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22 May 2025
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N 22:06 | Salvador Allende 7 changes history +8,234 [Winggal (7×)] | |||
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22:06 (cur | prev) −1,043 Winggal talk contribs (→Coup and Death) | ||||
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22:03 (cur | prev) −2,415 Winggal talk contribs (→Coup and Death) | ||||
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22:02 (cur | prev) +2,410 Winggal talk contribs (→Connection to CIA Figures) | ||||
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22:02 (cur | prev) +2 Winggal talk contribs (→Connection to CIA Figures) | ||||
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21:59 (cur | prev) −2 Winggal talk contribs (→Presidency) | ||||
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21:59 (cur | prev) +3 Winggal talk contribs (→Presidency) | ||||
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21:54 (cur | prev) +9,279 Winggal talk contribs (Created page with "Salvador Guillermo Allende Gossens (June 26, 1908 – September 11, 1973) was a Chilean physician, politician, and the first Marxist president elected in a democratic election, serving as Chile’s president from November 3, 1970, until his death during the military coup of September 11, 1973. A lifelong socialist, Allende led the Popular Unity coalition, advocating for nationalization, social reform, and anti-imperialism. His presidency faced intense opposition from the...") |
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N 21:25 | Thomas G. Clines 6 changes history +7,372 [Winggal (6×)] | |||
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21:25 (cur | prev) +20 Winggal talk contribs (→Post-CIA Career and EATSCO) | ||||
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21:22 (cur | prev) −1,165 Winggal talk contribs (→Post-CIA Career and EATSCO) | ||||
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21:21 (cur | prev) +23 Winggal talk contribs (→Post-CIA Career and EATSCO) | ||||
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21:18 (cur | prev) −10 Winggal talk contribs (→CIA Career) | ||||
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21:10 (cur | prev) −201 Winggal talk contribs | ||||
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21:07 (cur | prev) +8,705 Winggal talk contribs (Created page with "Thomas Gregory Clines (August 18, 1928 – July 30, 2013) was a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer whose 30-year career was marked by involvement in major covert operations, including the Bay of Pigs, the Vietnam War, and the Iran-Contra affair. A close associate of Theodore Shackley and Edwin P. Wilson, Clines co-founded the Egyptian-American Transport and Services Corporation (EATSCO) and played a key role in private arms dealing, which led to his conviction in...") |
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N 17:19 | Edwin P. Wilson 3 changes history +11,595 [Winggal (3×)] | |||
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17:19 (cur | prev) +1,183 Winggal talk contribs (→Private Arms Dealing and Libyan Scandal) | ||||
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17:16 (cur | prev) −3,225 Winggal talk contribs (→Office of Naval Intelligence and Task Force 157) | ||||
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17:12 (cur | prev) +13,637 Winggal talk contribs (Created page with "Edwin Paul Wilson (May 3, 1928 – September 10, 2012) was a former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) officer whose career in intelligence and subsequent activities as a private arms dealer made him one of the most controversial figures in U.S. espionage history. Known for his lavish lifestyle and covert operations, Wilson was convicted in 1983 for illegally selling 20 tons of C-4 plastic explosives to Libya, only to have his convic...") |
18 May 2025
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N 22:15 | Orlando Letelier 3 changes history +6,634 [WikiSysop; Winggal (2×)] | |||
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22:15 (cur | prev) +5 Winggal talk contribs (→Activism in Exile) | ||||
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22:12 (cur | prev) +13 Winggal talk contribs | ||||
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20:54 (cur | prev) +6,616 WikiSysop talk contribs (Created page with "Early Life and Education Orlando Letelier del Solar was born on April 13, 1932, in Temuco, Chile, to Orlando Letelier Ruiz and Inés del Solar Rosenberg. Raised in a middle-class family with a progressive intellectual tradition, Letelier grew up in Santiago, where his father worked as a civil servant. He attended the prestigious Instituto Nacional and showed early promise in economics and politics. At age 16, he enrolled at the University of Chile’s Law School, studyi...") |
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N 22:02 | Chicago Boys 4 changes history +11,958 [Winggal (2×); WikiSysop (2×)] | |||
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22:02 (cur | prev) +1 Winggal talk contribs | ||||
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22:02 (cur | prev) +19 Winggal talk contribs | ||||
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21:13 (cur | prev) +2 WikiSysop talk contribs | ||||
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21:13 (cur | prev) +11,936 WikiSysop talk contribs (Created page with "The Chicago Boys were a group of Chilean economists, primarily trained at the University of Chicago under the tutelage of Milton Friedman and Arnold Harberger, who played a pivotal role in shaping Chile’s economy during the military dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet (1973–1990). Influenced by neoliberal economic principles, they implemented free-market reforms, including privatization, deregulation, and trade liberalization, which transformed Chile into a labo...") |