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Orlando Letelier


 

Orlando Letelier (1932 April 13 - 1976 September 21) was a member of the Chilean government who was assassinated in Washington, D.C., by agents of Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet in 1976.

Related Topics:
1932 - April 13 - 1976 - September 21 - Chile - Assassinate - Washington, D.C. - Augusto Pinochet

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In 1971, Letelier was appointed ambassador to the United States by socialist Chilean President Salvador Allende. Two years later, he served as Foreign Minister, and then Defense Minister. During the period, the Nixon (and Kissinger) administration was directly engaged in an effort to destabilize Chile as a means of removing Allende from power. This, together with serious mistakes by the Chilean government, ultimately led to the coup on September 11, 1973, that brought Pinochet to power. The United States then became a strong supporter of the new Chilean dictator.

Related Topics:
1971 - Ambassador - United States - Socialist - Salvador Allende - Nixon - Kissinger - September 11 - 1973 - Dictator

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As a result of the coup, Letelier was arrested by the Chilean dictatorship and tortured. He was eventually sent to a political prison in Tierra del Fuego.

Related Topics:
Torture - Political prison - Tierra del Fuego

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After his release, he moved to Washington in 1974, where he worked to restore democracy to Chile. He was killed by a car bomb explosion on September 21, 1976, in Sheridan Circle. The car bomb also killed Letelier's American assistant, Ronni Moffitt.

Related Topics:
Democracy - Car bomb - September 21 - 1976 - Sheridan Circle

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Orlando Letelier's assassination was part of a coordinated effort by several right-wing military dictatorships in Latin America to intimidate and murder their political opponents. This effort, known as Operation Condor, included such states as Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia. Three of those states—Uruguay, Argentina and Chile—began assassinating opposition figures in foreign countries during the spring of 1976. The United States government was aware of Operation Condor's existence.

Related Topics:
Right-wing - Latin America - Operation Condor - State - Brazil - Argentina - Paraguay - Uruguay - Bolivia - 1976

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Several people were eventually prosecuted and convicted for the murder. Among them were Michael Townley, a U.S. expatriate with close ties to the Chilean intelligence agency DINA; General Manuel Contreras, former head of the DINA; and Brigadier Pedro Espinoza, also formerly of DINA. Pinochet has never been brought to trial for the murders, although Townley has implicated him as being responsibile for them. Later-released CIA documents show that the CIA was closely linked with Contreras up to, and even after, the assassination of Letelier. Townley and Armando Fernández, who was also implicated in the murder, were given visas by the United States ambassador to Paraguay at the urging of the Paraguayan government despite having false Paraguayan passports.

Related Topics:
Prosecute - Convict - Michael Townley - Expatriate - Intelligence - DINA - Manuel Contreras - Pedro Espinoza - CIA - Visas - Passport

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See also terrorism, state terrorism

Related Topics:
Terrorism - State terrorism

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