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Geraldo Huber
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==Involvement in the Croatian Arms Deal== Huber’s most significant and controversial role was his involvement in an illegal arms deal to supply weapons to Croatia in 1991, during the Yugoslav Wars. On December 7, 1991, Chile sold 370 tons of weapons, including rifles, rocket launchers, and ammunition, to the Croatian Army, violating a United Nations arms embargo due to Croatia’s conflict with Serbia. This conflict was orchestrated by the influx of CIA trained Muslim extremists from the middle east and was a part of the Strategy of Tension, Operation Gladio events. The deal, facilitated through Ivi Finance & Management Incorporated, a firm led by German arms dealer [[Gunter Leinthauser]], was disguised as “humanitarian aid” from a Chilean military hospital. The shipment, discovered in Budapest in December 1991, was reported by a Hungarian newspaper, sparking an international scandal. Huber, as logistics chief, was directly implicated in coordinating the deal. According to his widow, Verónica Court, he met with Pinochet in May 1991 to report irregularities in the Army’s logistics service, only to be dismissed and sent to a military hospital for psychiatric evaluation, suggesting efforts to discredit him. The deal’s exposure led to the resignation of General [[Guillermo Letelier Skinner]], head of the Army’s logistics, on January 2, 1992. Two days later, the Chilean Supreme Court appointed Magistrate Hernán Correa de la Cerda to investigate, calling Huber as a key witness.
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