[2] After the installation of the military dictatorship called the Argentine Revolution, Karakachoff clearly broke with conservative ideas that held the ideas of Ricardo Balbín (so-called balbinismo) within radicalism, creating the MAP (Movement of Popular Affirmation), related to the socialist group MAP (Argentine Popular Action Movement) which was simultaneously founded by Guillermo Estévez Boero.
The group would be the basis of the daily paper and political organ "En Lucha", (Infight)[3] to which Federico Storani was also associated where he wrote opinion pieces that profoundly influenced the generation of '70 highlighting the dependent structure of Argentina and the need for new strategies and policies to drive change through non-violent and democratic means.
[6] In 1975, he proposed the need to fundamentally reform the UCR to transform it into a political party deeply rooted in the working class.
In 1975, he joined the Permanent Assembly for Human Rights (APDH) where he became involved presenting hundreds of writs of habeas corpus on behalf of the detained and disappeared, that ran into thousands, from the actions of the 1976 military coup.
Their tortured bodies appeared on September 11, on the roadside in an area called Magdalena on the outskirts of the city of La Plata.