Artur da Costa e Silva person
also: Arthur Silva, President Costa Silva, Silva
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
Brazilcountry · 5Jean-Marc van derperson · 4Huberto Castelo Brancoperson · 3Aristides Drummondperson · 21964 Bolivian coup d'étatevent · 2Governor Saldanha da Gamaperson · 1Serviço Nacional de Informaçõesorganization · 1Valéry Giscard d'Estaingperson · 1São Pauloplace · 1Carlos Lacerdaperson · 1Helvecio Leteperson · 1
Claims (4)
Artur da Costa e Silva succeeded
Huberto Castelo Branco host_asserted
“The hardline general named by the military to succeed Branco used the rally as his reason for banning a political movement called the Front. It had been put together by Luzardo, and that was his one last attempt to basically open up the pol…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 7 @ 19:23
Huberto Castelo Branco succeeded
Artur da Costa e Silva documented
“the president of Brazil. I just wanted to make sure that people knew that he, he was for a, a short time. And then it was Silva. So, so anyway, did anybody else have anything? Molly, did you want to say something? Can you hear me? Yeah. Oh,…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 7 @ 1:02:28
Artur da Costa e Silva succeeded
Huberto Castelo Branco documented
“that the rebel movement was a result of the overthrow of their government. The government of Arthur Silva, who was a hardline general who had assumed the presidency on the retirement of Castillo Branco, was depending on his intelligence net…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 6 @ 52:29
CIA installed
Artur da Costa e Silva host_asserted
“rebellion against the CIA-installed dictator was growing. Mitterrand had spent five years in Brazil by that time. Later, the Office of Public Safety would claim to have taught over 100,000 policemen in Brazil, which ended up being one-sixth…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 6 @ 58:55
Mentions (10)
▶ 52:29
that the rebel movement was a result of the overthrow of their government. The government of Arthur Silva, who was a hardline general who had assumed the presidency on the retirement of Castillo Branco, was depending on his intelligence net…
▶ 18:55
on the procession, but there was a significant police presence and they were basically taking names, taking pictures so that they could later identify any of the people that was at the funeral. So the day after the funeral, President Costa …
▶ 19:23
The hardline general named by the military to succeed Branco used the rally as his reason for banning a political movement called the Front. It had been put together by Luzardo, and that was his one last attempt to basically open up the pol…
▶ 25:48
During his imprisonment, he was questioned at length by an army colonel, Helvecio Lete, who was notorious as a torturer. Lete threatened Jean-Marc with beatings and worse, but on the occasion, he was only blustering, and after the interroga…
▶ 26:47
The demonstration, which lasted five hours, brought 100,000 people to the streets. The police at the army barracks and at the U.S. embassy said that it looked like Brazil was on the verge of a civil war. Aristotle Drummond, a little less th…
▶ 27:19
that the president wanted to speak with him. He took it as a joke, the only humor on that menacing day. Then Silva personally called him and said, I want you at my office. Drummond boarded a military aircraft and flew to the Capitol with se…
▶ 27:48
All stops should be pulled out in order to hold them accountable. The next week was quiet, each side weighing the strengths and responses of the other. Believing the future of his government at stake, Silva agreed to meet with the delegatio…
▶ 31:43
Once in jail in Sao Paulo, the students learned that their arrest were already setting off street demonstrations all over. President Silva tried to lower the fever by announcing that although the students would be charged, the maximum possi…
▶ 44:18
Jean-Marc was hiding in a house of a physician who had been attending the president of Brazil. Jean-Marc called, had heard that Silva had had a stroke from the doctor. He got so excited about that news that he set off to a house of some fri…
▶ 1:02:28
the president of Brazil. I just wanted to make sure that people knew that he, he was for a, a short time. And then it was Silva. So, so anyway, did anybody else have anything? Molly, did you want to say something? Can you hear me? Yeah. Oh,…