Difference between revisions of "Ahmed Dlimi"

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{{person
 
{{person
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed_Dlimi
 
|wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmed_Dlimi
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|alchetron=https://alchetron.com/Ahmed-Dlimi
 
|amazon=
 
|amazon=
|image=
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|image=Ahmed Dlimi.jpg
|nationality=
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|nationality=Moroccan
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|victim_of=premature death
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|ON_death_cause=car crash
 
|birth_date=1931
 
|birth_date=1931
|birth_place=
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|birth_place=1Zaggota near Had Kourt, Sidi Kacem Province, Morocco
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|description=A Moroccan spook who died in suspicious circumstances
 
|death_date=22 January 1983
 
|death_date=22 January 1983
 
|death_place=Marrakesh, Morocco
 
|death_place=Marrakesh, Morocco
 
|constitutes=spook, soldier
 
|constitutes=spook, soldier
 
}}
 
}}
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==Death==
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According to [[Ahmed Rami]], several young military officers were arrested mid-January 1983. Dlimi himself was also arrested, interrogated and tortured in the royal palace, before his death being set up as a car-crash. Dlimi is said to have advocated a closer relationship to France in order to counter US influence.<ref name=Blum/>  Rami wrote that: "Hassan's closest circle, which also counts foreign secret agents, very well knows the circumstances of Dlimi's death." This veiled allusion to the [[CIA]] was elaborated upon by Rami, who claimed that the CIA was investigating Dlimi as a secret member of the "Independent Officers"; that they had filmed the Stockholm meeting between them, and had ultimately delivered this video to Hassan II.<ref name=Blum> [[William Blum]], ''[[Killing Hope|Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II]]'', revised edition (Common Courage Press) {{ISBN|1-56751-252-6}}</ref> Morocco was at the time a very close ally of the United States. Hassan II had sent troops to [[Zaire]] in 1977 and 1978 to support US intervention, and also assisted [[UNITA]] in Angola since the mid-1970s. He had agreed to the setting up of a CIA station in Morocco, which became one of its key installations in Africa.<ref name=Blum/>  Hassan II had visited US Secretary of Defense [[Caspar Weinberger]] and the State Secretary [[Al Haig]] in 1981, as well as the president of the [[United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations|US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations]] and the [[Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency|Deputy Director of the CIA]].<ref name=Blum/>
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After Dlimi's death, fifteen other officers were arrested and three of them executed. No one was allowed to see Ahmed Dlimi's corpse.
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 16:24, 21 July 2019

Person.png Ahmed Dlimi   AlchetronRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(spook, soldier)
Ahmed Dlimi.jpg
Born1931
1Zaggota near Had Kourt, Sidi Kacem Province, Morocco
Died22 January 1983 (Age 51)
Marrakesh, Morocco
Cause of death
"car crash"
NationalityMoroccan
Victim ofpremature death
A Moroccan spook who died in suspicious circumstances

Death

According to Ahmed Rami, several young military officers were arrested mid-January 1983. Dlimi himself was also arrested, interrogated and tortured in the royal palace, before his death being set up as a car-crash. Dlimi is said to have advocated a closer relationship to France in order to counter US influence.[1] Rami wrote that: "Hassan's closest circle, which also counts foreign secret agents, very well knows the circumstances of Dlimi's death." This veiled allusion to the CIA was elaborated upon by Rami, who claimed that the CIA was investigating Dlimi as a secret member of the "Independent Officers"; that they had filmed the Stockholm meeting between them, and had ultimately delivered this video to Hassan II.[1] Morocco was at the time a very close ally of the United States. Hassan II had sent troops to Zaire in 1977 and 1978 to support US intervention, and also assisted UNITA in Angola since the mid-1970s. He had agreed to the setting up of a CIA station in Morocco, which became one of its key installations in Africa.[1] Hassan II had visited US Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger and the State Secretary Al Haig in 1981, as well as the president of the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and the Deputy Director of the CIA.[1]

After Dlimi's death, fifteen other officers were arrested and three of them executed. No one was allowed to see Ahmed Dlimi's corpse.

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References