Ricardo Brinzoni (October 6, 1945 – October 24, 2005) was an Argentine military officer, serving as Argentina's Chief-of-staff.
Born in Buenos Aires, Brinzoni entered Military School on 1963, and trained as a paratrooper, qualifying in December 1964.
He built a career in the military and reached the rank of Brigadier General in 1990.
On December 13, 1999, President Fernando de la RĂşa appointed Brinzoni as Army Chief-of-staff and a Lieutenant General.
During the military government of 1976–1983, Brinzoni was Secretary-General of the military government of Chaco Province.
Nevertheless, he was heavily criticised for defending the repression and military illegal actions of the military government, for allegedly protecting the officers involved, and for setting back the reconciliation process that had been started by his predecessor, MartĂn Balza.
Brinzoni courted further controversy when it was revealed that his lawyer during this period, Juan Enrique Torres Bande, was a member of the neo-Nazi New Triumph Party.
Brinzoni subsequently issued several public statements criticising Kirchner's government.
Brinzoni was married to the former Lidia MarĂa Rosa Odino; they had
three children and two grandchildren.
He died of pancreatic cancer in Buenos Aires in 2005, aged 60.