• Brazil’s Military Regime: Technocrats, Torturers, and the Myth of Order (1964–1985)

    The Brazilian military dictatorship, inaugurated by the April 1964 coup, governed under the banner of “order” and anti-communism but relied on brutal repression and a technocratic developmental model.  On March 31–April 1, 1964, army officers deposed President João Goulart – a left‐leaning reformist – after a bloodless revolt by junior officers and hostile governors in Minas Gerais, São Paulo and elsewhere .  Congress promptly declared Goulart’s seat “vacant” and selected Army General Humberto Castelo Branco as president .  Far from returning to democracy as many expected, the coup leaders institutionalized an authoritarian regime.  Early Institutional Acts (AIs) stripped civil liberties:…

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  • Operation Condor: The Secret War Against Dissent (1975–1983)

    In the mid-1970s, a clandestine network of South American dictatorships coordinated a continent‑wide campaign against leftist dissent known as Operation Condor.  Institutionalized at a secret meeting in Santiago in November 1975, Condor united the intelligence and security services of Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay in a joint counterinsurgency effort .  Brazil formally joined the pact in 1976, followed by Ecuador and Peru in 1978 .  Together, these regimes shared information, logistics, and personnel to surveil, abduct, torture, and often murder political exiles and opponents across national borders. As Patrice McSherry observes, Condor was “a secret intelligence and operations system”…

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