July 18, 1994, the scene of destruction at the AMIA heaquarters
in Buenos Aires.
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The
Crime.
On July 18, 1994, a
massive explosion reduced the headquarters of the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina (AMIA) in mid-town Buenos
Aires to rubble. The explosion was the result of the detonation of a terrorist
bomb set in front of the AMIA building. So powerful was the blast and the
damage done that investigators have yet to determine without a doubt, after nearly
two decades, whether the approximately 275 kilograms (more
than 600 pounds )
of explosives were packed into a van parked directly in front of the targeted
building, into a dumpster that had been left in front of a building under
construction across the street, or both. But in subsequent investigations
carried out by the FBI and the Mossad (Israel’s secret service) it has been
established, almost without a doubt, that the suicide trigger man for the blast
was Ibrahim Hussein Berro, a 29-year-old Hezbollah militant, who probably used
a remote control device from the van to detonate the explosives. (The
identification was made on the basis of witness testimony and migration data
from the triple border crossing that Argentina shares with Brazil and Paraguay,
where the terrorist is thought to have entered the country, since local
investigators are alleged to have “lost” a human head found on the blast scene
that very likely belonged to Hussein Berro, and that could otherwise have been
used for DNA testing). The massive blast not only caused the total destruction
of the five-storey AMIA headquarters, but also demolished buildings all around
it, causing severe damage to an estimated one thousand apartments, businesses
and offices in the immediate area and breaking windows in other buildings
within a six-block radius. It was the worst bombing in Argentine history and is
ranked among some of the worst radical Islamic terrorist attacks in the world.
The suicide bombing was obviously timed to do the greatest human damage possible, with the explosives going off at approximately10 a .m.,
in the busy mid-town district. Eighty-five
people perished on the scene and another 300 were injured, many seriously. At
least 18 of the fatalities were passersby and people from other buildings. The
attack came only two years after another bombing by Islamic extremists in
Buenos Aires, that time perpetrated against the Israeli Embassy, on the north
side of the downtown area. That bomb attack destroyed the embassy building,
killing 29 people and injuring approximately 250 others.
Photo: Jewish Virtual Library.
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The suicide bombing was obviously timed to do the greatest human damage possible, with the explosives going off at approximately
The
Probe. The investigation of both Islamic
terrorist attacks on the Jewish community in Argentina—at about 250,000 people,
the largest in Latin America and the seventh largest in the world—was plagued
from the outset by intrigues, disconnects and cover-ups. Indeed, neither ever
led to a single conclusive conviction.
The worst by far, however, was the
probe into the AMIA bombing. Early work
by detectives with the apparently impossible-to-avoid help of both US and
Israeli agents quickly led to the conclusion that such a major terrorist attack
never could have been pulled off without local collaboration. But the
investigation began to stall when it pointed to the possible collusion of several
Buenos Aires Province police officers and of a lawyer turned used car salesman
called Carlos Telleldín who was alleged to have provided the Renault Trafic van that the suicide bomber used
in the attack. Investigation of the AMIA case was handed over to Federal
District Court Judge Juan José Galeano. The former attorney had been appointed
to the federal court the previous year, allegedly with a behind-the-scenes nod
from Hugo Anzorreguy, who headed up the Argentine Intelligence Bureau (SIDE)
under the presidency of Carlos Saúl Menem (1989-1999).
Families of the victims, seeking justice in the midst of corruption and
political intrigue.
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But the following year, hidden-camera footage
was released on national television that implicated the judge in payment of a
US$400,000 bribe to Telleldín (who was in jail for ten years while the court
dragged its feet without convicting him) to change his testimony. The judge
tried to resign in order to avoid trial, but his resignation was “neither
accepted nor rejected” by the administration of then-President Néstor Kirchner,
clearing the way for Galeano to be impeached and removed from his post in
disgrace by a nine-judge jury of his peers. In addition to bribery, the
impeachment proceedings accused Galeano, among other things, of destroying
and/or tampering with evidence (such as a document identifying the engine-block
number of the vehicle used in the bombing and which allegedly linked Telleldín
to the case) and manipulating witness testimony.
But by then, subsequent probes and
Galeano’s own testimony in the impeachment proceedings had involved SIDE chief
Anzorreguy in the bribery scandal and, called upon to answer the charges,
Anzorreguy (released from his secrecy vows by Néstor Kirchner, who called the failed
AMIA investigation “a national disgrace”), quickly pointed an accusing finger
at his former boss, ex-President Carlos Menem, who, he said, had authorized the
bribe.
In late 2006, the subsequent Argentine
prosecutors in the case, Marcelo Martínez Burgos and Alberto Nisman, who had
centered part of their investigation on an Iranian connection, formally charged
the government of Iran with directing the attack and accused the Hezbollah
militia of carrying it out. The theory behind the prosecutors’ probe would
appear to link the AMIA bombing to a much more far-reaching issue than a random
terrorist attack. If they were correct, the bombing was a kind of warning to
the Menem government after a decision by Buenos Aires to at least temporarily
suspend the promised transfer of nuclear technology to the Iranians. While this
hypothesis has been much debated, it would certainly appear to be in line with
what is now the very clear intention of Iran’s radical leadership to gain
access by any and all means to ever greater nuclear technology and material, so
as to eventually achieve atomic warhead-manufacturing capability. However,
Menem himself—whose family has long been prominent in the Argentine-Arab
Community—has advanced the theory that the bombing was a vendetta for his
support of the United States in the first Gulf War (Desert Storm) against Iraq.
Local trails led back to Menem.
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Last year, Judge Ariel Lijo charged
former President Menem and a group of alleged co-conspirators—including
Galeano, Menem’s brother Munir, Anzorreguy, and the former SIDE director’s
deputy Juan Carlos Anchezar and Metropolitan Police Chief Jorge “Fino”
Palacios, among others—with obstructing the 1994 investigation and with
protecting possible accomplices in the crime, and called for them to be bound
over for an oral, public trial. Menem also stands accused of allegedly covering
up the possible involvement in the AMIA attack of Syrian-Argentine businessman
Alberto Kanoore Edul. Kanoore Edul, who died in 2010, was suspected of having
made contact with Menem to seek to convince the president to use his influence
to keep Galeano from progressing in the AMIA case.
One of the witnesses that Galeano
interviewed while still on the case was known as “Witness C”. Reports in
international news media indicated that this mysterious witness was allegedly a
former Iranian intelligence agent called Abolghasem Mesbahi. “Witness C” is
reported to have told the judge that the Iranian government paid ten million
dollars into a Swiss numbered account belonging to “a former president,” in
order to ensure that the AMIA investigation was blocked. When The New York Times published a report
including this information, Menem moved quickly to deny the charge, but
admitted to having a Swiss bank account.
Rogue Iranian leader Ahmadinejad
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Despite long years of theories, accusations,
lies, cover-ups, new probes and still more accusations, however, the AMIA case
remains stymied and, as I said earlier, not a single conviction has been made
to date.
The
Policy: Yet Another Diversionary Maneuver? While the administration of Néstor Kirchner gave every outward appearance of seriously seeking
justice in the AMIA case, this latest move by his widow and current President
Cristina Kirchner appears destined to once again cloud the picture regarding
compelling evidence of Iran’s involvement in this heinous crime, whose
perpetrators have gone untried and unpunished for the past two decades. It
seems at least naïve, if not ill-intentioned, to try to convince the public
that a criminal regime like that of Ahmadinejad, which has denied the existence
of the Holocaust, rejected the right of the State of Israel to exist and is now
threatening its neighbors with the possibility of nuclear war, besides being a
declared enemy of the West and express archenemy of the Jewish people, could
possibly be trusted to provide a venue in which to objectively question
suspects in the AMIA case, especially when at least one of them is a ranking
Iranian official.
Cristina: Admiration for Muammar Gaddafi... |
Here, Caputo
tacitly suggests that drafting a memorandum that includes a clause that promotes
legislative approval by both countries is, by all appearances, a diplomatic subterfuge
aimed at, well, turning a sow’s ear into a silk purse—or, in other words, a
memorandum into a full-scale treaty.
...for the half-century Castro dictatorship... |
The
administration of Cristina Kirchner in general and Foreign Minister Héctor
Timerman in particular, are clearly being disingenuous when they and their
“talking heads” (like erstwhile sports announcer and full-time Kirchner
propagandist Víctor Hugo Morales) cry crocodile tears about how misunderstood
the government’s intentions are in accepting Ahmadinejad’s rules and surrendering
the sovereignty of the Argentine justice system whose repeated extradition
efforts have been rejected and ignored. And the government’s barely veiled
attempt to use the “good offices” of Timerman to attempt to convince the local
Jewish community that an agreement with Ahmadinejad isn’t a veritable pact with
the devil and that it will somehow end up being “good” for the families of the
victims of the AMIA bombing in bringing them closure and justice in a case that
has been abusively manipulated and has gone unsolved for two decades is clearly
cynical if not plain cruel.
And an almost "carnal" relationship with the Chávez regime.
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The concept behind this projected
commission appears to form a coherent part of an erroneous foreign relations
policy on the part of Argentina’s current government that is obviously bent on
removing the country completely from the Western mainstream (where
historically, socially, politically and economically it should surely be) and
aligning it on the world stage with as many rogue dictators, authoritarians,
autocrats and assorted other marginal miscreants as possible. The
administration’s almost carnal relations with the Chávez regime in Venezuela,
its fawning reverence for the five-decade-long Castro dictatorship in Cuba, its
express admiration for the murderous and long-reigning former regime of Muammar
al-Gaddafi in Libya, and its latest unsavory and shamefully accommodating pact
with anti-Western authoritarian hardliner Ahmadinejad all bear clear witness to
this trend. It is a policy that unequivocally demonstrates, as critics
including myself have pointed out from the start, that the Kirchners (and
particularly Cristina Kirchner) have shamelessly used the cause of human rights
to gain domestic and international recognition, while formulating an overall
policy bent on disdain for Western democracies and their principles abroad, and
the undermining of basic rights like freedom of expression, the right to
privacy and private property, free transit, and respect for the law and legal
security within Argentina itself.
6 comments:
Clearly, legislative confirmation of this misguided manouver must be avoided at all costs. In the USA, my friends would say: "write to your congressman". To whom shoud we write? Our constitution states that ours is a "federal representative democracy". Who are my representatives? Can we stop this?
Rab, some opposition polititans are very active on Facebook. It's a question of starting to look them up and seeing where they lead. It's probably better than sitting on our hands.
OK Dan, today the UCR announced they will not endorse the agreement:
http://www.google.com.ar/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=acuerdo%20con%20iran&source=web&cd=18&cad=rja&ved=0CFcQFjAHOAo&url=http%3A%2F%2Fnoticias.terra.com.ar%2Fpolitica%2Fla-ucr-no-avalara-el-acuerdo-con-iran%2C715e21105c7bc310VgnCLD2000000ec6eb0aRCRD.html&ei=iXkVUc7kMKmu0AGUn4H4DQ&usg=AFQjCNFtO7SDUp7sNua7pEQNMdd4XG6obQ
Perhaps you are right!
Good for them, Rab, it's about time somebody took a stand against these lunatic policies.
After reviewing three different sources on the AMIA bombing quoted in Bob Cox's column (BAH 02/10/13), I find your overview of the case the most useful by far.
The other two do little more than illustrate why, with the present evidence, the case would be thrown out of court by the judiciary.
Faced with yet another whitewash, we can only speculate but, relieved of the burden of proof, common sense can guide us. In the absence of evidence, we can look at who is responsible, be it by action or by omission.
The proposition that the case is unrelated to the prior Israeli Embassy bombing is unreasonable. If nothing else, the impunity of the first incident invited reiteration.
In both instances, local logistic support was indispensable and the resources to investigate those involved have been (or should have been) available to our governments (all three of them).
Iran's flat denial and uncooperative attitude so far is inconsistent with total innocence and bodes ill for any "joint" investigation.
If the proposition that antisemitic elements of our past military governments were responsible had any real or perceived merit, the present government would have jumped on it long ago, in keeping with its policy of attributing all our misfortunes to their actions.
Ignorance breeds fear; fear breeds hatred and hatred breeds violence.
My profound thanks to Robert Cox for publishing the link to this blog in his column in the "Buenos Aires Herald" last Sunday. His own analysis of the government's current AMIA/IRAN policy is, as usual, incisively brilliant, well informed and on target. He remains one of the truly outstanding international journalists of our time.
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