Guerrillas and Generals : Dirty War in Argentina

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Author: Paul H. Lewis

ISBN-10: 0275973603

ISBN-13: 9780275973605

Category: South American History

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Lewis provides a comprehensive, impartial examination of Argentina's Dirty War. He analyzes the causes, describes the ideologies that motivated both sides, and explores the consequences of all-or-nothing politics.He begins by tracing the Dirty War's origins back to military interventions in the 1930s and 1940s, and the rise of General Juan Peron's populist regime, which resulted in the polarization of Argentine society. Peron's overthrow by the military in 1955 only heightened social conflict by producing a resistance movement out of which several guerrilla organizations would soon emerge. The ideologies, terrorist tactics, and internal dynamics of those underground groups are examined in detail, as well as their links to other movements in Argentina and abroad. The guerrillas reached the height of their influence when the military withdrew from power in 1973 and turned over the government to Peron's puppet president, Hector Campora. They quickly found themselves in opposition again after Peron returned from exile, and as Peronism dissolved into factions after Peron's death, the military prepared to take power again, inspired by a new National Security Doctrine. The origins of this ideology in US Cold War doctrine and in French revolutionary war doctrine are fully explored, because the Argentine military's Dirty War strategy and tactics grew directly out of these ideas. The arrests, the treatment of prisoners, and the mindset of the interrogators are treated in detail. Special attention is given to the anti-guerrilla war in Tucuman's jungles, the strange history of David Graiver-the guerrillas' banker-and the Timerman case. In the last part of the book, Lewis describesthe intrigues that undermined the military regime, its retreat from power, and the human rights trials that were held under the new democratic government. Those trials eventually were stopped by military revolts. Presidential pardons followed and have left Argentina divided once more. An important survey for scholars and students of Latin American politics, contemporary history, and civil-military relations.

The "Oligarchy" and "the People"The Seedbed of TerrorismThe Guerrilla EmergesThe Guerrillas' WorldThe Military SurrendersThe Peronist RestorationToward the "Dirty War"The CoupThe Ideology of RepressionThe InfernoPower StrugglesThe Regime CrumblesRetributionThe Endless DenouementResidues of the Dirty WArBibliography