1995-09-28 House AMIA Hearing
1995-09-28 House AMIA Hearing
1995-09-28 House AMIA Hearing
INARGENTINA
HEARING
BEFORE TH
COMMITTEE ON
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
ONE HUNDRED FOURTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
SEPTEMBER 28, 1995
WASHINOIN : 1996
For sale by the U.S. Government Printing Office
Superintendent of Documents, Congressional Sales Office, Washington. DC 20402
ISBN 0-16-052233-1
(II)
CONTENTS
WITNESSES
Pagu
Ambassador Philip Wilcox, Jr., Coordinator for Counterterrorism, Department of State .................................................................................................
Mr. Robert Bryant, assistant director of National Security Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation .......................................................................
Dr. Luis Czyzewski, father of AMIA bombing victim ....................................
Dr. Ruben Beraja, president, Delegation of Argentine Jewish Associations ...............................................................................................................
Rabbi Avi Weiss, national president Coalition for Jewish Concerns .........
Mr. Tommy Baer president, BNAI B'RITH ..................................................
Mr. Jacob Kovaloff, consultant for Latin American Affairs, American
Jewish Com mittee ........................................................................................
Mr. Israel Singer, secretary general, World Jewish Congress .....................
Mr. Barry Mehler, national commissioner, Anti-Defamation League ..........
Mr. Ralph Goldman, father of victim of 1992 Israeli Embassy bombing
in Buenos Aires, Argentina ..........................................................................
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APPENDIX
Prepared statements:
Ambasssador Wilcox .........................................................................................
M r. Robert Bryant ............................................................................................
Dr. Luis Czyzewski ..........................................................................................
D r. Ruben Be raja ..............................................................................................
R abbi Avi W eiss ................................................................................................
M r. Tomm y Baer ..............................................................................................
.......................
Mr. Jacob Kovadoff ........................................
M r. Israel Singer ..............................................................................................
......................
Mehler ...........................................
Mr. B
Mr. Ralph Goldm an ..........................................................................................
Additional material submitted:
Statement submitted for the record by James Brown, deputy associate
director (Criminal Division), Department of Treasury, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearm s ...........................................................................
Additional information supplied by Chairman Benjamin Gilman ...............
Letters submitted by:
Senator Barbara Mikulski ........................................................................
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean, Simon Wiesenthal Center .....
Guillerm o Patricio Kelly ...........................................................................
Additional information submitted by Rabbi Avi Weiss .................................
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Washington, DC.
The committee met, pursuant to call, at 10:15 a.m. in room 2170,
Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Benjamin A. Gilman (chairman of the committee) presiding.
Chairman GILMAN. The committee will come to order. I am
pleased to call to order today's full committee hearing on international terrorism in Latin America, in particular Argentina and
the bombing of the Jewish Community Center (AMIA) in Buenos
Aires last year to be our focus for today.
In 1993, we in our Nation had the World Trade Center bombing
in New York, as we all know, along with the terrorist plots to kill
government officials, destroy commuter tunnels, attack United
States Government and U.N. facilities in the city of New York. Terrorism has come to our shores and as we will hear today, to that
of our neighbors to the south as well.
It is an unsafe world out there, particularly in the Americas
where we have become the newest targets of these cowardly terrorists. We have a vested and common interest in this vital subject
because it does threaten all of us, threatens our way of life and our
fundamental freedoms. We must all battle this scourge together
here in the Americas.
The Summit of the Americas in Miami last year had this to say
on terrorism in the region and I quote, "We condemn terrorism in
all its forms and we will, using all legal means, combat terrorist
acts anywhere in the Americas with unity and vigor."
Surely, the deadly 1994 AMIA bombing in Argentina, which we
will be examining today, requires that same unity and vigor in the
struggle against international terrorism. The Jewish Community
Center bombing in Buenos Aires has been linked to Hizballah, the
terrorist organization based in Lebanon, which has close links to
Iran. An earlier deadly bombing at the Israeli Embassy in Buenos
Aires in 1992 also has been linked to Hizballah.
The AMIA blast killed some 86 innocent civilians, wounded 300
more, and has again greatly shaken the feeling of security of the
largest Jewish community in Argentina and in the Americas. We
look forward to hearing from the coordinator for counterterrorism
in the Office of the Secretary of State, and from the head of FBI's
National Security Division.
Representatives of both organizations recently attended a regonal conference in Argentina on international terrorism. We will
also be hearing today from concerned members of the Jewish community, both in Buenos Aires, and here in our own Nation. We will
also have a written submission from the ATF which was at the
bomb site, and has been very helpful to us in preparing for this
hearing.
During the August recess, committee staff traveled to Buenos
Aires and met wit many of the interested parties, including family
members, the prosecuting judge and senior government officials on
the AMIA attack. I am pleased to report that the committee received the full cooperation, and support of the Argentine government in learning details about the bombing, and the status of the
inquiry to date.
We must continue to keep our regional effort strong and steady
in this struggle against terrorism, especially when the subject isn t
on the nightly news or in the morning headlines. Vigilance and
perseverance is especially needed when the clues and leads die
down, and the public and media attention shifts away from the
horror of the smoke-filled ruins of the latest terrorist atrocity.
Hopefully, today's hearings will help to strengthen the resolve of
all of those who are dedicated to seeing that justice is done in the
AMIA bombing, the earlier Israeli Embassy attack and other such
terrorist attacks, wherever and whenever they occur. Not to do so
serves merely to reward these cowardly terrorists and encourages
more of the same, whether abroad or here at home.
Before beginning testimony, I would like to ask if any of our colleagues have any opening statements. I must hold all our witnesses, incidentally, to 5 minutes and we will include all of their
written testimony in the record if they wish to submit full testimony since we must be out of the room by 1 p.m. for a European
parliamentary session, which has to be set up here for an afternoon
session.
Mr. Lantos.
Mr. LANTOS. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Chairman, before I make some substantive comments about this issue,
I want to pay personal tribute to you for your leadership over the
years in the fight against terrorism. You have been the strong voice
of the United States in our semiannual meetings with the European Parliament advocating a coordinated effort to fight international terrorism and I want publicly to express my admiration
for that effort.
It is ironic, Mr. Chairman, that you have called this meeting for
today and, of course, I salute you for holding this hearing, because
in a few minutes, some of us will be going down to the White
House for the signing ceremony in this next stage of the Middle
East peace process. We were there a year ago and while some
progress has been made, there have been enormous setbacks, and
almost every single one of them is related to acts of terrorism. So
if we needed any reminder, we have the reminder of the event at
the White House today that major international developments like
the attempt to craft a more stable Middle East are at the mercy
of ruthless, reckless international terrorists, and that is our subject
at this hearing.
11/
United States and Argentina. Within 48 hours of the AMIA bombing, an international response team managed by the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security, with three explosive experts
from Treasury's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, flew to
Buenos Aires. Three FBI agents also participated and provided
technical assistance.
The members of the IRT team and the FBI were instrumental in
this--in assisting in the early phase of the investigation. They
helped in recovering parts of the engine of the van which was believed to be carrying the suicide bomber and the explosives. They
helped monitor the cleanup efforts and they provided technical advice to the Argentine authorities on evidence collection and preservation.
The United States has also provided extensive antiterrorism
training assistance to the Argentine government through the Department's Antiterrorism Assistance Program, which this committee has given generous support. The ATA program has trained over
280 Argentine officials in 17 different courses.
We are proposing to provide 10 more such courses in the next 2
years that will train 222 additional officials. We have invested so
far about $4.8 million in this training and we think it is very important. The Buenos Aires bombings ave created a new sense of
urgency in the Southern Hemisphere and they have galvanized the
states of that region into greater counterterrorism cooperation.
As in other parts of the world, you cannot fight terrorism successfully without cooperation among the law enforcement, intelligence and diplomatic elements of friendly governments. Spreading
this approach of cooperation to our own hemisphere has been one
of this administration's most important goals and I am pleased to
report that this is working.
The United States, Argentina and other like-minded States led
an initiative at the December summit in Miami for an OAS-backed
hemispheric conference on terrorism. This will be held in Lima in
the spring, and we will be playing an active role in that process.
In another move to strengthen cooperation, Argentina held a conference of the five states of the southern cone in Buenos Aires in
August and they produced agreement to cooperate in very practical
ways against terrorism. The United States and Canada also took
part.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Excuse me, Mr. Ambassador, if you could
summarize.
Mr. WILcox. This was a heinous act of terrorism, as was the
1992 bombing. It was aimed at the very heart of the Jewish community in Argentina and it destroyed a priceless historical archive.
Out of this tragedy has come greater awareness of the international threat to Argentina in the Southern Hemisphere, and we
are doing everything we can to work with the government of Argentina and the other nations of the region to stop this threat. We
pledge to continue this, so that there will be no recurrence of such
acts in our hemisphere. Thank you, Madam Chair.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Wilcox appears in the appendix.]
Ms. Ros-LEHTnMN. Thank you so much, Mr. Ambassador, I
apologize. We are trying to stick to the 5-minute rule because of
all the witnesses that we have following this esteemed panel.
State.
Mr. WILcox. May I add, Madam Chairman, that one of the elements of the declaration issued in Buenos Aires 3 weeks ago at the
subregional conference on counterterrorism was for nations in the
hemisphere to take action against nations which abuse diplomatic
privilege by using accredited diplomats for teTorism and other illegal activities.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. Following up on that, what are we urging
our allies and our friends around the globe to do about this gross
abuse of the diplomatic immunity by Iran? Are we urging them to
use the persona non grata tool and expel these diplomats in order
to attempt to break the links these diplomats have in the local
commmity, as well as in order to expose Iran's outrageous role in
promoting international terrorism around the world? What are we
doing to help our allies help us in this?
Mr. WILCox. We are sharing information in our possession with
other States about Iranian diplomats, Iranian terrorist leaders who
are posing as diplomats, so that nations will refuse to give them
accreditation, or if they are already accredited, to expel them. We
have had some success in that respect, but we have not always succeed cd.
Ms. RoS-LEHTMNEN. I would like to ask the gentleman a question
submitted by Congresswoman Meyers to you, if you could respond
and we would include that in the record. She asks two questions:
What, if any, progress has been made in the investigation of the
March 17th, 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires?
And what connections, if any, are there between that attack on this
most recent atrocity? Realizing that you might have covered that
already, but if you could summarize it for the Congresswoman.
Mr. WILCOX. I regret that little progress has been made toward
solving the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy. We do believe
that the Hizballah was responsible for both acts because of the carbon copy similarity of the two acts: the same modus operandi, the
same suicide technique, the same kind of vehicular attack, which
are Hizballah signatures. Yet unfortunately, there has not been
progress in identifying the individuals who are responsible and
bringing charges against them.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Mr. Bryant.
Mr. BRYANT. I would just add that the bombing had the earmarks of a Hizballah-type bombing. It has not been solved. But
from what we see in similarities to other bombings, we would classify it as a Hizballah bombing.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Thank you. Before I recognize Mr. Lantos for
question period.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Thank you.
gentina who are impeding this investigation for any reason whatsoever.
Mr. WYNN. If I could just interject. Then you are saying by structural deficiencies, a lack of resources, training, problems such as
this, rather than any deliberate obstacles being placed. Is that a
fair assessment of your position?
Mr. WILCOX. To the extent of my knowledge, sir, that is the position of the U.S. Government. We have no reason to believe that
there is any official hindrance and effort to stall or not to aggressively pursue this investigation.
The leadership of the government of Argentina is determined to
do this. There are problems of efficiency, training and competence
at some of the lower levels in the judicial and law enforcement apparatus, and I believe that this has probably been an impediment
to the investigation.
Mr. WYNN. OK, and I appreciate you saying that. In that context,
do you believe the current level of U.S. assistance to Argentina is
adequate to assist them in dealing with these structural deficiencies should there be a significant increase in U.S. assistance or
should there be an increase in multilateral assistance?
Mr. WILcox. We view Argentina as an important country. The
terrorist threat there continues. We have committed a disproportionate share of antiterrorism assistance program funds to training
Argentine officials, and will continue to look for other ways to do
that, as the opportunities arise and as the Argentine authorities request such assistance. We also have done considerable training in
the area of aviation security to prevent Argentina's airports from
being used by terrorists.
Mr. WYNN. Could you put a dollar figure on the additional funds
that might be needed?
Mr. WiLCox. Sir, I can't do that, but I would pledge to you that
if a need is identified, if the government of Argentina requests assistance and to the extent that our budget allows us, we will give
this high priority.
Mr. WYNN. One final question and it may be more appropriate
for a closed session. My thinking along these lines is that increased
intelligence would be appropriate. Do you feel that the intelligencegathering apparatus we have in place is appropriate or what
changes ought to be made to give us a better ability to respond to
this great threat in the region?
Mr. WiLCox. I can only say in this open session that the collection analysis of intelligence on the terrorist threats around the
world andin Latin America is a very high priority for this administration and the U.S. intelligence community, and we are devoting
far more resources to that area than we were some years ago. It
is a critical area. It deserves that priority, and it is getting it.
Mr. WYNN. Thank you. Madam Chairman, I don t have any further questions, but I hear an underlying suggestion that perhaps
we should have some sort of closed session. We can go into this in
more detail.
I am particularly concerned in light of discovery of a billion dollars in apparently unused funds in one of the intelligence agencies
that might be appropriately used for purposes of antiterrorism.
Mr. MENENDEZ. What efforts concretely? You say you are gather-
the witness?
Mr. CzYzEwsKI. I am the father of a victim who died in the attack against the AMIA headquarters. On behalf of myself and my
wife who is with me, I am representing the relatives and friends
of this brutal massacre of victims. I would like to share with you
our views about the issues included in this meeting's agenda.
As we all know, Argentina suffered two attacks against Jewish
targets in less than 3 years. After the second terrorist attack, one
should carefully analyze whether the things that were not done or
done in the wrong manner after the attack to the embassy could
have caused the murders' action to be repeated.
We firmly assert that the mistakes and omissions that followed
the first terrorist attack, which was practically not investigated,
acted as an immense and attractive invitation to persuade terrorists to repeat their action.
Based on the theory that it was an attack by international terrorism against a foreign target located in Argentina, as is the case
of an embassy, the responsibility was moved beyond our borders
without seriously investigating the local connection which is not
doubted by anyone today.
On the other hand, we do not see that the first attack alerted the
Argentine Government about the security and control measures
that should have been implemented in borders and airports and we
believe that they were not applied as seriously and strongly as required.
This and the analysis of the events following the AMIA building
make us believe that Argentina in particular and Latin America in
general is a region in which international terrorism can operate
with extreme ease. It is a generally accepted principle that a thief
decides to steal where it is easier and that is applicable in this
case, with the aggravating circumstance that in the two attacks
perpetrated in Argentina, terrorists necessarily had support from
internal partners who have not been discovered to date.
In our opinion, the following is therefore imperative: A, the countries of the region should coordinate efforts and elaborate joint
strategies to prevent terrorist acts not only in Latin America, but
in the continent as a whole.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. Doctor, if I could just impose myself for a
second because-of the translation taking longer, obviously then we
will afford you a few extra minutes. Thank you. I apologize.
Mr. CZYZEWSKI. [Through the interpreter.] With regard to the
present status of judicial investigations aimed at clarifying the attack, we perceive that in 14 months, a lot was investigated with
notoriously poor results. From our standpoint, where rational and
emotional aspects are necessarily intermingled, we firmly hold that
we will only be appeased when we get to know who perpetrated the
attack, who the local accompli es were and when their full names
are known and jail is the place where the rest of their lives would
be spent.
It does not suffice to hear that investigators are working hard
and doing everything possible. That is not their merit. It is their
duty. We do not perceive the coordination of objectives that should
exist between the judicial power and the agencies in charge of analyzing each of the pieces of evidence that appear every day and
then nothing becomes of it. This makes the feeling of impunity
grow day after day. As to this very day, the facts do not show the
opposite.
We are certain that the Argentine Government positively knows
that clarifying the attack to the AMIA will notoriously strengthen
its international standing and it is therefore necessary for investigators to do so without fear, doubt or conditioning. However, it
is something we have not perceived to date.
Madam Chairlady, allow me to spend one more minute analyzing
the topic that gathers us here from a different perspective, the
human aspect. For people and countries, attacks mean the analysis
of facts and actions originating in them.
For the relatives, the tragedy in itself is the most important fact
and I would like to convey a testimony on this aspect. Since July
18, 1994, myself, my wife, my other children cannot enjoy the
smile, a kiss and the model of life that our daughter, Paola, set
for us every day and which were beautiful.
Since then we cannot see her grow up, become an adult, a good
person as every parent wishes of her children. For the other 85
families, some Jewish, some Catholic, Argentine, Bolivians and
other nationalities, the situation is the same with respect to their
dead relative.
I hope that you who are also sons and daughters, parents, brothers, and sisters understand that the pain of this uselessly shed
blood should force all persons and countries to reflect and do what-
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ever is possible so that soon we can say with all our might never
again.
Finally, I would like to thank the Committee on International
Relations of the House of Representatives of the United States for
this invitation I received through Mr. Benjamin Gilman to offer my
testimony, which I hope is useful. Thank you very much.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Thank you so much, Doctor, for a very moving testimony and all of the committee members have received this
very touching and poignant book of memories of all of the victims
of that tragic bombing and, indeed, on page 17 is a lovely biography and photo of your beautiful daughter. She lives today still
in our memory and in our hearts.
Mr. CZYZEwsKi. Thank you.
Ms. RoS-LEHTEN. Next is Dr. Ruben Beraja, the President of
DAIA, the Delegation of Jewish Organizations of Argentina since
1991. An attorney by profession. Dr. Beraja is the head of Mio
Bank and is also the founding president of Bar Lan University in
Buenos Aires. Thank you, doctor.
STATEMENT OF RUBEN BERAJA, PRESIDENT, DELEGATION OF
ARGENTINE JEWISH ASSOCIATIONS, BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA
Mr. BERAJA. Thank you, Miss Chairman. I will provide and will
make the presentation on behalf of the DAIA, the Delegation of
Jewish Organizations in Argentina. We have been working to obtain so that the wound opened by the international terrorism does
not remain unpunished and that they also receive the adequate political sanction.
Regarding the first aspect, as plaintiffs together with AMIA, we
have had an active participation in the activities covered by the Argentina justice, witnessing the difficulties that prevented more concrete results in the ongoing investigation.
We criticize the fact that these difficulties were increased in the
past by the lack of coordination between the security and intelligence agencies in charge of the investigation and because of the
delay in obtaining the active participation of the police of the Buenos Aires Province, which only took place a few months ago.
In spite of the above-mentioned, we believe that the court has
gathered elements that have allowed us to come to the following
conclusions:
A. To commit the terrorist actions, the perpetrators acquired
qualified support from diplomatic personnel or individuals linked to
the Embassy of Iran in Buenos Aires.
B. Under diplomatic immunity or in close relationship to those
who have it, as indicated previously, cells of activists identified
with Islamic fundamentalism have been established in Argentina,
one of which can be reasonably presumed has played an important
role in the logistical support previous to the attack.
C. Groups involved in the illegal dealing of cars, where some
members of the police of the province of Buenos Aires are involved,
have been included as accessories, providing support to the terrorists.
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D. The elements obtained in the investigation allow us to conclude that Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, constitutes a center of support of fundamental terrorism in Latin America.
I wish to emphasize that as we assert responsibilities to
Hizballah and Islamic fundamentalism we would continue for a citizen investigation of the local connection and the anti-Semitic extreme right in Argentina.
The logical analysis of the information already gathered allows
us to indicate that those mentioned in points A, B, C and D constitute an interconnected web, interacting between them and reciprocally necessary to consummate a massacre as the one we have
suffered.
This logical conclusion which has been conducted with great effort in the court file is enriched by the investigations carried out
within the sphere of the Secretary of State Intelligence, which is
under the authority of the President, and they have arrived to the
following conclusions:
The attack of July 18, 1994, and also the attack against the Embassy of Israel in 1992 was the responsibility of individuals belonging to the Hizballah organization. This was admitted recently by
the head of intelligence, by the Argentinean Foreign Minister, and
also by the Ambassador of Argentina to the United States.
There are serious indications of suspicious activity of individuals
linked to the Iranian embassy as well as growing activism within
elements of Islamic fundamentalism in Buenos Aires and other
parts of Argentina. The accumulation of conclusions reached by the
court and those obtained by the law enforcement and intelligence
agencies allow us to state that from a political point of view there
exist enough elements and background so that the government of
Argentina can adopt policy decisions that imply stronger sanctions
against Hizballah and allthose states that through complacency,
direct or indirect involvement, allow that organization to plan and
execute acts of aggression in other countries killing innocent civilians, instilling fear in the society, creating havoc and enormous
material damage, all of which affects and endangers the basic pillars of democratic life.
We, therefore, wish to propose, first, that democratic nations and
particularly the United States intensify specific actions to neutralize terrorists groups in their own bases.
Two, governments denounce without fear or ambiguous speculation those regimes that support, protect and promote terrorism and
narcoterrorism.
Three, that the resolution against terrorism passed unanimously
by the General Assembly of the United Nations in the last year be
implemented with complete measures. Words are not enough.
Our organization, an NGO, recognized for 60 years of the struggle against Nazism, discrimination and for the preservation of
human rights, will continue its efforts within the rule of law so
that Argentina becomes one of the leading countries willing to face
terrorism and its allies and neutralize sinister threats that endanger democracy. Between them we see also the allies with the
narcoterrorism.
We trust that this presentation contributes to strengthen the decision of the U.S. Congress to maintain as a priority item of its
agenda the terrorist threat and that the rule of law will assure
protecting the basic right of a human being, the right to live without fear.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Beraja appears in the appendix.]
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. Thank you very much.
Rabbi Avi Weiss, the president of the Coalition for Jewish Concerns, ACJC, a grass roots Jewish activist group with more than
5,000 members nationwide. He is also a senior Rabbi of the Hebrew
Institute of Riverdale, New York, a congregation serving 500 member families. He is assistant associate professor of Jewish studies
at Stern College, Yeshiva University in New York where he has
been a member of the Judaic faculty for 25 years. Welcome.
STATEMENT OF RABBI AVI WEISS, NATIONAL PRESIDENT,
COALITION FOR JEWISH CONCERNS
Rabbi WEIsS. Thank you very much. I am grateful to Congressman Ben Gilman for convening these hearings and to my own representative, Eliot Engel, for his great concern and to your presence.
I dedicate this testimony to the victims and their families in the
prayer that justice will be done. Their images will forever be etched
in my memory.
It is my contention that the government of Argentina is
stonewalling the investigation and that a cover-up is taking place.
This conclusion is not speculation.
One, it is part of the public record that President Carlos Menem
has reincorporated many people with ultra right-wing or neo-Nazi
views or criminals with murderous pasts into the State intelligence
service, people with notorious pasts like Guerreri appointed by
Menem as an advisor to SIDE. One cannot expect individuals with
these kinds of views to carry out a serious investigation into either
of the two bombings, yet these were the individuals tasked to carry
out the investigation.
Two, the Argentine immigration services are compromised. For
example, in January 1990, a Syrian terrorist Monzar Al Kassar,
linked to the Pan Am 103 bombing and Achille Lauro hijacking,
was permitted to enter into Argentina by Martinez, appointed by
Menem as director of immigration. Kassar's name surfaced in connection with the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy.
Three, specific questions concerning the AMIA and the Israeli
embassy bombing point to a government cover-up.
A. Carlos Telleldin, the only person detained, swore before three
Federal judges that Vergez, rumored to be an ex-member of SIDE,
offered him $1 million and his freedom in exchange for falsely implicating one of the Lebanese citizens held in Paraguay as the person to whom Telleldin sold the van. In La Nacion a few days ago
it was reported that Telleldin met secretly with one of the judges
and told her that he had in fact sold the cars whose parts were
found in the AMIA rubble to two Buenos Aires police officers.
B. The policemen on duty at AMIA and the Israeli Embassy
when the attack occurred were not present. Despite this fact, Captain Fernandez, chief of the seventh precinct which controls special
guard duty in front of AMIA, was promoted.
C. Several Buenos Aires residents told me that members of the
Painted Faces, a notorious neo-Nazi group, were given life sen-
tences and were seen on the streets of Buenos Aires just a few
weeks before AMIA was bombed. Who was responsible for their
early release?
D. Subsequent to the Israeli Embassy attack, the United States
warned Argentina of possible further terrorism. Despite this fact,
security remained lax, the borders remained unguarded. Jewish
buildings were not protected by cement barriers. Why has no one
befni held accountable?
E. Respected Argentina La Nacion reporter, Adrian Ventura, told
me he saw two men wearing blue uniforms digging craters in front
of the Israeli Embassy on the Saturday night after it was bombed
to give the appearance that a car bomb exploded. It was clear from
the very beginning of the AMIA investigation that the police had
a preferred lead, specificall Iran, and they weren't goirg to give
serious consideration to other leads which woulct embe. rass the
Menem government. This kind of attack could not have taken place
without being abetted from the inside.
For the investigation to be thorough, nothing can be left unchecked. If neo-Nazis were involved, if they worked together with
Arab extremists, as the Mufti allied himself with Hitler 50 years
ago, it must be revealed. If it was Syria, which the United States
and even Israel seeks to protect from these charges to bring it into
the peace process, that, too, must be reported. Political expediency
has no place in the terrorist investigation. The chips must fal
where they may.
The argument that AMIA bombing was Hizballah because it
looked like the Israeli Embassy bombing does not wash. That is
what they said after Oklahoma City, it was Middle Eastern because it looked like the Twin Towers and in the end it proved to
be right-wing.
Four, serious questions have been raised about Federal Judge
Galeano's independence, who is charged with the investigation.
A. Until April 1995, this judge was handling hundreds of other
cases. While he has received no new cases since April, those cases
are still pending before him.
B. There are many in Argentina who believe that the judiciary
does not act without approval from high government officials, including Menem.
There is one other matter that deserves the committee's attention. Buenos Aires is a city that awaits the next terrorist attack.
This is because security in Argentina is abysmal. The Buenos Aires
International Airport is among the least secure in the world. They
don't check your passports by computer. It is common knowledge
the borders are open.
To test security, I traveled together with my colleagues by boat
from Buenos Aires to Uruguay and back this past July. My worst
fears were borne out. Both in Buenos Aires and Uruguay, our baggage, which included a tape recorder, commonly used by terrorists
to hide sophisticated bombs, was not checked. Upon our return to
Argentina, I walked directly from the ship to the streets of Buenos
Aires not even passing through passport control.
To prevent further terrorist attack in Argentina, it is critical that
this committee recommend that the U.S. Government conduct a
full onsite investigation into Argentine security. If Argentine air-
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Mr. BAER. Madam Chairman, members of the committee, on behalf of B'nai B'rith members in this country and Argentina and in
54 other countries around the world, I welcome this opportunity to
testify on a subject that has troubled and preoccupied us for more
than a year, particularly since our members in Argentina have become deeply frustrated in the failure to find the culprits in the dastardly 1994 AMIA bombing that was so costly in the lives of both
Jews and nonJews.
I am of two minds on the subject of the bombings and the inability to bring those responsible to justice. At the one level, while we
can commend the efforts of those judges and investigators who are
making a sincere effort to search out the truth and ensure that justice prevails, at another level, I have a knowing sense that obstacles are being thrown up by an old guard in the security forces and
in the courts, an old guard whose instincts were finely honed under
a military dictatorship and which has often been associated with
and protective of Nazis and neo-Nazis.
Because of the suicidal nature of the bombings, suspicion pointed
to Iranian sponsorship of Islamic extremists whose aim worldwide
is to defeat the Middle East peace process and to create hostility
between Jews and their neighbors. However, no clear evidence sufficient for a trial has yet appeared.
25
Wheels of justice turn slowly in Latin America. Argentina, better
developed than most countries in the region, is still impeded by a
lack of skills to deal with the ferocity of terrorism that has struck
it. From the standpoint of courts, laws and their security forces and
their apparatus, the country is ill-prepared to solve its terrorism
roblem. As a result, Argentina has begun to receive technical aid
fom the United States and other countries. What is more, judges
from Argentina have also come to the United States to learn how
our courts deal with terrorism cases.
At the onset of the two bombings, enormous technical assistance
came from the United States, Israel and other countries. Indeed, offers of cooperation from the U.S. Government agents to Argentina
are to be commended. More pressing is the reality that Argentina
is facing a threat from its open borders, particularly with Paraguay
and Brazil. The triborder region is thriving and unchecked, legal
and illegal elicit business, particularly in Ciudad del Este invites
strong suspicion of heavy drug traffic and drug running, contraband, arms and terrorists.
Aside from the fact that customs officials can be bought off for
a closed trunk passage from Paraguay to Argentina, the documents
collected from travelers are discarded after 3 months. There is no
computerization of who crosses borders. In other words, no record
of wanted or suspicious individuals is possible.
The investigation of the AMIA bombing has been the focus of one
judge. Upon learning that the judge was not free from his other
court duties and worked on the AMIA case only part-time, B'nai
B'rith questioned government officials and other judges on this
point. To its credit, the government released Judge Galeano from
all duties but the AMIA case.
However, at the outset, there were numerous runs down blind
alleys. By August, 1995, the judge had four people under detention.
The lead suspect is Carlos Telleldin, the son of a sadistic torturer
close to the junta who had been a high-ranking security official
from Cordoba. Telleldin espouses neo-Nazi views and is being held
for involvement in the falsifying of documents of the vehicle used
in the bombing.
We learned only yesterday that the two policemen to whom he
sold the vehicle were dismissed. However, knowledgeable people
see Telleldin as only a small cog in the wheel while other
operatives, especially those who planned this terrorist act, are still
at large.
Many terrorism analysts believe that Iranian Embassies are the
spark for activating dormant Hizballah and other Muslim extremist cells. They point to the enormous presence of the Iranian Embassy officials in countries like Argentina where there is a small
Iranian community and limited trade with Iran.
Insofar as diplomatic representation is concern, senior government officials in both Chile and Uruguay told me several months
ago that they are aware of the potential problems posed by overrepresentation at the Iranian embassies in their countries. Although there is a general belief among many that the government
will not prove a case against anyone who directed the attack, some
experts expect substantial breaks in the case.
26
It was thought that one occurred most recently. In earl August,
seven suspects from Paraguay, six Lebanese and one Brazilian,
were extradited to Buenos Aires for their connection with a German-born Nazi arms seller. They were released in less than 48
hours for a lack of evidence.
It seemed odd to us. After all, it was Argentina which pressed
for the extradition of the seven from Paraguay in the first place.
Why were the suspects released so quickly? Would not there have
existed probable cause precedent to a request for extradition?
Indeed, some countries in the region are aiming to comply with
higher standards. There is now a democratically elected government in Paraguay and clearly the old way of doing business is
changing. It is significant that the extradition which involved appeals by two of the terrorist suspects went through a process of adjudication. Despite insider claims of money changing hands at one
court level, the judges abided by judicial rules.
In memoryof those who died and as tribute to those who worked
in rescue and research, B'nai B'rith and other Jewish organizations
have pressed for a concerted effort to find those responsible. B'nai
B'rith Argentina sponsored a 2-day conference on July 3 and 4,
1995, to analyze the wide-reaching effects of terrorism.
With the participation of government officials, rabbis and priests,
educators and psychologists, the conference attracted more than
1,000 attendees. This historic conference, the first of its kind ever
held in Argentina, raised the profile of the terrorist threat and proposed concrete steps to confront it.
B'nai B'rith has also maintained contact with a broad range of
United States and Argentine officials to, among other things, gather information in order to properly assess the terrorist threat, to
commend the positive steps that are taken to improve the situation, including greater cooperation among appropriate agencies and
countries of the hemisphere and to continue pressing the Argentine
government.
From the viewpoint of worldwide jury, it is important not to forget the innocent victims who lost their lives in the two Argentine
bombings and in the Panamanian air bombing as well where members of B'nai B'rith, including an officer of that district, lost their
lives. B'nai B'rith pledges to continue its global role in working to
expose the threat posedby international terrorism and not just to
Jewish communities and to Israel, but to democracy everywhere,
including our own.
Madam Chairman, I want to thank you for the opportunity to appear before the committee today.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Baer appears in the appendix.]
Ms. Ros-LEHTNEN. Thank you so much. We have been joined by
Mr. Chabot. I don't know if you have any opening statement.
Mr. CHABoT. No. Thank you.
Ms. Ros-LEHTMnEN. Thank you so much.
We will next hear from Mr. Jacob Kovadloff, who is the consultant for Latin American Affairs and Spanish mass media at the
American Jewish Committee. He is the former Director of the
American Jewish Committee's South American Office in Buenos
Aires and is responsible for public relations with Spanish-speaking
28
While the public reaction and the public statements by the national leaders were sincere and appropriate, the action that has followed those expressions has been frustratingly inadequate-inadequate for a State, I know, to Foreign Minister Di Tella, with
whom several of my colleagues in AJC met yesterday in New York,
and frustrating to the Argentine Jewish community and to all who
are committed to justice in the AMIA case.
Answers to the questions posed by both of the Buenos Aires
bombings have eluded the Argentine criminal justice system, although a consensus was formed among Western intelligence officials that the attacks were carried out primarily by operatives of
or connected to Hizballah, very likely at the direction of or with the
knowledge of Iranian officials. After both bombings, there was a
speculation in Argentina that the attacks were intended as signs
to the government that its warming relations with Israel and perceptions of a cooling in political and commercial relations with
some in the Arab world would carry a heavy price. While such
speculation cannot be discounted, it must be said that other countries even in Latin America, have enjoyed a longer history of close
relations with Israel without experiencing similar tragedies.
The choice of Buenos Aires as the site for these two terrorist assaults has been the subject of considerable anxiety and speculation.
In fact, we may never know why the bomber selected Buenos Aires.
With each passing month, the prospect of resolving these crime
grows more uncertain. But there are facts we do know. That with
its long and, in many areas, minimally patrolled international borders, and its sorely inefficient immigration control procedures, Argentina likely offered the relatively easy access to and from their
targets that terrorists require.
That within the ranks of right-wing extremist elements and
within radicalized segments of the immigrant Arab population in
Argentina and its border regions, outside agents would be likely to
find operational support for an attack on Jewish institutions.
Mr. CHABOT [presiding]. Mr. Kovadloff, if you could summarize.
We have several other witnesses. I want to make sure we get all
the testimony in.
Mr. KOVADLOFF. I will, Mr. Chairman.
29
like to take notice of a personal friend, Mr. Ralph Goldman. I went
to Argentina right after the murder of his son along with the other
victims in the Israel Embassy bombing and I would like to take notice of Dr. Louis Czyzewski, whose daughter was killed. We flew to
Buenos Aires v th the president of the World Jewish Congress
after that ugly event and we met with victims, parents and families.
We met with victims themselves in hospitals. And without attempting to deal with the formal testimony which I am going to inclde in the record and because of the interest of 5 minutes that
we have here, I am, as well, going to include the research that we
have done into the worldwide Jihad movement, militant Islam targets in the West, as well as the United States, which our institution of the World Jewish Congress has put out, particularly in light
of the fact that the initial speakers that spoke today on behalf of
the U.S. Government pointed out that Islamic Jihad is a wing of
Hizballah.
I think that we have here today heard that the United States
sometimes speaks very, very clearly with regard to statements that
it makes on behalf of our administration and yet continues to
speak very diplomatically with regard to some of our enemies. And
yet we are the best of the lot because we are holding hearings
today.
We represent 75 communities throughout the world. Argentina is
the one that has been hit hardest. We visited those communities.
We saw those victims. We cannot stand for the fact that none of
these efforts on the part of our government have had any effect
upon the government of Argentina. Yes, we, too, met with Foreign
Minister Gatella this morning and, yes, he told us that there have
been no results with regard to the questions we put to him when
we were there last year after the AMIA bombing and in 1992 after
the Israel embassy bombing. But he is not alone.
,We met last week with President Chirac, with Prime Minister
Juppe, after the bombing which saved, because of some miracle,
hundreds of kids in Lyor. And we were to visit the people in London to our affiliate of the World Jewish Congress. There where two
bombings took place within 24 hours. The people were satisfied
with the efforts that were taking place. Many of those governments, as opposed to ours, still have relations with the Iranians to
this very day. And no one raises their voices about these things.
They have ful relations.
There is a lot that hasn't been said here today and I have included in my remarks, but I would like to summarize quickly by
telling you that there is no need to repeat what we already said
last year after the bombing and 2 years ago, Ralph. What I want
to say is that we have made little progress.
I want to commend Gilman and Lantos and yourself, the chairman and the members of this committee for asking us again, but
I want to tell you that we are not going to sit by and watch this.
We are going to continue to tell you that this is a problem in Argentina, that this is a problem in Europe, that many European
countries aren't even cooperating with each other as many Latin
Americans didn't until this bombing took place and until we, as the
free world leader, act as the impetus to change the lethargy which
22-101 0 - 96 - 2
exists on this subject, we shall have to as an organization of Jewish communities throughout the world, attempt to guarantee for
our people and for citizens of the world personal security, which is
the basis of a democracy.
On these days before the high holy days conclude with Yom
Kippur, I would like to ask that those who sit in judgment of us
all try to do a more effective job than we ourselves down here have
done. Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Singer appears in the appendix.]
Ms. Ros-LEHTMN. Thank you so much for your moving testimony, Mr. Singer. We will, of course, include all of your statements
in the full record.
Next, we will hear from Mr. Barry Mehler, who has been a leader of the Anti-Defamation League, of which he has been a trustee
for over 20 years. Mr. Mehler is a Washington-based CPA and partner in charge of the 10-man Mehler, Bloom & Gruen accounting
firm. Thank you, Mr. Mehler.
STATEMENT OF BARRY I. MEHLER, NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER, ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE
Mr. MEHLER. Thank you, Madam Chairlady. Thank you for allowing the Anti-Defamation League to testify at this very important hearing. As you know, on July 18, 1994, the world was
shocked by the horrific bombing of the AMIA building in Buenos
Aires. The terrorists who committed this heinous crime did not just
destroy a building. They struck at the very heart of the Argentine
Jewish community.
Among the 87 killed and scores wounded in the blast were Jews
visiting the building to pick up their pensions, to look for work, to
seek assistance. The records of 100 years of Argentine Jewish history was lost.
In the bomb's wake, the community, which had suffered the
bombing of the Israeli Embassy just 2 years earlier, was left fearful, helpless and demoralized. They wonder when and where the
third bombing will occur. Yet, 14 months after the assault against
the AMIA building and over 3 years after the destruction of the
embassy, little if any progress has been made.
In April 1995, a delegation of 17 leaders of the Anti-Defamation
League visited Argentina. Our objective was to demonstrate the
solidarity of American Jews with the Argentine Jewish community
and to assess the Argentine government's investigation into the
bombings of the AMIA building and the Israeli Embassy. Prior to
the trip to Argentina, several members of the delegation met with
the terrorism divisions of the FBI and the State Department and
were briefed on the current status of the Argentine Government's
investigation into both bombings and also given observations at
both divisions on various facts and assumptions.
In the 4 days that the delegation was in Argentina, we met with
government officials, including among others President Carlos
Menem, the Ministers of Justice and Interior, the Director of State
Intelligence Service in addition to several members of the staff.
Additionally, we met with the members of the DAIA which is the
umbrella organization of Jewish organizations in Argentina. These
meetings clearly showed that the Argentine Government, led by
President Menem has shown a greater seriousness and responsiveness investigating the AMIA bombing than that was shown following the embassy bombing. We also came to the following conclusions.
One, the expertise of the various Argentine security and police
departments is much less than what would be desirable. A general
consensus of the people we spoke to felt that the experience and
training of the investigators was not up to solving the problems
presented. In this regard, we would suggest that the American
Government and the FBI, in particular, expand the ava'lability of
counterterrorism schools to Argentine personnel. We understand
some of this training has already taken place by the FBI and we
feel that much more is necessary.
Two, from what we have, we were able to gather, there is very
little coordination in Argentina between the various entities that
are investigating these two bombings. We heard that they don't
share information, but rather that each one wants to be the one to
hit the home run and this has greatly hindered the investigation.
Three, in IGUACU area in the north of Argentina where the borders of Paraguay, Brazil and Argentina meet, there is an IslaTnic
extremist group that I understand resides on the Brazilian side of
the river. The border between these countries is very porous and
having spent some time in the area, I can agree that it is almost
impossible, if not impossible, to police crossings.
We suggest that a trilateral commission be set up between Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay to maintain control of the groups
that live in this area. There certainly should be infiltrators as well
as monitors at work. We urge the U.S. Government to work with
the respective governments to have such a commission formed that
would be active in the prevention of terrorism that emanates from
this area. But just as the United States must encourage Argentina
to take firm steps to combat terrorism, we must continue to be at
the vanguards of this international effort. Enactment of tough,
comprehensive antiterrorism legislation has been a top legislative
priority for the Anti-Defamation League and the broader Jewish
community.
We support the broad policy objectives of the bill and are disturbed by recent reports that the momentum behind this measure
has been stalled. The Comprehensive Antiterrorism Act is an important complement to existing legislation and strengthens the rule
of law against terrorists worldwide. Most important, the bill strives
for an appropriate balance between constitutional safeguards and
the need for a more aggressive response to this escalating threat.
Madam Chairlady, thank you for your time.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Mehler appears in the appendix.]
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Thank you so much for your testimony.
We will now like to hear from Mr. Ralph Goldman, who lost his
son, David Ben Rafael in the terrorist attack on the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires on March 17, 1992. Today, he joins us from
New York and we send our deepest condolences to the entire Goldman family.
34
ed by anyone today. If you could elaborate, doctor, just a bit about
this local connection.
Mr. CZYZEWSKI. [Through the Interpreter.] We are convinced that
this kind of terrorist attack cannot be perpetrated without the local
support people. What we cannot determine yet is this local support
was directly linked to the attack itself or was another kind of support. But both of the embassies and in the AMIA, this must have
been the case.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. We have had some documents shared with
us and we will be looking at some of those, some of those problems
that have been raised. We thank you for your testimony.
If I could ask all of you a general question, most of you had mentioned Iran and its diplomats' role in the AMIA attack. Do you support the greater use of the persona non grata tool against these
Iranian diplomats? There have been many reports that these embassies are stacked with individuals who may have other agendas
on their minds and there have been some indications that perhaps
in the specific countries those host countries are not being aggressive enough in getting rid of those so-called diplomats who are really tools of their countries.
Would you please tell us your opinions about the greater use of
this tool that, if the countries would use perhaps some of these
problems might be averted or diminished somewhat. And it is a
general question to whoever would like to answer it.
We heard from three of the individuals. Perhaps the others could
comment. Thank you. Mr. Baer.
Mr. BAER. Let me be bold enough, I guess, to go first. We would
concur that this is something that should be used, the persona non
grata. In March when I was in the countries of Chile, Uruguay and
Arentina meeting with the highest government officials of those
countries, this concern of the overrepresentation at Iranian Embassies and the questionable activities of individuals there was raised
very specifically, but primarily I must say by Chile and by Uruguay.
Both indicated that the activities of those at the embassy were
being monitored and that this was very clearly a concern. Overrepresentation, meaning an inordinate number of individuals assigned to the embassy based on the limited relationship, both trade
and otherwise, with the country of Iran.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. (Thank you.
Rabbi, let me just see in case anyone else would like to comment
on using this tool.
Mr. Singer.
Mr. SINGER. Yes. I think that we should consider the possibility
of using that tool, particularly when some of those people act as a
cover. We attempted to deal with that question as well in an economic manner through the support that we brought to the meeting
that we encouraged in your home cit in Miami at the summit
there and we tried to encourage the President to take a position
on that and, indeed, he did at our meeting in New York when he
called for a break of relations with Iran with regard to economic
relations.
I must say that some of the host countries for the events that
we are discussing here today, still haven't even begun to deal with
these questions the way we deal with them. And I think that having a meeting this afternoon on this subject might be a time to jolt
some of the representatives from Europe that are dealing with this
subject who still host some of these "diplomats" representing extremist groups, I think, in a manner that is much more kindly even
than we do.
Ms. ROS-LEHTnEN. Thank you. Rabbi.
Rabbi WEiss. Yes. I think it is a tool used b Iran, but the problem that the international community has is gat it does not recognize that it is also used, I believe, by other countries, specifically
by Syria.
I was at an open cabinet meeting that President Menem invited
me to attend.
I believe I am the only foreigner-I am sure Menem is not too
happy about the invitation: but I am the only foreigner to have
ever attended a full open cabinet meeting in Argentina and was
told then right after the AMIA bombing tht the Israeli Embassy
was bombed by an obscure terrorist group in southern Lebanon
called Ansar Allah.
Well, if that is the case, then the Menem government should certainly direct its attention to Syria which controls southern Lebanon
because if Syria wished to enter into the fray that terrorist group
(Ansar Allah) could not be operating in southern Lebanon and as
a consequence could not have bombed the AMIA building.
If I can, just one more statement, draw a parallel. Many of the
families of Pan Am 103, John Root, Susan Cohen-and I recognize
that the families are split-but many of the families believe that
it was Syria that was very much responsible that had a hand in
Pan Am 103, but that the U.S. Government, for political reasons,
for politically expedient reasons, decided to dump it all on Libya
because now the trend is to bring Syria into the peace process. And
that is what I meant when I said in my testimony that even the
United States, and I say with a heavy heart, even Israel, there was
a front-page report that Israel was blocking that there was stuff
coming out of Syria which contributed to the AMIA bombing and
in order Ito ge to the root of terrorism, it must be understood that
politics can have no place.
Political expediency cannot outweigh the value of Jewish lives
and let me just say this. That if after 4 years of the Israeli Embassy, if you don't find the culprits, after over a year of AMIA, you
don't find the culprits, that sends a message to terrorists around
the world You can do this and get away with it and I say it
emboldened and encourages terrorists to act right here in the United States.
When it comes to terrorism, this world is a global "shtetl", we are
one small community. And if America doesn't step in and pressure
the Argentine Government to put an end to it, believe me, it will
hop from South America to the United States as has already occurred. It is our problem.
Ms. Ros-L HTNEN. Thank you. Dr. Beraja, you wanted to add
something?.
Your translator is good, but I don't know if he is that good. Let's
find out.
Mr. BERAJA. [Through the interpreter.] We believe that international terrorism creates confusion among governments and one
of the consequences is this policy of appeasement regarding governments who sponsor terrorism and this is what we do not agree. The
ambiguity and the lack of determination to act against the so-called
diplomacy which covers up for terrorism.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. And the connection aboutMr. BERAJA. And the connection with drug trafficking and terrorism linked to drug trafficking also.
One last word. The policy of appeasement reminds us of what
happened in Europe in the 1930's with the appeasement regarding
the Nazi threat and the consequences of those mistakes are a sufficient lesson of history.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. Your statement about appeasement, are you
insinuating that Argentina has been intimidated by Iran?
Mr. BERAJA. We know that the Argentinean position follows the
advice of European governments who have suggested to the Argentinean government to be extremely careful regarding its attitude
toward Iran because there was danger of worse reprisals.
It was publicly acknowledged by the deputy foreign minister of
Argentina when he met with a delegation of the American Jewish
committee last year in Buenos Aires.
Ms.
Ros-LEHTINEN.
Thank you.
Let me just ask one question. For the folks who are based in
Buenos Aires, is it your opinion that the local prosecuting judge
has been getting all of the help and assistance that he needs from
the government of Argentina in order to carry out this very difficult
task that could be of far-reaching international perspective?
Mr. BERAJA. [Through the Interpreter.] The executive did provide
support to the Federal Judge Galeano, but the issue of those in
charge of the investigation both as security and intelligence agencies, took too much time for an adequate coordination under the
authority of the judge and this was not helpful in the course of the
investigation.
I wish, for the record, to say that President Menem has established a reward of $2 million for any information that can be provided in this investigation and, second, in the Argentine Congress
a follow-up committee has been established by both Chambers,
House and the Senate, to monitor the investigation process.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. Thank you. I would like to thank all of the
panelists for being here today. As Chairman Gilman said, we are
dedicated to seeing that justice is done in this bombing, in the Israeli Embassy attack and that, as he says, other such terrorist attacks, wherever and whenever they may occur. We will keep the
records open for statements from other members of the committee
and I apologize on their behalf.
There are so many committee hearings at this time, so many
meeting at this time because of our continuing resolution and reconciliation process, and that is the reason why they are not here
with us. It is certainly not indicative of their level of concern for
this very serious problem.
Rabbi.
Rabbi WEis. Yes. I just wanted to make two points, one on
Galeano. There are questions that have been raised about how
37
independent he really is. On my last visit to Argentina, I publicly
mentioned much of my testimony and that is that there is a coverup, that there is no full investigation because it would reveal that
people on the highest echelon were involved.
The President of Argentina also high profile, then proceeded to
call me "totally delirious." When I repeated that charge, Galeano
actually subpoenaed me to court. I think I am perhaps the only
American to have testified, but this is what happened.
I was there for 6 hours. I felt semi-arrested. I was literally held
in a very, very small room, read the riot act and I got the sense
right there that the real purpose that afternoon was to intimidate
me and to force me to recant my allegations and my sense is that
the judiciary there, unlike in the United States where we have precise checks and balances, they take their orders from higher up,
quite possibly from the President himself.
In my last comment, if I may, as an old Soviet Jewry war horse,
the most effective tool that sprung Soviet Jewry was the JacksonVanik amendment in which the U.S. Government told the Soviet
Union you want free trade? You want Most Favored Nation status?
Then you are going to have to be true to human rights. And I say
for the record, that the issue in Argentina is not a matter that they
don't have the means. They have the means.
As I told Menem, I said there is a Hebrew statement [speaking
Hebrew], there is nothing that stands before the will. It is not Iran
that troubles Menem. He has got internal problems and the only
way Argentina is going to beef u security and get the culprits. The
only way they are going to do this, is if like Jackson-Vanik, there
is going to be real pressure.
If the U.S. Government says if you want American tourists, if
you want American carriers to land, then the Azeiza airport, the
security better be better. If you want Americans to tour there, then
those borders where you can take across sea ship loads of explosives, those borders better be tight. That is the only language the
Argentina Government understands and if we don't do that, I predict, God forbid, that Buenos Aires is a community that awaits the
next terrorist attack.
Ms. Ros-LEHTI EN. Thank you so much and I apologize for bringr. BRAJA. Only 1 minute.
Ms. RoS-LEHTINEN. OK, thank you, Mr. Beraja.
Mr. BIERMA. [Through the Interpreter.] I will not have a confrontation with Rabbi Weiss, but I cannot agree on such a dramatic
vision of Argentina. We the Jewish leadership, have the total freedom to say what we believe we have to say. If we don't say more,
he can criticize us.
Ms. Ros-LEHTINEN. Thank you so much. Thank you to all the
panelists. Thank you.
[Whereupon, at 12:40 p.m., the committee was adjourned.]
APPENDIX
ZI]U&ZVL,TR
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On ITUN NATIONAL
"
SEPI2E
28, 1995
cLAOS
M03SSADO
PBIL!P C. WILCOX, JR.
COONDIUATOR ~rM wrOT 8ORI_
DEPAR19M OF STATE
n Latin America
(39)
- 4 State of Progrpa
in
TMI
mbn
43
---
44
-6
U -s- Ass;;tanee to te
Milk Inqjii
45
- 7 -
OPENING STATEMENT OF
ROBERT M. BRYANT
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
NATIONAL SECURITY DIVISION
BEFORE THE
HOUSE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE
HEARING ON INTERNATIONAL RADICAL TERRORISM
IN LATIN AMERICA
SEPTEMBER 28, 1995
52
Due to #w sensitive nature of the topic, I am prepared to
furnish th committee additional Information In a classified form. I
appreciate the opportunity of appearing before you today.
53
Presentation
terrorist
by
Dr.
attack
Luis
against
Czyzewski,
the
AMIA-DAIA
Aires.
House of Representatives
Committee on International
Washington D.C.
September 28,
1995
father
Relations
of
victim
headquarters
in
of
the
Buenos
54
I am the father of a victim who died in the attack against
the AMIA
the
relatives and
friends of
this brutal
massacre's
the issues
we
all
targets
After
know
in less
the
Argentina
two
attacks
against
Jewish
second
terrorist
suffered
the attack
attack
one
should
carefully
analyze
the murderers'
action to be repeated.
We firmly assert
that
followed the
investigated- acted as an
action.
international
Argentina, as
Based
on
the
terrorism
is
the
theory
against
case
of
that
it
was
foreign
an embassy,
an
target
the
attack
by
located
in
responsibility was
that
today.
the
measures that
the analysis of
the attack
to
America
in
general
is
region
in
which
international
that
thief
decides
in
the
two
attacks
perpetrated
from
where
it
is
easier,
and
The
internal
in
Argentina,
terrorists
been
to date.
to steal
countries
of
the
is therefore impeative:
region
should
coordinate
efforts
and
in
in all
investigation of
judicial
judicial
AMIA.
investigations aimed
our
where
standpoint,
necessarily
intermingled,
rational
and
firmly
hold
we
emotional
that
we
aspects
will
are
only
be
appeased when we get to know who perpetrated the attack and who the
local accomplices were, when their full names are known and jail
the
place where
the rest of
is
be spent.
It does not suffice to hear that investigators are working hard and
doing
everything possible, as
that
is
not
their
merit
but
their
duty.
We do not perceive the coordination of objectives that should exist
between the judicial
each
of
of
the
pieces
that
evidence
appear
every
day
and
then
day as to
this
become nothing.
This makes the
feeling of
the
international
investigators
However,
it
show
the opposite.
attack
to
standing,
do
so
AMIA
it
and
without
will
any
notoriously
is
strengthen
its
necessary
for
therefore
fear,
doubt
or
conditioning.
Mr. Chairman:
Allow me to spend one more minute analyzing the topic
us here from a different perspective:
For
people and
countries
actions originating in
For
relatives the
wculd
like
Since July
enjoy
the
Paola set
18,
in
itself
analysis
is the most
of
facts and
important fact.
smile,
the
them.
tragedy
to convey a
attacks mean
that gathers
kiss and
the model
life
that
our
cannot
daughter
56
Since then we cannot
and a good
to
I hope that you, who are also sons and daughters, parents, brothers
and sisters understand
should force all
that
the pain of
and do whatever
is possible so that very soon we can say with all our might: NEVER
AGAIN
Finally,
would
like
to
thank
the
Committee
of
International
be useful.
Mr. Chairmanii
I thank you for the invitation -to address this distinguished
Committee of International Relations of the House of
Representatives.
58
2
We are aware that there are many countries that faced with
terrorists aggression have chosen a policy of appeasement,
trying to unilaterally forgive crimes committed in their
territory as a necessary price to theoretically prevent new
terrorists attacks in the future. This policy of appeasement
brings back to our minds what happened in the thirties in
Europe, regarding the nazi threat.- the historical
conclusions of the cost of that ambiguous policy are so
f~frInit% 09
'
.7
64
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the Israeli Embassy. Additionally. Menem's brother-in-law, Ibrahim Al Ibrahim, was appointed head of
security at the Buencs Aires airport despite the ract that he didn't even speak Spanish.
3) Specific questions concerning the AMIA and for that matter the Israeli Embassy bombing
point to a government cc.ver-up.
(a) The only penon detained though not indicted in the AMIA bombings is Carlos Alberto
Telleldin. Telleldin was the last owner of an automobile whose parts were found in the ruins of the
AMIA building. Telleldin swore before three federal judges that Hector Vergcz, runrmed to be an exmember of SIDE offered him millionn and his freedom in exchange for falsely implicating one of the
Lebanese citizens held in Paraguay as the person to whom Telleldin sold the van. The charge precipitated
a separate investigation by Judge Branca.
It's
now four months later and no results have been
forthcoming.
In an article published in ?.a Nacion September 26, 1995 it was reported that Telleldin met
secretly with Luisa Riva Azamayo. one of the three federal judges and told her that he had in fact sold the
car to Zwo Buenos Aires police officers. Aramayo's decismon to meet with Telleldin in were without her
colleague. was highly unusual and was roundly criticized.
(b) T'he policemen on duty at AMIA and the Israeli Embassy were not at their posts when the
buildings were blown up. Despite this ftct, Captain Gaston G. Fernandez. chief of the 7th precinct
which controls special guard duty in front of AMIA was promoted.
(c) Several Buenos Aires residents told me that members of Painted Faces--a notorious Nazi
type group--who had been given life sentences, were seen on the streets of Buenos Aires just a few
weeks before AMIA was bombed. Who was responsible for their early release?
(d) Subsequent to Zhe Israeli Embassy attack, the US warned Argentina about possible further
terrorism. Despite this fact, security in Argentina remained appallingly lax, the borders remained
unguarded. Jewish buildings were not protected by cement barriers. Whoever was responsible for
these security lapses surely contributed to the AMIA attack--nonetheless no one has been held
accountable.
(e) Respected Argentine reporter Dr. Adrian Ventura of I-aNacion told me he saw two men
wearing blue uniforms digging craters in front of the Israeli Embassy on the Saturday night after it was
bombed to give the appearance that a car bomb had exploded.
In any police investigation one examines all possible leads and then discards them one by one
based on improbability or lack of evidence. It was clear from the very beginning of the AMIA
investigation that the police had a preferred lead--specifically Iran--and they weren't going to give
serious consideration to other leads as such information would hMve been embaramsing to the Merem
govemrnenL The reality is that this kind of attack could not have taken place without being abetted from
the inside.
For the investigation to be thorough, no lead must be left tnchecked. If neo-Nazis were
involved-pcrhaps intent on destroying Nazi files in the AMIA building-they must be implicated. If they
worked together with Arab extremists as the Mufti allied himself with Adolf Hitler 50 years ago, it must
be revealed.
66
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At the open cabinet meeting I attended I was told that Argentine intelligence had concluded that
the Israeli Embassy was bombed by an obscure terrorist group cal!ed An Sat Allah operating out of
Southern Lebanon. If the Menem government is serious about an investigation why has it not directed its
attention to Syria which controls Southern Lebanon ? Without Syrian cover 'his terrorist group could
not operate. Indeed, if Syria--which the United States protected from terrorist charges in the Pan Am
103 bombing in order to bring her into the peace process--was responsible, that too must be reported.
Political expediency has no place in a terrorist investigation; the chips must fall where they may.
The US government's claim that thc AMIA bombing was the work of Hizbollah because it so
closely resembled the Israeli Embassy attack which had the earmarks of Hizbollah, doesn't wash. It
ought be remembered that after the Oklahoma City bombing, the immediate reaction was that Middle
Eastenr extremist terrorists were resp nsible because of similarities with the World Trade Center attack.
As it turned out, extremist right wing fanatics played a key part in the Oklahoma City tragedy.
4) Serious questions have also been raised concerning Federal Judge Juan Jose Galeano charged
with the invcsugatiortiaw the AMIA bombing.
(a) Until April of 1995. Judge Galeano ws handling hundreds of other cases. While he has
received no new cases since April he still presides over the hundreds of cases still pending before him.
(b) Questions have been raised about Galeano's independence, After publicly accusing the
government of a cover up this past July, I was subpoenaed by Galeano and spent six hours virtually
locked in a small room answering questions about my allegations. The judge's assistant spent close to
half an hour reading a series of laws warning me ioal perjury carried with it a serious pendty. There arc
many in Argentina who believe that thc judiciary does not act without approval from high government
officials including Menem. I sensed right there in Galeano's presence that the real purpose that
afternoon was to intimidate me and to forme mc to recant my allegtAtions.
There is one other matter which deserves the committee's serious attention.
Buenos Aires is a city that awaits the net terrorist attack. I say this not only because the
continued failure to apprehend the terrorists who bombed the embassy and AMIA sends a message to
terrorists everywhere that Buenos Aires is an open trgct, but also because security in Argentina is
abysmal.
The Fzeiza Buenos Aires International airport is among the Icast secure in the world. When I
entered Buenos Aires this past July my passport was not checked by computer. It's common knowledge
that the borders into Argentina are sieves allowing terrorists to transport explosives unimpeded across
the frontier, especially by sea.
To test security I travelled together with several colleagues by boat from Buenos Aires to
Uruguay and back this past July. My worst fears were borne out. Among those traveling with me that
day by boat was Gabi, an Israeli citizen, who, despite the fact that he entered Argentina using an
Argentine passport, left that day using his Israeli passport. In other words, although there was no
indication on his Israeli passprt that he had arived in Argentina, he was nonetheless, permitted to
leave. Despite the fact that the US government had just issued a warning that a terrorist attack in South
America could be imminent, both in Buenos Aires and Uruguay our baggage, which included a tape
67
SEP-29-'95 15:49 T-FW104- NW 2067212520 W61-05
reder-corinmonly used by terrorists to hide sophistica ed bombs--was not checked. Upon our return
to Argentina I walked directly from the ship to the streets of Buenos Aires not even passiDg through
passport control.
To prevent furtbcr terrorist attacks in Argentina it is critical that the US government conduct a
full on-site investigation into Argentine security. If Argentine airports are found to be unsafe the US
government should prohibit American carriers from landing there. And if the Argentine borders are
found to be porous. US citizens should be warned not to travel to Argentina.
There is great fear in Bincoos Aires. Fear that terrorism will strike again. Fear that Argentina
may once again slip beck into & dictatorship. Fear on the part of many Argentine Jewish leaders to
speak out.
After I publicly accused the Menem government of a cover up this past July. Menem himself
called me "totally delirious' in stories earned on the front page of Buenos Aires newspapers. In a lead
editorial in Ia Nacion (July 30. 1995), Adrian Ventura indicated t.at the head of DAIA rejected my
accusations *out orear." Ventura continued, 'The truth is that from this moment on the volunel.ts
bee,; raised and now the discussion is concentrated on the actions of the security forces.' Ventura
confirmed what I had heard from scores of Buenos Aires Jews who came up to me and said "Thank you
for saying what we believe bus were afraid to say."
There is a fir burning in Argentina. Buenos Aire.%is ripe for another terrorist attack unless
America pressures the Argentine government to take serious measures and demands that security bc
dnmatically tigMened.
Just days carter the horrific World Trade Center and Oklahoma City bombings terrorists were
apprehended. It's almost four years since the Israeli Embassy was blown up and more than one year
since the AMIA attack, but them are no serious suspects. And there will be .ao serimos suspects without
the US government stepping in to demand a real and full investigation.
68
STATEMENT OF TOMMY P. BAER
INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENT OF B'NAI B'RITH
BEFORE THE
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
01 TERRORISM IN LATIN AMERICA
AJAIA BOMBING IN ARGENTINA
SEPTEMBER 28, 1995
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee:
On behalf of B'nai B'rith members in this country, in Argentina and In 54
other countries around the world, I welcome this opportunity to testify on
a subject that has troubled and preoccupied us for more than a year,
particularly since our members in Argentina have become deeply
frustrated over the failure to find the culprits in the dastardly 1994 AMIA
bombing that was so costly in the lives of both Jews and non Jews. The
trauma connected with this event was damaging to the functioning of the
Jewish community and to Argentina at largu. The fact that the bombing
was the second on a Jewish or Israeli institution in a two year period
adds to the malaise of Jews in Argentina.
I am of two minds on the subject of the bombings and the inability to
bring those responsible to justice. At one level, I commend the efforts
of President Menem to buoy the spirits of a beleaguered people, and of
those judges and investigators who are making a sincere and
determined effort to search out the truth and to assure that justice
prevails.
At another level, I have a gnawing sense that obstacles are being
thrown up by an old guard in the security forces and in the courts, an
old guard whose instincts were finely honed under a military dictatorship
and which has often been associated with, and protective of, Nazis and
neo Nazis.
The two devastating suicide bombings in Buenos Aires had staggering
death tolls: Twenty-nine people were killed and 252 injured in the March
1992 attack which destroyed the Israeli Embassy; and 86 people died in
the assault on the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMW)', an
agency central to the life of the country's Jewry.
Because of the suicidal nature of the bombings, suspicion pointed to
2
Iranian sponsorship of Islamic extremists whose aim worldwide Is to
defeat the Middle East peace process and to create hostility between
Jews and their neighbors. However, no clear evidence sufficient for a
trial has yet appeared.
With no clear path to a trial emerging after a yoar of Intensive
investigation, the Jewish community Is understandably argry, frustrated
and despondent In addition, there Is fear which grows out of the
realization that Argentina remains a soft target. In fact, in a meeting last
year with the country's foreign minister, Guido di Tella, a B'nai B'rith
group heard him say that failing to bring the criminal killers to Justice
would Invite a catastrophic, third terrorist attack In Argentina. He saw
such an eventuality as enormously destruive to the Jewish community
and to democracy.
The attacks are significant because they are directed at the largest
Jewish community in Latin America, which is estimated to be In excess
250,000 people.
Wheels of Justice turn slowly in Latin America. Argentina, better
developed than most countries in the region, is still Impeded by a lack
of skills to deal with the ferocity of terrorism that has struck It. From the
standpoint of courts, laws and the security forces and their apparatus,
the country is ill prepared to solve its terrorism problem.
This background, If left in place, hardly Invites an enthusiastic
Investigation of Jewish (or Israeli) Institutions. However, in answer to
questions from B'nai B'rith, high level Argentine officials claim they have
replaced the old guard. Although there is some skepticism among critics,
it Is recognized that training security forces is a major undertaking. As
a result, Argentina has begun to receive technical aid from the United
States and other countries. What's more, judgas from Argentina have
also come to the U.S. to learn how our courts deal with terrorism cases.
This Is important for the future.
At the onset of the two bombings, enormous technical assistance came
from the United States, Israel, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain.
Argentina's acceptance of the offer to help was an admission that other
3
powers were better equipped to deal with the catastrophe. Indeed, offers
of cooperation from U.S. governmgt agencies to Argentina are to be
commended. As never before, the importanc. of the existence of a State
Department office of Counter-terrorism has been underscored.
More pressing Is the reality that Argentina faces a threat from its open
borders, particularly with Paraguay and Brazil. The tri-border region's
thriving and unchecked illegal and illicit business In Ciudad del Este,
Porto-lguacu and Foz de Iguacu Invites strong suspicions of heavy traffic
In drug running, contraband, arms and terrorists. Aside from the fact that
customs officials can be bought off for a "closed trunk" passage from
Paraguay to Argentina, the documents collected from travelers are
discarded after three months. There Is no computerization of who
crosses borders, in other words, no record of wanted or suspicious
Individuals is possible. This reality makes it absolutely essential that
countries in this hemisphere closely cooperate in an effort to insure that
borders cannot be traversed with impunity by terrorists or those who aid
and assist them.
The prospects for rapid technological change are bleak because of the
precarious economic situation in Argentina which now suffers from an
official posting of 18.6 percent unemployment, but observers estimate an
even higher figure. As a reaction, public protests have been growing.
On the positive side, Argentina is now playing a lead role in promoting
interest in addressing the ravages of terrorism in the region. Additionally,
the Argentine government has announced that it will issue new fraudproof passports. This is even catching the eyes of previously
disinterested countries like Brazil and Paraguay.
The Investigation of the AMIA bombing has been the focus of one judge,
Juan Jose Galeano. Following the Gallic system of law, judges are
empowered to gather information and to prosecute. But if there is
cynicism about the security forces which are supposed to aid the judges,
the courts themselves are not highly respected institutions in Argentina.
By contrast, Judge Galeano has worked tirelessly with a small staff and
volunteers In a difficult landscape for pursuing leads. Upon learning that
4
the judge was not free from his other court duties, and worked on the
AMIA case only part.time, B'nai B'rith questioned government officials
and other judges on this point To Its credit the government released
Judge Galeano from all duties but the AMIA case.
The judge works closely with the Jewish community, particularly with the
DAIA, whose president, Ruben Beraja, who Is here today, Is both an
eloquent spokesman and frequent critic of the government's failings In
the pursuit of the case.
However, at the outset there were numerous runs down blind alleys.
By early August 1995, the judge had four people under detention. The
lead suspect is Carlos (Tel-el-deen') Telleldin, the son of a sadistic
torturer close to the Junta, who had been a high ranking security official
from Cordoba. Telleldin espouses nee-Nazi views and is being held for
involvement in the falsifying of documents of the vehicle used In the
bombing.
However, knowledgeable people see Telleldin "as only a small cog in the
wheel. Other operatives, especially those who planned this terrorist act,
are still at large.
Many terrorism analysts believe that Iranian embassies are the spark for
activating dormant Hizboliah and other Muslim extremist cells. As
evidence, they point to the enormous presence of Iranian embassy
officials in countries like Argentina where there is a small Iranian
community, and limited trade with Iran.
Insofar as diplomatic representation Is concerned, senior government
officials in both Chile and Uruguay told me several months ago that they
are aware of the potential problems posed by "over representation* at the
Iranian Embassies In their countries.
I should add that several years ago Argentina and Iran were cooperating
on a joint nuclear project which had boosted the trade between both
countries to a significant level. We are told that the joint nuclear project
has ceased, but trade continues, albeit at lower levels.
72
5
Although there Is the general belief among many that the government will
not prove a case against anyone who directed the attack, some experts
expect substantial breaks In the case. It was thought that one occurred
most recently.
In early August, seven suspects from Paraguay - six Lebanese and one
Brazilian - were extradited to Buenos Aires for their connections with a
German born Nazi arms seller; they were released In less than 48 hours
for lack of evidence.
This seemed odd to us: after all, it was Argentina which pressed for the
extradition of the seven from Paraguay in the first place. Why were the
suspects released so quickly? Would not there have existed probable
cause precedent to a request for extradition?
What has been clear all along is that terrorism raises uncomfortable
questions for societies on the following issues:
1.)
2.)
3.)
With whatever flaws exist in the emerging systems, the affected countries
have begun to realize that the damage from terrorism now far outweighs
the unrestricted movement of people and goods across a thriving trade
zone between Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina. One of the reasons is the
increased pressure from the United States and from groups like B'nai
B'rith, which continue to raise the twin issues of tightening security and
seeking justice. At the very least, some of these countries now see that
their international reputations for pursuing justice now count for
something.
Thus, some countries in the region arp aiming to comply with higher
6
standards. Paraguay had no democratic rule in recent memory. The 34.
year long dIctatoship of General Aifredo Stroessner totally controlled all
life forms. There is now a democratically elected government in Paraguay
and clearly, the old way of "doing business' Is changing. It is significant
that the extradition, which Involved appeals by two of the terrorist
suspects, went through a process of adjudication. Despite Insider claims
of money changing hands at one court level, the judges abided by
judicial rules.
In memory of those who died, and as tribute to those who worked in the
rescue and the search, B'nai B'rith and other Jewish organizations have
pressed for a concerted effort to find those responsible.
What can Individual organizations like B'nai B'rith do to create an
awareness of the threat posed by international terrorism?
B'nai B'rith Argentina sponsored a two day conference on July 3 and 4,
1995 to analyze the wide reaching effects of terrorism. With the
participation of government officials, rabbis and priests, educators and
psychologists, the conference attracted more than 1000 attendees. This
historic conference, the first of its kind ever held In Argentina, raised the
profile of the terrorist threat and proposed concrete steps to confront it.
B'nai B'rith has also maintained contact with a broad range of United
States and Argentine officials In order to:
1.) gather information in order to properly assess the terrorist
threat;
2.) to offer constructive insights into possible ways to improve
security;
3.) to offer Argentine officials a platform to share their
perspectives and Interpret their policies and positions;
4.) to commend the positive steps that are taken to improve the
situation, including greater cooperation among appropriate
agencies and countries of the hemisphere; and
5.) to continue pressuring the Argertine government.
From the viewpoint of worldwide Jewry it is Impk;Aant not to forget the
Innocent victims who lost their lives in the two Argentine bombings.
74
7
B'nai B'rith pledges to continue its global role In working to expose the
threat posed by International terrorism not just to Jewish communities
and to Isrel, but to democracies everywhere, Including our own.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman for the opportunity to appear before the
Committee today.
75
INTERNATIONAL TERORISM IN LATIN AMERICA,
AND THE AMIA BOMBING IN ARGENTINA
TESTIMONY OF
JACOB KOVADLOFF, CONSULTANT ON LATIN AMERICAN AFFAIRS
THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMITTEE
BEFORE THE
COMMrFTE. ON INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
U.S. HOUSE OF RKPRESENTAT1 S
THUBSDAV, SEPTEMBER 28, 1995
Mr. Chairman, on behalf of the American Jewish CoTuuittee, I want to thank you for this
opportunity to testify today on a matter of grave importance to our country and, to the security
and well-being of democratic societies throughout the Westcm Hemisphere and across the globe.
Under your Icadership, Mr. Chairman, the Commiuct hm. devoted considerable attention to this
urgent iLsue -- probing the international connacaions that facilitate tenorist acts, and crating
legislation that will deter such acts, dry up their sounes of support, and severely punish their
perpetrators. The American Jewish Committee commends you in this critical effort and pledges
to continue our work with the Committee and others in the Congress and in the Administration
who seek to raise public awareness about the threat posed by international terrorism and to
develop tough and practical coumermeasures.
By way of introduction, Mr. Chairman, I must tell you that my connection to the isuue
before the Committee today is profoundly personal. I am Argentine and Jewish. For the I-Ast
eight of its more than 30 years or existence, I was the director of the American Jewish
Commlttee's South American Office. headquartered in Buenos Aires. In June of 1977, 1 left my
country due to escalating thmtatA to my family, my staff and, of course, myself. At that time,
my country was in political turmoil, torn by a virtual civil war between subversive groups and
the forces of repression -- and among civilian. military and paramilitary organizations. After the
threat of political violerce forced us to clo.e our offic in Buenos Aires, the American Jewish
Committee continued to work alongside democratic institutions, both JewiLs and non-Jewish, in
Washington and New York, that sought an end to the repression and civil strife in my country.
In the years since the end of that dark chapter in Argentine history, the American Jewish
Committee, through frequent exchmges in both countries. has remained in close contact with the
Jewish community there, with Argentine civic institutions, and with the Government of
Argentina.
Allow me to say, Mr. Chairman, that many of us have not forgotten and still harbor dccp
gratitude to yuu fur your help to the victims of thc barbaric struggle in my home country. We
have not forgotten, either, your irm condemnation of the anti-Semitic acts which were a
common occurnce in Argentina during that terrible time.
Indeed, the history of extremist political movements -- in and out of power -- in my
native country and across Latin America for wevcral decade% bs been interwoven with antiSemitisr. In a sense, today's hearing revisits i chapter of that history that might well be called
76
TESTIMONY OF THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMITTEE
PAGE 2
"From Domestic Terrorism to International Terrorism." In a 1980 AIC analysis, "Latin Arixrica
-- The Arab Connection, we described how the political pragmatism of many Latin American
governments gradually allowed the penetration of a discriminatory and anti-Semitic ideology into
their diplomacy. Its culmination was the infamous vote at the United Nations equating Zionism
and racism. In an oddly parallel fashion, anti-government guerrillasi and subversive movements
fmm the 1960's onward, with support from anti-Western governments in the Muslim world.
voiced similar strains of anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism. Operatives of some of these so-called
liberation movements received weapons, money and asylum from confrontational nonaligned
states, with training camps in Lebanon, Syria. IrAq. Libya and Sudan.
While in Argentina today there are no surviving structures of militant movements of the
extreme left, it is easy to see that individuals and small groups of the extreme right, remnants
of the repressive former regime "nd its support network, are still active, anonymously, in
important areas of Argentina's political ifc, particularly in its armed forces, and in the security
and intelligence services. The link between these groups and individuals on the militant right,
and the terrorist attacks against the Israeli Embassy ad the Jewish community in Buenos Aires
of 1992 and 1994. respectively, has never bccn firmly established, but there continues to be
speculation in Argentina that such groups may have played a supportive, logistical role in the
bombings -- and, through law enforcement connections, may have complicated the government's
investigative efforts.
Before turning to those terrible incidents in 1992 a&d 1994, 1 must say emphatically, Mr.
Chairman, that it would be inaccurate and unfair to broadly characterize Argentina as an antiSemitic country an a Nai haven -- stigmas which are frequently applied to my native country.
Yes, there are racists in Argentina, and yes. the country harbored a number of infamous figures
of German Nazism -- but Argentine society as a whole rejects anti-Semitism. Indeed, in 1992
the American Jewish Committee in cooperation with the DAIA, Argentina's umbrella group of
Jewish organizations. published an opinion survey in which a decisive 81 percent of rpondcnts
expressed acceptance and tolerance of Jcws -- a significant rise from previous studies conducted
in the 1960's and 70's.
The 1992 and 1994 bombings in Buenos Aires elicited broad and sincere expressions of
public sympathy with the victims and their families, and with the Jewish community generally.
But those expressions were, of course, made nearly incidental by the horror of the attacks
themselves -- attacks that together killed morc than 120 individuals, and that as yet have led to
no cotnlusive prosecutorial action. Shortly after the March 17, 1992. bombing that destroyed
the Israeli Embassy - and again just thrt days after the July 18, 1994, bombing that reduced
to rubble the AMIA Jewish community headquarters building -- large public demonutrations were
conducted in Buenos Aires in support of Israel and the Argcntinc Jewish community, and in
trihute to the victims. Prrdkknt Menem and his entire cabinet, Catholic Church leaders.
lawmakers and representatives from all walks of Argentine life joined the Argentine Jewish
community in expressions of solidarity and in condemnation of the attacks.
After the- 1992 bombing, a newspaper in Buenos Aires headlined its report on the
PAGE 3
demonstrations with these words: "We ire all Jcws." A me-mber of Israel's Parliament, the
Knesset, answered back: "We are all Argentines." Two years later, as I saw when I ad my
colleague Jason Isaacson, AJC's Director of Government ancL International Affairs, joined the
public demonstration after the AMIA bombing, "We are all Jews" was a slogan prominently
displayed on banners above the streets of Buenos Aires.
Official Government reaction to the bombing of tfe AMIA building was immediate and
heartfelt. Just hours after the first reports of the attack, Ar .cntina's Consul General in Ncw
York, Arnaldo Listre, was able to arrange a meeting for Arm rican Jewish Commi-tee officials
with the then-interior Minister and now Vice President Carlos Ruckaut, who was visiting New
York; in that meeting and in further discussions with AJC lat r that week in Buenos Aims with
Minister Ruckauf, Foreign Minister Guido DiTella, and other officials, and in the televised and
frankly emotional public apology to the Jewish community issued by President Menem, the
Government sought again and again to express its outrage and sorrow, and its dctermination to
apprehend those responsible for this unspeakable crime.
While the public reaction and the public statements by the nation's leaders were sincere
and appropriate, the action that has followed those expression. has been fruasrntingly inadequate - frustrating, I know, to Minister DiTella. with whom I and several of my col'eagues in AJC met
yesterday in New York, and frustrating to the Argentine Jewish community) and to all who are
committed to justice in the AMIA case.
Answers to the questions posed by both of the Buenos Aires bombings have eluded the
Argentine criminal justice system, although a consensus has formed among Western intelligence
officials that the attacks were carried out primarily by operatives of or connected to Hizbollab,
very likely at the direction of or with the knowledge of Iranian oficialk,. After both bombings,
there was speculation in Argentina that the attacks were intended as signals to the government
that its warming relations with Israel -- and perceptions of a cooling iri political and cozumnercial
relations with some in the Arab world -- would carry a heavy price. While such speculation
cannot be discounted, it must be said that other countries, even in Uitin America, have enjoyed
a longer history of close relations with Israel without experiencing similar tragedies.
The choice of Buenos Aires as the site for these two terrorist assaultss has been the suhieut
of considerable anxiety and speculation. In fact, we mniy never know why the bombers slccted
Buenos Aires; with each passing month, the prospect of resolving these crimes grows mort:
uncertain. But there are facts we do know: That with its long and, in many areas, ninimally
patrolled international borders, aid its sorely inefficient Immigration control prucducs,
Argentina likely offers the relatively easy access to and frnm their targets that terrorists require.
That within the ranks of right-wing extremist elem-vnts and within radicalizcd segnnts of the
immigrant Arab population in Argentina and its border regions, nutside agents would be likely
to find operational support for an attack on Jewish institutions. That, at least from the
pcrptive of 1994. it was unclear whether Argentina's investigative services had the will, or
the experience, or the competence to resolve a difficult caw of international terrorism.
PAGE 4
The American Jewish Committee has explored thesc and other factors that may hive
contributed to the ,ircumstance of the AMIA bombing in two publications. Shortly after the
atck, we published a text by Professor Carks Waisman of the University of California in San
Diego -- "Why Arl:ntina? -- that portrayed the political and sociological context of the attack
and described how local extremist groups could have given logistical uppnrt to the culpriLs in
the AMIA bombing,, likely members of an anti-Israel nidical Islamic faction.
On the first anniversary of the attack, wc published a report prepared for the American
Jewish Committee by an Argentine journalist, Sergio Kiernan, titled "Atrocity in Buenos Aires - The AMIA Bombing, One Year Later." It provides the most thorough and balared analysis
I have yet reviewed of the investigation to date, and its forecast of progress toward a successful
resolution of the case !a thing short of discouraging. As the Committee knows, the only
suspect now being hlld in the cas is Carlos Alberto Tclleldin, a secondhand-car dealer who had
connections with the police and especiaUy with a Dr. Berges, who is well known in Argentina
for having ooperatal in the military repression of the 1970's. The investigation conducted by
Judge Juan Je,, Gale ino has made little apparent progress in part, at lewt because he and the
prosetors simultane usly are responsible for score.%of other cases before the same court.
I respectfully request that both Professor WaIsman's and Mr. Kiernan's studies be
considered part of my testimony and he included in the bearing record.
The 1995 editiorA of the prestigioua publication "Anisemitism World Report," which is
public jointly by the London-base Institute of Jewish Affairs and the AIC, states in the final
paragraphs of its entry ott Argentina a conclusion similar to those I have made here. It says, in
part:
"The bombing of the AMIA on 18 July was the most serious attack on a Jewish
community nutside Isrdel since the Second World Wa, In terms of Argentine antisemitism, it
was a vivid demonstration of a certain contradictory tread. On the one hand, the incidence of
atise mitic prejudice and mauifestations in the country remains sporadic, even decreasing (despite
an increase in the general crime ratr).... On the other hand, the attack represented the second
time in twemy-eight months that Buenos Aires was chuen as the site of international anti-Israeli
or anti-Jewish terrorism.
"President Mene, and key members of his cabinet ar aware that such attacks bring back
memorial of Argentim as a plate wherc terrorism is not yet umething of the past, and
undermine official efftit's to atte act 'ureign investment.... Responsibility for the AMIA bombing
has been ascribed by th Argcntie, Israeli and US governments, as well as by numeruus analysts
(both Jewish and non-Jewlah) to Islamic militants. The latter, though, may have 3ubcontractcd
pail of. if not the whole of, the operation to kx4 ani-Jcwish elements -- whether opposed or
otherwise to the Menem admInistration's woo-liberal economic policies and international
alignment with the USA - or to other operatives.*
It is worthy of note that Hizbollah, identified-by intelligence agncks and singled out by
79
TESTIMONY OF THE AMERICAN JEWISH COMMITTEE
PAGE 5
Secretary Christopher as the party most likely responsible for the AMIA attack, receives
considerable ftMding from Iran -- some $100 million annually, as U.S. experts have told us -and operates with apparent ease in Syria ax Lebanon. It is disturbing that, although Argentina
appears to be seeking a lower profile in its relations with Iran, it continues to maintain such
relations in the fac of the consensus view of Hizhollah involvement in terrorist acts on
Argentine soil. I know that some who are committed to justice in the AMIA case are concerned,
as well, about Argentina's recent decision to sell one or more nuclcar reactors to Syria, a nation
that remains on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism -- although the Argentine Guvcrnent
has said that such a sale is dependent on the achievement of peace between Syria and Israel. As
AJC has pledged to continue to monitor and report on the AMIA and Embassy investigations,
we will continue to monitor these aW other related Issues in the pursuit of justice for the victims
of tho e tragedies.
A prestigious Argentine writer has said that "the July 18th attack puts before us a tragedy
h'e drama, which is
and a drama, The tragedy, which is irreparable, is what happened.
eventually reversible, is the state of powerlessmss in which Argentina is today when trying to
counter the impunity with which the attack's authors were able to act and the awful effect-; of
the pain and sorrow they have sown."
It is to defeat that seme of powerlessness and to provide maximum assurance that the
tcrrihlc events of March 1992 and July 1994 will not he repeated in Buenos Aires that we know
key officials of the Argentine Government are committed -- a commitment we share. We hope
this Committee will do all in its power, Mr. Chairman, to encourage a broadening of the
international intelligence cooperation initiated among Argentina. the United States and Israel, in
particular, in the wake of the Buenos Aires attacks, and to seek intensified participation by
Argentina and other states throughout the Hemisphere in efforts to protect against international
terrorist acts. block support for those acts -- whether such support derives from govermnents or
individuals -- and punish those who engage in them.
Again, Mr. Chairman, I want to express to you my gratitude for having been called to
testify before the Committee. I note that I am joined here today by my colleague Richard Foltin,
AJC's Legislative Director and Counsel. On behalf of the AmerictAn Jewish Committee, 1 must
again thank you for your contimed devotion to the eradication of the scourge of terrorism, and
for the intense focus you have applied today to thesr tragic acts in my native country.
06/27/85
14:17
W J C NY
0212 755
-0.0- N83
MIUSE COMM-1lNT
Q003/006
Ift
Secretary
.neral,
OENEVA
I ni do Vmwrm
MOUMBU
M4gW
Yo"
?eAMMOLe
12I2)751-577
T"A 2361 29
TeAa. (212)7 5-5fl3
12
OL43
AW
L~m 744
31 J~omb*y ban
CA" WoK.Me
Kr. CheLiman,
71 VuWWAeimV 1ohomm
I catoA here in my capacity as Secretary General of the Vorld Jevish
PAIS
Congress.
As much my concern with this matter exteuds. beyond that which
7U Awe.des CK MBwm
we all share* as Americans to include those of Jeish
communities both
here and esecially abrza4.
I am particularly delighted that VJC vicepresident Dr. Rt4bdn Neraja, head of Argentina's Juvish county, has
joined us here tody.
The issue before us cannot of course be reduced to one-dimensiotal
sad formdlas.
So In the short time which is allotted, I vant
to focus speciically on the particular characteristic of the terzorlst
virus which clearly was at work and was behind the bombing of the AXIA
cAmne
Islamic terror.
At these hearings we are looking at the Lme as it
Latin America. t-c it
is
relates to
abundantly clear that the threat in that region
is
not
isolated from the wwre general one and that Jews have been made
a specific though -certain,: not the exclusive target of these criminjls.
Vituess the events in the past two years. In Buenos Aires, Panara,
A-
London,
and Lyon,
France.
./2
81
09/27/95
14:17
S$ I C NY
It0o4006
-1-
is based
The vast majority of the world's more than one billion Muslims
It is only a small minority which advocates
82
0/27/5
14:16
0212 75
-.-.-
V ,IC Y
853
HOUSE COKXINTL.
Q0o5/o06
- 3 -
instead of weeping the problem under the rug. The State DepartmAnt seems to be
guided by the philosophy that Lilitant Islam need not be confrt-nted; that only
Such a policy is doomed to failure bethe "extremists" need to be challenged.
cause it posits the existence of artificial differentiations within militant Islamic movements. The essential element guidin these moveeuts is the necessary
aggrand4isemant of Islam at the owpense of all other systems. As such, the much
disparaged "conflict of civilizations" between Islas end to the West is, in fact,
# conflict of irreconcilable values between political Is lem and the West.
believes in the notion that dialogue with the
The State Departuent still
Islamic movements is something that should be pushed forward. Unfortunately, the
dialogue is in reality a means by which Islamists gloss over their differences
with the West In an effort to lull it Into a false sense of security. Unless the
US recognizes first and foremost the differences with political Islam, the path
of dialogue" ir am empty 'and dangerous gesture.
Most tragically,
the reticence to face this threat has pulled the rug out
from the great majority of Muslims vho do not believe In a militant interpretation:
secularists, modernists, and even traditionalists who do not demand the establishIndeed, only through the emergence of a sodezate Islam
ment of Islamic empires.
And
will a competing ideological canter of gravity to political Islam be created.
in order for that to occur, the West, led by the US. must be willing to lend its
great moral weight to the delegItimation of militant Zlm and to the concomitant
build-up of moderate Islam. In fact, the great power available to the US in this
debate is largely of a moral nature;
Mainitration
terrorist acts.
83
14:15
O9/27/95
@212
785 5683
w J C NY
Qoo8/oo6
- 4 -
In addition to the security elements, a comprehensive policy towards militant Islam will require the following components:
*
Intelligence
Western
regimes,
84
STATEMENT
of
on
BEFORE TIlE
85
House Committee Testimony - September 28, 1995
The
terrorists who committed this heinous crime did not just destroy
a building; they struck at the very heart of the Argentine Jewish
community.
The records of a
In the
against the AMIA building, and over three years after the
destruction of the embassy, little if any progress has been made.
In April, 1995, a delegation of seventeen leaders of the
Anti-Defamation League visited Argentina.
86
Jewish community and to assess the Argentine government's
investigation into the bombings of the AMIA building and the
Israeli embassy.
Prior to the trip to Argentina, several members of the
delegation met with the terrorism divisions of the FBI and the
State Department and were briefed on the current status of the
Argentine government's investigation into both bombings and also
given observations of both divisions on various facts and
assumptions.
In the four days that the delegation was in Argentina, we
met with government officials including, among others, President
Carlos Menem, the Ministers of Justice and Interior, and the
Director of State Intelligence Service in addition.to several
members of his staff.
conclusions:
1)
87
that the Anerican government and the FBI in particular expand the
availability of counterterrorism schools to Argentine personnel.
We understand some of this training has already taken place by
the FBI and we feel that much more is necessary.
2)
information but rather that each one wants to be the one to "hit
a home run" and this has greatly hindered the investigation.
3)
is very porous and, having spent some time in the area, I can
agree that it is almost impossible, if not impossible, to police
crossings.
88
the vanguard of this international effort.
Enactment of tough,
of the bill and are disturbed by recent reports that the momentum
behind this measure has been stalled.
09/27/95
19:15
AJJDC NY
Ralph /. Goldman
Father of David Ben Rafael,
Victim of terrorist attack on the Israeli Embassy ir, Buenos Aires, March 17, 1992
On March 17th, 1992 1lost my son David Ben Rafael in the mcst deadly terrorist act of
that year; the attack on the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires.
American born and educated, raised on the values of freedom and justice, he was there
ais the minister of the Israel legation.
In the years that passed since that day, I lost my confidence in the will of the
government of Argentina to pursue the investigation into this criminal incident and its
perpetrators, with energy and determination.
Do02
90
19:15
09/27/96
AJJDC NY
For more than three years I have pressed the Argentine authorities with respect to two
simple questions;
1)
Mbo
rof
and
2)
wht were charwed with ouardina the Isrdael Embassy were not on duty when the
attack took o~lace.
I take the opportunity to draw to the attention of this distinguished body that to this date
no response pubilirt or privately to either question has been offered by the Argentine
government and that the investigation is apparently at a halt.
We know that the poisonous weed of terrorism grows mainly where ripe conditions
exist. In retrospect, it is clear that Argentina continues to provide such fertile ground.
Q_003
91
0/27/05
19:15
AJJDC NY
____
Following the inveitgations of the two terrorist attacks, one can not avoid the
frustrating conclusion that the authorities of Argentina failed twice in their duty as a
sovereign government:
Once They failed to create the right climate of deterrence that would have prevented
terrorism from operating on its territory. It saddens me to suggest that perhaps the
opposite climate existed there: one that attracts terror by an astonishing leniency of its
law enforcement apparatus.
And the second failure Is the inability of the authorities to capture and bring to trial those citizens of Argentina
who, with their deeds or omission, were auxiliary to the two attacks.
K-
t00t
92
09/7/95
13:16
AJJPC NY
I am cognizant of the fact that America has used its u, -,ast resolve and concerted
resources to fight this terrorist scourge. However, not enough has been done.
Americans must not let these events In Argentina be forgotten until justice is served. I
urge that the Congress of the United States use its prestige and economic power to
assure meaningful investigations of the 1992 and 1994 terrorist attacks and to keep the
international community and the families of the victims informed.
Moreover, I hope that these hearings will continue and will contribute to a thorough
resolution of the Investigations at hand.
os6
0i27'05
19:16
AJJDC NY
I opened my statement by sharing with you the fact that 1, personally, have suffered
from terrorism In Argentina. No action you take will return my son, and others, to Ife.
However, your voice can be heard and your statement can resonate in the free
democratic world, encouraging the government of Argentina to exhaust all measures to
pursue justice in these cases.
By doing that, you may be adding a significant weapon to the global war against
terrorism.
Thank you.
i-i1
n -
96 -
94'
TRAM
TOBACCO AND
TREASURY.
AT?
TERRORISM.
AS T
CURN
INCLUDED IN THIS
96
THIS IS
STATE,
97
-3-
SOCIETY.
ON
(NE).
EACH TEAM,
RECONSTRUCTION INVESTIGATORS,
TECHNICIANS,
CHEMISTS,
AND BOMB
TO DATE,
DEATHS
DAMAGE.
2,324,
98
-4-
BOMB TECHNICIANS,
WHICH IS
BLAST EFFECT,
DEBRIS
(DNA)
NEW MEXICO.
99
DATA COLLECTION.
SONKTIXE IN 1996.
NRT MEMBERS
EXPLOSIVES
ASSISTING IN THIS
DNA.
INFORCED(NT EFFORTS
IN MARYLAND, GEORGIA,
AND
USED.
COMPARISONS.
MOREOVER,
MARKET
100
OF THE NATIONAL
ON SERIAL
THEY CONSTRUCT
RENDER
PROVIDE EXPERT
101
STATE,
RECENTLY,
102
-8-
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
SczEzCToN
THE
ATF,
LABORATORY,
HAVE
EXPLOSIVES GROUPS,
103
GREECE, CYPRUS,
IN
ISRAEL AND
RGYPT.
INITIATIVE.
TO DETERMINE
TO ASSIST IN
THIS CAPABILITY
ENABLES
OR ABANDONED
EXPLOSIVES,
EXPLOSIVE MATERIALS,
THIS
COMMERCIAL,
MUNITIONS.
104
RECOVERIES,
STATE,
NATION.
OR THROUGHOUT THE
THIS COMPILATION OF
DISTRIBUTED INTERNATIONALLY.
ATF IS
IN THE PROCESS OF
INCIDENTS.
ON SEPTEMBER 30,
CONCEPT,
1991,
ATF INITIATED
105
-11-
OF AN ACRWN
DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
BETWEEN AT'
THE ZRT IN T2
AND THE U. S.
THIS
VIOLENCE.
PROPERTY IN FOREIGN
AMBASSADOR
106
-12-
EVALUATION,
TO DATE,
IN MARCH 1992,
IN BUENOS AIRES.
THE
INJURIES.
TESTIMONY
OF ARGENTINA IN A POSTBLAST
200
95
107
-13-
IN APRIL 1995,
THE DEVICE,
WHICH
A
THE
A SUSPECT.
CLEARLY,
108
-14-
ATF HAS
GERMANY,
SWITZERLAND,
THE
PARTICIPANTS DISCUSSED
109
MATERIALS,
IS
IMPRACTICAL.
AS WELL AS
TO
110
BUT THIS
STATE,
LOCAL AND
111
Question
1. Were composite sketches prepared of the suicide bomber, or
any of his accomplices associated with the vehicle used in the
attack on the AMIA building in Buenos Aires in July 1994?
If
so, how many sketches were prepared, and who was depicted in
each sketch?
Answer
112
Question for the Record Submitted to Philip Wilcox
Committee on International Relations
September 28, 1995
Question
2. Who prepared the composite sketches (i.e., police in Buenos
Aires, Argentine intelligence, prosecuting judge)?
113
Question for the Record Submitted to Philip Wilcox
Committee on International Relations
September 28, 1995
Question
3. Were any of the sketches publicized in Argentina to help
If so, please
identify the suicide bomber or his accomplices?
provide samples of any publicity the drawing may have received.
other sketches, one of the person who parked the van used in
the attack in a garage on Azcuenage and Paraguay Streets three
days before the attack, and the other of the person who
purchased the van.
Attachment:
Samples
;L..
'
-I...
proLesariest
.~.
~zinao, ELjuez
i.astov
- *.
..
S a o
Aiea
voU~
ladus c
prI
Argoulna. bajo to piAa e_," to ftu"
-ula
iuwexr
wlzwuL
tkm
1saadi
Proomtak quo rgoooo a-a uusknin
par-i calwod-.
I&M10dO Um. Cmemuemgmwzvu
db ori dI 5 to
l..
d
10
o
d
0o'
11211a
o
Rn DIAn
u
f& de m4rsd
o- b*~
Prum jiveouvs0i
rm e
tsko
veindio..Ia
Jan Jose GoleanoIidag~ alapersonicuEii
cameionela, Un tesskmonio quo es consiJeizado clove.
"pao
?Plas
Lo
...
Leataal olgrngeso Y.
od
o.
a -quit,"c evesttwo- we. tiealooJ y p'oe a
*o
im Ca;iru6W7Wie
1441. pues- adnattinm acho w~mdoorq woewao.Mmwai
AgpOtvocists w, ,eWdeI
d
pd
*
aiatoio di Tolrw. a
le-sy- Icm no Undi
CancUlea.,;pdrfa incluir urs"
Ar
Ia suspipqdOdoa qu ose t
-.. ".
.
I&
CM , *gjL
dcut* tiewaoo I&*wds~ 4,ou
SiN cwamo CSwansphonebo
(MAL6mi
tdtlo
Goblet.. considera cIm.. per& graar-ioou
mochos
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64rnzd~
apantglar ma agouitodumi legal y*
do oluimwgrove% sntiedeJa syer
.!
"co*3imdfw
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cootma
Politic.
tu"sootmofams.
LAeCameio
CMt Uo CIa j
'-l Imftdf JUstbd& 4-St y& 00MCASd a.v~
de Segturtdad mans per quot toLy madfnwitat
cJn do I&Seccgsamu4
osrric.4do odtont y I& edatdhir
go, y Tipedido 6o coteboracift welo-* LnCmpotw em AUt mI Is ihAus"
coal 15614U11que wm@Qoogo
.00
Itdttl
-de om
bay. inaia..o o yasedo. Io manda- nacional mmtartmk do LatatlgemdL. cO-r
En ot marco.- tambide as Went- dlphom~ticos exwmsos EAA Posa
ayor
Q
emm%
Ino of Parianm=.
fbut
Pe
CwM
aunt
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Tura
v.0gm.ocmario &o egat y Tdc- cliut "o Poder Ziecutivo
Cma.
iw
spar- empoda "u mAbu t" oft
mica deIs Tremddas. CmveIo- - pemoar a to dudadsno" qwodo
TOOWo n bm I& Peam ul delco Pam Ia rewoucada
4..~~~W
oath.
m'
do Iris
culacto. do to x~nobaped
caw do torAXM&
LA Lnlc"atVu Encluyeanca teps.
oatm
stesiada
del
automg
can' Ios
Ls oposicddn polhi~ca--oeg,
olalosdo
pna
tod.IsSoas
A.tI.
Is
ftoa&Aut
Baa acuVIAdesovnculadas toon *I coiaddame a dIputsa
"X- "mdad qe go dereob
Goacloa&VarmAmdagMXoldo At resotaquocasigrco
beoam
domgI
turfo qu ort ,.
penw. do out te y reuismicwo' &Cal Jo~ Radir'. y el soelia- oe
AM at Prisma- y sparecta a I& Is Udoo rob..- coasiders 'oma- caamda eaktem gmwbaima.oo
dhlt6@ab ornen
do
do
IDdltom
L&
tlsicacidr
bigua"
emocbe
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p66A1icarb
Iuz
tegor orono. toabvhmiso do
dLrote do! stenleda exptaako quo ytfvwfen w sa iwaci~fdo dO
91o~
0dgl
At-moeloroaloop~Oe
a oqo~lrmawado orab UWdemmiM Is Abodcl~n. mutualtom.Carim ol vicooeoclurr fgg.m
ayr
.OIL
elite Arre.na (AMUA)..
rtoct.
101s.
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o c'w
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CAMARA-FEDEIRAL- .
115
OCT-1 3-1
995
16:ieEt1ESSy(
ES~n
197
p. ~
A'
t
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4.
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LAD.A.AAA EEA
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C.--
r,*
acig~g-e
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Y~~CZ9.
aI
kE9IS
INV
117
Question for the Record Submitted to Philip Wilcox
Committee on International Relations
September 28, 1995
118
Question for the Record Submitted to Philip Wilcox
Committee on International Relations
September 28, 1995
5. What is the routine practice of the ATF, FBI and other law
enforcement agencies in using and publicizing composite
sketches to attempt to identify bombers or their accomplices?
Answei
119
Question for the Record Submitted to Philip Wilcox
Committee on International Relations
September 28, 1995
-t1i-2QG
120
QaLtiQn
7. You have identified the Middle East group, Hizballah, as
responsible for the AMIA attack. Has the State Departmentoffered the use of its world wide terrorist rewards and
publicity program to help the Argentine government identify the
suicide bomber or any of his accomplices?
We have not.
The AMIA
We have,
121
Question for the Record
Submitted to Ambassador Philip C. Wilcox
House International Relations Committee hearing
September 28, 1995
Answer
(Emphasis
122
-2-
123
Question for the Record
Submitted to Ambassador Philip C. Wilcox
House International Relations Committee hearing
September 28, 1995
QOuetion
9. What follow up steps are to be taken by the United States
resulting from the recent regional meeting on terrorism in
Argentina?
Answer
124
-2
In
125
-3--
We continue to
the FBI, ATF, CIA, FAA, and the Departments of Justice and State
have bilateral ongoing relationships and exchanges in place to
fulfil the goal of encouraging our partners to take vigorous
action to combat terrorism.
House of Representatives.
22-101 0 - 96 - 5
126
Question for the Record
Submitted to Ambassador Philip C. Wilcox
House International Relations Committee hearing
September 28, 1995
Anwex
Training:
December 1994 - Am evaluation Mm wu sent to determine if
Argentia could paticipfte inn boml-deecto dog prMram to te
ANTI-TERRORISM COOPERATION
responded to ie AMIA bombing by providing a team
of 13 cxpers in explosive vsgatioa. de Iernaaional
Response Tem., whicb arived Wedesday. July 20, 1992. less
thm 48 hours after die blt.The tam ieptaeuid govnment
nc luding the State Depument, 6e FBI, and he Bureau
of Alcohol. Tobacco ad Frcwms. Memben of dis was had
o the World Trade Center bombig and others ald
woe
-e
mtitig te
fon
by the USG.
Investigation: 20 office
January 195 - Teorist Crime Sc
from Police and Judiciary amended a two-week cyure at the FBI
aS 5.00F
to puticipoe.
AMIA, we iny
April 1995 - A gsoup of 14 OOA offlciis ftom de Federal
police, Federal Ju&ciay, Offie of Security and Prolection and
128
Domkingo 16 de julio de
!ejuliOl
e994:
9.52
MIA:;-
129
IN
AA.
xjc
8-27-95 ; 3:50AM ;
gNT BY:
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bOA
:l I I Im 4"4
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WAPNWNO?.
glm fl
124l
oc M 100o3
ApI 7. 1995
ftaeddlr of Axwumft
,ALCARB 5(2064)
l FdW, MApw
-em'
r In Argud
um
and heulgt~u the word.
We p4prciate y&= atn nio to oe conrcu amd hope that yo,- V.I.. fti to
evymaxy.
Whs efit the aui. vIgm and devmimi you btwugb to uonn
Wei of course, .nand zemd to do what wi can to help you in pursuing lo :crpteator
of this terble crime amglist boey.
sincaejy,
AoioSdoI 1Aav
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130
SEW BY:
Bryan
Burns
Campbell
Chaffee
Coats
Cohen
Conrad
Daachle
DeWine
Dodd
D Amto
Dole
-xXon
Feingold
teinstein
Glenn
Gorton
Oraham
Grams
Grassley
Harkin
Helms
Inouye
Kennedy
Kerry
Kohl
xyl
Lutenberg
Leahy
Levin
Liebmiman
McConnell
Moue -Braun
Murray
Nickles
Paockwood
Reid
Robb
Rockefeller
Sarbanes
Shelby
Snee
Speatr
Welletone
181
xJC!R
9-27-95 ; 9:51AN :
SENT BY:
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4,
MMi
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Sa
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0836816.4
WAINNTOK. D
1M-20d2
.ALCAICY So (loe)
Capital Pederal, Argentina
Dear President Ienem:
Za Aprl
YOU r.garig
./c,ollwguse
ij,
the ivivestigutioa of tha
99P3 kf wbir
lewish Coxmunity Center in Buenlos Aires and the bob.*,
Israeli rm"ey
bombing in 1992.
wrote to
o! the-
I am snlosing
& copy of that letter.
We wold &Zpreeiace
reoiving a reaponse tQ our letter
and look forward! ct; working
terrariuft.
Best wish"s.
sincerely,
Bsrbara A. MJkulski
United states senator
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133
La Nacion - 4y A~-,^
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134
What happened these days has to be analyzed in light of
the occurrences of last week.
Rabbi Avi Weiss, a Rabbi from New York City, arrived in
our country when we commemorated the first anniversary of
the massacre.
The Rabbi on his second visit to our country was not
pleased and upheld the theory, not based on fact, but on
reliable information that in Argentina there has not been a
serious investigation because to do so, would implicate a
government official or his collaborators.
As you will recall, criticism was widespread.
President, Carlos Menem, who had invited Rabbi Weiss to a
cabinet meeting last year, has now described the Rabbi as
delirious. Ruben Beraja, head of the DAIA, rejected Rabbi
Weiss's accusations as reckless.
Never-the-less, what is certain is that the volume of
the discussion has been raised and in now centered on the
actions of the security forces.
Even yesterday, United States Democratic Congressman
Elliot Engel, who met at the beginning of June with our
president to convey his uneasiness over the lack of results
from the investigation, stated to "La Nacion" that the
Committee of International Relations of the United States
Congress, had invited Rabbi Weiss to a meeting that took
place last Thursday with the head of the committee, Ben
Gilman, to try to understand why Menem insulted the Rabbi
when to them he deserves the utmost confidence.
The Rabbi took this opportunity to reiterate that Menem
has not taken this matter seriously and that our borders
lack security. This is the way we are perceived.
In the meantime, Beraja warned that he would raise the
level of his complaints if no progress is shown soon. As a
result, Menem manifested his profound disgust. Corach is
angry at Beraja as well.
Maybe because Rabbi Weiss' speech helped to redirect
the fire toward antisemitic clusters, and surely because of
the convictions of the Jewish leadership, Alberto
Crupnikoff, head of the AMIA, Luis Dobniewsky, the AMIA's
legal advisor and Beraja, had a long and honest meeting with
the Federal Representatives (Camaristas). At this meeting,
Beraja stated the problem clearly and the other two men
backed him up.
135
It is suspected that the Buenos Aires police force has
radical members in its ranks. Although less dramatic, due to
the good will that these entities have toward Hugo
Anzorregui, they also are distrusting of members of the
second and third ranks of the SIDE. It is very probable that
some of these members will be arrested in the near future.
SOMETHING IS MISSING
The pressure applied by the AMIA and the DAIA to clear
up this matter is crucial. On the other hand, Judge Galeano
and the District Attorneys Eamon Mullen and Jose Barbaquia,
who had never been involved in a terrorist case, have in the
last twelve months gained valuable experience and are
conducting a solid and professional investigation.
The danger and the breakdown appear to be in the
security forces who perhaps are protecting themselves or are
covering up internal mafias. Additionally, Telleldin, a
compactors of cars, related how in order to "keep his job",
he must periodically hand over auto engines to an important
urban police brigade ("conurbano"). They could be
obstructing the investigation.
THt JEW'SH
WEKMAY12.1995 1
At.
Morn 1
'it
CflIt
n
is
tern
S3
qW,
suegckuns='I=.O.$'".m 2r%
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K9 IhrMrAl Ram's
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aquad&
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taie
Mr SebuIowm.
who'mind
to isee
the19NS n* ft o Pm AmtPFg his troops ukthe
listpres,
sy-on^orUbyasimadimat
terased
we similar PO in the 103awets
Lacarble, Scoaed
9tliwmt'erholowterv-shs
If the Metsr gewerrneritIs tfermerdictaterohi, Ot of Mt.
Th*e ther tob1equestionafidet
serleet about acevetlng slid Metal cmeainat headof the Mesga's ewea past political
liv ern ear a poid edits' to
toprsad posile aeu of hoe SIDErepecudwarkad durin the eIstvlsma,
a
gm by Tdoleg'lshwdnopgeuodihe cirope flmuoAreilln l. itdmght
npr adamod
aar
bderntse
Rn"~
rse bahiedthree say
sel ponder
Oartltaofits materA
inter
odei minister - * rporter *I*
rblytl
rebllan aeat Mr. Menm,%
dIlgaon free Israel, the United ponstlanof Ipis'tcelasnts
opoddonse
wspapes'PosingI2
4ltt redates
tragic relief the pose comte-. Stearid tariptepairued en purged trotm pelbticlife by Maj Artin'tehef lawentaeeteni
oniie
bout
hpl
a
Cadgr
-o Rea Allforein.
"ace's of the rainpst lsIms,
demecally-elecsed predates. tld ofale"e ialem;;;_714.
* Is 151. sa the Dritish Wari
ihode Mr. Manv Arvertnub
naw tl enerles thetgolnesouaCEsthotim
of the lose
am RaidAlfni
chatFinancierLiceaCell. tomheadi ftstblg the FfhktaegdjKelvlnae
Jeicwy ha bese pluged mid
steeflcilAsyintlr pyetden Carlos
Camslder.
bywa"ofeample.tme of Italy's naloroan P-2 Mesnic
toliswig sot Argfentiac
corruptd to -n iree-dlnery
Meneut.whlat proUS lbigea
eSe Con
a aPluscoal Guerri- lodgelike discvry2 of which Island
army Invasion.Mr. Mane. Wishe degree Its PUSrAMhasa baes
poiceszdnofeemaket rtfor:~
r tHai -Celwol Rae7 hrwohl
brituih downCE Itaia govern- Mesasear Gales's Libya linthe
Initothe Menewi
ganonirmernta
en
ni
i
1911)
and
privately
11old
coepay if theArab atotegaia cat of rule byexectiv Mswhen
America ntmlai
sdvkneelolthe
Stateinlegtreoter
associatedchat, toe is. Adolf
Argetijite epohesmeeHoratio
Three weeks earlier. as Mr.
vice.SIDENileirawa"aieee
-m thatlef* w (And
Mcmleit
wit preparing
bueo
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Menrnm himself say the
'ime heedof two cinmusotbo
Mt. Menem'sfaily tins sand Semilesad oanort deatholqoa Nb_
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a~m aWllae
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CAw"Aduringa proisaosanaory frienids we slammiqlesing. The leaders, Ingard at weapons
hr
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the Argretne%
rMeem (e Remntin
Catholiccatd
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In 1992and 1L13Aegc'fi
stewardship. hlls coesiry Wa
do ttorSsorr. army lnletice his ranged wifeZoletw (a Syri- bombingcat ~& rilpoihood- buldy
'bewvte a waystation(or Mitdd& Jimndnnientalist
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rend
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Mt. Alfeias' gten- Hatesk
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Pvgenfre Jewish leadersandMr
nrmi CoLGwerriri himsearf
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red
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hNs
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er-ta,., thrrole l thshm. a Ansotada. FrankrDlL
mlay
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that hist also
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rked Pasone andGreatBritain. hawe counted on
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UnderMr Meet,,,. neotnip went Ibroltin weas
Aome
torenle when, idenitiallstandardbearers com- dms1fo6tc
all thetwte
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widmnthe sisiregiame
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to
a
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of almost
vicird in encee~o
orcl it mansi moey launiderig ritg,
major contributors liecluded
outrage (Critics paint owl thatOdim huma rights eluacteles,
bute
death1 Slmilarlo, at rietiored In lin
Paraluepan
llclio foessmor raest elipoete, AotNe. York
mOstrilw-hillea~ex,or fromaole- mintls hoeictig the meiN sellsaid ekaeftai.owecme activis
apacetati nnth, Al Menem*# alieft belpitm wcanledlto nala Thete ooeresniesdest
Nothariel
Semiticsttackagainstanon-com- art eotive hidnaoper were asmigraton director- a toles
N dite meAsunci bythe UtS Notokreported a day beforethe
pess wy
eet'
tatetrip t
batedJewih pepaumtce Ltt
slies poets
widdiliai grrmntnt
esbasssk - andPeicematdrAg*fd
Mat
dalnese4
M c onfroaup Halsicaecoain twoyeers siftera (tnarlag ekedlctatnrhtp, a hey
nafl atrinimr ManuelHre
ideot Manes who have been
atnilarl deedyalck "a"t dc Meets campaign
worker. andat.
edtoeetorielildrappfeloagae
'-a~ withb
compiitln ha-whad
pastalilalAreslee wnfplktlepi
federal reire chiel In theAtlantic Jewsaid sat -weto e ra
aneew drpped -- Sotar no
eadie alis GeniesnNewwer eaphat. Whichwee nver tally
cloe alias'helpifgte sed the became
Mr Maes'sl Amt -amN rtaseilicted of remaps.
crttiel". and he tact hit
investigaerd.) The loqoaclouo orlciadty arltitle, wris
citeulivytwquesd leranm.
denial aokeemmigftllks~o his
i.aone
served puce ti meagent hictosdes
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tatrit MoisterAl tasue. (Mr. election,
Mr.Manser's
hiawkee
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Molrin&&w*n
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of dissident armyv leader lin e while Hlsoe fiealofficil
autho %'-DwsteSereneo
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tha soene roantd or henen istu laire t1n rni- panesnoc sllege
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not s aipouecidon
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seated ansiomr110leader
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the 'Dip" ir
sun hae helpedthe Iranian tir
mirui- en te attachan theAdeilk Laosn ari Argroe
SeveralMens cabinet
and taaydefl
edoariall prene a' %hy'
*y Mfle Edwin
Andeeln
-O -ru
Aiete Jewish
tlede and Mor
-biiml
-uredt-Nasis
local anti-Semiter.
~WVW-
-by
138
TO fHE HONORABLE CONGRESS OF THE UNfTED ST:%TFS CF AMER..A
We have spent the last 14 months waiting to learn who were the c'riminals who
murdered our ielativei in the bombing that destroyed the AMIA building on
July 18, 1994. Expers from various countries assured us that t.o: action of
local groups was ar,-;olulely necessary in carrying out this bloody ac!
regardless of the intell.qctjal and/or financial rpspor.sabilty of international
terrorism. Presently, ne only person detained in tne case (although still not
indicted) is Ca;los Asberto Telleldin, the last owner of an auto some of whose
parts were found arridst the rubble of the AMIA building
After so many months of attempting unsuccesfilly to find some explanation
about those who were responsible for the massacre we believe it is esentia!
at this time to rnake knwr. some details aoout persons involved in, and
action%, taken during the investigation For example'
The total chaos in the zone from t a moment of the explosion (which
suqgestively neither the judicai auth .,it;qs. nor police officials evear attempted
to curb) impeded the proper collection, ard. pr cessing of the basic evidence
which would have given clues to the manner In which the blast was produced
Given that there was no control in, and no cordoning off of the area. one ca,
surmise that since persons robbed belongings from the cadavers and looted
items from the b;own out shoos and apartments in the neighbcurhoco.
persons could just as easly have placed false evidence ;n the zone.
"After 14 months the technical investigation is filled with conflicting
hypotheses regarding the type and quantity of explosive charge and the exac:
point of the epicenter of the o'tplosion
*The judge in the case. Dr. Juan Jos- Caleano although e has received no
new cases since April. 1995. still is pcesiding over 400 pending cases In other
parts of the wold, in cases of much less importance, there would be An
independent prosecutor or 3 judge placed exclusively in a position to
investigate only the one ctime
* The pressure exerted on the judge is o,vious. He has suffered thrce attacks
on his apartment, whicm supposedly has a 24-hour guard by the Argentine
Federal Police
* There has been no publicir regarding t'e t.vo million dollar reward offered
by the government for those giving information on the AMIA bombing. That
reward, part of the Decree # 2023 signed into law by President Menem on
November 16. 1994, has had p;acticaliy no publ;citv in Ine loza, media in the
last ten months
139
Thie policemen O'e~o Bareeaa and Mario lBateiro, whc amit chOir
partciption in a cnmina: gang spect'aizing in - among io,,e. rimas - auto
theft have not been detained Amongi the members of their, cng was Carlos
TeIleldin. Even mnore SUSPICOUILS is te fact that Offinar Daweiro rece;ved a
departmental promotion during the same tirm.) that he was under suspicion in,
the AMIA case
*Another police officer who was promoted is Captain Gaston G. Verriancez
who even with a kong history of anti-semitic oehavior. was chief of the 7ith
Prexinct (the same staticbrhousc trnat controliod tho special gu3rd duty in frcnt
of the AMIA). Fernzndez is now a ccrnristorei irn charge ofl eight different
precincts
*Hector Vet-gezi's an ex-rnemoer of SIDE, tne A'nz:rmine intlierene service
whio was cr~iet of the LA Rioera concentaticn c.mp and brags openly triat he
helped set-Lip La Peria, one of the bcodiest "detention centers" ouririg the last
military dictatorship Verge; rnifte-d offenng Tflield'n ore milion dcI~ars hind
his freedom in exchange for fCngetiin7 one :'f the Leban~ese citizens (detained
in another case 'ni neighboring Fi ':_uz, .is the perscri tLwhom ne Orelleldirsold the van wy-' - parts later apk. 4'ec .1ipersed in thl( area of the ANIA
bombing 1The v!-,( m~vion doiars %\-...to be relc! by "trieros'of the SIDE,
according to Verqy z Tilo Vergez admission provoKed the opening of a
by Judge Branca Alter tou;r months nothing has
separate jdi8netic
been pjblic&y comruniai~ abOUt the resuls of this seconds ry investigationn
We have onl. :s:eo the tio ,)f the iCeberg a few samo' es of SOw~e of tnre
frightening 'acts surroundings this poorly i-anag~ed clorfusing and obstmc'efilled investiawon. We ask the Honola. . ;O'~rs fteUie t~so
America to exert the necessary pressure tcocleaf up this he;'ious crime so tnat
vve. our children and the entire Aroantir~e society can ;r.' - ri oeace ari Wiar1
justice. rher and only 'ner, can the deadl rnaiy rc st Inpe-ice.
'%AJ J
7),,
e--
140
wj,;i-4 ,,6y
t'/c 6r iet
'
l6/Z
.v~
Mc..
Introduction
This work was undertaken with the purpose of discovering the reasons why the
investigation into the attack against the AMIA-DAIA headquarters hasn't advanced.
Carturing the guilty depends on the development of a consistent hypothesis, free from
political ideas or preconceptions. Until now, such notions have served only to deviate
from the case. Without a consistent hypothesis, it will be difficult to conclude the
investigation. And if the time already gone by and the poor management of this case make
it difficult to catch the guilty, we have to think about preventing future attacks which, with
each passing moment, seem to draw pitifully closer.
Historical Background
This attack, along with the one committed two years earlier against the Israeli Embassy in
Buenos Aires, can be viewed as the second most important case in Argentine judicial
criminal history.
The first culminated at the end of 1985, when the leaders of Argentina's military
dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, Generals Videla and Viola and others such as Admirals
Massera and Lambruschini, were judged and condemned. Kidnappings, rapes,
assassinations, tortures and other crimes were proved. More than 10,000 disappearances
were accounted for, although that figure may actually approximate 30,000.
Analyzing the list of the victims of those crimes (and we refer to the 10,000 proven cases)
one finds that 15% were of Jewish background. This is a remarkable figure, if we
consider that the percentage of Jews in Argentina is only 1%. Also, according to the
testimony of the survivors of the concentration camps and extermination camps that
existed at that time, simply being a Jew or being considered a Jew meant death almost
without exception.
In the case of the journalist Jacobo Timerman, the mobilization of the Jewish community
of the United States, backed by its state organizations, finally helped save his life, although
they could not stop his torture.
The indictment of the military junta was possible due to the political conditions and the
correlation of forces during Argentina's return to democracy. At that time, after the
Malvinas Islands defeat, the totality of the Armed Forces were at a point of disintegration
and deterioration. Nevertheless, before leaving power, they decreed a law of selfamnesty.
In 1982, months before the elections which reestablished democracy, the Presidential
candidate for the majority Justicialist party was asked about the possibility of repealing the
'
141
2
self-amnesty law should he be elected President. Dr. Italo Argentino Luder answered that
to do so would be manifestly anti-Constitutional.
In the end, Raul Alfonsin of the Uni6n Civica Radical (UCR) won the elections and
pushed for the trial of the commanders, which ended in their condemnation at the end of
1985. This entire process, even if it cannot be considered satisfactory, would not have
been possible had Luder won.
A short time later, due to pressure from a variety of sectors, the laws of Due Obedience
and Final Point were decreed, and with them dissolved the possibility of pursuing further
judicial actions and sentencings of the Armed Forces and Security Forces involved.
The current Argentine government is Justicialist. Without this implying any accusation
against the President, many of the current high officials could have been in a government
led by Luder, and in some cases, some of them served in military governments, especially
in areas tied to security organizations, the police, intelligence, etc.
Nazism in Argentina
From the first coup orchestrated by General Jose Felix Uriburu, Argentina has been a
country with a Nazi tradition, inside and out the apparatus of the State. That coup was
carried out against the Radical government of Hipolito Yrigoyen on September 6, 1930.
The people of Argentina used to call Uriburu "Von Pepe" due to his admiration for
Germany. The German influence during his reign was notable.
During the entire decade of the '30s, with strong resources supplied by the German
ambassador Von Therman, the extreme fight -- groups such as the Civic Legion and the
Nationalist Freedom Alliance -- proliferated. The latter was led by a policeman named
Juan Queralt6. These groups marched down a principal thoroughfare in Buenos Aires
known as Avenida de Mayo dressed in Nazi uniforms and under police protection.
The coup of June 4, 1943 was eminently fascist. The majority of its protagonists, civil and
military, did not hide their admiration for the "Hitler cross." Even Per6n, the obvious
brain of the coup, and later president, spent many years in Italy and Argentina, and also
explicitly manifested his admiration for the totalitarian regimes of the right.
When the war exploded and practically until 1945, different Argentine governments
maintained an uncomfortable "neutrality" whi ;h the Allied powers interpreted as a political
cover in favor of the Third Reich.
As such, numerous war criminals found a refuge in Argentina and later collaborated with
different State structures like the Police and the Armed Forces. A typical case is that of
the AS of the Luftwafe, Hans Rudel, who was practically the father of the Argentine
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military Air Force. Rudel, like Eichmann and other Nazis, arrived in Argentina after 1945,
fleeing Allied justice.
This influence of Nazi ideology continues today. The Interior Minister, Carlos Corach (of
Jewish heritage) has currently among his advisors two known Nazis. One is Carlos
T6rtora, who belonged to the Nationalist University Concentration (CNU). At the
beginning of the '70s, the CNU assassinated a Jewish student named Silvia Ester Filler in
Mar del Plata. T6rtora, before being designated as an aide to Corach, was one of the main
officers of the SIDE (State Information Service).'
During the Second World War, a priest names Julio Meinvielle, became very popular. He
revindicated Nazism and did not hide his aversion to Jews. In the '60s, he was the mentor
and ideologue of the Nationalist Restoration Guard (GRN) that committed crimes and
attacks of all kinds. Among his disciples was a youth named Norberto Belladrich, who
currently is the press aide to Interior Minister Corach.
In the '70s, Horacio Calder6n edited a book entitled "Jewish Argentina," a book of Nazi
ideology in which it was affirmed that Jews were the true owners of the country. On the
cover was a map of Argentina, nailed with little Stars of David to a cross. "Jewish
Argentina" is considered as an archetype model of the majority of the studies about NeoNazism. Today, Calder6n is an advisor to President Menem. In his latest public
comments he has reneged on his anti-Semitic past, but he has not been convincing.
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In 1988, when he was a candidate for the Presidency, Mencm visited Syria at the
invitation of President Haffez el Assad. In that visit he met Monzer Al Kassar, a Syrian
arms dealer, and Ibrahim Al Ibrahim, who would later marry Menem's sister-in-law, Amira
Yoma.
When Menem was elected President, Ibrahim and Al Kassar traveled to Argentina and
obtained passports in record time. Although he hardly spoke Spanish, Ibrahim was named
Special Delegate to the President in the Customs Division of Ezeiza, where he obtained
sufficient power to block inspection of entering merchandise.
In the middle of March 1992, some days before the attack against the Israeli Embassy in
Argentina, the US State Department placed Argentina's airport Ezeiza in the "unsafe"
category, and warned visitors !hat the airpuft was open to terrorist attack.
A short time after, Monzer Al Kassar was arrested in Spain for arms trafficking. Ibrahim
Al Ibrahim divorced the President's sister-in-law and left the country. He is wanted by
Interpol and by Argentine authorities for drug trafficking charges and forgery.
The election of President Menem worried various sectors of Argentina's population,
especially the Jewish community, overall due to his Syrian environment and his contacts
with the Peronist ultra-right. But Menem tried to show himself as friendly to the Jewish
community. In his speeches, he spoke of tolerance and respect and he was the first
Argentine president to visit Israel.
The Sivak Case
During both the Proceso (Argentina's military government from 1976 - 1983) and again
when the country returned to democracy, the engineer Osvaldo Sivak (of Jewish origin)
was kidnapped twice. His kidnappings demonstrate the relationship that exists among
neofascist and delinquent groups that are maintained intact and in a situation of power
until today.
When the case regarding Osvaldo Sivak's second kidnapping began in the court of Dr.
Luis Enrique Velasco, in the Secretariat of Dr. Bruno and with the collaboration of Dr.
Galeano, 2 in the complaint, Dr. Marta Oyhanarte de Sivak and her brother-in-law Dr.
Jorge Sivak requested from the Federal Police a list of the kidnappings that had occurred
in the last years. The request, made in 1985, was made to find similarities with the
kidnapping of Osvaldo Sivak. The Federd Police denied the request. After some
insistence, the list was given in April 1986.
Approximately 25% of the persons on the list were of Jewish origin. The list reached the
president of the Delegation of the Argentine Israeli Associations (the DAIA), Dr.
2
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Goldberg, who was grateful for the information and said that he had suspected that
something like this had been occurring, but that it han't been possible to prove. In any
event, the matter was not denounced publicly, and it has never been known whether this
information has been considered in the appropriate manner.
In April 1986 it was determined that Mario Agustin Aguilar, and Barrionuevo, Army
Intelligence Agents, with the collaboration of others, extorted Marta Oyhanarte de Sivak
and Jorge Sivak. Judge Velasco considered that they were not mere extortionists, and he
attributed the Sivak's kidnapping to them. This was one of many errors of the
investigation.
Also, it was known that in his private practice as a lawyer, Judge Velasco previously had
defended Mario Agustin Aguilar, in an extortion case in a court in San Isidro (in the
complaint.4 After appeals and different judicial and parliamentary proceedings, the case
was transferred to the Federal Criminal and Correctional District Court No. 5, headed by
Dr. Martin Irurzun.
A very few months later, in the first days of November of 1987, Judge Irurzun brought the
investigation to a close. He determined who the perpetrators were, found Sivak's remains
and clarified that two other two extortionary kidnappings ended in death: those of
Benjamin Neuman and Eduardo Oxenford.
Neuman had had an important role in the Argentine Jewish community and had ties to the
Israelita Hospital and the Israeli Embassy in Argentina. A policeman named Villarreal
3From prison, Aguilar sent a note to the Supreme Court of Justice on June 28, 1994, anticipating the
attack against the DAIA. (This note, a copy of which can be found now in Judge Galeano's court records,
has the June 28 entry date with the Court's stamp and signature. During the Sivak case, Aguilar
demonstrated a mythomaniac personality and in innumerable opportunities tried to change dates and add
notes to the record to his own benefit. Nevertheless, the stamp and signature of the Court's entry table are
real and should be taken seriously.] The Court did not investigate the matter. In the same way, Judge
Galeano failed to note that if the date were certain, various felonies were committed by public officials
who did not act in accordance with their duties once they received the accusation. Or by declaring the
date stamp false, Galeano failed to recognize the complicity of some Court official or that he should
investigate the reason for it. Aguilar's accusation can be found in Section 14 of Galeano's court
proceedings.
4
Dr. Smolianski was recently brought in (March 1995) to help the lawyers of the AMIA-DAIA in their
task.
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who was a custodian in the Embassy determined that Neuman was a good candidate for
kidnapping. It was also discovered that all those involved in these cases were in tile
Argentine Federal Police, among them Officials Buletti, Galeano' and the Assistant
Commissary Lorenzatti, who to date is a fugitive.
Success in the investigation of the Sivak, Oxenford and Neuman cases was directly related
to tile drastic changes in the cupola of power of the Argentine Federal Police.
Commissary Gneral Pirker who took over as Chief from June 1985 to until his death in
May 1987 was one of the key pieces of this success
Pressure from U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy and various Jewish institutions in North
America was also important. One of the coordinators of this effort was the deceased rabbi
Marshall Meyer.
National Alert
When Commissary Pirker commanded the Federal Police, a Nazi-fascist group called
National Alert was arrested. National Alert had placed bombs in a Sephardic temple on
Lavalle street (four blocks from the AMIA building) and in a movie theatre in the Capital
(where a Jewish movie was playing). This group was responsible for Anti-Semitic
propaganda in downtown Buenos Aires.
In attempting to deactivate the bomb in the movie theatre, a policeman of the Explosives
Brigade died and another was seriously injured. This led some sectors of the police to
collaborate with Commissary Pirker to detain the perpetrators. Pirker had to use officials
from the Railroad Security Superintendency of the Federal Police, a dependency with little
organic ties to the rest. According to what Pirker confessed to the author of this report,
"I didn't know who I could confide in in the force."
The incidents regarding National Alert and Osvaldo Sivak are the only two, the first of net
anti-Semitic content and the kidnapping with anti-Jewish connotations, that the Federal
Police has resolved from 1983 to the present. During this time at least thirty threats and
anti-Semitic attacks have occurred.
The Embassy
In 1992, the bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires occurred. The investigation
of the attack, for Constitutional reasons, is in the hands of the Minister of the Supreme
Court of Justice of the Nation, Dr. Ricardo Levene, an elderly man, physically and
mentally deteriorated.
S No relation
to Judge Galeano.
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Dr. Bisordi, who was assigned to investigate the case and who worked with Levene, has
been accused by the Lawyers Association of Buenos Aires of sympathizing with Nazism
and with the military regime that governed Argentina until 1983. He was relieved some
time later by Dra. Silvina Catucci, who has not been found to be very effective.
Levene's investigation was not successful because he committed many mistakes in the
investigation, even though they were technical. Faults were manifested. Finally, the case
entered death row. Today nobody bothers with the subject.
A few hours after the attack against the Embassy occurred, when survivors were still
being rescued, a journalist with close ties to the Menem government, Silvia Fernandez
Barrios, asked the wounded, without any basis, if it was true that the arsenal of the
Embassy had exploded. This question was broadcast on official television, Argentine
Color Television. These comments were also made by, among others, the governor of
Buenos Aires Province, Eduardo Duhalde.
Security in the AMIA Building
The building was located in Once, a commercial neighborhood where there is a constant
loading and unloading of merchandise.
The roof was easily accessible from two buildings in the rear. One was an apartment
building, from which kids would go to look for their ball each time it would fall from a
bJcony to the patio. The other easy point of access was from an old house taken over by
squatters, Uriburu 626 (linked to AMIA funds).
After the attack on the Embassy, parking on the block of the AMIA headquarters was
prohibited, and a patrolman and two agents were assigned to guard the building around
the clc,-k. Still, it was easy to convince them to allow parking on the block, especially if a
bribe were offered. Neighbors saw vehicles parked there with total freedom, drivers
spoke with the police officers and then they would load or unload their merchandise.
Ten days before and up untill the moment of the attack, the lights of the street Pasteur
were not working.
The Explosion
At 9:53 AM on July 18, 1994, a powerful bomb exploded and destroyed the headquarters
of the AMIA. According to local authorities, the bomb was carried by a Renault Trafic
pickup truck which came down Pasteur Street and detonated fight in front of the building.
This is the official hypothesis, but there is conflicting evidence that points to a bomb in the
inside of the building.
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8
No terrorist group took responsibility for the attack. In spite of this, as soon as the
explosion occurred, and before the investigation began, all community leaders, the media
and government officials maintained that the attack was carried out by Arabs.
The front of the building crumbled instantaneously. The majority of the victims died as
they were crushed by the collapse of the walls and floors. The largest number of survivors
were found in the back of the building.
In the street, victims were wounded by the explosive charge, many others were hit by
flying rubble.
As soon as a column of black smoke emerged from the ruins, and the survivors were
overcome by a strong ammonia smell, chaos enveloped the area. Buenos Aires, a city of
three million inhabitants (eight million in Greater Buenos Aires) lacks a centralized
organism that handles public catastrophes. The immediate consequences of the explosion
clearly showed the lack of an authority to take charge of the matter.
The site was invaded by hundreds of curious onlookers, journalists, firefighters,
paramedics, volunteers and afflicted individuals searching for relatives or friends. It was
only at 12:15, more than two hours after the explosion, that the area was cordoned off.
Gas and light were cut off a half an hour later. Fortunately, one of the main hospitals of
the city is located a few blocks away (the Hospital de Clinicas). Many wounded were able
to walk there, with the aid of friends or workers. Ihe seriously wounded were taken by
ambulance.
A survivor, Natalio Slutsky, described the confusion after the crumbling of the building.
At the time of the explosion, Mr. Slutsky was in his office in the rear of the AMIA
building, and he was able to rescue other survivors through the roof of the building. Upon
scaling an adjacent balcony, Slutsky looked back: "I saw hundreds of people standing in
the ruins, giving orders. At that moment, I thought that if anyone were still alive, all this
noise and lack of organization would kill them. I think that they should have remained
silent, trying to listen for sounds to find someone alive. People died asphyxiated."
Friday, July 22, a group of forensic Israeli police arrived in Buenos Aires, led by Dr. Jay
Levenson, head of the Disaster Victims Identification Group. According to all the
witnesses, the group essentially took charge of the Argentine morgue, and added a little
bit of order to the confused scene. The autopsies, delayed due to a lack of personnel,
accelerated so that relatives could receive corpses in time to have a proper burial.
Witnesses present who helped in the search for victims told that each time a body was
detected or found, the firefighters would make the others leave, giving no logical
explanation for this measure.
There were many robbery cases. Diana Malum recovered her dead husband's watch, his
wedding ring and his wallet, but the latter only had 6 pesos. "My husband always carried
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al6t of money," she says. "Someone took hi money and left only his credit cards and
personal papers." According to survivors, Andris Malamud, Diana's husband, who was
the architect responsible for the building's repair -- was carrying $6,000 dollars in his shirt
pocket, because that morning he had withdrawn that money from the bank.
The surrounding businesses were also ransacked. In the photography store of Mario
Damp, cameras, film and an enlarger were stolen. His safe was forced open and $3,800
dollars were stolen. A nearby shoestore was also ransacked the night of July 21. That
same day the owner of-a toy store asked the police for permission to enter the, perimeter of
the security area, and lie spent the afternoon putting merchandise that had not been
damaged in garbage bags. The next day when he returned to find them, the bags were
gone.
The owner of a print shop was luckier. When he arrived at his store he found it destroyed
by tiie explosion, Someone had taken a key from his desk, had opened the safe, and had
taken all the checks and cash. The owner argued so violently with police and his case
attracted such attention that finally a police official told him that his belongings had been
transferred to the 5th Commissary "for security reasons." They returned everything to
him.
Anti-Semites did not dare to speak openly, but nevertheless they were present. The
Jewish institutions were inundated with anonymous telephone attacks, indicating that more
bombs had been placed in other buildings.
One of these calls stood out for its cruelty. Because some survivors had been found
wandering the area in a state of shock, many people requested help via radio and
television, in the hope that a disappeared family member would be found. One man
received a call on his cellular telephone, telling him that his mother was in a hospital thirty
minutes from the AMIA. The man rushed to the hospital, but he was told that they hadn't
admitted any victim of the explosion. At that moment, his cellular telephone rang again: it
was the same person that had called before, this time laughing and asking "How did you
like the joke, you disgusting Jew?"
Members of the bomb squad of the Federal Police only examined three building searching
for rubble from the explosion, the two contiguous to the AMIA building and the one
across from it. A group ofjournalist who were doing an investigation for a book,
searched in more than a dozen buildings, in which they found remains of the explosion and
found more human remains. The journalists took all this evidence to the Judge in charge
of the case. The doormen of the buildings they-visited told them that the Police had never
come by. In one of the few buildings where the police did gather evidence, the technicians
came with brooms and picked up all the material with used and dirty shovels. The
material was not labeled nor were photos taken.
The remains of the explosion were abandoned in a deserted lot in the University City, by
the side of the river. Among the remains were hundreds of books of the AMIA and IWO
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Library, some damaged, others intact. There were also, according to witnesses, pieces of
remains from the police laboratory, and remains of a dumpster which sat in front of the
AMIA. Abraham Lichtenbaum, the AMIA's librarian, went to the lot to try to rescue
some books, accompanied by some volunteers. They were arrested. The librarian called a"
lawyer and petitioned the authorities to be able to enter the land and save the books. once
the petition was accepted, they went back to the lot and they were arrested once again.
Lictenbaum appealed to Judge Galeano. Three weeks passed without an answer from the
court. Then the librarian received a call from the owner of the restaurant across form the
lot telling him that vagabonds were coming to the lot daily taking away things to sell.
Professor Lichtenbaum called the police and went running over there: There he found a
dozen persons complaining to the police agents and asking them "Why can't we go in
today?"
A North American specialist that works for a federal agency saw the personnel of the
Police and the Civil Defense gathering parts of cadavers in the explosion site, and placing
them in garbage bags. Bothered -- the standard procedure is to put away each part
separately and label it--, he tried to intervene, but they told him not to interfere. At the
same time, remains of the building, which are critical for analyzing the type of explosives
used and the exact position of the bomb, were removed from the site, except for small
samples that the local agencies took.
The Judicial Morgue still has 16 bags of human remains that have not been identified. No
analysis has been done to determine which cadavers these remains belong to.
The Federal Police
The attack of the Embassy occurred when Commissary General Pasero was the Chief of
the Argentine Federal Police. He resigned a few days after the attack on the AMIA-DAIA
headquarters. It was not clear if his resignation can be attributed to the lack of
professional efficiency or if there were other reasons.
Another question is in what measure the current Chief of the Federal police, the
Commissary General Adriin Pelacchi (previously in charge of the Superintendency of
Dangerous Drug Investigations) will want to or be able to do what his predecessor Pasero
could not.
It is important to mention some things about the Argentine Federal Police. It is a very
powerful institution (it has more than 35,000 in its ranks) and it possesses an enormous
degree of autarky -- even if it does depend hierarchically on the Ministry of the Interior
and ultimately on the President of the Nation. Only in the period during the last military
government did the Executive Branch exert real power over the Police. The Argentine
Federal Police in its organic role has a formal similarity to the FBI of the US. Republican
and federal institutions were incorporated into the Constitution of 1853, as were the
reforms that followed.
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In Argentina, maflas do not exist in the same way they do in the U.S. and the few
organizations that would be able to organize themselves as mafiosos are more in the
business of meat or in the distribution of newspapers and magazines. But prostitution
drugs, gambling, etc. are administered or regulated by some groups belonging to the
Federal Police. These are independent groups, but at the same time they are tied to the
institutional organization chart, and their respective spheres of influence are clearly
divided.
These considerations help to understand, or at least not to discount that even if a minority
of the Force, undertakes or has anti-Semitic activities,6 the rest are not in conditions to
investigate these activities, given that they (by being involved in other types of illicit
activity) prefer to avoid eventual conflict, in order not to-be discovered themselves. Their
intervention is only possible if the political pressure amasses at the national or international
level.
The Argentine Federal Police has been acting superficially, but these matters demand more
forcefulness.
The Seventh Commissary
The AMIA building is in the jurisdiction of the Seventh Commissary, which is the
responsibility of Inspector Commissary Gast6n Fernindez.
As soon as he took charge as Commissary, Fernandez was visited by, as a welcome, five
members of the Jewish community, merchants in the zone. The Commissary made them
wait two hours and then finally told them that he would not receive them.
In the beginning of the military regime (1976) an organization was created called CAPE or
the Special Police Correction Center, in which courses of net anti-Semitic content were
given, in which it was said that the Jews were to blame of what used to be called the
"international and apatriate subversion" or "international synarchy," Gast6n Fernandez
attended these courses.
Fernandez was also related to the famous task forces working with great freedom and
absolute power over the lives of the detained. Fernandez' group applied specifically what
they had learned in the courses at the CAPE. Commissary Fernandez was promoted to
Inspector Commissary and currently is in charge of Zone Three of the Federal Capital.
(Zone Three has seven commissaries under its charge in the capital).
Three months after the attack, the DAIA honored to Commissary Fernandez for his role in
the investigation.
6Until recently, the Constitutional Order of Police indicated in its official report that thcre was no attack
against the AMIA, but that its was an accident produced by the explosion of a heater.
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It's also appropriate to underline that no Police guard assigned to the custody of the
AMIA (Fernandez' subordinates ) was at his post at the time of the explosion. The
Federal Police never clearly explained the reason for this, something that had already
occurred in the attack against the Israeli Embassy.
This process (removing guards suddenly in order to perform a kidnapping or attack) was
called "free zone" in the time of the military rule. In many cases, the free zones were
determined according to where the jurisdiction of where case would be handled, assuring
either the complicity of the judges or their ideological sympathy and the consequential
impunity from justice.
Many of these judges continue working in the different areas of the Judicial branch.
The police guarding the AMIA were hardly equipped for security. They only had guns.
Their only means of communication was through walkie-talkies and the police car didn't
run. Since no one had seen the car move during an entire year, the neighbors had asked if
it had an engine. When the police car was destroyed by the explosion, the mystery was
revealed: it had an motor, but it didn't work.
The police reports and the firefighters' report that appear in court records tell of their
actions after the explosion.
Even with the contradictions and the ambiguities of the accounts, one can deduce that one
of the policemen assigned to guard Pasteur street was in the bathroom of the bar across
the way when the bomb exploded. Three minutes later, he went to save his partner and
help him out of the patrol car. Also it's said that his partner was fixing the vehicle, and the
hood of the car was up, protecting him from the blast. In other paragraphs, the Officer
that wrote the report (in third person) notes that the sergeant was struck by the arrival of a
truck at the door of the AMIA with two dumpsters. The driver unloaded them both and
left the scene. It's interesting that the assistant officer said that in that moment the
sergeant got out of the patrol car and went to the bathroom. The sergeant maintains, each
time that he refers to the subject, that "God's hand saved him." Seeing the dumpsters
being delivered, failing to investigate their contents and arrival as one would expect from a
guard, and then abandoning the scene may indicate that he was not just lucky but may
have been an accomplice.
A young man who operated a quiosk in the area and was a witness arrived at the scene 40
seconds after the explosion (more than two minutes before the sergeant). He looked
inside the destroyed vehicle and upon assuring that it was empty proceeded to save victims
among the building's ruins. Only some minutes later did he see police at the site. The
sergeant, in an interview with a weekly magazine, offered yt;t another account when he
declared that he found his partner various meters from the place, standing and holding his
head.
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Hours after the explosion, the Volunteer Firemen Corps of Florencio Varela offered to
collaborate in the rescue of victims. This body is the only one at that time that had
equipment for rescuing victims similar to that brought by the Israelis some days later. The
equipment was purchased in France and some of their members were trained in its usage.
Aside from these Firemen, members of the Federal Police did not posses the equipment
nor the experience and did not authorize their colleagues to collaborate.
Judge Galeano
The AMIA-DAIA investigation is formally the responsibility of the Criminal and
Correctional Federal Judge, Dr. Juan Galeano. In Argentina, the judges act as
investigators and prosecutors. Ideally, the police and security organizations should help
the judges. But the system rarely works.
A series of scandals has stained the image of the Judicial Branch in Argentina. In 1992, a
judge named Sarmiento was accused of blackmail against a private hospital. Snatorio
Guemes. In that case the present Judge Galeano was a secretary for Judge k'elasco, and
with the help of the chief of the State Information Service (SIDE) Hugo Anzorregui, they
were able to detain Judge Sarmiento. What was interesting was that the hospital was the
subject of extortion in connection with a felony, which the hospital's medical director Dr.
Sorin admitted in a televised report. The felony consisted of reusing disposable materials
(syringes, filters, etc.). The lawyer that represented the hospital, Anzorregui's brother,
was able te get them to detain Judge Sarmiento and to forget the felony committed by
Sanatoio Guemes itself. A little time later, thanks to the efficiency he demonstrated in
this case, Dr. Galeano was named a Federal Judge by recommendation of the SIDE
Director, Hugo Anzorregui.
In 1994, some months before the attack on the AMIA, a prosecutor from Judge Galeano's
court was forced to resign, because he had accidentally discovered that Galeano was not
even a lawyer. When Galeano was named, it didn't occur to anyone to ask for his
diploma.
Judge Galeano's work has been criticized a great deal. In his proceedings, many defects
have been found. Many witnesses were not called to testify. Some went voluntarily to the
police but were rejected. In one case, a witness was told there were no diskettes, so his
declaration couldn't be taken. Another witness was told that his declaration "didn't
interest them" because "they already had too many."
One of the wounded in the AMIA attack was transferred to the Hospital de Clinicas, and
by the individual's name and description he was of Arab origin. The Jewish, Korean and
Arab communities all live together in the Once neighborhood, so it's quite likely that a
passerby hit by the blast could be of Arab origin.
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The victim, the same day he arrived at the hospital, was visited by various peoplA, who
immediately took care of transferring him to the Syrian-Lebanese Hospital. Judge
Galeano freed up an official and asked the Syrian Lebanese Hospital to give him
information about this patient. It's important to note that the Hospital de Clinicas is also a
Teaching Hospital and even though it may lack means, it is considered professionally one
of the best in the country. The Syrian-Lebanese Hospital did not respond to Galeano's
request and some months later Galeano tried again. It goes beyond saying that the proper
procedure in a case like this - being careful of course not to fall into a racism -- would
have been to send a official of the Court, accompanied by the police, to appear in the
Hospital and register the patient themselves to avoid any alterations to the record. In
these cases, to send one official only serves to alert the suspicious. The matter has still not
been investigated. Research should be done - in a subtle but efficient manner - of the
wounded, given that one can't discount that some terrorist could have been wounded in
the explosion.
At one point Galeano received information about an Iranian in Venewuela that could
provide important information about the attack. He traveled to Caracas in the President's
plane7 with this secretary, Dra. Spina, and with two prosecutors, where they interrogated
an Iranian who presented himself as remorseful, manifesting that the perpetrators of the
attacks in Buenos Aires were members of the Iranian Embassy in Buenos Aires.
Judge Galeano did not clarify why, or by whose authority, he authorized Berges 8 to visit
Telleldin in prison.
Berges, with photos in hand and the promise of an important sum of money, tried to
convince him to recognize the detained Lebanese in Paraguay as purchasers of the Trafic.
Dr. Galeano also authorized the "reconstruction" of the explosion, done by Armed Forces
experts in military dependencies. The reconstruction was broadcast on national te',.ision
and seen by millions of viewers. The similarities to the actual explosion were minimal. It
was done in an open field where the lack of surrounding buildings made it so that the only
impact produced which could be verified was the rating of the program itself.
In spite of this, the experiment was added to the court record.
Some obstacles to the investigation can be explained by the lack of organization in certain
areas of the Government. For example, when Judge Galeano asked for information about
the entry of Iranians into the country and other suspicious foreigners, Immigration
'The National Constitution clearly and precisely establishes the independence of the three Powers of the
State: Judicial, Legislative and Executive. Judge Galeano, confirming the politicization of the case,
instead of requesting authorization for his trip from the Court, asked directly for it from the Presidcnt of
the Nation.
' Berges is also an intelligence agent. During the Proceso he was incharge of the concentration camp La
Perla and he is friends with Tellcidin's father, a member of the Triple A and a known anti-Semite and
oppressor.
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Services answered him by sending him a note in which it said that computer registers
weren't saved since 1989, "due to budgetary problems." In order for the Immigration
Services to find the real registry of the entry and exit of suspicious persons from the
country, the Judge had to submit the exact date of entry, the flight number and place of
entry into the country. In reality, the computer system of Immigration Service only
consist of inputting in alphabetical order the forms that the border officials send to the
central office. There was no computer network nor a digital information system
From the beginning, the Court or more specifically the court record, received all kinds of
visitors. Confidential information became public, with amazing exactness.
Feeding the pages of the newspapers, from the Court, the Prosecutor, and from the DAIA
itself, the task of thejournalists was made easy. They have limited their extensive
investigation to talks over coffee with the government officials while Xerox machines do
the heavy work.
One could suppose that Judge Galeano and the complainants know where the information
flows from and, of course, that this will not get into the hands of the guilty, so that they
can avoid having to build their defense or alibis. In any event they don't have to do much
more than read the newspapers to inform themselves, even before the officials leave the
Judge's chambers.
The court record consists of more than 80 sections, of four hundred pages each, in
addition to other sections which are not in the principal court proceeding, where one can
find the declarations of eleven protected witnesses. These latter reports are reserved for
the Intelligence Service, etc. Several hundred telephones were involved and 10,000 hours
of recordings of those telephone conversations have been gathered.
All this information, which until now has not served to reach any positive result, is
virtually unmanageable for one person, and one has to further consider that the Court's
record is growing at the rate of one and one half sections each week.
The Iranian Connection
The declarations of an Iranian refugee, Moatmer Manucher, who is said to be a former
diplomat, currently under protection of the United States, warned beforehand that Iran
was planning an attack in London.
There is not a great deal of transparency here. Two high-ranking officials of the UN High
Commission on Refugees personally responsible at the time for protecting the Iranian,
were dismissed. In the declarations taken by member of the Court there is reference made
to the fact that the Iranian anticipated the future attack.
14
15
16
Galeano visited the President at his residence in Olivos to show him this lead. The British,
nevertheless, were not interested in the Iranian and thanks to that, they were able to
uncover the attack committed in the center of' London, organized by a Palestinian woman
in an act of vengeance. According to her, the Israelis had killed her husband. There was
no Iranian connection.
At that time, Galeano had already accused four Iranian diplomats as accomplices and had
asked for their extradition to Iran. Iran harshly criticized Judge Galeano and demanded
apologies.
According to British terrorism experts, one can't discount this as just a maneuver to
distract the bloodhounds. Until now, the elements that Judge Galeano sustains are meager
and doubtful in order to insure an Iranian connection.
In spite of this, his investigation was directed to an area known in Argentina as the
"Triangle," on the border of Paraguay and Brazil, where there is a large Arab community.
Recent arrests made by the Argentine and Paraguayan police indicate the existence of a
Nazi network that reaches Buenos Aires.
In accordance with Ruben Beraja, president of the DAIA, the hypothesis has a meaning
due to the activist posture of the Iranian Embassy since the fundamentalist revolution of
1979 that toppled the Shah. The Iranian Embassy has financed visits to Iran, and together
with a Lyndon Larrouche delegation in Buenos Aires, has sponsored many meetings and
book presentations. According to Beraja, the Iranians spent the last decade organizing
militant cells among the Muslim Arabs of Argentina, and tying to earn the sympathy of the
majority of the local Christian Arab community. In the Triangle region, according to
Beraja, there is a large group of Arab immigrants, sympathetic to Yasser Arafat. Because
contraband flourishes in the area, the Triangle can provide the clandestine cells with
asylum and connections with the entire world.
Three men currently under custody alleged that they were trained in an island of the Tigre
River which belonged to the extremist neo-Nazi Alejandro Suckdorf.9 The other trails
Galeano took didn't lead to anything either. There were also trails that indicated that a
group of Pakastani immigrants that lived in a farm to the west of Buenos Aires were said
to be "involved in something." But no evidence about them was ever uncovered.
Judge Galeano refused to consider the possibility of a Syrian connection. According to
con Rubdn Beraja, the DAIA president, Syrians in the Argentine government say there
may be corruption in the government but no ties to an attack.
The court only has one witness that is said to have seen the white Trafic pickup truck,
which according to the official explanation, contained the bomb. This witness, a woman,
is said to have seen the driver: a man with Arab features, and she even describes the color
9Currently detained in the Civil Court of San Isidro of Dr. Markevich.
156
17
of his eyes (which contradicts what was said in later declarations). The question is how
could she have seen the driver so clearly.
No other witness saw the pickup with these characteristics before the explosion. Some
time after, a street sweeper who miraculously survived given he was only a few meters
from the explosion, went to the Court and was obliged under threats to confirm that he
had seen a vehicle with the same characteristics as the Trafic heading for the AMIA,
instants before the attack occurred. The street cleaner who lives in a poor neighborhood
in the Port area and is the father of eleven children, refused to give false testimony. This
fact is known to some of the families of the victims.
Based on the presence of few remains of a pickup truck of that description among the
ruins of the building, the hypothesis of the car bomb has been attacked by various experts.
The main argument is the degree of destruction on the right wing of the building, which
much greater than that of the left. This indicates that the center of the explosion is
different from where the truck supposedly detonated.
The government is said to have found evidence that the pickup had been kept in a parking
lot in the area. According to the Intelligence reports, the terrorists left the white Trafic in
the parking lot of the street Paraguay, three block; from the AMIA. A man took the
pickup there five days before the explosion, paid for a week of parking and left a generous
tip. The person in charge of the parking lot testified that at the time he thought that the
pickup was weighed down because it hao difficulty going up the access ramp of the
parking lot.
If this is so, how could it have gone over the curb of the AMIA at high velocity on
Monday, July 18? Another curious detail is that the parking ticket included the complete
name and the document ID # of the driver. Parking tickets never include such data - only
the date and the hour of arrival and exit of the vehicles. If it is true that some remains of a
vehicle were found inside and among the ruins of the AMIA, it is also certain that the
quantity of people entered the site of the attack a few seconds after it occurred and with
complete freedom, ruining the possibility of finding -- unless false proof was introduced
from the beginning.
The fact that 15 months have passed since the attack without any resolution to the
investigation, shows that terrorists planned their actions with great prudence and
precision. This is contradictory with the manner in which the Trafic was kept in the
parking lot, Where each one of their acts calls attention or is suspicious. The generous tip,
the risk of leaving a vehicle filled with explosives for 5 days, the traditional possibility of
robbery in parking lots, or putting information never required on a parking ticket.
Everything seems more like a mechanism prepared to derail the investigation than a part of
a well thought-out plan prior to an attack of great magnitude.
157
18
The SIDE
In Argentina there are various intelligence services. In the time of the military
government, their numbers were even greater, but today each Armed Force has its own.
The Police has its own, and the National Gendarme and the Naval Prefecture has its own.
Each provincial government has an autonomous intelligence service. Finally there is
SIDE, the Information Service of the State, which answers directly to the President's
Office. The existing and traditional rivalry between these intelligence services makes
collaboration or the exchange of information impossible. This is also characteristic of the
diverse foreign services solicited by the Government, which served to strengthen the
investigation of the attack against the AMIA.
After the attack on the Embassy, the following episode occurred: In one of the islands of
the Tigre ( an area situated about 30 to 40 kilometers from the city of Buenos Aires, a
group of islands where the Rivers Parani and Uruguay join and the Rio de la Plata begins)
lived an agent of one of the intelligence services of the Argentine Army, by the last name
of Suckdorf. He had had a strong argument with his wife and it ended with him striking
her.
The wife denounced him with the Buenos Aires Provincial police and also told the police
that he had a firing range, a large amount of explosives, arms of different calibres, and a
landing area for helicopters. After the AMIA attack, her husband had returned home
happy, saying that "at last the Jews were given what they deserved," and hinted to her that
he had collaborated in the attack.
The Police broke into the house and proved the woman right. Suckdorf told the police
that he kept all this material under the orders from the Chief of the Army, General Balza. 10
A few months after this event, the attack against the headquarters of the AMIA-DAIA
occurred..
The Trafic used supposedly in this attack had been sold by a auto merchant named
Telleldin, son of the Commissary Telleldini and member of the Intelligence Service.
Together with various police officials in the province they sold "used cars."
Baiza has maintained in recent times his democratic ideas. On December 3, 1990, he defeated
the military command of the painted faces, led by Col. Seineldin. Seineldin had a nationalistic ideology,
but there were reasons to consider that in reality he was a neofascisl and anti-Semitic. Seinildin
manifested on one opportunity, jokingly, that "in the same way you can't talk about green horses, you
can't speak of an honest Jew."
11Telleldin's first lawyer, the only one who has been detained until now for the AMIA attack, was paid by
SIDE, according to vox populi in the Courts. His name: Mez Ferrio. Telleldin's current lawyer is Victor
Stinfale, the same lawyer as that of the Nazi Suckdorf, who was detained when explosives were found
that would have been used in attacks.
IGeneral
19
Telleldin and his wife had had legal problems before. She hs four cases pending, for
prostitution, acting as a pimp, operating "massage parlors," check falsification and other
criminal activities.
Telleldin is the only suspicious one still under custody, after another sixteen were freed.
According to the Judge who listened to the declaration, Telleldin had bought a burned
truck, and he had repaired it and painted it in a mechanic shop belonging to Ariel
Nitzcaner and Fabiin Jeurce and then he sold ;4. The buyer, according to Nitzclner -- was
a man with Central American features who used a hat and sunglasses.
The owner of the mechanic shop is Jewish and he complained that the police tortured him
to oblige him to confess that he was Telleldin's accomplice.
1-
159
20
traditional rivalry between the Security and Intelligence Forces in Argentine made the
investigation more difficult.
Despite the report Hunter gave to his superiors, the final report maintains the existence of
the Trafic pickup and the car bomb.
Jewish Institutions
Some months before the attack, the President of the AMIA, Dr. Alberto Crupnicoff was
alerted, through Dr. Bronstein of the DAIA, about the certain possibility of an attack.
Despite this, invoking economic reasons, nothing was done to avoid it. Measures were
not taken such as those to avoid the accumulation of people in the areas close to the
Ground Floor of the building, to reduce possible consequences. That laziness in decisionmaking seems to still be the way both institutions operate. None of the lawyers that form
part of the complaint have had previous experience in this type of matter and the
criminologists who from the start have worked in the AMIA-DAIA lawyers group don't
work full-time on the matter. None of them has event read the entire court record.
For political reasons, apart from the act in and of itself, different measures are
needed which correspond to "4querellantes"12 The case before Judge Galeano is moving
'1"La querella" in the Argentine judicial system, is equivalent to a type of private prosecutor. They can
demand measures and question all or part of a Court, in case the court is not acting in accordance with the
law.
160
21
slowly., Nor has the Court known how to carry the investigation forward. Nor has it
demanded minimally that the police or services assist it in undertaking measures of the
most basic common sense: such as investigating contradictions in the police report, the
fact that the guards were absent from their posts in the moment of the attack, the
irresponsibility in the care and search for proof, the quantity of testimony that was rejected
without being heard with the pretext that they had already had abundant information. This
abundance that did not serve to resolve absolutely anything. As with so many other
measures, or the lack of them, some of which form part of this report.
At no moment did the DAIA or the AMIA specifically denounce anyone, even
though they know 3 all and each of the officials of greater or lesser hierarchy, of net antiSemitic past and present involved directly in the investigation of the case. Starting with
Dr. Bisordi, secretary to the Minister of the Court where the case of the attack against the
Embassy is investigated, to the current manifest Nazi advisors in the Interior Ministry.
Neither was the numerous quantity of robberies produced after the attack by firefighters
under the noses of the Federal Police which they belonged to, in nearby businesses and the
cadavers they needed to rescue. Nor was the irresponsibility with which they managed the
remains of the victims denounced, mixing everything together in a bag, without the
certainty that they belonged to the same person.
The remains, objects and other elements that were taken from the destroyed
building, possible necessary evidence for the investigation, were sent under police custody
to the University City -- by order of the Court and to be evaluated later.
They were hardly deposited in the fenced terrain and with guards at the door and
nearby, when vagabonds were extraofficially notified the take material for its sale. They
walked on top of the remains and the evidence with total liberty.
Repeatedly and without any plan, despite the advice and orders from their lawyer's
group, the officials of the DAIA passed on information, and they continue doing so, to the
press. With this, the possibility increases that those measures requiring secrecy to be
effective, could be leaked out by investigators.
A few days ago, Judge Galeano announced to the heads of DAIA that he would
soon call for 30 searches. One cannot discount that these searches may serve to alleviate
pressure on the Court, for fear that the case changes hands. This fear is shared by some of
the attorneys of the DAIA, who prefer to maintain a friendly relationship with the Judge.
Even though searches require the most absolute reserve, Beraja announced on
television that very important measures would occur, alerting once again the possible
individuals that might be investigated.
13much of the information in this report was checked and supplied by government officials and or lawyers
of both institutions.
161
22
In the case against Berges for trying to bribe Telleldin to recognize the Lebanese
extradited from Paraguay with respect to Suckdorf's case, the AMIA-DAIA lawyers'
group agreed to present itself as private prosecutors. The possibility of doing this is based
in that the private prosecutors could be damaged with this false testimony. As such they
have the right to form part with the advantages that this implies for the basic cause.
The strategy in which this presentation is based has a double purpose: the first is to remind
Galeano what occurred in the Sivak case when the investigation was practically stopped,
and through a strategy similar was able to take the case from the court to Dr. Irurzin, who
in four months resolved what Velasco and Galeano could not resolve in two years.
If the pressure wasn't sufficient, they could move the case into another Court and continue
forward in a more efficient manner.
Despite the agreement between the lawyers, those charged with making it hypen did not
do so. After a month and a half they returned to the subject. They returned to talk about
it but until today nothing has been done.
The majority of the most spectacular and publicized measures were taken in coincidence
with different political circumstances such as Berges' detention, before the one year
anniversary of the attack. Now, it seems that the July 28 hearing of the International
Relations Committee in the House of Representatives in Washington, which will consider
the attack, should push the measures announced by Beraja.
In a television report, part of a special program paid by the AMIA, and made by the son of
the AMIA's President, Dr. Crupnicoff, ex President Raul Alfonsin said "I would have
liked to have seen them arrive at some solution, but I have not seen any important
complaint on the part of the Jewish community or on behalf of the Embassy of Israel in the
sense that things have been handled poorly by the government. Then neither can the UCR
go beyond what the community itself clamors for. We will always be aware to accompany
the community in all that can be done on a road that culminates with the clarification of
responsibilities."
When the leaders of the DAIA were alerted to the growing discontent among the families
of the victims, they incorporated one of them into the lawyers' group for fear that their
frustration would lead them to start separate complaints with a consequential loss of
control.
Luis Czyzewski, parent of one of the victims, was included and recently was invited to
participate in the September 28 hearing in Washington, but on the condition that the rest
of the relatives were not informed. Until now, the families gathered in a group called
Active Memory made its decisions as a group.
Also, about a month ago, about thirteen months after the attack, the first informative
meeting for relatives of the victims was held.
162
23
Conclusion
To be able to carry an investigation of the attack forward, difficulties exist that are not
related to the case in and of itself, but instead with political interference, inexperience and
lack of interest in the organisms in charge of the investigation.
The court proceedings are the testimony of a tiring game of chess, with different sectors as
protagonists, with two big absent groups: the relatives of the victims and the authors of
the massacre.
It is full of all kinds of psychological actions, pressures, false leads and testimony. The
abundant, insubstantial evidence ends up hiding the little data that could serve as a start
for an effective investigation.
Three groups comprised of journalist investigators achieved greater success in their
investigation than the Courts, the Federal Police, the Information Services and the
National Government all together. Tils alone is a remarkable fact.
From an international point of view, the United States maintains, as does Israel, that the
attack was done by Iranian terrorists.
Even if the attack coincides with other attacks that happened contemporaneously in
different places of the world, its magnitude reveals a great collaboration of local forces.
The inefficiency (in the best of cases) of the officials involved in the investigation of the
attack, like those that should have foreseen it, plus the suspicious, evasive and
irresponsible attitude of the Federal Police, protected by a strategy designed by local
Information Services, in the manner that historically was done in the time of the
Dictatorship, only reinforces the hypothesis of LOCAL PARTICIPATION, be it of partial
or total responsibility. That is to say, if one cannot absolutely discard the connection with
international terrorism, the leads that have been followed until now probably form part of
.-i defense strategy and hide those truly responsible.
Repeatuly, different independent journalistic sources come denouncing the principal
repressive organisms, like the Police the Armed Forces and different Intelligence services
are infiltrated by anti-Semitic elements. The subject has generated also harsh internal
discussion in zhe Jewish community.
In the official institutions of the community, even if there is ample understanding of these
circumstances, their leaders have systematically refused to formulate the corresponding
announcements. This nevertheless is not absolutely lineal, because some of them in giving
declarations have unleashed the truth. The president of the DAIA, who ultimately
adopted a very cautious attitude in order not to generate too many irritations with the
168
24
164
25
This report was done by a team directed by Gabriel Levinas. He is a journalist, he was the
Director of El Porteno magazine between 1981 and 1986. He was also a member of the
Jewish Movement for Human Rights.
Sources:
*
*
*
*
*
*
e
*
*
*
*
Court Records.
CELS (Center for Legal and Social Studies)
Luis Domievsky - Lawyer of the AMIA's querellante.
Omar Lavieri -journalist for the newspaper Clarin.
Herman Shiller. journalist and writer. Founder of the Jewish Movement for Human
Rights and ex-director of the magazine Nueva Presencia.
Report supplied by the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Argentina, produced by
Northamerican journalists.
SG - Former official of the Israeli Army, dedicated to the search for Nazi war
criminals.
Archives of El Porteno and Nueva Presencia.
Fernando Almir6n, La Prensa newspaper.
Colonel R. Horacio P. Ballester. Argentine Army (infantry).
President of CEMIDA (Center of Military Officials for Democracy).
All the information in this report can be explained in greater detail upon request.
(5
.165
Guillermo Patricio Kelly
Posadu 1355, Capital Federal
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Guillermo
166
Guillermo Patricio Kelly
Attachment to Argentine Supreme Court
1-Request from Mr. Kelly to the Argentine Supreme Court to depose
Cesar Alejandro Enciso (AICA "Pino", "el Polaco") picture attached,
whom due to his terrorist background might have knowledge on the
execution of the actual bombing of the Embasoy of Israel and the
ANTA Building.
2.- Same request to depose Hector J. Villalon whom on his
background show that he was detain 1976 in France for the
kidnapping of the President of FIAT. His defense lawyers were also
the lawyers of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He presently
maintain extensive contact with Libya and Iran.
3.-Letter to Mr. Kelly from the Charge de Affair Embassy of Iran in
Argentina June 9, 1987, protesting his articles against them
and fundamentalist.
167
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168
I-ANIFIESTA.
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169
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record6 que
Cr6111cn,
slej~indose
sri doinicillo
que
ye
rjxcenr-e
Iiam6
on
entiondo,
pidi6
contest~rndole
record",
oncontrarme
gustnrin
mec
at California
rotikro do
y quo
no
poro
Le
61.
In
aImplitud.
quiso
aton-
Quo al dicolite le
nada.
quo
Quoe
si
roaiiz6
el
com'
173
inotivo do nsa conversnc[6ii con Granillo Ocanipo.
te
qtio
soliclta
la
todos
cierto,
los
tanto
1LJak,
nm!ido
"Pistil
[to-3r,
LI a
lo
qjue
ovin
IA
pui
lo
en
ser
preso
es Alek,
Que
de I
indepeiidiente-
blen
este
Khomeini
Adeiante
enl
liquidada
lado Ghadafi,
i(liomfas.
AlMi
sostiene
pueblo.
qtio
de
tiene
Acuerclo
"lbro
que
Ias
sun Armas
Que i
lo
dodo
In
3ga
pitienus
i den
A
quo
civili
(Ie
Loclos
largo
el. iomenlo
lleg6
lanz.i el
liquiradas y traaadas
problena,
In
i-parece
iiortoeamict icana
(4uo- no
de
1'or lo
relitona
efltrevis-tas a
visualiznr
1 nO
ateiitados
los
y Ion diploinAticos
de
periodista
qixiere deci
onto
Ctiando
1i-An
el. Papa,
contra
una
ellos.
y otros estaclos.
teoria
no
reliqi6n,
-is-
qiAl-
inlAmico.
ario-
t,~oos lot
pupdeni
caso,
astos
Pou otro
una
si bien. es
Qile con
'r'u
hac~e
la
haco
donde
concepci6n
Ia
rercinleable
)o
se atentil
y el. 6rlco
Iiiz-..
que
este
rlotenidos.
id
sootiJencli
enl
quo
01Bull-A"
trnbaijor- de
niundo,
lo tionen
linea de Chadafi
la
coin', cuaiido
qtictImi
libel
los
nrsi
qtio
enl
no
pertetiece
fundaamenLatismro,
tieneni
pero el poder
nlcjiie n~oteniendo
f-I
mntie
At-abee
do-rsinnnztaimo
tambief l e
ell
fuindamenalist.,
pueblos
todons on extivemistas,
)ixthln
Que bace
monienlo del
do
lo aconipaiie.
t~mhi62l
91 presidon-
del
ello.
zaci~in
dle
ir
al
vertle'
impreso
fuerzas
armradas
en tren dias y
zunprcaentaa'le
de' 1r~n
1.,i arqen--
174
tins
et& "libanizada".
territorio occidental.
nanto,
poro ahora
apareciondo.
El dicente
quo su condticci6n
en todoo
los poises.
Qua el dicente
sostiene
Quo
aqul
iiidividuos
11atrleut4.
Pino,
no
quoe
ha
tionen
antecodontes
Pinito o e1 Polaco,
Tribunal
Cjsmi
y pido
si ha tenido contacto
pars
5610
atentados
Aiwardo
Ia
lan caude
de
Ion
esta
Encik,alled
intervenci6n
con H6cto.~ J.
do
Villal6n.
ofite
Que
Paseo Trocadero,
Paris,
Francis.
so lo encuontra pocque
"nazi
onctientra
no
encuontra
uanteiidas
Los ejecuitoros
c16n ilicita
tropa
no
ha recorjido informaci6un
coino periodista
vistas
nazi,
do
iuteligoncia
qtiq
Quoe
y tambi~u n en itre-
-no
tropa".
sino tam-
eclifndolo In culpa
limitado
frento
itltiuuamontoean
ostado,
Ia gravedad
Los quoaso
nocesita
do
Los hechos
frento
cios do informacionos
uria
ocurridos
raz6n
gobierno.
do
servi-
y siga
la
175
atentado
que en
so
c6mo
PreguiAndo
lio.
la
el
del
ombajada
dicho
Mtnistetio
liinitar
conio
del
qu6
Interior
organismo,
a 6sto,
periodista.
en
enroinndas
conterido.
de
Ia
drogni
bombas
pnva
No
so
Otie eni el
quo la
Oca.
caso
un video-boniba.
meociante
yando
e)
sin
juzgado
hace
quo
Que
buscar
pero ambas
jueces no
se hnn
dispuenta
tanto el
ducc16n
este
tiene
seguit
fondo.
dicente
pero
Sino nos va a
no estAt
el dicontfe
puede
gente
sino
corno
neocoinunismo
una
iranista
el
estA probaclo
con
las
vienen
por
adentro.
en
la
Quo
Las
mercnarios
lo
obligac16n
paaar como
el
diconto
ni
fiscaliv.nr
dicente,
frontoras,
para. desarroilar
hibla con
Servini de
Lon despachos
el
tiene
colocando
hay
que
fundamontalismo
pi-obado
tiene
sigue distribu-
do Ushuaia
Oca.
Nacional
Oca
no
federal
las
enviaton
Ie
la emptosa
que
poder
el
tribunal
la Dra.
imeonazismo y el
del
que
Ilegar pot
Quo
pretexto
cjendarmeria
Imy
bomba
a ello,
contest
tieno
no
el
coii
reforencia
dicente
otro
V~illal6n
adjudica,
hace
se
el
instiincia
ciudadano
les
roles
Que
Eiiciso
acompafiara
oscrito.
se en primera
ponde
vincula
escrito quo
ciie a
nucleo o do inonopo-
investigaci6ii
hacen baja
iolamista.
pai'a
l~a pista
del
quoe
la con-
Quo
no
investigatlo
Bulgara.
investigaci6n.
jefe de pol"Icia
Chaco,
10
a
Quo el
Que
ayer
qUien
1e
176
4~Lb
g:'\~~
.. ~
Qaurnaa
C6 14
C~jsaL'itSd
que
i-,%: Lay
snlidAs
del pas
hay
alli
~e 7Ai
iiecsidei
de la gente.
declaraciones
ej~rcito y --
ervicias.
Interrogado
fieste
agregar
declara:
Que
finalizado
el
desea
el
Jix
deja&
C0116taflii
quo
dicen
que
son
el
compareciente
algo mis a
que mai-
declaraci611,
previa
lectura
del
las cOLISaS y
para
la presente
!no
explosivos
personal
sues ejeckitoes.
si
ekQb
dio por
ratificaci6n- que
y por
hilzo
ainte
177
wm4"
4kU~4c
-4 A
@.7Wdjma al(edn
Nota
zqz
Serlores
Quorum
At. Sr. Editor Responsable
D. Guillermo Patricio Kelly
De nuestra consideraci6n,
N0s dirigimos a Uds. por medio de la presente
para hacer Ilegar nuestra protest por 1o que aparenta ser una campafIa
de desprestigio contra la Reptlblica IslAmica del Irin y su Lider el
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini a quienes insisten en presentar como mentores del Terrorismo Hundial, con mdltiples conecciones en el ambiente de la subversi6n.-No solo rechasamoa las t~rminos de estas publicaclones ( copia adjunta) por inexactos e injuriosos, sino porque ademas
atentan contra las buenas relaciones existentes entre ambos paises.-
petuosamente.-
22-101 0 - 96 (184)
de Neg, a.
t.