Senator Edward M. Kennedy: "How could one of the most civilized nations on the face of the earth be swept away by a bloody and barbaric reign of terror? What was it that caused the kidnapping, torture, and murder of thousands of innocent citizens? In his remarkable history of this terrible time, Mick Andersen has supplied new evidence and new answers to these troubling questions."
"Written like a suspenseful detective novel, Dossier Secreto explains how genocide occurred in Argentina and why U.S. policy alternated between condemning and condoning it. A spectacular story."
-- Robert Pastor, Emory University and The Carter Center; former member, National Security Council Staff on Latin America
A "tour de force." -- The New York Times
Subtitles:
The Sabato Commission Report
Dirty Secrets of a "Dirty War"
Daniel Barjacoba Deserved a Trial
Wounds That Will Not Heal
Doctors Who Heal, Doctors Who Make Pain
U.S. Policy: Between Complicity and Condemnation
Kissinger's "Green Light"
Original Title
"The Sad Privilege of Being Argentine" -- Chapter 1 of Dossier Secreto: Argentina's Desaparecidos and the Myth of the "Dirty War"
Senator Edward M. Kennedy: "How could one of the most civilized nations on the face of the earth be swept away by a bloody and barbaric reign of terror? What was it that caused the kidnapping, torture, and murder of thousands of innocent citizens? In his remarkable history of this terrible time, Mick Andersen has supplied new evidence and new answers to these troubling questions."
"Written like a suspenseful detective novel, Dossier Secreto explains how genocide occurred in Argentina and why U.S. policy alternated between condemning and condoning it. A spectacular story."
-- Robert Pastor, Emory University and The Carter Center; former member, National Security Council Staff on Latin America
A "tour de force." -- The New York Times
Subtitles:
The Sabato Commission Report
Dirty Secrets of a "Dirty War"
Daniel Barjacoba Deserved a Trial
Wounds That Will Not Heal
Doctors Who Heal, Doctors Who Make Pain
U.S. Policy: Between Complicity and Condemnation
Kissinger's "Green Light"
Senator Edward M. Kennedy: "How could one of the most civilized nations on the face of the earth be swept away by a bloody and barbaric reign of terror? What was it that caused the kidnapping, torture, and murder of thousands of innocent citizens? In his remarkable history of this terrible time, Mick Andersen has supplied new evidence and new answers to these troubling questions."
"Written like a suspenseful detective novel, Dossier Secreto explains how genocide occurred in Argentina and why U.S. policy alternated between condemning and condoning it. A spectacular story."
-- Robert Pastor, Emory University and The Carter Center; former member, National Security Council Staff on Latin America
A "tour de force." -- The New York Times
Subtitles:
The Sabato Commission Report
Dirty Secrets of a "Dirty War"
Daniel Barjacoba Deserved a Trial
Wounds That Will Not Heal
Doctors Who Heal, Doctors Who Make Pain
U.S. Policy: Between Complicity and Condemnation
Kissinger's "Green Light"