dias. March 13, 1983, pages 74-76
  14. ^ Oscar R. Cardoso, Richardo Kirschbaum, Eduardo van der Kooy, Malvinas, la trama secreta, 1983, p. 27
  15. ^ Joselovsky. El ejercito del 'Proceso'. p. 63.
  16. ^ Dickey, Christopher (1987). With the Contras: A Reporter in the Wilds of Nicaragua. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 54–55.
  17. ^ Mendez, Juan E. (1987). Truth and Partial Justice in Argentina. p. 7.
  18. .
  19. ^ Capítulos desconocidos de los mercenarios chilenos en Honduras camino de Iraq Archived May 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, La Nación, September 25, 2005 – URL accessed on February 14, 2007 (in Spanish)
  20. ^ "Nicaragua: U.S. Support for the Contras". Brown University.
  21. ^ Michael Dobbs, The Washington Post, 21 March 2005, Negroponte's Time In Honduras at Issue; archived at [1]
  22. ^ 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. Archived October 30, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Margen (in Spanish)
  23. ^ 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 August 5, 2009. Retrieved August 2, 2009.
  24. ^ 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
  25. ^ "Military Diplomacy Tilts Argentine Foreign Policy towards Washington". 'Latin America Weekly Report,' Page 1. September 11, 1981.
  26. ^ ""Che" Galtieri Plans his Own Vietnam". Latin America Weekly Report. October 9, 1981.
  27. ^ Central Bank of the Republic of Argentina (BCRA), the directorate's secret session, "Acta no. 'S' 2." February 11, 1982.
  28. ^ Duhalde. El estado terrorista argentino. pp. 122–123.
  29. ^ Guardian, London, 12/29/1981; Duhalde, El estado terrorista argentino, 122
  30. ^ "Testing Time for Military Solutions in Guatemala and El Salvador". Latin American Weekly Report. November 6, 1981.
  31. ^ Joseph, Spenser (2008). In from the Cold: Latin America's New Encounter with the Cold War. p. 152.

Bibliography