Jack Carr's take on the AMIA bombing of July 18, 1994, in Buenos Aires, Argentina: 'Pistol by his side'

Terror attack targeted Jewish community institute, killed 85 people and wounded 300

On the morning of July 18, 1994, a van pulled up to the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) headquarters in Buenos Aires. 

It was packed with what is suspected to be approximately 275 kilograms of fertilizer and TNT. 

The subsequent explosion destroyed the seven-story building, killed 85 people and wounded 300. 

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The AMIA was a Jewish community institute that included employment services and contained a library of rare books. 

The facility also hosted meetings for an organization called Project Witness, a group examining Argentine collaboration with Nazis in the aftermath of World War II.

Jack Carr

Bestselling novelist Jack Carr, a former Navy SEAL, is launching a new nonfiction book series starting in 2024 called "Targeted." Stressing the importance of knowing and understanding history, Carr said the first book in his "Targeted" series will be out in October 2024. He'll be teaming up with Pulitzer Prize finalist James M. Scott to explore terrorist events that changed the course of history.  (Jack Carr)

The driver, who was killed in the explosion, was tentatively identified as Ibrahim Hussein Berro.

He was a Lebanese citizen with ties to Hezbollah.  

"Hezbollah carried it out at the direction of the Iranian regime," said the U.S. State Department. 

In May 2013, the general prosecutor, Alberto Nisman, charged with investigating the bombing, issued an indictment directly implicating Iran in the attack.

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In early January 2015, he accused the then-president of Argentina, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner, and other top officials, of covering up Iranian involvement in the AMIA bombing in exchange for lucrative trade deals involving grain and oil with Iran. 

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"The single deadliest anti-semitic attack in more than half a century, the AMIA bombing underscored Hezbollah's global ambitions and is a clear example of Iran’s support of international terrorism," said the U.S. State Department in a press release a few years ago in remembering the victims of the terror attack in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in July 1994. 

Days later, and just hours before he was to present lawmakers with evidence implicating Kirchner in obstructing the investigation, Alberto Nisman’s body was found in his apartment with a single gunshot to the head. 

A pistol was by his side.

(Follow Jack Carr on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jackcarrusa.)

More on AIMA headquarters attack in July 1994 

"The single deadliest anti-semitic attack in more than half a century, the AMIA bombing underscored Hezbollah's global ambitions and is a clear example of Iran’s support of international terrorism," said the U.S. State Department in a press statement two years ago as it remembered the victims of the attack. 

"High-level Iranian government officials were directly implicated in the attack, and Hezbollah carried it out at the direction of the Iranian regime," said then-spokesperson Ned Price in a press release in July 2022.

"The callous murder of civilians must not stand."

"While no one responsible for the attack has been brought to justice, the United States believes all Argentines deserve to have those responsible held accountable for this despicable and cowardly attack."

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He also said, "The United States is committed to countering Hezbollah and Iran’s malign influence. The funding, training, weapons, and other support Iran provides Hezbollah support complex and heinous terrorist attacks like these."

He added, "The callous murder of civilians must not stand."

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Israel considers Hezbollah its most serious immediate threat, estimating it has some 150,000 rockets and missiles aimed at Israel, the Associated Press noted recently.