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The return of Peron, the Dirty Wars and their outcomes. The return of Perón and the Dirty War. Left wing origins Kidnapping of Pedro Aramburu , May 29, 1970 Accomplished by Emilio Angel Maza and Fernando Luis Abal Medina Leaders of the Montoneros – a tiny group, mostly of leaders
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The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Left wing origins • Kidnapping of Pedro Aramburu, May 29, 1970 • Accomplished by Emilio Angel Maza and Fernando Luis Abal Medina • Leaders of the Montoneros – a tiny group, mostly of leaders • Killed Aramburu and proclaimed that it was the beginning of seizure of power for Perón and Peronism and reprisal for kidnapping corpse of Eva Perón in 1956 • Caused massive police and military response • 72,000 police and military men went looking for Aramburu • Followed by seizure of town, La Calera, in Córdoba • Received more public support than Marxist ERP
The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Left wing origins • Kidnapping of Pedro Aramburu, May 29, 1970 • Never criticized by Perón, strongly supported by the Peronist Youth (Juventud Peronista) • Linked to student, particularly university, activists who joined Montoneros • Followed by equally daring activities on part of Marxist groups
The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Return of Perón • Preceded by presidential election of Hector Cámpora who was sympathetic to leftist groups and let militants out of jail • Perón became president, Oct. 12, 1973 • Gave hints that he did not support the Left, but they were ignored until Jan. 1974 • Told leftists to support a repressive reform of the Penal Code • Finally, on May 1, 1974 during May Day speech, he called the vocal Montoneros a bunch of stupid idiots • Without Montonero support, Perón’s plans for a social pact disappeared
The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Rise of the Extreme Right • José López Rega and the AAA • Founded the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance within the Social Welfare Ministry in 1973 and they participated in Ezeiza massacre of June 20, 1973 • Linked to Federal Police • Began killing politicians, labor leaders, and guerillas
The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Rise of the Extreme Right • Military joined with AAA after Isabel Martínez de Perón invited them to wipe out the guerillas; then took power for themselves on March 24, 1976 • Inflation and political violence uncontrolled • Economy in shambles • Montonero response • Try to blow up Federal Police chief by putting explosives under a bed and bombing the dining room of the Federal Police Security Branch • Military response: massive hunts for subversives; use of torture to extract names of collaborators • By 1978, Montoneros mostly defeated, but Dirty War continued
The return of Perón and the Dirty War • Rise of the Extreme Right • Role of the Catholic Church • Interrogated prisoners, gave comfort to torturers • Turned in names of left wing religious, religious youth • Tolerated anti-Semitic aspects of Dirty War (JacoboTimerman) • The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo • Began to organize in 1977 to protest disappearances of children • Early leaders infiltrated by Church informers and some disappeared • Gained international support and recognition for their protests • Became the voice of conscience for Argentina during the military regime