fbpx
Wikipedia

Nicaraguan Revolution

The Nicaraguan Revolution (Spanish: Revolución Nicaragüense or Revolución Popular Sandinista) encompassed the rising opposition to the Somoza dictatorship in the 1960s and 1970s, the campaign led by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) to oust the dictatorship in 1978–79, the subsequent efforts of the FSLN to govern Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990,[31] and the Contra War, which was waged between the FSLN-led government of Nicaragua and the United States–backed Contras from 1981 to 1990. The revolution marked a significant period in the history of Nicaragua and revealed the country as one of the major proxy war battlegrounds of the Cold War, attracting much international attention.

Nicaraguan Revolution
Part of the Central American crisis and the Cold War

From left to right: FSLN guerrillas entering León, bodies of people executed by the Nicaraguan National Guard, FSLN soldier aiming an RPG-2, a government spy captured by guerrilla forces, bombings by the National Guard air force & destruction of towns & villages taken by guerrilla forces.
Date19 July 1961 – 25 April 1990
(28 years, 9 months and 6 days)
19 July 1961 – 17 July 1979 (first phase: FSLN Rebellion)
17 July 1979 – 25 April 1990 (second phase: Contra War)
Location
Result

FSLN military victory in 1979

Belligerents

Somoza regime
(1961–1979)


Contras
(1979–1990)

FSLN

MAP-ML (1978–1979)

 Panama (1978-1979)[17][18]

Commanders and leaders
Casualties and losses

1978–79: 10,000 total killed[30]

1981–89: 10,000–43,000 total killed; best estimate using most detailed battle information is 30,000 killed.[30]

The initial overthrow of the Somoza regime in 1978–79 was a dirty affair, and the Contra War of the 1980s took the lives of tens of thousands of Nicaraguans and was the subject of fierce international debate. Because of the political turmoil, failing economy, and decreasing government influence, during the 1980s both the FSLN (a leftist collection of political parties) and the Contras (a rightist collection of counter-revolutionary groups) received large amounts of aid from the Cold War superpowers (respectively, the Soviet Union and the United States).

A peace process started with the Sapoá Accords in 1988 and the Contra War ended after the signing of the Tela Accord in 1989 and the demobilization of the FSLN and Contra armies.[32] A second election in 1990 resulted in the election of a majority of anti-Sandinista parties and the FSLN handing over power.

Background

Following the United States occupation of Nicaragua in 1912 during the Banana Wars, the Somoza family political dynasty came to power, and would rule Nicaragua from 1937 until their ouster in 1979 during the Nicaraguan Revolution. The Somoza dynasty consisted of Anastasio Somoza García, his eldest son Luis Somoza Debayle, and finally Anastasio Somoza Debayle. The era of Somoza family rule was characterized by economic development albeit with rising inequality and political corruption, strong US support for the government and its military,[33] as well as a reliance on US-based multinational corporations.[34]

Rise of the FSLN

In 1961 Carlos Fonseca Amador, Silvio Mayorga, and Tomás Borge Martínez formed the FSLN (Sandinista National Liberation Front) with other student activists at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Nicaragua (UNAN) in Managua. For the founding members of the FSLN, this was not their first experience with political activism. Amador, first General Secretary of the organization, had worked with others on a newspaper "broadly critical" of the Somoza reign titled Segovia.[35]

Consisting of approximately 20 members during the 1960s, with the help of students, the organization gathered support from peasants and anti-Somoza elements within Nicaraguan society, as well as from the communist Cuban government, and the socialist Panamanian government of Omar Torrijos, and the social democratic Venezuelan government of Carlos Andrés Pérez.[36]

By the 1970s the coalition of students, farmers, businesses, churches, and a small percentage of Marxists was strong enough to launch a military effort against the regime of longtime dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle. The FSLN focused on guerrilla tactics almost immediately, inspired by the campaigns of Fidel Castro and Ché Guevara. Penetrating the Northern coast of Nicaragua, the Río Coco/Bocay-Raití campaign was largely a failure: "when guerrillas did encounter the National Guard, they had to retreat...with heavy losses."[37] Further operations included a devastating loss near the city of Matagalpa, during which Mayorga was killed, which led Fonseca to a "prolonged period of reflection, self-criticism and ideological debate."[38] During this time, the FSLN reduced attacks, instead focusing on solidifying the organization as a whole.

Fonseca died in combat in November of 1976. After his death, the FSLN split into three factions which fought separately: Tendencia GPP (Guerra Popular Prolongada) (English: Prolonged People's War), which followed Maoist ideas; Tendencia Proletaria (English: proletarian), which followed Marxist-Leninist ideas; and Tendencia Tercerista (English: third), which pursued politically left-wing nationalism, social democracy, and liberation theology.

Overthrow of the Somoza regime

 
A M4 Sherman tank of the Nicaraguan National Guard during clashes with Sandinista rebels in Estelí, 1979

In the 1970s the FSLN began a campaign of kidnappings which led to national recognition of the group in the Nicaraguan media and solidification of the group as a force in opposition to the Somoza Regime.[36] The Somoza Regime, which included the Nicaraguan National Guard, a force highly trained by the U.S. military, declared a state of siege, and proceeded to use torture, extrajudicial killings, intimidation and censorship of the press in order to combat the FSLN attacks.[36] This led to international condemnation of the regime and in 1978 the administration of U.S. president Jimmy Carter cut off aid to the Somoza regime due to its human rights violations (Boland Amendment). In response, Somoza lifted the state of siege in order to continue receiving aid.[10]

Other opposition parties and movements also started a process of consolidation. In 1974, Unión Democrática Liberal (UDEL) was founded by Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal; the alliance included two anti-Somoza liberal parties as well as some conservatives and even the Nicaraguan Socialist Party.[39]

On 10 January 1978, the editor of the Managua newspaper La Prensa, and founder of the Union for Democratic Liberation (UDEL), Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal was murdered by suspected elements of the Somoza regime, and riots broke out in the capital city, Managua, targeting the Somoza regime.[40] Following the riots, a general strike on 23–24 January called for the end of the Somoza regime and was, according to the U.S. State Department staff at the U.S. Embassy, successful at shutting down around 80% of businesses in not only Managua but also the provincial capitals of León, Granada, Chinandega, and Matagalpa.[40]

In the words of William Dewy, an employee of Citi Bank who witnessed the riots in Managua:

Our offices at the time were directly across the street from La Prensa and in the fighting that followed part of our branch was burned, but not intentionally. They were going after the Somoza-owned bank. In the turmoil they torched the [Somoza] bank and our building also burnt down. It was clear [to the U.S. business community] that the Chamorro assassination had changed things dramatically and permanently for the worse. — Interview with Morris H. Morley, 17 October 1987[40]

On 22 August 1978 the FSLN staged a massive kidnapping operation. Led by Éden Pastora, the Sandinistan forces captured the National Palace while the legislature was in session, taking 2,000 hostages. Pastora demanded money, the release of Sandinistan prisoners, and, "a means of publicizing the Sandinista cause."[10] After two days, the government agreed to pay $500,000 and to release certain prisoners, marking a major victory for the FSLN.[36] Revolts against the state continued as the Sandinistas received material support from Venezuela and Panama. Further support would stem from Cuba in the form of "arms and military advising."[10]

In early 1979 the Organization of American States supervised negotiations between the FSLN and the government. However, these broke down when it became clear that the Somoza regime had no intention of allowing democratic elections to take place.

By June 1979 the FSLN controlled all of the country except the capital, and on 17 July President Somoza resigned and the FSLN entered Managua,[36] giving full control of the government to the revolutionary movements. Somoza fled to Miami, his Nationalist Liberal Party became practically "decapacitated" and many of its functionaries as well as business figures overtly compromised with somocismo chose the exile. The Catholic church and the professional sectors generally approved of the new reality.[41]

Sandinista government

Immediately following the fall of the Somoza regime, Nicaragua was largely in ruins. The country had suffered both war and, earlier, natural disaster in the devastating 1972 Nicaragua earthquake. In 1979, approximately 600,000 Nicaraguans were homeless and 150,000 were either refugees or in exile,[42] out of a total population of just 2.8 million.[43]

In response to these issues, a state of emergency was declared. President Carter sent US$99 million in aid. Land and businesses of the Somoza regime were expropriated, the old courts were abolished, and workers were organized into Civil Defense Committees. The new regime also declared that "elections are unnecessary", which led to criticism from the Catholic Church, among others.[10]

Economic reforms

 
Nicaragua inflation rate 1980-1993

The Revolution ended the burden the Somocista regime had imposed upon the Nicaraguan economy and which had seriously deformed the country, creating a big and modern center, Managua, where Somoza's power had emanated to all corners of the territory. Somoza had developed an almost semifeudalist rural economy with few productive goods, such as cotton, sugar and other tropical agricultural products. All sectors of the economy of Nicaragua were determined, in great part if not entirely, by the Somozas or the officials and others surrounding the regime, whether by directly owning agricultural brands and trusts, or actively putting them into local or foreign hands. It is famously stated that Somoza himself owned 1/5 of all profitable land in Nicaragua. While this is not correct, Somoza or his adepts did own or give away banks, ports, communications, services and massive amounts of land.[44]

The Nicaraguan Revolution brought immense restructuring and reforms to all three sectors of the economy, directing it towards a mixed economy system. The biggest economic impact was on the primary sector, agriculture, in the form of the Agrarian Reform, which was not proposed as something that could be planned in advanced from the beginning of the Revolution but as a process that would develop pragmatically along with the other changes (economic, political, etc.) that would arise during the Revolution period.[45]

Economic reforms overall needed to rescue out of limbo the inefficient and helpless Nicaraguan economy. As a "third-world" country, Nicaragua had, and has, an agriculture-based economy, undeveloped and susceptible to the flow of market prices for its agricultural goods, such as coffee and cotton. The Revolution faced a rural economy well behind in technology and, at the same time, devastated by the guerrilla warfare and the soon to come civil war against the Contras.

Article 1 of the Agrarian Reform Law says that property is guaranteed if it laboured efficiently and that there could be different forms of property:

  • state property (with the confiscated land from somocistas)
  • cooperative property (part of confiscated land, but without individual certificates of ownership, to be laboured efficiently)
  • communal property (in response to reinvindication from people and communities from Miskito regions in the Atlantic)
  • individual property (as long as this is efficiently exploited and integrated to national plans of development)[45]

The principles that presided Agrarian Reform were the same ones for the Revolution: pluralism, national unity and economic democracy.[45]

The Nicaraguan Agrarian Reform developed into four phases:

  1. phase (1979): confiscation of property owned by Somocistas and its adepts
  2. phase (1981): Agrarian Reform Law of 19 July 1981
  3. phase (1984–85): massive cession of land individually, responding to demands from peasantry
  4. phase (1986): Agrarian Reform Law of 1986, or "reform to the 1981 Law"

In 1985, the Agrarian Reform distributed 950 square kilometres (235,000 acres) of land to the peasantry. This represented about 75 percent of all land distributed to peasants since 1980. According to Project, the agrarian reform had the twofold purpose of increasing the support for the government among the campesinos, and guaranteeing ample food delivery into the cities. During 1985, ceremonies were held throughout the countryside in which Daniel Ortega would give each peasant a title to the land and a rifle to defend it.[46]

Cultural Revolution

The Nicaraguan Revolution brought many cultural improvements and developments. Undoubtedly, the most important was the planning and execution of the Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign (Cruzada Nacional de Alfabetización). The literacy campaign used secondary school students, university students as well as teachers as volunteer teachers. Within five months they reduced the overall illiteracy rate from 50.3% to 12.9%.[47] As a result, in September 1980, UNESCO awarded Nicaragua with the "Nadezhda K. Krupskaya" award for their successful literacy campaign. This was followed by the literacy campaigns of 1982, 1986, 1987, 1995 and 2000, all of which were also awarded by UNESCO.[48] The Revolution also founded a Ministry of Culture, one of only three in Latin America at the time, and established a new editorial brand, called Editorial Nueva Nicaragua and, based on it, started to print cheap editions of basic books rarely seen by Nicaraguans at all. It also founded an Instituto de Estudios del Sandinismo (Institute for Studies of Sandinismo) where it printed all of the work and papers of Augusto C. Sandino and those that cemented the ideologies of FSLN as well, such as Carlos Fonseca, Ricardo Morales Avilés and others. The key large scale programs of the Sandinistas received international recognition for their gains in literacy, health care, education, childcare, unions, and land reform.[49][50]

Human rights controversies

The Heritage Foundation, a conservative American think tank with close ties to the Reagan administration,[51][52] charged the Sandinista government with numerous human rights violations, including censorship of the press and repression of the country's Miskito and Jewish populations. It charged that the government censored the independent newspaper La Prensa,[53] though French journalist Viktor Dedaj, who lived in Managua in the 1980s, contended that La Prensa was generally sold freely and that the majority of radio stations were anti-Sandinista.[54] The Heritage Foundation also claimed that the Sandinistas instituted a "spy on your neighbor" system that encouraged citizens to report any activity deemed counter-revolutionary, with those reported facing harassment from security representatives, including the destruction of property.[53]

The Heritage Foundation also criticized the government for its treatment of the Miskito people, stating that over 15,000 Miskitos were forced to relocate, their villages were destroyed, and their killers were promoted rather than punished.[53][55][56] The Los Angeles Times also noted that "...the Miskitos began to actively oppose the Sandinistas in 1982 when authorities killed more than a dozen Indians, burned villages, forcibly recruited young men into the army and tried to relocate others. Thousands of Miskitos poured across the Coco into Honduras, and many took up U.S.-supplied arms to oppose the Nicaraguan government."[57]

The United Nations, the Organization of American States and Pax Christi disputed the Foundation's allegations of anti-Semitism. According to them, individual Nicaraguan Jews had their property expropriated due to their connections with the Somoza regime, but not because they were Jewish. They cited the fact that there were prominent Sandinistas officials of Jewish descent.[58] In contrast to these organizations, the Anti-Defamation League supported the Reagan administration's allegations of Sandinista anti-semitism. It worked closely with Nicaraguan Jewish exiles to reclaim a synagogue that had been firebombed by Sandinista militants in 1978 and expropriated by the Sandinista government in 1979.[59]

Amnesty International also noted numerous human rights violations by the Sandinista government. Among what they found: they contended that civilians "disappeared" after their arrest, that "civil and political rights" were suspended, due process was denied detainees, torture of detainees, and "reports of the killing by government forces of those suspected of supporting the contras".[60]

The Sandinistas were also accused of mass executions.[61][62] The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights investigated abuses by Sandinista forces, including an execution of 35 to 40 Miskitos in December 1981,[63] and an execution of 75 people in November 1984.[64]

Contra War

 
Contra Commandos from FDN and ARDE Frente Sur, Nueva Guinea area in 1987
 
Members of ARDE Frente Sur

Although the Carter Administration had attempted to work with FSLN in 1979 and 1980, the more right-wing Reagan Administration supported a strong anti-communist strategy for dealing with Latin America, and so it attempted to isolate the Sandinista regime.[65] As early as 1980–1981 an anti-Sandinista movement, the Contrarrevolución (Counter-revolution) or just Contras, was forming along the border with Honduras. Many of the initial Contras were former members of the Somoza regime's National Guard unit and many were still loyal to Somoza, who was living in exile in Honduras.[65]

In addition to the Contra units who continued to be loyal to Somoza, the FSLN also began to face opposition from members of the ethnic minority groups that inhabited Nicaragua's remote Mosquito Coast region along the Caribbean Sea. These groups were demanding a larger share of self-determination and/or autonomy, but the FSLN refused to grant this and began using forced relocations and armed force in response to these grievances.[65]

Upon taking office in January 1981, Ronald Reagan cancelled the dispersal of economic aid to Nicaragua,[66] and on 6 August 1981 he signed National Security Decision Directive number 7, which authorized the production and shipment of arms to the region but not their deployment.[67] On 17 November 1981, President Reagan signed National Security Directive 17, authorizing covert support to anti-Sandinista forces.[66]

An armed conflict soon arose, adding to the destabilization of the region which had been unfolding through the Central American civil wars in El Salvador and Guatemala. The Contras, heavily backed by the CIA, secretly opened a "second front" on Nicaragua's Atlantic coast and Costa Rican border.[citation needed] With the civil war opening up cracks in the national revolutionary project, the FSLN's military budget grew to more than half of the annual budget.[65] The Servicio Militar Patriótico (Patriotic Military Service), a compulsory draft, was also established.[68]

By 1982 Contra forces had begun carrying out assassinations of members of the Nicaraguan government, and by 1983 the Contras had launched a major offensive and the CIA was helping them to plant mines in Nicaragua's harbors to prevent foreign weapons shipments from arriving.[69] The 1987 Iran–Contra affair placed the Reagan Administration again at the center of secret support for the Contras.

1984 general election

The 1984 election took place on 4 November. Of the 1,551,597 citizens registered in July, 1,170,142 voted (75.41%). The null votes were 6% of the total. International observers declared the elections free and fair,[70] despite the Reagan administration denouncing it as a "Soviet style sham". The national averages of valid votes for president were:

  • Daniel Ortega, Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) – 66.97%
  • Clemente Guido, Democratic Conservative Party (PCD) – 14.04%
  • Virgilio Godoy, Independent Liberal Party (PLI) – 9.60%
  • Mauricio Diaz, Popular Social Christian Party (PPSC) – 5.56%
  • Allan Zambrana, Nicaraguan Communist Party (PCdeN) – 1.45%
  • Domingo Sánchez Sancho, Nicaraguan Socialist Party (PSN) – 1.31%
  • Isidro Téllez, Marxist–Leninist Popular Action Movement (MAP-ML) – 1.03%

Esquipulas

The Esquipulas Peace Agreement was an initiative in the mid-1980s to settle the military conflicts that had plagued Central America for many years, and in some cases (notably Guatemala) for decades. It built upon groundwork laid by the Contadora Group from 1983 to 1985. The agreement was named for Esquipulas, Guatemala, where the initial meetings took place. The US Congress lobbying efforts were helped by one of Capitol Hill's top lobbyists, William C. Chasey.

In May 1986, a summit meeting, Esquipulas I, took place, attended by the five Central American presidents. On 15 February 1987, Costa Rican President Óscar Arias submitted a Peace Plan which evolved[clarification needed] from this meeting. During 1986 and 1987, the Esquipulas Process was established, in which the Central American heads of state agreed on economic cooperation and a framework for peaceful conflict resolution. The Esquipulas II Accord emerged from this and was signed in Guatemala City by the five presidents on 7 August 1987.

Esquipulas II defined a number of measures to promote national reconciliation, an end to hostilities, democratization, free elections, the termination of all assistance to irregular forces, negotiations on arms controls, and assistance to refugees. It also laid the ground for international verification procedures and provided a timetable for implementation.

Sapoá Accords at March 23, 1988 initiated the peace process in Nicaragua. Name comes from the location, town of Sapoá near Costa Rican border. Sandinismo in 1988 had reached economical end point since Cold War (1985–1991) was coming to an end as Soviet Union was near the peak of Era of Stagnation limiting its support to Sandinistas. This in turn limited Sandinista government options to continue the conflict to favourable end and forcing them to negotiation for peace. The Accords was mediated by João Clemente Baena Soares at the time as Secretary General of the Organization of American States and then Archbishop of Managua Miguel Obando y Bravo[71][72] Since Nicaraguan conflict was one of the proxy war between Soviet Union and United States, peace process management relied also on then Soviet ambassador Vaino Väljas mediation depending on the recent US-Soviet agreements since US did not have any Ambassador assigned to Nicaragua from July 1, 1987 till May 4, 1988.[73][74][72][75]

UNO

Nicaraguan historian and leading social investigator Roberto J. Cajina describes UNO as follows:

"Since the very moment of inception, under the political guidance and technical and financial support from the government of the US, the existence of UNO was marked by grave structural deformations, derived from its own nature. In its conformation concurred the most diverse currents of the Nicaraguan political and ideological range: from the liberal-conservative -traditionally anticommunist and pro-US, to marxist-leninists from moscovian lineage, openly declared supporters of class struggle and enemies of capitalism in its superior development stage".[76]

The constitution of the UNO Coalition for the 1990 General Elections was as follows:[76](exact transcription and translation of the names of these political parties needed)

  • 3 Liberal factions: PLI, PLC and PALI
  • 3 Conservative: ANC, PNC and APC
  • 3 Social-Christians: PPSC, PDCN and PAN
  • 2 Social democrats: PSD and MDN
  • 2 Communists: PSN (pro-Moscow) and PC de Nicaragua (pro-Albania)
  • 1 Central American Unionist: PIAC

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board, Canada (1 May 1989). "Participation of Costa Rican government in arms smuggling, for Sandinistas in 1979 and for Contras in mid-1980's". UNHCR. Retrieved 4 December 2020.
  2. ^ Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran/Contra Affair, 1995. Page 165. Page 271. Page 481.
  3. ^ "CIA-Contra-Crack Cocaine Controversy". Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  4. ^ "Reagan Says Saudi Talked of Contra Aid". tribunedigital-chicagotribune. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Saudi Arabia and the Reagan Doctrine – Middle East Research and Information Project". December 1988. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  6. ^ "Understanding the Iran-Contra Affairs – the Iran-Contra Affairs".
  7. ^ MCMANUS, DOYLE (6 March 1987). "Private Contra Funding of $32 Million Disclosed : Leader Shows Secret Bank Data in Effort to Prove Rebels Did Not Get Money From Iran Arms Sales". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  8. ^ "The Contras, Cocaine, and Covert Operations". Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  9. ^ The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability. Page 255.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Understanding the Iran-Contra Affairs". www.brown.edu. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  11. ^ "IRAN-CONTRA HEARINGS; BRUNEI REGAINS $10 MILLION". The New York Times. 22 July 1987. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
  12. ^ "POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS". The New York Times. 2 May 1987. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  13. ^ Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988. Page 143.
  14. ^ "POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS". The New York Times. 2 May 1987. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  15. ^ Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988. Page 143.
  16. ^ Landslide: The Unmaking of the President, 1984-1988. Page 143.
  17. ^ a b Brown, Jonathan C. (2022). "Omar Torrijos and the Sandinista Revolution". The Latin Americanist. 66: 25–45. doi:10.1353/tla.2022.0003. S2CID 247623108.
  18. ^ a b Sánchez Nateras, Gerardo. "The Sandinista Revolution and the Limits of the Cold War in Latin America: The Dilemma of Nonintervention During the Nicaraguan Crisis, 1977–78" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran/Contra Affair, 1995. Page 216. Page 485.
  20. ^ "The Soviet Union and Revolutionary Warfare: Principles, Practices, and ..." Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  21. ^ a b Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran/Contra Affair, 1995. Page 27.
  22. ^ a b c Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran/Contra Affair, 1995. Page 485.
  23. ^ "POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS". The New York Times. 2 May 1987. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  24. ^ "Mexico's Support of the Sandinista Revolution". Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo.
  25. ^ ECHIKSON, WILLIAM (15 July 1982). "France Warms Up to Nicaragua—As US Fumes". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 29 July 2022.
  26. ^ . Swedish International Development Corporation Agency (www.sida.se). 2009. Archived from the original on 15 June 2013.
  27. ^ "Sandinistas Find Economic Ally In Socialist Sweden". philly-archives. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  28. ^ Bishop, Adam (2 September 2009). "With Them and Against Them: Canada's Relations With Nicaragua, 1979-1990". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ "Daniel Ortega", Encyclopædia Britannica (15th ed.), 1993
  30. ^ a b Lacina, Bethany. "The PRIO Battle Deaths Dataset, 1946–2008, Version 3.0: Documentation of Coding Decisions" (PDF). International Peace Research Institute, Oslo. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2013.
  31. ^ Louis Proyect, Nicaragua, discusses, among other things, the reforms and the degree to which socialism was intended or achieved.
  32. ^ Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua, State-based conflict, Peace efforts, https://www.ucdp.uu.se/country/93
  33. ^ Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia, Nicaragua, State-based conflict, In depth, Background, http://www.ucdp.uu.se/gpdatabase/gpcountry.php?id=117&regionSelect=4-Central_Americas# [link is not working]
  34. ^ "Taking Care of Business in Nicaragua". Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  35. ^ Baracco, Luciano (2005). Nicaragua: The Imagining of a Nation – From Nineteenth-Century Liberals to Twentieth-Century Sandinistas. New York, NY: Algora Publishing. p. 61.
  36. ^ a b c d e Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia, Nicaragua, State-based conflict, In depth, The Sandinista revolution, http://www.ucdp.uu.se/gpdatabase/gpcountry.php?id=117&regionSelect=4-Central_Americas# [link is not working]
  37. ^ Baracco, Luciano (2005). Nicaragua: The Imagining of a Nation – From Nineteenth-Century Liberals to Twentieth-Century Sandinistas. New York, NY: Algora Publishing. p. 66.
  38. ^ Baracco, Luciano (2005). Nicaragua: The Imagining of a Nation – From Nineteenth-Century Liberals to Twentieth-Century Sandinistas. New York, NY: Algora Publishing. p. 67.
  39. ^ María Dolores Ferrero Blanco La Nicaragua de los Somoza : 1936–1979. Managua: Instituto de Historia de Nicaragua y Centroamérica de la Universidad Centroamericana; Huelva : Universidad de Huelva, 2012. P. 132.
  40. ^ a b c Washington, Somoza and the Sandinistas: Stage and Regime in US Policy toward Nicaragua 1969–1981, Author: Morris H. Morley, Published: August 2002, ISBN 9780521523356, pg. 106
  41. ^ María Dolores Ferrero Blanco La Nicaragua de los Somoza : 1936–1979. Managua: Instituto de Historia de Nicaragua y Centroamérica de la Universidad Centroamericana; Huelva : Universidad de Huelva, 2012. P. 273.
  42. ^ Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia, Nicaragua, State-based conflict, In depth, Nicaragua under Sandinista rule, http://www.ucdp.uu.se/gpdatabase/gpcountry.php?id=117&regionSelect=4-Central_Americas# [link is not working]
  43. ^ evolution of demography in Nicaragua (1961–2003), Data FAOSTAT, http://faostat.fao.org/faostat/help-copyright/copyright-e.htm (last updated 11 February 2005)
  44. ^ SOLÁ MONSERRAT, Roser. "Geografía y Estructura Económicas de Nicaragua" (Nicaragua's Geography and Economical Structure). Universidad Centroamericana. Managua, Nicaragua, 1989. Second Edition.
  45. ^ a b c "Agrarian Productive Structure in Nicaragua", SOLÁ MONSERRAT, Roser. 1989. Pag 69 and ss.
  46. ^ Louis Proyect, Nicaragua, about 4/5 of the way down.
  47. ^ Hanemann, Ulrike. . UNESCO. Archived from the original (DOC) on 3 July 2007. Retrieved 2 July 2007.
  48. ^ B. Arrien, Juan. "Literacy in Nicaragua" (PDF). UNESCO. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
  49. ^ Background History 22 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine of Nicaragua
  50. ^ globalexchange.org 30 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Report on Nicaragua
  51. ^ "REAGAN AND HERITAGE: A Unique Partnership". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  52. ^ Arin, Kubilay Yado (2013): Think Tanks, the Brain Trusts of US Foreign Policy. Wiesbaden: VS Springer.
  53. ^ a b c L., Melanie. "The Sandinista War on Human Rights". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  54. ^ Que faire si vous lisez le journal "Le Monde", Viktor Dedaj, 2004
  55. ^ Russell, George (17 October 1983). "Nicaragua: Nothing Will Stop This Revolution". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  56. ^ L., Melanie. "The Sandinista War on Human Rights". The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  57. ^ Farah, Douglas (2 August 1987). "Miskito Indians Forced to Flee : Their Dreams of Returning to Nicaragua Fade". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
  58. ^ Kinzer, Stephen (4 July 2006). "Herty Lewites, 66, Ex-Sandinista, Dies". The New York Times.
  59. ^ "Sandinista Anti-Semitism and Its Apologists". September 1986.
  60. ^ Amnesty International (1989). Nicaragua: The human rights records 1986–1989. Amnesty International Publications. ISBN 9780939994502.
  61. ^ Moore, John Norton (1987) The Secret War in Central America. University Publications of America. p. 143. ISBN 978-0890939611
  62. ^ Miranda, Roger and Ratliff, William (1993) The Civil War in Nicaragua. Transaction. p. 193. ISBN 9781412819688
  63. ^ "OAS Study Says Miskito Indians Suffered Abuse From Sandinistas". The Washington Post. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  64. ^ "Annual Report 1992–1993". Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. 12 March 1993. Retrieved 30 March 2009.
  65. ^ a b c d Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia, Nicaragua, State-based conflict, In depth, Contras/FDN, http://www.ucdp.uu.se/gpdatabase/gpcountry.php?id=117&regionSelect=4-Central_Americas# [link is not working]
  66. ^ a b U.S. Department of Justice, Appendix A: Background on United States Funding of the Contras, http://www.justice.gov/oig/special/9712/appa.htm
  67. ^ University of Texas, National Security Decision Directive number 7, http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/reference/Scanned%20NSDDS/NSDD7.pdf 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  68. ^ "LEY DEL SERVICIO MILITAR PATRIÓTICO". legislacion.asamblea.gob.ni. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  69. ^ McManus, Doyle; Toth, Robert C. (5 March 1985). "Setback for Contras: CIA Mining of Harbors 'a Fiasco'", Last in a series". L.A. Times.
  70. ^ "BBC ON THIS DAY-5-1984: Sandinistas claim election victory". 5 November 1984. Retrieved 10 April 2015.
  71. ^ "Revista Envío – Sapoá—A New Benchmark".
  72. ^ a b "Acuerdos de Sapoá – 23 de marzo de 1988".
  73. ^ "Proxy wars in Nicaragua and Angola - The Cold War, 1972-1991 - OCR A - GCSE History Revision - OCR A - BBC Bitesize".
  74. ^ "Toomas Alatalu: Vaino Väljas – eestlane, kes alustas külma sõja lõpetamist". 28 March 2021.
  75. ^ "The INF Treaty and the Washington Summit: 20 Years Later".
  76. ^ a b "Paradoxes from an heterogeneous and fragile electoral Alliance", CAJINA, Roberto, Pag. 44 and ss.

Bibliography

  • Emily L Andrews, Active Marianismo: Women's social and political action in Nicaraguan Christian base communities and the Sandinista revolution. Grinnell College research project, 1997. Retrieved November 2009.
  • Enrique Bermudez (with Michael Johns), "The Contras' Valley Forge: How I View the Nicaragua Crisis", Policy Review magazine, Summer 1988.
  • David Close, Salvador Marti Puig & Shelley McConnell (2010) "The Sandinistas and Nicaragua, 1979–2009" NY: Lynne Rienner.
  • Dodson, Michael, and Laura Nuzzi O'Shaughnessy (1990). Nicaragua's Other Revolution: Religious Faith and Political Struggle. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0-8078-4266-4
  • Head, Michael & Viglietti, Brian (2012). "Question 35/48: Nicaraguan "Contra" Mining Campaign". Warship International. LXIX (4): 299–301. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Schmidli, William Michael, "'The Most Sophisticated Intervention We Have Seen': The Carter Administration and the Nicaraguan Crisis, 1978–1979," Diplomacy and Statecraft, (2012) 23#1 pp 66–86.
  • Sierakowski, Robert. Sandinistas: A Moral History. University of Notre Dame Press, 2019.

Primary sources

  • Katherine Hoyt, Memories of the 1979 Final Offensive, Nicanet, Retrieved November 2009. This is a first-hand account from Matagalpa; also contains some information on the general situation. Has photograph showing considerable damage to Matagalpa. News and Information
  • Salvador Martí Puig "Nicaragua. La revolución enredada" Lirbos de la Catarata: Madrid.
  • Oleg Ignatiev, "The Storm of Tiscapa", in Borovik and Ignatiev, . Progress Publishers, 1979; English translation, 1980.

Further reading

  • Meiselas, Susan. Nicaragua: June 1978 – July 1979. Pantheon Books (New York City), 1981. First Edition.
  • "Nicaragua: A People Aflame." GEO (Volume 1 charter issue), 1979.
  • Teixera, Ib. "Nicarágua: A Norte de um pais." Manchete (Rio de Janeiro). 7 July 1979.

External links

  • Library of Congress (United States), Country Study:Nicaragua, especially Chapter 1, which is by Marisabel Brás. Retrieved November 2009.
  • Louis Proyect, Nicaragua. Retrieved November 2009.
  • from the

nicaraguan, revolution, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, jul. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nicaraguan Revolution news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish May 2019 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 5 226 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at es Revolucion Sandinista see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated es Revolucion Sandinista to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Nicaraguan Revolution Spanish Revolucion Nicaraguense or Revolucion Popular Sandinista encompassed the rising opposition to the Somoza dictatorship in the 1960s and 1970s the campaign led by the Sandinista National Liberation Front FSLN to oust the dictatorship in 1978 79 the subsequent efforts of the FSLN to govern Nicaragua from 1979 to 1990 31 and the Contra War which was waged between the FSLN led government of Nicaragua and the United States backed Contras from 1981 to 1990 The revolution marked a significant period in the history of Nicaragua and revealed the country as one of the major proxy war battlegrounds of the Cold War attracting much international attention Nicaraguan RevolutionPart of the Central American crisis and the Cold WarFrom left to right FSLN guerrillas entering Leon bodies of people executed by the Nicaraguan National Guard FSLN soldier aiming an RPG 2 a government spy captured by guerrilla forces bombings by the National Guard air force amp destruction of towns amp villages taken by guerrilla forces Date19 July 1961 25 April 1990 28 years 9 months and 6 days 19 July 1961 17 July 1979 first phase FSLN Rebellion 17 July 1979 25 April 1990 second phase Contra War LocationNicaraguaResultFSLN military victory in 1979 Overthrow of Somoza government in 1979 Insurgency of the Contras FSLN junta led by Daniel Ortega take power of Nicaragua in 1981 29 Electoral victory of FSLN in 1984 Electoral victory of the National Opposition Union in 1990BelligerentsSomoza regime 1961 1979 National GuardContras 1979 1990 FDN UDN Fifteenth of September Legion ARDE MILPAS after 1979 KISAN YATAMA RNSupported by United States Costa Rica 1982 1986 1 Israel 2 Saudi Arabia 3 4 5 Taiwan 6 Honduras 7 Panama 1981 1987 8 Chile 1973 1990 9 Argentina 1976 1983 5 Colombia Imperial State of Iran until 1979 Islamic Republic of Iran Indirectly since 1979 10 Brunei 11 People s Republic of China 12 13 Poland 14 Romania 15 Portugal 16 FSLN EPSMAP ML 1978 1979 MILPAS Panama 1978 1979 17 18 Supported by Soviet Union 1980 1990 Costa Rica 1978 1982 1 Libya 19 Cuba 20 Bulgaria 21 Czechoslovakia until 1989 22 East Germany until 1989 21 Hungary until 1989 Poland until 1989 23 North Korea 22 PLO 22 Mexico 24 France 25 Sweden medical support 26 27 Chile 1970 1973 Venezuela 1978 1979 18 17 Canada 1984 1990 28 Commanders and leadersLuis Somoza Anastasio Somoza Enrique Bermudez Adolfo Calero Aristides Sanchez Alfonso Robelo 1982 1988 Edgar Chamorro 1979 1984 Eden Pastora 1982 1986 Fernando Chamorro 1981 1987 Daniel Ortega Carlos Fonseca Amador Humberto Ortega Joaquin Cuadra Tomas Borge Eden Pastora until 1981 Hugo SpadaforaCasualties and losses1978 79 10 000 total killed 30 1981 89 10 000 43 000 total killed best estimate using most detailed battle information is 30 000 killed 30 The initial overthrow of the Somoza regime in 1978 79 was a dirty affair and the Contra War of the 1980s took the lives of tens of thousands of Nicaraguans and was the subject of fierce international debate Because of the political turmoil failing economy and decreasing government influence during the 1980s both the FSLN a leftist collection of political parties and the Contras a rightist collection of counter revolutionary groups received large amounts of aid from the Cold War superpowers respectively the Soviet Union and the United States A peace process started with the Sapoa Accords in 1988 and the Contra War ended after the signing of the Tela Accord in 1989 and the demobilization of the FSLN and Contra armies 32 A second election in 1990 resulted in the election of a majority of anti Sandinista parties and the FSLN handing over power Contents 1 Background 2 Rise of the FSLN 3 Overthrow of the Somoza regime 4 Sandinista government 4 1 Economic reforms 4 2 Cultural Revolution 4 3 Human rights controversies 5 Contra War 5 1 1984 general election 5 2 Esquipulas 5 3 UNO 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 Primary sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditMain article Somoza family Following the United States occupation of Nicaragua in 1912 during the Banana Wars the Somoza family political dynasty came to power and would rule Nicaragua from 1937 until their ouster in 1979 during the Nicaraguan Revolution The Somoza dynasty consisted of Anastasio Somoza Garcia his eldest son Luis Somoza Debayle and finally Anastasio Somoza Debayle The era of Somoza family rule was characterized by economic development albeit with rising inequality and political corruption strong US support for the government and its military 33 as well as a reliance on US based multinational corporations 34 Rise of the FSLN EditIn 1961 Carlos Fonseca Amador Silvio Mayorga and Tomas Borge Martinez formed the FSLN Sandinista National Liberation Front with other student activists at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Nicaragua UNAN in Managua For the founding members of the FSLN this was not their first experience with political activism Amador first General Secretary of the organization had worked with others on a newspaper broadly critical of the Somoza reign titled Segovia 35 Consisting of approximately 20 members during the 1960s with the help of students the organization gathered support from peasants and anti Somoza elements within Nicaraguan society as well as from the communist Cuban government and the socialist Panamanian government of Omar Torrijos and the social democratic Venezuelan government of Carlos Andres Perez 36 By the 1970s the coalition of students farmers businesses churches and a small percentage of Marxists was strong enough to launch a military effort against the regime of longtime dictator Anastasio Somoza Debayle The FSLN focused on guerrilla tactics almost immediately inspired by the campaigns of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara Penetrating the Northern coast of Nicaragua the Rio Coco Bocay Raiti campaign was largely a failure when guerrillas did encounter the National Guard they had to retreat with heavy losses 37 Further operations included a devastating loss near the city of Matagalpa during which Mayorga was killed which led Fonseca to a prolonged period of reflection self criticism and ideological debate 38 During this time the FSLN reduced attacks instead focusing on solidifying the organization as a whole Fonseca died in combat in November of 1976 After his death the FSLN split into three factions which fought separately Tendencia GPP Guerra Popular Prolongada English Prolonged People s War which followed Maoist ideas Tendencia Proletaria English proletarian which followed Marxist Leninist ideas and Tendencia Tercerista English third which pursued politically left wing nationalism social democracy and liberation theology Overthrow of the Somoza regime Edit A M4 Sherman tank of the Nicaraguan National Guard during clashes with Sandinista rebels in Esteli 1979 In the 1970s the FSLN began a campaign of kidnappings which led to national recognition of the group in the Nicaraguan media and solidification of the group as a force in opposition to the Somoza Regime 36 The Somoza Regime which included the Nicaraguan National Guard a force highly trained by the U S military declared a state of siege and proceeded to use torture extrajudicial killings intimidation and censorship of the press in order to combat the FSLN attacks 36 This led to international condemnation of the regime and in 1978 the administration of U S president Jimmy Carter cut off aid to the Somoza regime due to its human rights violations Boland Amendment In response Somoza lifted the state of siege in order to continue receiving aid 10 Other opposition parties and movements also started a process of consolidation In 1974 Union Democratica Liberal UDEL was founded by Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal the alliance included two anti Somoza liberal parties as well as some conservatives and even the Nicaraguan Socialist Party 39 On 10 January 1978 the editor of the Managua newspaper La Prensa and founder of the Union for Democratic Liberation UDEL Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal was murdered by suspected elements of the Somoza regime and riots broke out in the capital city Managua targeting the Somoza regime 40 Following the riots a general strike on 23 24 January called for the end of the Somoza regime and was according to the U S State Department staff at the U S Embassy successful at shutting down around 80 of businesses in not only Managua but also the provincial capitals of Leon Granada Chinandega and Matagalpa 40 In the words of William Dewy an employee of Citi Bank who witnessed the riots in Managua Our offices at the time were directly across the street from La Prensa and in the fighting that followed part of our branch was burned but not intentionally They were going after the Somoza owned bank In the turmoil they torched the Somoza bank and our building also burnt down It was clear to the U S business community that the Chamorro assassination had changed things dramatically and permanently for the worse Interview with Morris H Morley 17 October 1987 40 On 22 August 1978 the FSLN staged a massive kidnapping operation Led by Eden Pastora the Sandinistan forces captured the National Palace while the legislature was in session taking 2 000 hostages Pastora demanded money the release of Sandinistan prisoners and a means of publicizing the Sandinista cause 10 After two days the government agreed to pay 500 000 and to release certain prisoners marking a major victory for the FSLN 36 Revolts against the state continued as the Sandinistas received material support from Venezuela and Panama Further support would stem from Cuba in the form of arms and military advising 10 In early 1979 the Organization of American States supervised negotiations between the FSLN and the government However these broke down when it became clear that the Somoza regime had no intention of allowing democratic elections to take place By June 1979 the FSLN controlled all of the country except the capital and on 17 July President Somoza resigned and the FSLN entered Managua 36 giving full control of the government to the revolutionary movements Somoza fled to Miami his Nationalist Liberal Party became practically decapacitated and many of its functionaries as well as business figures overtly compromised with somocismo chose the exile The Catholic church and the professional sectors generally approved of the new reality 41 Sandinista government EditImmediately following the fall of the Somoza regime Nicaragua was largely in ruins The country had suffered both war and earlier natural disaster in the devastating 1972 Nicaragua earthquake In 1979 approximately 600 000 Nicaraguans were homeless and 150 000 were either refugees or in exile 42 out of a total population of just 2 8 million 43 In response to these issues a state of emergency was declared President Carter sent US 99 million in aid Land and businesses of the Somoza regime were expropriated the old courts were abolished and workers were organized into Civil Defense Committees The new regime also declared that elections are unnecessary which led to criticism from the Catholic Church among others 10 Economic reforms Edit Nicaragua inflation rate 1980 1993 The Revolution ended the burden the Somocista regime had imposed upon the Nicaraguan economy and which had seriously deformed the country creating a big and modern center Managua where Somoza s power had emanated to all corners of the territory Somoza had developed an almost semifeudalist rural economy with few productive goods such as cotton sugar and other tropical agricultural products All sectors of the economy of Nicaragua were determined in great part if not entirely by the Somozas or the officials and others surrounding the regime whether by directly owning agricultural brands and trusts or actively putting them into local or foreign hands It is famously stated that Somoza himself owned 1 5 of all profitable land in Nicaragua While this is not correct Somoza or his adepts did own or give away banks ports communications services and massive amounts of land 44 The Nicaraguan Revolution brought immense restructuring and reforms to all three sectors of the economy directing it towards a mixed economy system The biggest economic impact was on the primary sector agriculture in the form of the Agrarian Reform which was not proposed as something that could be planned in advanced from the beginning of the Revolution but as a process that would develop pragmatically along with the other changes economic political etc that would arise during the Revolution period 45 Economic reforms overall needed to rescue out of limbo the inefficient and helpless Nicaraguan economy As a third world country Nicaragua had and has an agriculture based economy undeveloped and susceptible to the flow of market prices for its agricultural goods such as coffee and cotton The Revolution faced a rural economy well behind in technology and at the same time devastated by the guerrilla warfare and the soon to come civil war against the Contras Article 1 of the Agrarian Reform Law says that property is guaranteed if it laboured efficiently and that there could be different forms of property state property with the confiscated land from somocistas cooperative property part of confiscated land but without individual certificates of ownership to be laboured efficiently communal property in response to reinvindication from people and communities from Miskito regions in the Atlantic individual property as long as this is efficiently exploited and integrated to national plans of development 45 The principles that presided Agrarian Reform were the same ones for the Revolution pluralism national unity and economic democracy 45 The Nicaraguan Agrarian Reform developed into four phases phase 1979 confiscation of property owned by Somocistas and its adepts phase 1981 Agrarian Reform Law of 19 July 1981 phase 1984 85 massive cession of land individually responding to demands from peasantry phase 1986 Agrarian Reform Law of 1986 or reform to the 1981 Law In 1985 the Agrarian Reform distributed 950 square kilometres 235 000 acres of land to the peasantry This represented about 75 percent of all land distributed to peasants since 1980 According to Project the agrarian reform had the twofold purpose of increasing the support for the government among the campesinos and guaranteeing ample food delivery into the cities During 1985 ceremonies were held throughout the countryside in which Daniel Ortega would give each peasant a title to the land and a rifle to defend it 46 Cultural Revolution Edit The Nicaraguan Revolution brought many cultural improvements and developments Undoubtedly the most important was the planning and execution of the Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign Cruzada Nacional de Alfabetizacion The literacy campaign used secondary school students university students as well as teachers as volunteer teachers Within five months they reduced the overall illiteracy rate from 50 3 to 12 9 47 As a result in September 1980 UNESCO awarded Nicaragua with the Nadezhda K Krupskaya award for their successful literacy campaign This was followed by the literacy campaigns of 1982 1986 1987 1995 and 2000 all of which were also awarded by UNESCO 48 The Revolution also founded a Ministry of Culture one of only three in Latin America at the time and established a new editorial brand called Editorial Nueva Nicaragua and based on it started to print cheap editions of basic books rarely seen by Nicaraguans at all It also founded an Instituto de Estudios del Sandinismo Institute for Studies of Sandinismo where it printed all of the work and papers of Augusto C Sandino and those that cemented the ideologies of FSLN as well such as Carlos Fonseca Ricardo Morales Aviles and others The key large scale programs of the Sandinistas received international recognition for their gains in literacy health care education childcare unions and land reform 49 50 Human rights controversies Edit The Heritage Foundation a conservative American think tank with close ties to the Reagan administration 51 52 charged the Sandinista government with numerous human rights violations including censorship of the press and repression of the country s Miskito and Jewish populations It charged that the government censored the independent newspaper La Prensa 53 though French journalist Viktor Dedaj who lived in Managua in the 1980s contended that La Prensa was generally sold freely and that the majority of radio stations were anti Sandinista 54 The Heritage Foundation also claimed that the Sandinistas instituted a spy on your neighbor system that encouraged citizens to report any activity deemed counter revolutionary with those reported facing harassment from security representatives including the destruction of property 53 The Heritage Foundation also criticized the government for its treatment of the Miskito people stating that over 15 000 Miskitos were forced to relocate their villages were destroyed and their killers were promoted rather than punished 53 55 56 The Los Angeles Times also noted that the Miskitos began to actively oppose the Sandinistas in 1982 when authorities killed more than a dozen Indians burned villages forcibly recruited young men into the army and tried to relocate others Thousands of Miskitos poured across the Coco into Honduras and many took up U S supplied arms to oppose the Nicaraguan government 57 The United Nations the Organization of American States and Pax Christi disputed the Foundation s allegations of anti Semitism According to them individual Nicaraguan Jews had their property expropriated due to their connections with the Somoza regime but not because they were Jewish They cited the fact that there were prominent Sandinistas officials of Jewish descent 58 In contrast to these organizations the Anti Defamation League supported the Reagan administration s allegations of Sandinista anti semitism It worked closely with Nicaraguan Jewish exiles to reclaim a synagogue that had been firebombed by Sandinista militants in 1978 and expropriated by the Sandinista government in 1979 59 Amnesty International also noted numerous human rights violations by the Sandinista government Among what they found they contended that civilians disappeared after their arrest that civil and political rights were suspended due process was denied detainees torture of detainees and reports of the killing by government forces of those suspected of supporting the contras 60 The Sandinistas were also accused of mass executions 61 62 The Inter American Commission on Human Rights investigated abuses by Sandinista forces including an execution of 35 to 40 Miskitos in December 1981 63 and an execution of 75 people in November 1984 64 Contra War EditFurther information Sandinista National Liberation Front Sandinistas vs Contras Nicaraguan Democratic Force Democratic Revolutionary Alliance Contras and Foreign policy of the Ronald Reagan administration Nicaragua Contra Commandos from FDN and ARDE Frente Sur Nueva Guinea area in 1987 Members of ARDE Frente Sur Although the Carter Administration had attempted to work with FSLN in 1979 and 1980 the more right wing Reagan Administration supported a strong anti communist strategy for dealing with Latin America and so it attempted to isolate the Sandinista regime 65 As early as 1980 1981 an anti Sandinista movement the Contrarrevolucion Counter revolution or just Contras was forming along the border with Honduras Many of the initial Contras were former members of the Somoza regime s National Guard unit and many were still loyal to Somoza who was living in exile in Honduras 65 In addition to the Contra units who continued to be loyal to Somoza the FSLN also began to face opposition from members of the ethnic minority groups that inhabited Nicaragua s remote Mosquito Coast region along the Caribbean Sea These groups were demanding a larger share of self determination and or autonomy but the FSLN refused to grant this and began using forced relocations and armed force in response to these grievances 65 Upon taking office in January 1981 Ronald Reagan cancelled the dispersal of economic aid to Nicaragua 66 and on 6 August 1981 he signed National Security Decision Directive number 7 which authorized the production and shipment of arms to the region but not their deployment 67 On 17 November 1981 President Reagan signed National Security Directive 17 authorizing covert support to anti Sandinista forces 66 An armed conflict soon arose adding to the destabilization of the region which had been unfolding through the Central American civil wars in El Salvador and Guatemala The Contras heavily backed by the CIA secretly opened a second front on Nicaragua s Atlantic coast and Costa Rican border citation needed With the civil war opening up cracks in the national revolutionary project the FSLN s military budget grew to more than half of the annual budget 65 The Servicio Militar Patriotico Patriotic Military Service a compulsory draft was also established 68 By 1982 Contra forces had begun carrying out assassinations of members of the Nicaraguan government and by 1983 the Contras had launched a major offensive and the CIA was helping them to plant mines in Nicaragua s harbors to prevent foreign weapons shipments from arriving 69 The 1987 Iran Contra affair placed the Reagan Administration again at the center of secret support for the Contras 1984 general election Edit Main article Nicaraguan general election 1984 The 1984 election took place on 4 November Of the 1 551 597 citizens registered in July 1 170 142 voted 75 41 The null votes were 6 of the total International observers declared the elections free and fair 70 despite the Reagan administration denouncing it as a Soviet style sham The national averages of valid votes for president were Daniel Ortega Sandinista National Liberation Front FSLN 66 97 Clemente Guido Democratic Conservative Party PCD 14 04 Virgilio Godoy Independent Liberal Party PLI 9 60 Mauricio Diaz Popular Social Christian Party PPSC 5 56 Allan Zambrana Nicaraguan Communist Party PCdeN 1 45 Domingo Sanchez Sancho Nicaraguan Socialist Party PSN 1 31 Isidro Tellez Marxist Leninist Popular Action Movement MAP ML 1 03 Esquipulas Edit The Esquipulas Peace Agreement was an initiative in the mid 1980s to settle the military conflicts that had plagued Central America for many years and in some cases notably Guatemala for decades It built upon groundwork laid by the Contadora Group from 1983 to 1985 The agreement was named for Esquipulas Guatemala where the initial meetings took place The US Congress lobbying efforts were helped by one of Capitol Hill s top lobbyists William C Chasey In May 1986 a summit meeting Esquipulas I took place attended by the five Central American presidents On 15 February 1987 Costa Rican President oscar Arias submitted a Peace Plan which evolved clarification needed from this meeting During 1986 and 1987 the Esquipulas Process was established in which the Central American heads of state agreed on economic cooperation and a framework for peaceful conflict resolution The Esquipulas II Accord emerged from this and was signed in Guatemala City by the five presidents on 7 August 1987 Esquipulas II defined a number of measures to promote national reconciliation an end to hostilities democratization free elections the termination of all assistance to irregular forces negotiations on arms controls and assistance to refugees It also laid the ground for international verification procedures and provided a timetable for implementation Sapoa Accords at March 23 1988 initiated the peace process in Nicaragua Name comes from the location town of Sapoa near Costa Rican border Sandinismo in 1988 had reached economical end point since Cold War 1985 1991 was coming to an end as Soviet Union was near the peak of Era of Stagnation limiting its support to Sandinistas This in turn limited Sandinista government options to continue the conflict to favourable end and forcing them to negotiation for peace The Accords was mediated by Joao Clemente Baena Soares at the time as Secretary General of the Organization of American States and then Archbishop of Managua Miguel Obando y Bravo 71 72 Since Nicaraguan conflict was one of the proxy war between Soviet Union and United States peace process management relied also on then Soviet ambassador Vaino Valjas mediation depending on the recent US Soviet agreements since US did not have any Ambassador assigned to Nicaragua from July 1 1987 till May 4 1988 73 74 72 75 UNO Edit Main article National Opposition Union Nicaraguan historian and leading social investigator Roberto J Cajina describes UNO as follows Since the very moment of inception under the political guidance and technical and financial support from the government of the US the existence of UNO was marked by grave structural deformations derived from its own nature In its conformation concurred the most diverse currents of the Nicaraguan political and ideological range from the liberal conservative traditionally anticommunist and pro US to marxist leninists from moscovian lineage openly declared supporters of class struggle and enemies of capitalism in its superior development stage 76 The constitution of the UNO Coalition for the 1990 General Elections was as follows 76 exact transcription and translation of the names of these political parties needed 3 Liberal factions PLI PLC and PALI 3 Conservative ANC PNC and APC 3 Social Christians PPSC PDCN and PAN 2 Social democrats PSD and MDN 2 Communists PSN pro Moscow and PC de Nicaragua pro Albania 1 Central American Unionist PIACSee also Edit Nicaragua portalCuban Revolution Dirty War Guatemalan Civil War Iran Contra affair Murals of revolutionary Nicaragua National Guard Nicaragua Nicaragua v United States Salvadoran Civil War Under Fire film United States embargo against NicaraguaReferences Edit a b Research Directorate Immigration and Refugee Board Canada 1 May 1989 Participation of Costa Rican government in arms smuggling for Sandinistas in 1979 and for Contras in mid 1980 s UNHCR Retrieved 4 December 2020 Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran Contra Affair 1995 Page 165 Page 271 Page 481 CIA Contra Crack Cocaine Controversy Retrieved 10 April 2015 Reagan Says Saudi Talked of Contra Aid tribunedigital chicagotribune Retrieved 10 April 2015 a b Saudi Arabia and the Reagan Doctrine Middle East Research and Information Project December 1988 Retrieved 10 April 2015 Understanding the Iran Contra Affairs the Iran Contra Affairs MCMANUS DOYLE 6 March 1987 Private Contra Funding of 32 Million Disclosed Leader Shows Secret Bank Data in Effort to Prove Rebels Did Not Get Money From Iran Arms Sales Los Angeles Times Retrieved 19 August 2019 The Contras Cocaine and Covert Operations Retrieved 10 April 2015 The Pinochet File A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability Page 255 a b c d e Understanding the Iran Contra Affairs www brown edu Retrieved 9 April 2017 IRAN CONTRA HEARINGS BRUNEI REGAINS 10 MILLION The New York Times 22 July 1987 Retrieved 5 December 2021 POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS The New York Times 2 May 1987 Retrieved 31 March 2023 Landslide The Unmaking of the President 1984 1988 Page 143 POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS The New York Times 2 May 1987 Retrieved 31 March 2023 Landslide The Unmaking of the President 1984 1988 Page 143 Landslide The Unmaking of the President 1984 1988 Page 143 a b Brown Jonathan C 2022 Omar Torrijos and the Sandinista Revolution The Latin Americanist 66 25 45 doi 10 1353 tla 2022 0003 S2CID 247623108 a b Sanchez Nateras Gerardo The Sandinista Revolution and the Limits of the Cold War in Latin America The Dilemma of Nonintervention During the Nicaraguan Crisis 1977 78 PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran Contra Affair 1995 Page 216 Page 485 The Soviet Union and Revolutionary Warfare Principles Practices and Retrieved 10 April 2015 a b Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran Contra Affair 1995 Page 27 a b c Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran Contra Affair 1995 Page 485 POLAND AND CHINA REPORTEDLY SENT ARMS TO CONTRAS The New York Times 2 May 1987 Retrieved 31 March 2023 Mexico s Support of the Sandinista Revolution Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo ECHIKSON WILLIAM 15 July 1982 France Warms Up to Nicaragua As US Fumes The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 29 July 2022 Our work in Nicaragua Swedish International Development Corporation Agency www sida se 2009 Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Sandinistas Find Economic Ally In Socialist Sweden philly archives Retrieved 10 April 2015 Bishop Adam 2 September 2009 With Them and Against Them Canada s Relations With Nicaragua 1979 1990 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Daniel Ortega Encyclopaedia Britannica 15th ed 1993 a b Lacina Bethany The PRIO Battle Deaths Dataset 1946 2008 Version 3 0 Documentation of Coding Decisions PDF International Peace Research Institute Oslo Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2013 Louis Proyect Nicaragua discusses among other things the reforms and the degree to which socialism was intended or achieved Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua State based conflict Peace efforts https www ucdp uu se country 93 Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua State based conflict In depth Background http www ucdp uu se gpdatabase gpcountry php id 117 amp regionSelect 4 Central Americas link is not working Taking Care of Business in Nicaragua Retrieved 10 April 2015 Baracco Luciano 2005 Nicaragua The Imagining of a Nation From Nineteenth Century Liberals to Twentieth Century Sandinistas New York NY Algora Publishing p 61 a b c d e Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua State based conflict In depth The Sandinista revolution http www ucdp uu se gpdatabase gpcountry php id 117 amp regionSelect 4 Central Americas link is not working Baracco Luciano 2005 Nicaragua The Imagining of a Nation From Nineteenth Century Liberals to Twentieth Century Sandinistas New York NY Algora Publishing p 66 Baracco Luciano 2005 Nicaragua The Imagining of a Nation From Nineteenth Century Liberals to Twentieth Century Sandinistas New York NY Algora Publishing p 67 Maria Dolores Ferrero Blanco La Nicaragua de los Somoza 1936 1979 Managua Instituto de Historia de Nicaragua y Centroamerica de la Universidad Centroamericana Huelva Universidad de Huelva 2012 P 132 a b c Washington Somoza and the Sandinistas Stage and Regime in US Policy toward Nicaragua 1969 1981 Author Morris H Morley Published August 2002 ISBN 9780521523356 pg 106 Maria Dolores Ferrero Blanco La Nicaragua de los Somoza 1936 1979 Managua Instituto de Historia de Nicaragua y Centroamerica de la Universidad Centroamericana Huelva Universidad de Huelva 2012 P 273 Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua State based conflict In depth Nicaragua under Sandinista rule http www ucdp uu se gpdatabase gpcountry php id 117 amp regionSelect 4 Central Americas link is not working evolution of demography in Nicaragua 1961 2003 Data FAOSTAT http faostat fao org faostat help copyright copyright e htm last updated 11 February 2005 SOLA MONSERRAT Roser Geografia y Estructura Economicas de Nicaragua Nicaragua s Geography and Economical Structure Universidad Centroamericana Managua Nicaragua 1989 Second Edition a b c Agrarian Productive Structure in Nicaragua SOLA MONSERRAT Roser 1989 Pag 69 and ss Louis Proyect Nicaragua about 4 5 of the way down Hanemann Ulrike Nicaragua s Literacy Campaign UNESCO Archived from the original DOC on 3 July 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2007 B Arrien Juan Literacy in Nicaragua PDF UNESCO Retrieved 1 August 2007 Background History Archived 22 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine of Nicaragua globalexchange org Archived 30 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine Report on Nicaragua REAGAN AND HERITAGE A Unique Partnership The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 29 January 2016 Arin Kubilay Yado 2013 Think Tanks the Brain Trusts of US Foreign Policy Wiesbaden VS Springer a b c L Melanie The Sandinista War on Human Rights The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 9 April 2017 Que faire si vous lisez le journal Le Monde Viktor Dedaj 2004 Russell George 17 October 1983 Nicaragua Nothing Will Stop This Revolution Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 11 April 2017 L Melanie The Sandinista War on Human Rights The Heritage Foundation Retrieved 11 April 2017 Farah Douglas 2 August 1987 Miskito Indians Forced to Flee Their Dreams of Returning to Nicaragua Fade Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2 December 2020 Kinzer Stephen 4 July 2006 Herty Lewites 66 Ex Sandinista Dies The New York Times Sandinista Anti Semitism and Its Apologists September 1986 Amnesty International 1989 Nicaragua The human rights records 1986 1989 Amnesty International Publications ISBN 9780939994502 Moore John Norton 1987 The Secret War in Central America University Publications of America p 143 ISBN 978 0890939611 Miranda Roger and Ratliff William 1993 The Civil War in Nicaragua Transaction p 193 ISBN 9781412819688 OAS Study Says Miskito Indians Suffered Abuse From Sandinistas The Washington Post Retrieved 21 July 2021 Annual Report 1992 1993 Inter American Commission on Human Rights 12 March 1993 Retrieved 30 March 2009 a b c d Uppsala Conflict Data Program Conflict Encyclopedia Nicaragua State based conflict In depth Contras FDN http www ucdp uu se gpdatabase gpcountry php id 117 amp regionSelect 4 Central Americas link is not working a b U S Department of Justice Appendix A Background on United States Funding of the Contras http www justice gov oig special 9712 appa htm University of Texas National Security Decision Directive number 7 http www reagan utexas edu archives reference Scanned 20NSDDS NSDD7 pdf Archived 4 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine LEY DEL SERVICIO MILITAR PATRIoTICO legislacion asamblea gob ni Retrieved 20 May 2018 McManus Doyle Toth Robert C 5 March 1985 Setback for Contras CIA Mining of Harbors a Fiasco Last in a series L A Times BBC ON THIS DAY 5 1984 Sandinistas claim election victory 5 November 1984 Retrieved 10 April 2015 Revista Envio Sapoa A New Benchmark a b Acuerdos de Sapoa 23 de marzo de 1988 Proxy wars in Nicaragua and Angola The Cold War 1972 1991 OCR A GCSE History Revision OCR A BBC Bitesize Toomas Alatalu Vaino Valjas eestlane kes alustas kulma soja lopetamist 28 March 2021 The INF Treaty and the Washington Summit 20 Years Later a b Paradoxes from an heterogeneous and fragile electoral Alliance CAJINA Roberto Pag 44 and ss Bibliography EditEmily L Andrews Active Marianismo Women s social and political action in Nicaraguan Christian base communities and the Sandinista revolution The Marianismo Ideal Grinnell College research project 1997 Retrieved November 2009 Enrique Bermudez with Michael Johns The Contras Valley Forge How I View the Nicaragua Crisis Policy Review magazine Summer 1988 David Close Salvador Marti Puig amp Shelley McConnell 2010 The Sandinistas and Nicaragua 1979 2009 NY Lynne Rienner Dodson Michael and Laura Nuzzi O Shaughnessy 1990 Nicaragua s Other Revolution Religious Faith and Political Struggle Chapel Hill N C University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4266 4 Head Michael amp Viglietti Brian 2012 Question 35 48 Nicaraguan Contra Mining Campaign Warship International LXIX 4 299 301 ISSN 0043 0374 Schmidli William Michael The Most Sophisticated Intervention We Have Seen The Carter Administration and the Nicaraguan Crisis 1978 1979 Diplomacy and Statecraft 2012 23 1 pp 66 86 Sierakowski Robert Sandinistas A Moral History University of Notre Dame Press 2019 Primary sources Edit Katherine Hoyt Memories of the 1979 Final Offensive Nicanet Retrieved November 2009 This is a first hand account from Matagalpa also contains some information on the general situation Has photograph showing considerable damage to Matagalpa News and Information Salvador Marti Puig Nicaragua La revolucion enredada Lirbos de la Catarata Madrid Oleg Ignatiev The Storm of Tiscapa in Borovik and Ignatiev The Agony of a Dictatorship Progress Publishers 1979 English translation 1980 Further reading EditMeiselas Susan Nicaragua June 1978 July 1979 Pantheon Books New York City 1981 First Edition Nicaragua A People Aflame GEO Volume 1 charter issue 1979 Teixera Ib Nicaragua A Norte de um pais Manchete Rio de Janeiro 7 July 1979 External links EditLibrary of Congress United States Country Study Nicaragua especially Chapter 1 which is by Marisabel Bras Retrieved November 2009 Louis Proyect Nicaragua Retrieved November 2009 Nicaragua Whose Side Are We On from the Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicaraguan Revolution amp oldid 1150031428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.