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sandensea

(21,639 posts)
Tue Feb 25, 2020, 07:31 PM Feb 2020

Tex Harris, U.S. diplomat who helped bring Argentine dictatorship's crimes to light, dies at 79

Allen “Tex” Harris, the United States diplomat who helped save the lives of Argentines during the brutal 1976-83 military dictatorship, has died.

The tall, robust ex-U.S. official, who commanded great respect in the human rights community, passed away on Monday, sources close to the family confirmed. He was 79.

Beginning his service in 1965, Harris served in the U.S. Foreign Service for over 35 years.

Sent by President Jimmy Carter to monitor Argentina's military dictatorship and its nuclear ambitions, Harris arrived in Buenos Aires in June 1977 - where he served as a junior officer in the U.S. Embassy.

But after learning of the human rights abuses at that time, efforts to combat state-sponsored terror quickly became his primary focus.

Receiving thousands of complaints denouncing abuses perpetrated by the Jorge Videla regime (1976-81), Harris opened the doors of U.S. Embassy to relatives of the missing and their details of the disappearances.

After two years, Harris compiled a comprehensive report on the fate of some 9,500 known victims, as well as the structure of the regime’s repressive apparatus.

Harris informed the U.S. government that the dictatorship had “a clear intention to exterminate” its enemies - angering both the dictatorship and U.S. defense contractors who saw $400 million in arms sales nixed by President Carter following Harris' 1978 report.

In 2000, he established the “Tex Harris Award” for creative dissent by a Foreign Service specialist, honoring those who broke ranks to denounce crimes.

At: https://www.batimes.com.ar/news/world/us-activist-for-disappeared-tex-harris-dead-at-79.phtml



U.S. diplomat Allen "Tex" Harris, 1940-2020.

Harris marshaled U.S. Embassy resources to document and draw attention to the Argentine military regime's campaign of torture, disappearances and state terror in the late 1970s.
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Tex Harris, U.S. diplomat who helped bring Argentine dictatorship's crimes to light, dies at 79 (Original Post) sandensea Feb 2020 OP
he is a businessman. he thinks in business terms. dumptrump1 Feb 2020 #1
Mike Bloomberg, you mean? sandensea Feb 2020 #2
I hmust have though I was responding to a different thread? dumptrump1 Feb 2020 #3
No worries! sandensea Feb 2020 #4
RIP Mr. Harris. abqtommy Feb 2020 #5
The right man at the right time. sandensea Feb 2020 #6
 

dumptrump1

(236 posts)
1. he is a businessman. he thinks in business terms.
Tue Feb 25, 2020, 08:08 PM
Feb 2020

It is why he is a billionaire and the best positioned to beat Donald trump.

sandensea

(21,639 posts)
2. Mike Bloomberg, you mean?
Tue Feb 25, 2020, 08:48 PM
Feb 2020

Quite possibly.

I agree with you that Mike would be a formidable opponent against the Orange Oaf, and I for one haven't ruled him out in the least.

But as you know, if he can't do well on Super Tuesday it'll be all but over for his campaign. The same can be said for most if not all the Democratic contenders: Super Tuesday will be the moment of truth.

Personally, I'm more on the Sanders/Warren wing of the party - but a Bloomberg nomination, if that's what happens, is fine by me.

Whoever it takes to defeat Trump - whose economic policies (particularly) are so like that Argentine dictatorship Tex Harris fought to expose.

Just like Bush's were.

sandensea

(21,639 posts)
4. No worries!
Tue Feb 25, 2020, 09:00 PM
Feb 2020

Lots of similarities between the Bush and Trump administrations, and the last Argentine dictatorship - in terms of economic policy (disastrous financial deregulation, bubbles, union-busting. etc.).

sandensea

(21,639 posts)
6. The right man at the right time.
Tue Feb 25, 2020, 10:51 PM
Feb 2020

He would've no doubt been sacked by Idi Trumpin the minute he got into office.

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