How
a Police Spy’s Stunning Testimony Threatens the Official US-Israeli AMIA
Bombing Narrative
Revelations by a former police spy upend the
official story blaming Iran for the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center
in Buenos Aires, and suggest a cover-up by dirty war elements may have let the
real culprits off the hook.
The July 18, 1994 bombing
of the Argentine Israeli Mutual Association (AMIA) Jewish community center in
Buenos Aires, Argentina was one of the worst pre-9/11 terrorist attacks in the
Western hemisphere, killing 85 and injuring 300.
For over a quarter-century,
the US and Israeli governments have blamed Iran for the bloodshed, citing it as
primary evidence of Tehran’s role as the world’s largest sponsor of terrorism.
This narrative remains part
of the propaganda offensive against Iran, and has been exploited by the Donald
Trump administration to justify a campaign of economic strangulation aimed at
either destabilizing the Islamic Republic or achieving regime change.
Soon after the bombing, the
United States and Israel placed heavy pressure on the Argentine government to
implicate Iran. At the time, however, officials in the embassy in Buenos Aires
were well aware there was no hard evidence to support such a conclusion.
In an August 1994 cable to
the State Department, US Ambassador James
Cheek boasted of the “steady campaign” the embassy had
waged that “kept the Iranians in the dock where they belong.” In a striking
comment to this writer in 2007, Cheek conceded, “To my knowledge, there was
never any real evidence” of Iranian responsibility.
Bill Brencick, the chief of
the political section in the US embassy from 1994 to 1997, also acknowledged in
a 2007 interview that US insinuations of Iranian responsibility were based
solely on a “wall of assumptions” that had “no hard evidence to connect those
assumptions to the case.”
Brencick recalled that he
and other US officials recognized “enough of a Jewish community [in Buenos
Aires] and a history of anti-Semitism that local anti-Semites had to be
considered as suspects.” But this line of investigation was never pursued in
any official capacity, likely because it contradicted the interests of a US
national security state that was dead-set on indicting Iran for the bombing.
However, dramatic
development has threatened to upend the official US-Israeli narrative on the
AMIA attack. In 2014, the public learned that a former spy who had infiltrated
the Jewish community in Buenos Aires on behalf of Argentina’s Federal Police
had revealed to two investigative journalists that he had been ordered to turn
over blueprints to the AMIA building to his Federal Police case officer.
The spy was convinced the
building plans were used by the real culprits behind the bombing. His stunning
revelation prompted a series of articles in the Argentine press.
The former infiltrator’s
account provided the first clear indication that anti-Semitic veterans of
Argentina’s “Dirty War” and their allies in the Argentine police and
intelligence service orchestrated the explosion.
But Argentina’s legal
system – still heavily influenced by the intelligence agency that influenced
the official investigation to blame Iran and a prosecutor whose career had been
based on that premise – stubbornly refused to investigate the former police
spy’s account.
Infiltration, torture,
anti-Semitic conspiracies
The former police
infiltrator, Jose Alberto Perez, believed the AMIA building blueprints he had
provided to the Federal Police were used by those who planned the bombing. He
had learned from his police counter-terrorism training course that such
building plans could be a valuable tool for planning such an operation.
Perez was also convinced
that the bomb had detonated inside the building, rather than in front, and had
been placed in the interior of the AMIA building through a gap between it and a
neighboring building. Experts of Argentina’s Gendarmerie had come to the same
conclusion, and leaked it to Clarin, Argentina’s largest tabloid,
just two days after the bombing.
Perez also provided crucially
evidence that those who had used him to spy on Jewish community leaders were
motivated by the same anti-Semitic beliefs that had led the Argentine military
dictatorship to single out Jews for especially cruel treatment during the
“dirty war” in the 1970s: his case officer, whom he knew only as “Laura”, had
ordered him to find out as much he could from the Jewish community about the
so-called “Andinia Plan.”
According to that alleged
plan, Jewish immigrants and foreign Zionists had been secretly plotting to take
control of the vast Patagonia region of southern Argentina and create a Jewish
state to be called “Andinia.”
The myth of the “Andinia
Plan” followed the rise of anti-Semitism as a major social force in Argentina
during the 1930s and became a staple of the anti-Semitic right’s narrative
during the heyday of military domination of the Argentine society and politics
from the 1960s through the “dirty war” against leftists in the 1970s.
At least 12 percent of
those subjected to interrogation, torture, and murder during the dirty war were
Jews, according to an investigation by the Barcelona-based Commission of
Solidarity with Relatives of the Disappeared, although they represented
only 1 percent of the population. Nearly all were interrogated about the
“Andinia Plan.”
The crusading Argentine
journalist Jacobo Timerman, who was born to Jewish parents and whose newspaper
provided critical coverage of the military regime’s “dirty war,” was among
those detained in the junta’s secret prisons.
Timerman recalled in his memoir how he was asked
repeatedly to reveal what he knew about the “Andinia Plan” during extended
interrogation and torture sessions. His interrogator refused to accept his
answer that it was merely a fiction.
Meanwhile, Israel, which
maintained strong military and
political ties to the Argentine Junta throughout the dirty
war remained silent about the Jewish
journalist’s detention throughout the war.
“Iosi” goes to the press
Jose Alberto Perez, for his
part, was wracked with guilt about having enabled the AMIA terror bombing. He
had become an integral part of the Jewish community, studying Hebrew for three
years, marrying a Jewish woman who was the secretary of an Israeli Embassy official
and even taking the Jewish version of his Spanish surname, Jose. Within the
Jewish community, he was known as “Iosi” Perez.
As he fell into despair,
Iosi contacted investigative journalists Miriam Lewin and Horacio Lutzky to ask
their help. The two journalists had tried for years to find a foreign sponsor
to grant the former spy asylum abroad but to no avail.
Meanwhile, Iosi had
secretly taped a video with the prominent Argentine journalist Gabriel Levinas
in which he narrated his work penetrating the Jewish community and the unusual
request for the blueprints. Levinas posted the video online in early July 2014,
just prior to the publication of the second edition of his
own book on the AMIA bombing, which included Iosi’s story.
The release of that video
prompted Lewin and Lutzky to arrange for Iosi to join Argentina’s Witness
Protection Program. The two journalists also urged Argentine prosecutor Alberto
Nisman, who had spent a decade accusing Iran of the bombing, to meet Iosi in
person.
But according to Lewin,
Nisman would only agree to speak with Iosi on the phone. The prosecutor
insisted on having three of his employees interview Iosi in person, she
recalled in an interview with The Grayzone, then signed a declaration about
that July 2014 meeting as though he had been present, and “did not show
interest in interrogating him any further.” Iosi entered the Witness Protection
Program the same day as the interview, according to Lewin.
Iosi’s Federal Police case
officer “Laura,” who was retired by then, was released by the minister of security
from the normal secrecy requirement about Iosi’s work. But she rejected Iosi’s
testimony, according to Lewin, claiming his reports had been judged “poor.” Her
claims stood in stark contrast to the actual reports obtained by prosecutors
which clearly showed his findings had been evaluated as “excellent” year after
year.
Lewin told The Grayzone she
was confident that Iosi would have been able to provide “solid information
about the local connection of the bombing,” but none of the four prosecutors
who inherited the unsolved AMIA case after Nisman’s death were willing to
follow up on the leads he provided.
Lewin noted that several of
the senior Federal Police officials who would have been involved in the
decisions to infiltrate the Jewish Community and request the AMIA blueprints
were still active in 2015. That fact helps to explain why the case was left to
die despite Iosi’s explosive revelations.
SIDE covers the junta’s
back
Another key factor in the
corruption of the AMIA investigation was the role of the state intelligence
agency, known as SIDE, in influencing the lead prosecutor, Judge Juan Jose
Galeano. Not only was a special unit within SIDE tasked with overseeing the
Galeano’s investigation, another SIDE unit operated directly inside Galeano’s
office, as journalist Sergio Kiernan reported.
SIDE proceeded to exploit
its power to divert attention away from the logical suspects within the junta,
circling the wagons to protect its own.
As Sergio Moreno and Laura
Termine reported in the daily La Prensa, November 28, 1994, the SIDE unit
handling the AMIA investigation was notorious for its hatred of Jews. The group
consisted of veterans of the dirty war known as the “Cabildo” group, their name
inspired by a right-wing anti-Semitic magazine published in the early 1980s
that had republished an infamous tract detailing the “Andinia Plan” conspiracy.
The chief of the Cabildo
group unsuccessfully sued Moreno and Termine for labeling his unit
anti-Semitic. Following complaints by Jewish community leaders about the
Cabildo group’s role in the AMIA investigation, it was removed from the case –
but not before it deflected public attention away from leaders of the dirty war
and onto an alleged Iranian conspiracy.
SIDE’s PR strategy depended
on the theory that the AMIA explosion emanated from a vehicle-born suicide
bomb, thereby casting suspicion on Iran and its ally, Hezbollah.
The intelligence services
claimed a white light commercial van had been used in the bombing. Its engine
was supposedly found in the rubble on April 25, a week after the explosion.
The identification number
on the engine was traced to Carlos Alberto Telleldin, the Shia owner of a shady
“chop shop” operation that rebuilt damaged cars for sale. Telleldin was accused
of being an accessory to the terror plot and jailed on other charges.
But the official AMIA case
files revealed that Telleldin had been targeted before the AMIA bombing. This
stunning fact was noticed by a “private prosecutor” hired by the organization
of AMIA victims Memoria Activa.
According to a close analysis
of the official evidence by Alberto L. Zuppi, a request by Federal
Police to wiretap Telleldin’s phone was issued on April 25 – at least five days
before the alleged discovery of the engine that led investigators to blame
Telleldin.
In the weeks that followed
the AMIA explosion, more evidence surfaced that pointed to Telledin’s role as a
patsy.
In September 1994, five
Lebanese nationals were detained as they tried to leave Argentina for Paraguay.
Through a series of leaks, SIDE planted stories in the media suggesting the
suspects were linked to a terrorist network.
The following month, a
part-time agent for SIDE and former chief of a notorious prison camp where
suspects were tortured during the “dirty war,” Captain Hector Pedro Vergez,
began visiting Telleldin in prison.
In four meetings between
September 1994 and January 1995, Vergez offered the jailed suspect $1 million
and his freedom if he would identify two of the Lebanese nationals who were
then detained in Paraguay as having purchased the van from him – thus making it
possible to accuse them of the bombing. But Telleldin refused to lie, and the
SIDE plan was derailed.
It was not long, however,
before SIDE and Galeano initiated a new plan to implicate two Buenos Aires
provincial policemen as Iranian-sponsored culprits.
Resorting to bribery,
Mossad info, and MEK sources to blame Iran
In July 1996, Juan Jose
Galeano personally visited Carlos Telleldin in prison and offered him $400,000
to blame the two police officers. The scandalous scene was captured in a video
shown on Argentine television in 1997.
SIDE was actively
involved in the cover-up operation, with agency director Hugo
Anzorreguy approving a direct payment to Telleldin’s wife.
The case against the two
policemen was thrown out in court in 2004, but Galeano and Anzorreguy went
unpunished for another 15 years. It was not until 2019 that they were sentenced
to prison terms for their role in the affair, highlighting the culture of
impunity that surrounded SIDE.
Once the Galeano case
imploded, Alberto Nisman attempted to craft yet another narrative blaming Iran
for the bombing. For this, he depended on information provided by Israel’s
Mossad to Jaime Stiuso, the SIDE official in charge of counterintelligence.
Nisman’s 2006 indictment of
seven Iranian officials for the terror plot relied completely on the claims of
senior members of the Mujahedin-E-Khalq (MEK), the Israeli and Saudi-backed
Iranian exile cult.
Not only were none of the
MEK members in any position to provide reliable information about a supposedly
high-level Iranian plot because they had been actively engaged in a terrorist campaign of their own against
the Islamic government by helping Iraq’s then-President Saddam Hussein select
targets in Iran.
Nisman’s reliance on such
unscrupulous sources demonstrated his own apparent determination to reach
preordained conclusions about Iran’s guilt. It was hardly a surprise, then,
that Nisman ignored Iosi’s revelatory testimony.
Nisman’s other major
source, Jaime Stiuso of SIDE, was a notorious manipulator who had spent years
collecting wiretaps on Argentine politicians. In 2014, the intelligence chief
was working to build a case against President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner
for supposedly conspiring with Iran to eliminate the official Argentine
accusation of Iranian guilt. Few observers believed the case would hold up under
close scrutiny.
In January 2015, Nisman was
found dead in his apartment of a gunshot wound to the head. Though political
opponents of Kirchner were convinced the prosecutor’s death was the result of a
government-sponsored murder, a recent documentary detailing the various
investigations of his death, “Nisman: el fiscal, la presidenta
y El espía,” concluded that he had committed suicide.
By the time of his death,
Nisman was helping direct a disinformation campaign that allowed SIDE to cover
for shadowy figures from Argentina’s violently anti-Semitic past, and to bury
their likely role in the AMIA bombing.
Iosi’s testimony should
have ended that cover-up, but Nisman, SIDE, and the Federal Police colluded to
quash a serious investigation.
A quarter-century after the
bombing, impunity for the real AMIA terrorists continues.
Gareth Porter, an
investigative historian, and journalist specializing in US national security
policy received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for journalism for 2011 for
articles on the U.S. war in Afghanistan. His new book is Manufactured Crisis:
the Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare. He can be contacted at porter.gareth50@gmail.com.
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