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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Wednesday, August 10, 2016

RSN: Chevron Won't Have to Pay for Its Own Version of Chernobyl, US Documents on Argentina Dirty War Show Conflict Between Carter Administration and Kissinger



US actions in South America have created brutal dictatorships, killings, human rights atrocities and created to immigration flood that is criticized. 

The solutions are simple and complex. 
Allow these people to live in PEACE, free of violence and killings, with stable governments that elevated their people.

And YES! Henry Kissinger is a WAR CRIMINAL!  

Below is an excerpt from: 

US Documents on Argentina Dirty War Show Conflict Between Carter Administration and Kissinger 
teleSUR 
Excerpt: "In a much-awaited step toward uncovering the historical truth of the U.S.-backed Dirty War in Argentina in the 1970's and 80's, the United States has delivered over 1,000 pages of classified documents to the South American country." 
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The files include grisly descriptions of torture, rape, assassinations, and forced disappearances carried out by the military regime under General Jorge Rafael Videla, installed after the 1976 coup against left-wing President Isabel Peron.
The documents also detail Henry Kissinger’s applause of the Argentine dictatorship and its counterinsurgency strategy, including during a visit to General Videla during the 1978 World Cup. National Security staffer Robert Pastor wrote in 1978 that Kissinger's “praise for the Argentine government in its campaign against terrorism was the music the Argentine government was longing to hear.”
Argentina’s so-called anti-terrorism policy was in reality a brutal crackdown on political dissidents, human rights defenders, academics, church leaders, students, and other opponents of the right-wing regime. It was also part of the regional U.S.-backed Operation Condor, a state terror operation that carried out assassinations and disappearances in support of Sout America's right-wing dictatorships. In Argentina, up to 30,000 people were forcibly disappeared during the Dirty War.
The documents also detail how then-U.S. President Jimmy Carter raised concern over the human rights situation in Argentina, including in a letter to General Videla rather gently urging him to make progress with respect to human rights. At the time, Kissinger reportedly demonstrates a “desire to speak out against the Carter Administration's human rights policy to Latin America,” according to a memo by National Security’s Pastor.
The further confirmation of Kissinger's atrocious legacy in Latin America comes as U.S. presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton courts an endorsement from Kissinger, widely condemned as a war criminal by human rights groups. 


(photo: teleSUR)







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