Real Dictators - General Videla Part 4: Dictator in the Courtroom
Episode Date: November 20, 2024The Falklands War casts a long shadow over Argentina as the junta teeters on the verge of collapse. The country slowly returns to democracy. But that isn’t the end of Videla’s time in the spotligh...t. As a heroic legal case is brought against him, justice for his victims finally seems within reach. We’ll meet a man who sat mere feet away from Videla in the courtroom - a young prosecutor with the hopes of a nation resting on his shoulders… A Noiser production, written by John Bartlett. Many thanks to Edward Brudney, Robert Cox, Marguerite Feitlowitz, Francesca Lessa, Sara Méndez, Luís Moreno Ocampo, Ernesto Semán. This is Part 4 of 4. Get every episode of Real Dictators a week early with Noiser+. You’ll also get ad-free listening, bonus material and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you’re on Spotify or Android, go to noiser.com/subscriptions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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It's September the 18th, 1985, in Buenos Aires.
In weak spring sunshine, expectant crowds have gathered in the open square outside the
Federal Appeals Court.
Inside the oak-panelled courtroom, people are filing into the stalls in the gallery
and taking their seats.
The murmur of anticipation grows.
After five months of harrowing testimony, proceedings are finally coming to an end.
The survivors of General Jorge Rafael Videla's dirty war have had their say.
Now, Prosecutor Julio Stracero will deliver his closing remarks.
In file the nine defendants.
They are the members of the first three military juntas which led Argentina's dictatorship
after seizing power in 1976.
power in 1976. Among them, hair scraped back against his scalp and flecks of grey in his customary toothbrush moustache, is General Videla. He takes his place in the middle of
the row of dictators seated on a wooden bench. Stracero clears his throat, breaking the bristling silence.
As Stracero reads out his statement, Videla does his best to convey his disdain for proceedings,
nonchalantly reading a book, never looking up from its pages.
The prosecutor's voice is charged with emotion.
The tension in the room is palpable
as he reaches his conclusion.
He asks for a life sentence for Riddela.
Intense whispers fill the air.
I want to use a phrase that does not belong to me,
but which already belongs to the Argentine people,"
Stracera says, pausing as his throat tightens.
You're honest. Never again.
Up in the gallery, survivors of the General State Terror Program weep and embrace one
another.
Banners unfurl and insults rain down upon the dictators.
Videla rises to his feet, a brown leather folder tucked under his arm.
He surveys the room, expressionless, before being let out with his eight co-defendants.
It's the last time he will be seen in public for several years.
Stracera has given a voice to the tortured, to the kidnapped, to the murdered, to the disappeared.
to the murdered, to the disappeared.
The sentences await,
but Argentina's silence has been broken.
From the Noisa Network,
this is the final part of the Videla story.
And this is Real Dictators. Let's scroll back to Argentina's autumn of 1982.
General Leopoldo Galtieri has invaded the Falkland or Malvinas Islands.
British forces have set sail to reclaim them.
The right to possess the islands, which were seized by the British in the 19th century, is a central tenet of Argentine identity and nationalism.
The country's constitution even asserts this imprescriptible sovereignty over the Malvinas,
South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands.
All are recognised elsewhere as British Overseas Territories.
Gauthier's invasion on April 2nd was greeted with delirious celebration in Argentina.
But just a few weeks later, things look very different.
The Argentine forces are underprepared, and conditions on the islands are inhospitable.
Yet enthusiastic demonstrations are still being held up and down the country.
Squares are filled.
Women knit scarves, gloves and pullovers for the
soldiers. Schoolchildren write letters to the brave men on the front lines. Tons of food and
clothing are collected to send to those fighting. For the beleaguered junta, the invasion has helped
to get the people back on side. But it won't last long.
Galtieri has made a series of misjudgments.
Edward Brodny, historian of 20th century Argentina.
Galtieri has assumed that the United States is going to remain, at the very least, neutral
and maybe even support
Argentina because of the Monroe Doctrine, because of this idea that the United States keeps Europe
out of the Americas and the Malvinas should be hemispherically American, etc. Dramatically
misreading the nature of the relationship between Great Britain and the United States, right? And
between Thatcher and Reagan specifically.
He also thought, at least according to people who were privy to these discussions,
March in Argentina is the fall. They really wanted to launch the invasion a couple months later, but were forced to move it up because of this popular unrest. But Galtieri believed that if
he could launch the invasion in the winter, the British Navy would look at the prospect of crossing the Atlantic Ocean in the winter and just say, oh, it's not worth it.
A British naval force arrives in the South Atlantic Ocean and retakes South Georgia on
April the 25th. The next month it lands at San Carlos Water on East Falkland,
The next month it lands at San Carlos Water on East Falkland.
And, not long after, the war is won.
The whole operation takes just over ten weeks.
The Argentine military governor signs the surrender on June 14th, 1982.
649 Argentine and 255 British personnel have been killed.
More than 11,000 Argentines are wounded.
The defeat comes as a crushing blow to President Galtieri's military government,
which had found itself riding a wave of patriotic fervor.
One of the things that is going on throughout this is that the press is reporting on the war as if Argentina is winning. And so the defeat takes a lot of people
by surprise when it's finally announced. Galtieri has to resign in disgrace. Obviously, a military
dictatorship can't lose a military campaign and expect to maintain any shred of its authority.
This was all a last roll of the dice.
I mean, their authority was in tatters prior to this.
And this was one last hope to rally people to the cause,
to buy themselves perhaps a little more time.
When the defeat is announced, the national mood changes drastically.
A return to democracy seems all but inevitable.
Cultural resistance is growing too.
A generation of Argentine
musicians sense that change
is in the air.
On Boxing Day
1982, legendary
rocker Charlie Garcia
debuts his new track
Los Dinosaurios.
The dinosaurs will disappear, he sings, in a thinly veiled attack on the beleaguered dictators.
It won't be long before they do.
The national reorganization process, the grandiose title Videla gave to his regime, is on its
last legs.
Three days after the Falklands surrender, Gauthiery resigns as President and Commander-in-Chief
of the army.
General Reynaldo Bignoni replaces him.
Bignoni announces an end to the political blackout.
Elections are called for October 1983,
but that is still 18 months away.
And so a lot of what's going on in the second half of 1982 and into 1983 is a gradual transition to a more civilian administration.
So this is when you start to see civilians occupying more
ministerial posts. So by comparison, in that first cabinet in 1976, there were only two civilian
ministers out of a dozen or 15. By the end of the dictatorship, almost all of the ministers are
civilians, but still very much trying to control what this transition is going to look like, what
is going to happen to the armed forces,
and whether anyone is going to be able to be
quote-unquote held accountable for what has happened.
Marguerite Feitlowitz, historian and author of A Lexicon of Terror.
One would like to say that Argentina rose up
in disgust over the repression and said,
you're done.
But it was the Malvinas War and the indignity of it,
the waste of it, the insanity of it that brought the dictatorship down.
But before the armed forces properly hand back power to the people,
there is an extremely important matter to be taken care of.
In April 1983, the military publishes a self-pitying summary of their war against what
they've loosely termed subversion. They give it the title, A Message for Justice and the right to life. For legal purposes, it declares that all of the disappeared are dead,
dismissing them as terrorists who'd killed themselves
and whose bodies could not be identified.
Other abuses are brushed off as excesses
committed while the armed forces were fighting for the dignity of man.
committed while the armed forces were fighting for the dignity of man.
General Vredela has been keeping a low profile since stepping back from government,
but now he consents to a long television interview.
He declares that the document has been written with love.
He says that the excesses of his regime are unavoidable.
The military follow up their report by declaring a self-amnesty law,
the Law of National Pacification.
This limits the possibility of prosecuting members of the armed forces.
On November 22, 1983,
secret orders are issued for the destruction of all documentation pertaining to the war
against subversion.
Finally, on October 30th, elections are held.
Raul Alfonsín triumphs.
He is a civilian lawyer who has dedicated himself to defending the dictatorship's
victims. By the time Argentina returns to democracy, Robert Cox, the former editor of
the Buenos Aires Herald, is living in exile in the US.
Once again, with Alfonsín, there's this great hope. This time, I didn't think it was an illusion.
I thought this certainly could work.
Politics remains fraught with infighting and mistrust
after seven years of dictatorship.
But President Alfonsín puts down a marker,
a plan to address what the country has lived through
and to try to bring this long, painful chapter to a close.
He swiftly reverses the amnesty that General Bignone had enacted.
Five days after he's sworn in, he uses International Human Rights Day, December 10th, 1983, to announce the prosecution of all nine members of the first three military juntas
they will be tried for atrocities committed since videla's 1976 coup
and the leaders of left-wing guerrilla organizations whose violent activities
the military had cited to justify its intervention shall also be brought to trial
to justify its intervention, shall also be brought to trial.
When Alfvéncín was swept to the presidency in 1983
on the promise of bringing back democracy
and accountability, he formed the National Commission
on the Disappeared.
And they had six months to gather testimonies.
They got another six months because they needed it.
This was a blue ribbon committee that fanned out all over the country taking testimony.
It takes a year of painstaking work, but the National Commission on Disappeared Persons
collects more than 1,000 testimonies from the victims of the Idelis State Terror Program
and begins locating and excavating mass graves.
In September 1984, it publishes its findings in a report entitled Nunca Mas, Never again. It is able to confirm nearly 9,000 cases of disappearance,
but fewer than 2,000 bodies have so far been found and identified.
It also locates 364 secret detention and torture centers.
This number will more than double over the coming decades.
The horror of what Argentina has lived through is starting to come to light.
President Alfonsín proposes that Videla and his fellow commanders be tried by a military
court, but the armed forces are reluctant
to cooperate.
Instead, Case 13, as it comes to be known, is thrown to the Federal Court of Appeals
in Buenos Aires.
Julio Stracera will lead the prosecution.
His deputy prosecutor is Luis Moreno Ocampo. He will take on the arduous task of gathering testimonies and evidence.
When Estratera offered me the job, before I said yes, I had to think a little,
because I knew it was a risky business.
I never was thinking I would be a prosecutor,
but I studied law to understand how to organize a country with rules.
Therefore, when Julio called me, I could not say no.
I said, of course, yes.
And then Julio told me, OK, we need to do the investigation in five months.
And I said, look, Julio, I will be delighted to do it.
But you have to understand, I have zero experience.
This is my first case as a prosecutor.
He was prepared.
He said, it's fine.
I understood.
But it's better because you don't know how we normally do it.
If we do it in a normal way, we cannot do it.
So we basically used the archives of the Truth Commission to select the best cases with the
best evidence, to select cases showing a pattern for around the country and for different
years, and also showing that the crimes were committed by the different forces. Evidence,
territory, time, and forces. We start to call the victims and the families the victims. So
suddenly we transform the Truth Commission report into judicial evidence. In addition, in a few cases, we got exceptional evidence.
I would say one smoking gun was the last days we received the testimony
of the former French president, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing.
And he provided a document with a list of 18 French citizens
who were abducted
and marked were those who were killed.
It's April the 15th, 1985.
Time is up for Luis Moreno Ocampo and his young team.
They've had five months to prepare for the most important human rights trial in Argentina's history,
despite their almost total lack of legal experience.
They've traveled the country interviewing thousands of their compatriots.
They've called for testimonies, and Argentina has responded.
In just five months,
the team have built 709 cases.
They're ready.
And that shocks the defense,
because the strategy of the army
of the military commanders
during the dictatorship
was denying the facts.
No, torture did not happen.
Killing would not, never.
You cannot prove this massive crime in five months.
So they were expecting there would be no evidence.
And suddenly we appear with 2,000 witnesses,
15,000 habeas corpus, tons of documents.
So we destroyed them.
It was like a tsunami of evidence against them.
General Videla and his co-defendants are remanded in custody for the duration of the trial.
Videla passes his days by responding personally to correspondence from friends and admirers
and reading the newspapers avidly.
A priest comes on Sundays to perform a mass especially for him.
At mealtimes, he prefers to eat alone in his cell.
Outside the courtroom, many Argentines are hearing the truth
about what happened to their fellow countrymen and women for the first time.
Television news programs are allowed to show three minutes of courtroom images
without sound each day,
and papers are printing transcripts of the trial.
The disappeared are no longer the hypothesis General Videla sneers about.
They have become people with faces and names.
Every week the Diario, the newspaper of the trial, gave all the testimonies, all the argument, everything.
I have a whole set and it's extraordinary.
And even so, people would say, could it be?
Could that really have happened?
Pablo Diaz is a guy who was abducted when he was 16 with another classmate, a girl,
who was crying all the time.
And then he, to support her, started to talk to her and say, no, don't worry, we'll date,
we'll be boyfriend and girlfriend, we'll marry, don't worry.
And then, one day,
the guard allowed him to visit her in a different cell.
And he was trying to hug her.
And he said, don't touch me.
They raped me. So, don't touch
me, please.
He kept talking to her that he will
leave, and then, in December,
he was going to be transferred to a normal prison.
He told her, look, I'm leaving, and you also leave. We'll marry.
And she said, I will not. They will not leave me.
So the only thing I ask you to do is, each end of the year, raise a glass for me, because I will watch you from the sky.
raise a glass for me because I will watch you from the sky.
So when he explained that
all the court was in silence
and he went out
and I followed him
because I knew for him it was a big deal.
And he hugged me and he said
Luis, I was waiting nine years to say that.
That was the impact I saw in the witness.
They transformed the pain into evidence.
While the prosecution amasses more than 3,000 witnesses,
the nine defendants can call upon just 100 between them.
The court hears testimony from Adriana Calvo de la Borde.
She describes the depravity of her arrest.
Heavily pregnant when kidnapped by state agents, she was forced to give birth on the backseat
of a car.
Before she was allowed to see her baby, her torturers
stripped her naked and made her mop the tiled floors of the detention center.
But even as these horrific accounts emerge, there are many in Argentina who dismiss them.
Moreno Ocampo's own mother was a staunch defender of General Videla. My grandfather was a general, so my mother loved generals. And she was in a mass with Videla.
She was praying with him, so for her, he was a very nice guy, protecting her from the guerrillas.
So my mother was saying, you're wrong. I never could convince my mother that Videla was doing
these crimes. Never. But when she read about this witness
who had the baby in a police car,
the following day she called me and said,
I still love General Videla, but you are right.
He had to go to jail.
After the evidence is presented,
the public hearings begin.
There's only room for 150 of the 670 accredited journalists, plus 75 special invitees and 100 members of the public.
But 50,000 people take to the streets of Buenos Aires to demonstrate their support for the trials.
and people take to the streets of Buenos Aires to demonstrate their support for the trials.
With Moreno Ocampo by his side,
Stracere delivers his repudiation of the Junta's atrocities.
It is now that the nine men on trial are finally brought into the courthouse,
made to sit and listen while their crimes are laid out by the prosecution.
They were not present when the witnesses were talking.
They just listened to us.
They were forced to be there to listen to our closing arguments.
So I had them one meter from me when I was telling them what they did.
The nine of them seated. So that was the moment we were the voice of the society telling them what they did. The nine of them seated.
So that was the moment we were the voice of the society telling them what happened to the country.
That was the moment.
The judges deliberate for two days
before meeting at Banchero, a Buenos Aires pizzeria.
There, they write down their historic final judgment
on a rectangular paper napkin
and pass it around the table, signing it.
Argentina awaits the verdict.
Despite his disdain and dismissals,
Jorge Rafael Videla is sentenced to life in prison.
He is convicted of 469 crimes against humanity, including direct responsibility in 66 murders,
306 kidnappings, 93 cases of torture, and four of theft. Admiral Emilio Massera is given a life
sentence. General Ramon Agosti gets four and a half years, Roberto Viola, 17. Their crimes include
aggravated homicide, torture, unlawful arrest, robbery, violence, and threats.
torture, unlawful arrest, robbery, violence, and threats. Argentina, for now, has won.
Videla is stripped of his military rank and honors.
He and his fellow inmates are flown by helicopter to Magdalena Military Prison, 125 kilometers from Buenos Aires.
But when they arrive, it looks more like a country club than a jail.
They have a large dining table, barbecue area and living room in a chalet with a tiled roof, surrounded by lawns.
You can hardly call this a torture centre, Viola jokes grimly.
They're brought magazines and newspapers upon request,
and have colour television and a VHS player.
The convicts are allowed visitors, as and when they please,
and when the monotony of life in the chalet gets the better of them,
they can request a change of surroundings by taking medical leave at one of the military hospitals.
And this is called the age of impunity, right?
They're all out and about.
Even when Massero was in prison, he was seen by a newspaper vendor going into his tailor.
So they were in country club prisons, they were going out, they were shopping, they were
visiting their family, etc., etc.
Videla's wife, Alicia Hartridge, even joins him in Magdalena, moving into a small house
by the estate's pigsty.
But she soon grows bored of rural life and relocates to the nearby town with two drivers on rotation
so she can attend to her husband's every need.
While Videla is in prison, his mother Olga dies in June 1987, having seen her son convicted
of crimes against humanity.
humanity.
Beyond the confines of their comfortable prison, the cases keep building up against the torturers and repressors who carried out Videla's orders.
But none of this is making life any easier for President Alfonsín.
The armed forces feel under attack from these continued legal proceedings.
So, to quell the growing resentment, the president rushes through two key bills by decree, which
bring Argentina's pursuit of justice to a shuddering halt.
helped. One being due obedience, which against the precepts of Nuremberg and against most any military code of honor allowed lower ranking military to say they were just following orders,
right? So tens of thousands get off that way. The other was the final point, which says that there will be no further trials after February 1987.
He said, we cannot have trials going on for years and years and years.
The democracy is still too fragile.
How do we try all these tens of thousands of people?
Because on some level, the whole society is guilty anyway.
Then, amid yet another serious economic crisis,
Alfonsín resigns in June 1989.
His successor, Carlos Menem,
was himself a victim of torture during the dictatorship.
But realizing he needs to keep the military on side,
he signs a general pardon in October.
This absolves those convicted of human rights crimes and those responsible for the Malvinas
war disaster.
His decree initially excludes Videla and the members of the Junta, but soon after he follows
it up with another pardon which sets them free on December 29th, 1989.
There is uproar in the streets.
Historian Ernesto Semán.
When Menem declared the amnesty, he did so with every single poll suggested that most of the population were against.
And for the remaining nine years of his administration,
those polls never changed.
In the final few days of the 1980s,
having served just five years of his life sentence,
Jorge Rafael Videla steps out into the bright sunshine, a free man.
That night, one of his sons comes out to Magdalena in a blue Peugeot to pick his father up from jail.
Videla receives guests at his home the next day.
At the very same time, over in the Plaza de Macho,
more than 40,000 people have gathered to protest the pardons.
The former general writes to the head of the army, pleading for his military rank to be restored.
The request is rejected. His first public appearance is at a church service two days later.
is at a church service two days later.
A free man, Videla is able to circulate at his leisure,
between his upmarket flat at Belgrano and El Trapiche,
the picturesque mountain resort where he spent his childhood summers and where he met his wife.
Back in Buenos Aires, he attends Mass on Sundays
and strolls out to buy empanadas at an Italian bakery on the corner.
The dictatorship's victims are suddenly living alongside their oppressors once more, sitting at adjacent tables in cafes or passing them in the street.
I know a number of people who have crossed paths with their former torturers and a number of people who also said, you know, I was blindfolded the whole time
so I don't know who they were but they would know me
which is a very bad feeling
Only a few years later
Jorge Rafael Vidal is hauled back before the judges.
In 1998, he's arrested again, accused this time of child appropriation.
President Menem's pardons have made the former dictator immune
from punishment for crimes committed between 1976 and 1983.
But human rights groups have successfully argued for crimes committed between 1976 and 1983.
But human rights groups have successfully argued that the kidnapping of children is an ongoing crime
and therefore remains prosecutable.
Videla was found to have centrally coordinated a plan
to kidnap the offspring of detainees
and adopt them into military or police families.
For this, he is convicted and locked up once more.
But after just 38 days in jail on this occasion, Videla is granted house arrest on account
of his advanced age.
He's 72 years old.
Sara Mendes was kidnapped from her home on July 13th 1976 and taken to Automotores Oletti
torture centre.
That night was the last time she laid eyes on her son Simon.
He was just three weeks old, sleeping peacefully in a cot in her Buenos Aires home,
as she was led away by armed men. For two decades, she never knew what had happened to Simon.
She didn't even know if he was alive. Then, 26 years after they were separated,
they finally found one another and agreed to meet.
In 2002, Simon appeared.
Neither of us had any experience of these meetings,
but we tried to make it the least dramatic, normal experience we could.
I think we had to meet up to establish a relationship between two people who had
come from different worlds.
It's March the 13th, 2002, as Sara walks into a Buenos Aires café.
She's gripping her partner's hand so hard that her knuckles have turned white.
At a table at the front of the mezzanine balcony is a young man with red hair, staring fixedly towards the door.
He stands up abruptly, clutching a bunch of flowers.
Tears prick Sara's eyes.
I remember his first words were,
I want you to know that I have been happy and I want you to be part of my happiness.
He'd rehearsed those words
and as he said it, I realised that
I was talking to my son. He bought me a bouquet of flowers, and what my partner told me afterwards
was that Simon would bite his nails when he was nervous, in the same way that I do.
We were sat there, and we all had the same habits and gestures.
the same habits and gestures.
More than 500 babies were kidnapped and given to new parents under Videla's regime.
As of 2024,
just 137 of them have been identified
through DNA tests
and reunited with their blood families.
Simón continues to live in Buenos Aires.
Sara Méndez has returned to her native Uruguay.
Today we know that the people who stole my son lived in the same neighbourhood as I did
and the husband was a police sub-commissioner there.
He was part of the operation and we know that that he took Simon away directly when I was kidnapped. Simon grew
up a few blocks away from where I was kidnapped. He lived there until the day we found him.
In March 2001, Menem's controversial amnesty laws are finally ruled unconstitutional.
The race for justice is on once more.
Especially after 2003, the legacy of the dictatorship was dramatically re-conceptualized.
The crimes of the dictatorship were reconsidered not as unfortunate excesses in what was otherwise
a worthwhile cause and not as one part of a war between two equal sides, but instead
as a campaign of extermination, as a campaign of state terrorism directed at, for the most
part, unarmed and uninvolved civilians
who were not trying to overthrow the government, who were not involved in armed leftist guerrilla organizations,
but instead were leftist or center leftist labor leaders, students, professors, political authorities, etc., etc.
It's a sunny morning
in a central residential neighborhood
in Buenos Aires.
It's March the 18th, 2006,
just a few days
before the 30th anniversary
of Videla's coup d'etat.
More than 10,000 people
have amassed for this latest protest,
and there are more of them
every year.
Argentines want to show their tormentors
that they have not forgotten them or their crimes.
Before the crowd, ranks of police officers are standing,
silent and spattered with flecks of red paint thrown by the protesters.
This symbolizes the blood of our parents,
one shouts through a megaphone.
The group slowly moves away and continues down a wide avenue of luxury flats, turning onto a street called Cabildo.
Somebody has sprayed Videla is a murderer on a wall beneath the apartment, where Jorge
Rafael Videla is living peacefully under house arrest.
The organizers have hired a crane. Out in the street, they raise the platform up to the fifth
floor, level with Videla's window, and a poster unfurls below displaying the faces of the
disappeared. You have been judged by society, the protester on the crane platform shouts.
All of these people are saying that they don't want to live next door to a murderer.
They want you to rot in prison. Murderer, murderer, they chant below.
Paint bombs explode on the shutters of his apartment. They're pulled tightly down.
The protesters are speaking directly to their dictator for the first time.
These escracé protests target the homes of torturers who have evaded justice.
Francesca Lessa, from University College London. They carry out these quite almost
carnival-esque demonstrations and marches that would go outside the house of a former member
of either the police or the military, but also civilian accomplices of the military dictatorship.
And this was important in a way to try to fill the
vacuum of the lack of formal justice through the courts. So I don't think it's possible to talk
about the Argentine experience without talking about human rights groups, civil society and
relatives groups, because they've been basically present from day one in all of the key tasks of recording the crimes, denouncing the crimes,
basically calling the state to account.
Without all of the civil society groups in Argentina, it's very unlikely that we would have seen all the progress that was made.
In time, Videla is convicted twice more.
He receives another life sentence in 2010
for the murders of 31 political prisoners
in San Martin in 1976.
During his trial, Videla finally accepts
full responsibility for his actions
during the dictatorship.
His subordinates were just following orders, he says.
In 2012, he's sentenced to 50 more years in jail for the systematic plan that led to the
abduction of 20 children. This time, Videla maintains that he was simply doing his duty.
This time, Videla maintains that he was simply doing his duty. Following his conviction in 2012, Videla is moved to Module 4 of Marcos Paz Prison, a
civilian jail in Buenos Aires province.
Old and frail, he's pushed around in a wheelchair, his feet resting limply on the footrests as
his memory fades. He still attends Mass on Sundays.
Behind his back, the convicted soldiers who share the cell block with him call him El Viejo,
the old man. But never to his face. He is still their leader. Outwardly the hierarchy is maintained.
They call him, my general, and some even salute him on his shuffling laps of the prison yard.
On May 12, 2013, Jorge Rafael Videla slips in the shower, hitting his head, resulting in multiple
fractures and internal bleeding.
Five days later, on May 17, aged 87, he is found dead on the metal toilet in his cell.
Until his last breath, he considers himself a political prisoner.
He remains utterly unrepentant.
He was found sitting in the toilet.
And I'm not saying, I'm not celebrating his death or anybody's death for that matter. But it's a powerful image.
Videla's family asked for him to be buried in the family crypt in Mercedes.
But fierce protests
in his hometown, where he's
been declared persona non grata,
force them to rethink.
Instead, he's interred
at Pilar Cemetery to the north of
Buenos Aires.
When his body arrives,
the words Videla murderer
and never again have already been sprayed on the road leading to the cemetery.
More than 40 years have passed since Argentina returned to democracy.
More than 40 years since Videla's bloody reign.
Memory of the atrocities fades with the passage of time In October 2023, far-right ultra-libertarian Javier Mile
sweeps to victory in the presidential elections
His vice-president, Victoria Vicharul
is the niece of an alleged torturer and a known dictatorship apologist.
President Mile slashes the budgets for projects relating to memory, human rights, and archival information linked to the Junta.
While human rights organizations maintain that around 30,000 people were disappeared under the regime,
Argentina's new leader casts doubt on that number, even insisting that it is invented.
Part of what remains so divisive and so hotly contested today,
that there are still within Argentina those who
fervently believe that the coup and the subsequent dictatorship, that all of the repression and the
violence was necessary to protect the country from a real communist threat in the framework
of the Cold War, that Argentina could have been lost to communism if not for this military
intervention. And that perspective, as ahistorical
and somewhat fanciful as it seems to me,
still nonetheless exists,
and it still is a real thing in Argentina.
And interestingly, not just among those
who lived the 1970s and who experienced this firsthand,
but it is an intergenerational narrative.
One needs pretty heavy words for it, and really does.
It was a period in which you saw the most appalling perversion
in terms of what the military did to the women that they captured.
It was a murderous period.
I don't want to keep looking back.
I do, because I want to try and understand
what happened, why it happened, and everything about it.
But it's very, very difficult to do that.
In Argentina, one of the major problems was the lack of information.
People didn't know what was happening.
And that was the fault of people who owned the private presses,
because they could have done something.
They could have just done ordinary things like published a letter
from a mother who was looking for her children.
That's all they needed to do.
The armed force are immediately, in institutional terms,
immediately subordinated to political power.
In any way you can look at it, it's a country in which military power
in the domestic realm disappears and is fully
under civil control. Of course, they remain powerful within the security apparatus,
but I think that's the most remarkable part. Argentina is a beautiful example of the
bloodbath of truth, because the media started to break the silence.
Then Alfonsín appointed the Truth Commission,
one of the first Truth Commission before South Africa, before Chile.
And then the Junta trial, the most important aspect was the communication.
Because each day people heard victims telling these awful stories.
And this happened for five months.
So that transformed the perception of the country.
But what I learned also, you fight your wars many times,
once in the battlefield, but then in the memory.
This podcast is a piece of the battle for the memory.
of the battle for the memory.
Isabel Perón,
the president deposed by Videla in March 1976,
still lives in Spain,
in a quiet suburb of Madrid.
She rarely talks
about what she lived through.
All nine members of the Juntas, first sentenced in 1985, are now dead.
Today, the Esma is a museum,
and an official memorial to the victims of Videla's dirty war.
Its whitewashed buildings are crumbling slowly,
and weeds are creeping into the cracks in the plaster.
The mothers of the Plaza de Marcio become grandmothers.
They still march every Thursday.
In the next episode,
we're in Italy at the turn of the 20th century for the story of Benito Mussolini.
That's next time.