Editing Juan Perón
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then publish the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision | Your text | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Important}} | {{Important}} | ||
{{Villain_Infobox | {{Villain_Infobox | ||
|Image = | |Image =Juan_Perón_01.jpg | ||
|fullname = Juan Domingo Perón | |fullname = Juan Domingo Perón | ||
|alias = El Viejo<br>Pocho<br> | |alias = El Viejo<br>Pocho<br> | ||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
After [[World War II]], with Europe in ruins, Perón's ambition was to transform Argentina into a superpower. He nationalized/expropriated several foreign companies (mostly British-owned) in order to achieve complete autarky, launched a five-year plan focused on economic growth and infrastructure, and started developing a nuclear program on Huemul Island. | After [[World War II]], with Europe in ruins, Perón's ambition was to transform Argentina into a superpower. He nationalized/expropriated several foreign companies (mostly British-owned) in order to achieve complete autarky, launched a five-year plan focused on economic growth and infrastructure, and started developing a nuclear program on Huemul Island. | ||
He remained sympathetic to fascism, and granted asylum to many [[Nazi]] [[War crimes|war criminal]]s and collaborators as part of his own version of Operation Paperclip, most notably [[Adolf Eichmann]], [[Josef Mengele]], Croatian dictator [[Ante Pavelić]] (leader of the [[Ustaše]]) and | He remained sympathetic to fascism, and granted asylum to many [[Nazi]] [[War crimes|war criminal]]s and collaborators as part of his own version of Operation Paperclip, most notably [[Adolf Eichmann]], [[Josef Mengele]], Croatian dictator [[Ante Pavelić]] (leader of the [[Ustaše]]) and Otto Skorzeny, the former [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]] bodyguard and ''[[Schutzstaffel]]'' officer who rescued [[Benito Mussolini]] from house arrest in 1943; Skorzeny was Perón's close advisor and Evita's bodyguard (and, presumably, even her lover). However, Perón himself wasn't anti-semitic. | ||
Perón's regime was certainly repressive and intolerant of opposition, but not in a murderous way. He favored [[censorship|media suppression]], and intimidation, persecution, imprisonment and [[torture]] of prominent critics both left and right over straight-up forced disappearances. But that slowly began to change following the 1947 [[Rincón Bomba massacre]], a brutal eviction of members of the indigenous Pilagá people, which technically constitutes [[genocide]]. | Perón's regime was certainly repressive and intolerant of opposition, but not in a murderous way. He favored [[censorship|media suppression]], and intimidation, persecution, imprisonment and [[torture]] of prominent critics both left and right over straight-up forced disappearances. But that slowly began to change following the 1947 [[Rincón Bomba massacre]], a brutal eviction of members of the indigenous Pilagá people, which technically constitutes [[genocide]]. |