Prelude to Repression: From Democracy to Dictatorship

In March 1976, Argentina’s armed forces overthrew President Isabel Perón in a coup that inaugurated one of the darkest chapters in Latin American history. The new regime, calling itself the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional (National Reorganization Process), promised to restore “order” and “Western Christian civilization.” In practice, it unleashed a campaign of terror against its own citizens—a Dirty War that killed or disappeared as many as 30,000 people.

Argentina’s descent into authoritarianism had deep roots. By the mid-1970s, the country was wracked by economic crisis, political polarization, and escalating violence between leftist guerrillas—such as the Montoneros and the ERP (Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo)—and right-wing paramilitary death squads like the Triple A (Alianza Anticomunista Argentina).

The fragile presidency of Isabel Perón (who succeeded her husband Juan Perón in 1974) struggled to control this chaos. The military, long accustomed to intervening in politics, viewed itself as the savior of the nation. On March 24, 1976, it struck.

The coup installed a three-man juntaJunta Full Description: A military or political group that rules a country after taking power by force. These military councils suspended constitutions, dissolved congresses, and banned political parties, claiming to act as “guardians” of the nation against internal corruption and subversion. A Junta is the administrative body of a military dictatorship. In the Southern Cone, these were often composed of the heads of the different branches of the armed forces (Army, Navy, Air Force). They justified their seizure of power as a “state of exception” necessary to restore order, presenting themselves as apolitical technocrats saving the nation from the chaos of democracy. Critical Perspective:The Junta represents the militarization of politics. By treating the governance of a nation like a military operation, these regimes viewed distinct political opinions not as healthy democratic debate, but as insubordination or treason to be court-martialed. It replaced the messy consensus-building of democracy with the rigid hierarchy of the barracks. led by General Jorge Rafael Videla (Army), Admiral Emilio Massera (Navy), and Brigadier Orlando Agosti (Air Force). They suspended Congress, banned political parties, censored the media, and imposed curfews. Behind bureaucratic language about “reorganization,” the junta embarked on what it saw as a crusade: to eradicate “subversion” and rebuild Argentine society from the ashes of “decadence.”

Ideology of the Dirty War: “Christian Western Civilization”

The Argentine dictatorship’s ideology fused Cold War anti-communism, Catholic traditionalism, and military corporatism. Its leaders saw themselves not merely as rulers but as moral redeemers. Videla declared in 1977:

“A terrorist is not only someone with a gun or bomb, but anyone who spreads ideas contrary to Western Christian civilization.”

This doctrine justified repression without limits. Influenced by the French experience in Algeria and U.S. counterinsurgency manuals, the junta viewed Argentine society as infected by an “internal enemy.” Intellectuals, students, trade unionists, journalists, priests, and even social workers were targeted.

The military’s war was not fought on battlefields but in clandestine torture centers hidden within cities, schools, and naval bases. Victims—called “subversives”—were abducted by plainclothes agents, taken in unmarked Ford Falcons, and disappeared into a vast secret network of repression.

The regime denied everything. Families seeking their loved ones were told their children had “left the country” or “joined the terrorists.” Yet the disappearance itself became a weapon—erasing not only the body but the legal existence of the victim. As Marguerite Feitlowitz writes in A Lexicon of Terror, the dictatorship “turned language itself into an instrument of annihilation.”

Machinery of Terror: The Clandestine Detention Centers

Between 1976 and 1983, Argentina operated more than 340 clandestine detention centers (centros clandestinos de detención). These were nodes in a nationwide network of abduction, torture, and disappearance.

One of the most notorious was the ESMA (Escuela de Mecánica de la Armada)—a naval mechanics school in Buenos Aires that became a labyrinth of horror. Thousands of prisoners passed through its “Capucha” (hood room), where detainees were kept blindfolded for weeks, tortured with electric shocks, beaten, and interrogated. Many were eventually “transferred”—a euphemism for execution. Prisoners were sedated, loaded onto planes, and thrown alive into the Río de la Plata in the regime’s infamous vuelos de la muerte (death flights).

Former ESMA prisoner Adolfo Scilingo, a naval officer, later confessed in the 1990s that “the flights were routine… Two hundred, three hundred people.” His testimony helped break Argentina’s silence.

Other centers—like El Olimpo, La Perla, Pozo de Banfield, and Campo de Mayo—functioned with similar brutality. Prisoners were systematically raped, tortured, and murdered. Pregnant women were often kept alive until childbirth, after which their babies were stolen and given to military families.

The systematic appropriation of babies became one of the regime’s most grotesque legacies. The organization Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo (Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo) has since identified more than 130 of these children, now adults who were raised under false identities.

Operation Condor: Argentina’s Regional Role

Argentina’s Dirty War did not occur in isolation. It formed part of the broader network of repression known as Operation Condor, linking the military regimes of the Southern Cone.

Argentina’s intelligence service, the SIDE, and its military collaborated with counterparts in Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil to kidnap and kill exiles abroad. Buenos Aires became a hub for Condor operations: Chilean, Uruguayan, and Bolivian dissidents were abducted on Argentine soil and handed over to their home regimes.

In 1976, Uruguayan legislators Zelmar Michelini and Héctor Gutiérrez Ruiz—exiled in Buenos Aires—were murdered by a joint Uruguayan-Argentine team. U.S. cables later confirmed coordination between Condor members. The Argentine regime, under Videla and later Viola, was one of Condor’s most aggressive participants, providing both logistical expertise and personnel.

This collaborationCollaboration Full Description:The cooperation of local governments, police forces, and citizens in German-occupied countries with the Nazi regime. The Holocaust was a continental crime, reliant on French police, Dutch civil servants, and Ukrainian militias to identify and deport victims. Collaboration challenges the narrative that the Holocaust was solely a German crime. across Europe, local administrations assisted the Nazis for various reasons: ideological agreement (antisemitism), political opportunism, or bureaucratic obedience. In many cases, local police rounded up Jews before German forces even arrived. Critical Perspective:This term reveals the fragility of social solidarity. When their Jewish neighbors were targeted, many European societies chose to protect their own national sovereignty or administrative autonomy by sacrificing the minority. It complicates the post-war myths of “national resistance” that many European countries adopted to hide their complicity.
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blurred the borders of terror. As historian J. Patrice McSherry notes, “Condor institutionalized the disappearance of the person as a transnational political practice.”

The Doctrine of Psychological Warfare

The junta’s repression extended beyond physical violence—it was also psychological and linguistic. The military studied counterinsurgency manuals from France’s Algerian War and the U.S. School of the Americas, adapting them to Argentina’s urban context.

Documents recovered from the Batallón de Inteligencia 601 reveal training in “psychological warfare,” “cultural subversion,” and “ideological recovery.” Torture was rationalized as an interrogation method to “extract information” and “reprogram subversives.”

The dictatorship also weaponized propaganda. Official media portrayed the regime as defending Argentina from a vast international conspiracy of Marxism, Judaism, and moral decay. Victims were called terroristas or enemigos de la patria. Censorship banned words like “disappeared” (desaparecido), erasing victims even from language.

This was a war on meaning itself. As Feitlowitz observed, “the military did not only make people disappear; it made facts disappear.”

The Church, the United States, and Complicity

The Catholic Church in Argentina was divided during the dictatorship. Many bishops publicly supported the regime’s anti-communist crusade, while a smaller number—such as Bishop Enrique Angelelli—spoke out and paid with their lives. The Church hierarchy’s silence gave moral legitimacy to state terror.

The United States, under Henry Kissinger, offered tacit approval. Declassified State Department documents show that U.S. diplomats were aware of widespread disappearances by 1976. A 1978 memo quotes Kissinger advising Argentina’s foreign minister: “Do it quickly, before human rights become an issue in Congress.”

Later, under President Jimmy Carter, the U.S. briefly shifted to a human-rights focus, cutting military aid and pressing for accountability. But this policy was reversed under Ronald Reagan, whose administration restored cooperation with Argentina as part of anti-communist policy in Central America.

As the Explaining History podcast interview “Argentina’s Mothers of the Disappeared” notes, this U.S. ambivalence reflected the broader Cold War moral blindness: Washington feared leftist insurgency more than it condemned right-wing terror.

Resistance: The Mothers of the Plaza de MayoMothers of the Plaza de Mayo Full Description:The Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo is an association of Argentine women who began gathering in front of the presidential palace (Casa Rosada) in 1977 to publicly demand information regarding the whereabouts of their “disappeared” children. Wearing white headscarves (symbolizing diapers), they walked in circles to defy the ban on public assembly. Critical Perspective:This movement represents the weaponization of traditional gender roles against the state. The military junta, which claimed to defend “family values,” found itself paralyzed by these women. They could not easily massacre mothers and grandmothers without losing all moral legitimacy. By politicizing their grief, the Mothers transformed private trauma into the most potent public challenge to the dictatorship’s authority.
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The regime’s violence provoked a moral resistance that became iconic worldwide: the Madres de Plaza de Mayo (Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo).

In April 1977, a small group of mothers whose children had disappeared began gathering every Thursday in Buenos Aires’ Plaza de Mayo, opposite the presidential palace. Wearing white headscarves embroidered with their children’s names, they demanded answers: ¿Dónde están?—“Where are they?”

At first ignored, then ridiculed, they became the conscience of the nation. As one Mother later said, “They wanted us to be silent, so we chose the most public place.”

The regime responded with kidnappings and murder. In December 1977, three founding Mothers and two French nuns were abducted and thrown into the sea. Yet the movement endured. Their persistence forced Argentina and the world to acknowledge the crimes being committed in secret.

The Abuelas de Plaza de Mayo, founded in 1978, expanded the mission—seeking the stolen babies of disappeared women. Their DNA identification work, in partnership with forensic anthropologists, remains one of the world’s most successful human rights investigations.

The Explaining History podcast episode (2025) highlights this intergenerational continuity: many of the recovered grandchildren now stand beside their grandmothers, testifying in trials against former officers.

Collapse of the Junta: The Falklands and Beyond

By the early 1980s, the junta was fracturing. Economic liberalization led by Economy Minister José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz caused massive unemployment and foreign debt. Inflation soared. Internal rivalries among the armed forces eroded unity.

In 1982, in a desperate bid to regain legitimacy, the junta under General Leopoldo Galtieri invaded the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas), provoking war with Britain. The defeat that followed shattered the regime’s prestige and exposed its incompetence.

Mass protests erupted across the country. On December 10, 1983—symbolically, Human Rights Day—Raúl Alfonsín of the Radical Civic Union was inaugurated as president, marking Argentina’s return to democracy.

Truth, Justice, and Memory

Democratic Argentina faced a monumental task: how to confront the crimes of the dictatorship.

In 1984, Alfonsín established the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (CONADEP), whose report Nunca Más (“Never Again”) documented 8,961 cases of disappearance (a conservative estimate). The report shocked the world with its evidence of systematic torture, executions, and the state’s total denial.

In 1985, Argentina became the first Latin American nation to prosecute its former military rulers in civilian courts. The Trial of the Juntas convicted five top commanders, including Videla and Massera. However, military pressure soon forced the government to pass two amnesty laws—the Full Stop Law (1986) and Due Obedience Law (1987)—which halted further prosecutions.

Human rights groups refused to accept impunity. Throughout the 1990s, they pressed for renewed trials. In 2003, President Néstor Kirchner repealed the amnesty laws. Videla was rearrested in 1998 and sentenced to life imprisonment before his death in 2013. Hundreds of other officers have since been convicted.

Argentina’s reckoning has become a model for transitional justice worldwide. Truth commissions, forensic exhumations, and public memory museums—like the ESMA Memory Site Museum—testify to a nation still haunted by its ghosts yet determined to remember.

Historiography: Interpreting the Dirty War

The historiography of Argentina’s Dirty War is vast and evolving.

Marguerite Feitlowitz (A Lexicon of Terror, 1998) explores how language and euphemism sustained the regime’s violence. Pilar Calveiro, a survivor of detention, analyzes the “logic of disappearance” as a system of social control.

Carlos Santiago Nino (Radical Evil on Trial, 1996) examines the moral foundations of Argentina’s transitional justice. Inés Izaguirre, Elizabeth Jelin, and Emilio Crenzel document how memory and silence shaped Argentina’s post-dictatorship identity. Marcelo Cavarozzi and Maria Seoane debate whether the junta’s rise reflected Argentina’s “failed modernization” or the global Cold War’s logic of counterrevolution. Feitlowitz, Crenzel, and Robben emphasize that the Dirty War was not a war at all, but a campaign of extermination disguised as one.

Internationally, scholars link Argentina’s terror to global patterns of authoritarian modernization. Historian Greg Grandin situates it within the broader “Latin American Cold War,” arguing that Argentina’s generals saw themselves as soldiers in a continental crusade.

Legacy and Lessons

Argentina’s Dirty War remains a living wound. The number “30,000” has become both a symbol and a battlefield of memory—disputed by revisionists but sacred to survivors.

In 2023, on the coup’s 47th anniversary, tens of thousands marched in Buenos Aires under banners reading “Memoria, Verdad, Justicia.” Their chant—“Never Again!”—echoes the title of CONADEP’s report and the collective vow of a nation that refuses to forget.

The courage of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo endures as Argentina’s moral compass. They transformed private grief into public resistance and turned memory into justice.

Today, their white headscarves hang in Argentina’s congressional chambers and classrooms—a symbol that truth, once buried, can never again be silenced.

Conclusion

The Dirty War was not an aberration but part of a global story: the weaponization of fear in the name of security. Under the pretext of saving Argentina from communism, the junta annihilated its own citizens, corrupted its institutions, and scarred generations.

Yet from that abyss emerged one of the world’s most resilient human rights movements. Argentina’s pursuit of truth and justice stands as both a warning and a model—proof that even after terror, a nation can choose memory over oblivion.


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8 responses to “Argentina’s Dirty War: Terror in the Name of the Nation (1976–1983)”

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