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Argentine Dirty War

Dirty War
Part of Cold War and Operation Condor
Date 1974–1982
Location Argentina
Result
Belligerents

 Argentina

Supported by:
 United States
 Bolivia
 Brazil
 Chile
 Paraguay
 Uruguay

Bandera del ERP.svg ERP
Flag of Montoneros.svg Montoneros

Supported by:
 Cuba
Commanders and leaders
Argentina Juan Domingo Perón
Argentina José López Rega
Argentina Isabel Martínez de Perón
Argentina Jorge Rafael Videla
Argentina Emilio Eduardo Massera
Argentina Orlando Ramón Agosti
Argentina Roberto Eduardo Viola
Argentina Carlos Lacoste
Argentina Leopoldo Galtieri
Several far-left guerrillas
Casualties and losses
30,000 leftist sympathizers

 Argentina

Bandera del ERP.svg ERP
Flag of Montoneros.svg Montoneros

The "Dirty War" (Spanish: Guerra Sucia), was the name used by the Argentine Military Government for a period of state terrorism in Argentina from roughly 1974 to 1983 (some sources date the beginning to 1969), during which military and security forces and right-wing death squads in the form of the Argentine Anticommunist Alliance (Triple A) hunted down and killed left-wing guerrillas, political dissidents, and anyone believed to be associated with socialism. The victims of the violence were 7,158 left-wing activists, guerrillas and militants, including trade unionists, students, journalists and Marxists and Peronist guerrillas and their support network in the Montoneros believed to be 150,000-250,000-strong and 60,000-strong in the ERP, as well as alleged sympathizers. The official number of disappeared is reported to be 13,000. Some 10,000 of the "disappeared" were guerrillas of the Montoneros (MPM) and the Marxist People's Revolutionary Army (ERP). although it is estimated that the Montoneros and ERP had a combined strength of 5,000. The "disappeared" included those thought to be a political or ideological threat to the military junta, even vaguely, and they were killed in an attempt by the junta to silence the opposition and break the determination of the guerrillas. The worst repression occurred after the guerillas were largely defeated in 1977, when the church, labor unions, artists, intellectuals and university students and professors were targeted. The junta justified this mass terror by exaggerating the guerrilla threat, and even staged attacks to be blamed on guerillas and used frozen dead bodies of guerilla fighters that had been kept in storage for this purpose.


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