The Prague Post - Milei reignites debate on Argentine dictatorship, military

EUR -
AED 4.307418
AFN 74.465276
ALL 95.514371
AMD 434.805158
ANG 2.098956
AOA 1076.517252
ARS 1632.924699
AUD 1.63146
AWG 2.110818
AZN 2.000339
BAM 1.958015
BBD 2.362405
BDT 143.916949
BGN 1.956145
BHD 0.442832
BIF 3488.713569
BMD 1.172677
BND 1.496214
BOB 8.104758
BRL 5.8438
BSD 1.172942
BTN 111.265701
BWP 15.940191
BYN 3.309913
BYR 22984.465868
BZD 2.35899
CAD 1.595761
CDF 2720.610358
CHF 0.917467
CLF 0.026841
CLP 1056.41748
CNY 8.007214
CNH 8.012421
COP 4283.120034
CRC 533.257925
CUC 1.172677
CUP 31.075936
CVE 110.820711
CZK 24.387515
DJF 208.407834
DKK 7.473288
DOP 69.653797
DZD 155.317785
EGP 62.885146
ERN 17.590152
ETB 184.051848
FJD 2.573438
FKP 0.8693
GBP 0.86326
GEL 3.148634
GGP 0.8693
GHS 13.128074
GIP 0.8693
GMD 86.193962
GNF 10293.173047
GTQ 8.961018
GYD 245.385429
HKD 9.186381
HNL 31.216422
HRK 7.532223
HTG 153.64957
HUF 364.477323
IDR 20314.456628
ILS 3.462293
IMP 0.8693
INR 111.253144
IQD 1536.206647
IRR 1542070.031306
ISK 143.805737
JEP 0.8693
JMD 183.787948
JOD 0.831447
JPY 183.454755
KES 151.48057
KGS 102.515989
KHR 4705.363607
KMF 494.869371
KPW 1055.234051
KRW 1731.099679
KWD 0.360387
KYD 0.977477
KZT 543.287248
LAK 25757.669579
LBP 105091.824025
LKR 374.870911
LRD 215.229122
LSL 19.663076
LTL 3.462609
LVL 0.709341
LYD 7.452334
MAD 10.834021
MDL 20.209331
MGA 4878.335336
MKD 61.632468
MMK 2462.24902
MNT 4195.95468
MOP 9.464495
MRU 46.51419
MUR 55.150846
MVR 18.123687
MWK 2033.883357
MXN 20.513495
MYR 4.656045
MZN 74.939893
NAD 19.663244
NGN 1612.934762
NIO 43.060753
NOK 10.885912
NPR 178.016562
NZD 1.989159
OMR 0.450895
PAB 1.172912
PEN 4.133783
PGK 5.089176
PHP 71.879818
PKR 326.866189
PLN 4.256265
PYG 7213.869599
QAR 4.289774
RON 5.194842
RSD 117.365045
RUB 87.891789
RWF 1714.76447
SAR 4.397808
SBD 9.438387
SCR 16.104338
SDG 704.192833
SEK 10.831019
SGD 1.493486
SHP 0.875522
SLE 28.846643
SLL 24590.442291
SOS 670.304147
SRD 43.926094
STD 24272.042756
STN 24.53016
SVC 10.263619
SYP 129.749748
SZL 19.668182
THB 38.145993
TJS 11.001846
TMT 4.110232
TND 3.423574
TOP 2.823525
TRY 52.987285
TTD 7.961755
TWD 37.058963
TZS 3054.823151
UAH 51.538367
UGX 4410.422704
USD 1.172677
UYU 46.777514
UZS 13998.837394
VES 569.437509
VND 30907.070532
VUV 138.969615
WST 3.180521
XAF 656.747683
XAG 0.015894
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.169217
XCG 2.113926
XDR 0.818198
XOF 656.11183
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.830029
ZAR 19.572504
ZMK 10555.499773
ZMW 21.904372
ZWL 377.601461
  • RBGPF

    0.2800

    63.75

    +0.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.82

    0%

  • BCC

    0.2700

    79.27

    +0.34%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    36.59

    +2.16%

  • AZN

    2.1700

    187.37

    +1.16%

  • BCE

    0.5200

    23.78

    +2.19%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    52.31

    +1.74%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    58.8

    +2.3%

  • RIO

    3.9900

    100.48

    +3.97%

  • JRI

    0.2500

    12.99

    +1.92%

  • RYCEF

    0.5800

    15.8

    +3.67%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.13

    +0.3%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.8

    +2.91%

  • NGG

    3.5600

    89.54

    +3.98%

  • BP

    0.5800

    47.38

    +1.22%

Milei reignites debate on Argentine dictatorship, military
Milei reignites debate on Argentine dictatorship, military / Photo: Luis ROBAYO - AFP/File

Milei reignites debate on Argentine dictatorship, military

President Javier Milei's government has rekindled debate over Argentina's military dictatorship by questioning the number of its victims, while also seeking a greater role for the armed forces in tackling ongoing security issues.

Text size:

This week, at an event with veterans of the Falklands War that Argentina lost to the United Kingdom in 1982, Milei lashed out at what he said was a policy under previous governments of "harassing and humiliating" the military.

"That time is over," he said. "They will have the respect that has been long denied to them."

But Milei, a political outsider who won the presidency in November, is also facing pushback -- both on the streets and from some of his own conservative allies, including his vice president.

His comments at the Falklands event came after his government recently released a short documentary questioning the number of the 30,000 victims that rights groups estimate disappeared under the 1976-83 military junta, which employed brutal tactics to crack down on leftist dissent.

And, last month, Milei announced he was planning a legal reform that would allow the armed forces to intervene in domestic security operations.

The measure is aimed at fighting what the government dubs "narcoterrorism" in Rosario, a city mired in drug violence 300 kilometers (186 miles) northwest of the capital.

"The country has to be able to leave its wounds behind and move towards the future. The armed forces today are an integral part of our democracy," said Security Minister Patricia Bullrich.

- 'Drug traffickers in flip-flops' -

The effort to give greater powers to the army has hit a sensitive nerve, and is rejected by large sectors of society across the political spectrum.

Vice President Victoria Villarruel, who comes from a military family and has close ties to the armed forces, has spoken against Milei's plan, saying: "The role of the armed forces is not to fight civilians."

Villarruel's criticism comes even as she has also questioned the number of missing and backs the "two demons theory" which justifies the violence meted out by the military regime as having been necessary to combat leftist guerilla groups.

Critics argue that this theory minimizes state violence from the junta era, such as torture, disappearances, extrajudicial killings and the theft of babies from pregnant prisoners.

Since 1991, the army in Argentina has only been allowed to provide equipment and technical support to the police, without intervening directly in domestic affairs.

"We have to ask ourselves if the level of drug violence in Rosario warrants the use of the armed forces. Here we are talking about drug traffickers in flip-flops," said Jorge Luis Vidal, a specialist in public security management and the fight against drug trafficking.

- 'The full story' -

Efforts to change the role of the armed forces coincide with a review of their actions during the dictatorship and its victims.

Milei argues that 8,753 people went missing under military rule, far less than the 30,000 estimated as disappeared by rights groups and parties across the political spectrum.

The president's figure is closer to the 8,961 recorded in the report by the National Commission on the Disappearance of Persons (Conadep), published in 1984 and described as "an open list."

Marcela Perelman, a researcher at the Center for Legal and Social Studies, told AFP "this is not a new discussion, it has happened in other political eras."

She said the debate was not about uncovering the truth, but "accusing the victims of a lack of information that in any case is the state's responsibility."

In the video released by the government on March 24, the 48th anniversary of the coup, the government called for "the full story" of the dictatorship to be told.

That same day tens of thousands of people protested across the country, holding up signs reading "They are 30,000," in one of the biggest demonstrations marking the anniversary in years.

T.Musil--TPP