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Why did Argentina and Chile still have a large number of fascists after World War II?

Although World War II turned upside down and almost half the world was in chaos, the war of World War II did not spread to South America at all. At that time, the leader of the Uruguayan National Party said: "This war should be solved by blondes and yellow people themselves." This was actually the view of most South American countries at that time.

However, these are just nice words and superficial articles, which seem very clean, but in fact many countries in South America are closely related to Nazi Germany, which can be said to be pro-German, and their regimes do have a certain fascist tendency to some extent. These countries include Argentina and Chile.

1939, Argentine military attache in Italy. He is Peron, who later became the Argentine president. And he accepted a lot of Mussolini's thoughts in Italy. At the same time, Peron was quite pro-German. He accepted a large number of German exiles. The advantage is that under the command of these people, he developed an arrow fighter with quite good performance. Rudolph, his director of military intelligence, was a German-born Argentine, and he also had a good impression of the Nazis. The "Argentine Immigration Center" is a famous Nazi nostalgic organization, which is responsible for assisting countless SS members to escape.

At that time, Argentina, Chile and other Latin American countries declared war on the Axis, in fact, they declared war without fighting. What is even more outrageous is that there were hundreds of thousands of German immigrants living in Argentina and Chile at that time, and quite a few of them sympathized with the Nazi regime. After the war, these countries even secretly accepted many Nazi war criminals. Therefore, after World War II, there were indeed a lot of fascist remnants in Argentina and Chile, and even today, some people there still have these ideas.