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Paraguay

Paraguay under dictator Alfredo Stroessner (1954-1989) was a hub for Operation Condor's cross-border assassination networks, a refuge for Nazi war criminals including Josef Mengele, and a CIA client state whose intelligence services participated in the coordinated Latin American repression documented throughout this vault.

Location Asuncion, Paraguay Mentions 15 Tags CountryParaguayOperationCondorCIANaziStroessner

Paraguay is a landlocked country in central South America, bordered by Brazil, Argentina, and Bolivia. General Alfredo Stroessner, a Colorado Party politician and army commander, seized power in a coup on May 8, 1954, and ruled Paraguay as dictator until he was overthrown on February 3, 1989, making his 34-year rule one of the longest in the western hemisphere in the twentieth century. The United States, seeking stability and anti-communist alignment, recognized and maintained relations with the Stroessner government throughout the Cold War despite its systematic human rights abuses.1

Stroessner and the CIA

The Central Intelligence Agency maintained a close working relationship with Stroessner's intelligence services, particularly the feared Technical Assistance Department (Departamento de Asuntos Tecnicos, DAT), Paraguay's secret police. CIA training and technical assistance was provided through the Alliance for Progress framework and through direct contacts. Paraguay's geographical position - bordering Brazil, Argentina, and Bolivia, all of which hosted CIA-supported anti-communist operations - made it strategically important as a Condor node.1

Operation Condor

Paraguay was one of the six founding participants in Operation Condor alongside Chile (under Augusto Pinochet), Argentina, Uruguay, Bolivia, and Brazil. The DINA-organized founding meeting that established Condor's coordinated intelligence-sharing and assassination architecture occurred in Santiago in November 1975. Paraguay contributed to Condor's Phase I (information sharing) and Phase II (cross-border operations to capture and kill dissidents who had fled across borders) activities.2

The "Condor Archive" - approximately 700,000 documents from Paraguay's secret police files discovered in December 1992 by human rights lawyer Martin Almada in a police station in Lambare - provided documentary proof of Condor's operations and the participation of CIA personnel. The archive contained records of cross-border abductions, interrogation transcripts, and communications between the Condor partner services that had been concealed after the transition to democracy.2

Nazi War Criminals

Paraguay under Stroessner was a refuge for former Nazi war criminals. Josef Mengele, the Auschwitz physician responsible for medical experiments on concentration camp prisoners, lived in Argentina and Brazil before settling briefly in Paraguay in the late 1950s, obtaining Paraguayan citizenship in 1959 before moving on. Martin Bormann, Hitler's private secretary, was rumored to have survived the war and settled in Paraguay; this was ultimately disproved by DNA identification of his Berlin remains in 1998, but the rumors reflected Paraguay's known role as a Nazi haven. The ODESSA network facilitated Nazi war criminal passage through Paraguay, with the assistance of Catholic clergy and German-Paraguayan community networks.1

Post-Stroessner

Stroessner was overthrown on February 3, 1989, in a coup led by General Andres Rodriguez, his son-in-law. He went into exile in Brazil, where he died on August 16, 2006, aged 93, without having been prosecuted. Paraguay has since transitioned to democratic governance, though the Colorado Party remained politically dominant for decades after Stroessner's departure.1

  1. "Paraguay," Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/place/Paraguay
  2. McSherry, J. Patrice. Predatory States: Operation Condor and Covert War in Latin America. Rowman & Littlefield, 2005.

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