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June 26th, 2008 at 12:55pm
Date: Thu, 26 Jun 2008 17:41:34 GMT Server: Apache Accept-Ranges: bytes Connection:
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ARGENTINA
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Home News Releases About HRW Contribute Publications Info by Country Africa Americas Asia Europe/Central Asia Middle East/N. Africa United States Global Issues Arms Business Children's Rights Counterterrorism Economic, Social & Cultural Rights Health & Human Rights HIV/AIDS International Justice LGBT Rights Migrants Prisons Refugees United Nations Women's Rights More... Take Action Commentary Film Festival Photo Galleries Audio / Video Site Map Contact Us Corrections Permissions RSS XI. THE ROLE OF THE UNITED STATES Until the 1976 coup, and for months afterwards, the United States relied to a large extent on the armed forces as its main interlocutors in Argentina's turbulent politics. Unlike in Chile and Uruguay, where the U.S had backed reformist parties (at least until the emergence of a serious left-wing challenge in the early 1970s), it was consistently hostile to the most popular political movement in Argentina, Peronism. In the face of Peron's populist rhetoric, economic nationalism, and fascist sympathies, the military seemed to provide a moderate alternative, favorable to American investment, and just as staunchly anti-communist. Not only did it seem to offer the best hope of ending the country's chaotic violence: the military promised, as it had in Chile, to deal effectively with marxist subversion. Itself a cauldron of political violence during the mid-1970s, Argentina was home to hundreds of leftists exiled by the military coups in Chile and Uruguay. The declassification of thousands of secret U.S. government documents on the Pinochet regime during the Clinton Administration has shed some light on Washington's relations with the Argentine juntas in the 1970s, as has additional information released earlier. Relatives of victims, Argentine human rights groups, European and Argentine judges, and members of the U.S. Congress have called on the U.S. government to authorize the declassification of more documents. In August, 2000, then-Secret"
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