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  1. 8. Okt. 2015 · October 9, 2015. Washington D.C., October 8, 2015 – The CIA concluded that there was “convincing evidence” that Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet “personally ordered his intelligence chief to carry out the murder” of exiled critic Orlando Letelier in Washington D.C., according to a SECRET memo prepared for President Ronald Reagan in ...

  2. 8. Okt. 2015 · Orlando Letelier, a former defence and foreign minister under President Salvador Allende, was tortured and incarcerated after Pinochet’s 1973 coup.

  3. 20. Sept. 2016 · This was Orlando Letelier, a 44-year-old former Chilean diplomat who had been driving to work at a D.C. think tank along with his colleague, Ronni Moffitt, 25, and her husband, Michael. Letelier ...

  4. 20. Sept. 2019 · Washington D.C., September 20, 2019 — In the aftermath of the September 21, 1976, car-bombing that killed former Chilean ambassador Orlando Letelier and his colleague, Ronni Moffitt, in Washington D.C., four State Department officers began pressing for a policy to force General Augusto Pinochet from power, according to a declassified “Dissent Channel” memorandum published today by the ...

  5. 21. Sept. 2016 · Orlando Letelier was a Chilean patriot. Today many Americans and probably most readers of The Nation have problems with the very notion of patriotism: how can progressives be proud of their country’s repeated military intervention, endless wars, police brutality, gross racial inequity, overflowing prisons, vast income disparities, 30,000 people killed by guns in a single year…

  6. Orlando Letelier del Solar ( 13 d'abril de 1932 - 21 de setembre de 1976) fou un polític i economista xilè, membre del govern de la Unitat Popular de Salvador Allende, assassinat a Washington DC per agents de l' extrema dreta cubana a les ordres de la dictadura d' Augusto Pinochet el 1976. Documents desclassificats als Estats Units semblen ...

  7. 21. Sept. 2016 · Letelier’s essay was so bold and persuasive that it had an immediate impact, provoking debate and defensive responses. Yet much of why we’re still reading it today has to do with what happened ...