What is Plan Condor, the secret regime of South American dictatorships to persecute political exiles, created 50 years ago?

Generals Jorge Videla of Argentina and Augusto Pinochet of Chile at a meeting in 1978.

Image source, Getty Images

photo caption, Generals Jorge Rafael Videla of Argentina and Augusto Pinochet of Chile at a meeting in 1978.

    • author, Francesca Lisa
    • Author title, Conversation*

Fifty years ago, on November 25, 1975, military intelligence officers from Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay met in Santiago, the capital of Chile, to establish what they called the “Condor System.”

This operation, known as Operation Condor or Plan Condor, was a secret transnational terrorist network that allowed the repressive regimes in these countries to persecute dissidents in exile.

He left a legacy of torture, as well as hundreds of kidnappings, disappearances and murders.

The Condor system is built on three main operational pillars.

First, all intelligence relating to alleged subversive activities in the region was compiled in a database in Santiago.