Yes, I am sure you are well associated with the Nazi's of Latin America. Much of the Third Reich fled that to Argentina and were welcomed.
Actually, I accidentally cam to assist Israeli intelligence in the 60’s in their effort to find and capture Martin Bormann. Bormann was, at the time, thought to be in the Amazon headwaters where Brazil, Ecuador and Perú meet. So, when I was invited to a reception at the estate of the local Hoechst manager and took a wrong turn leading to the bathroom, I came upon a home office where a huge picture of Hitler was hung and it had to each side the Nazi secret police flags.
I told a friend who was also a stringer for several news services. He was also connected to MOSSAD and, after a meeting with several of his friends, was told that the Hoechst guy was well known. I was asked if I could attend any further gatherings of his and report back, which I did. It was thought that the Nazi I discovered was providing supplies to Borman.
My lead engineer for my first AM stations had been one of Telefunken’s chief design engineers in Europe before the war. Because he was Jewish, he fled Europe and ended up in Quito. My first FM engineer had owned a radio factory in France; when the Germans invaded, he joined the French resistance. After the war, he also went to Ecuador and established an electronic servicing business.
So, yes, I knew many refugees of World War II, but they were all in Ecuador as a result of persecution by the Nazis.
By the time I had a full project in Argentina, starting in 1999, any of the Nazis who had fled to that nation were long gone.
The USA took in a number of scumbags from Hitler's regime as well. Our Space program used them.
Yet in fairness, it can be said that many of those scientists had no choice, but to assist their country’s government. In many cases, the situation had advanced too far for them to extricate themselves.
Similar to the "democracies" we ushered into Latin America & Caribbean on tanks and gunships.
Not similar at all. What I saw in Argentina had no relation to American “peacekeeping” in other nations in fact, I saw no involvement at all there. On the other hand, in Ecuador, it was only after the inebriated president of that nation climbed on a banquet table and walked on it across to the American ambassador and peed on him that the United States gave a assistance to the military to remove that drunk. That action was soon followed by an election that was done quite peacefully and properly.