THE SANDINISTA REVOLUTION: Enier...
Transcript of THE SANDINISTA REVOLUTION: Enier...
THE SANDINISTA REVOLUTION:
THE EFFECTS OF THE UNITED STATES
FOREIGN POLICY
by
Enier Guanipa
B. A., University of Colorado, 1985
A thesis submitted to the
F acuity of the Graduate School of the
University of Colorado in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Arts
Department of Political Science
1988
This thesis for the Master of Arts degree by
Enier Guanipa
has been approved for the
Department of
Political Science
by
Stephen Thomas
iii
Guanipa, Enier (M.A. Political Science)
The Sandinista Revolution: the Effects of the United States Foreign Policy
Thesis directed by Associate Professor Lawrence Mosqueda
This thesis is a historical narrative of the revolutionary process in
Nicaragua. The purpose of this study is two-fold. First, it analyzes the
Nicaraguan revolutionary process, grounded in a desire of the Nicaraguans
to overthrow the Somoza regime established in 1936 with the help of United
States intervention. Second, it presents a critical analysis of United States
foreign pol icy from 1926 to 1988.
The study describes the efforts of the Sandnista goverment to
institute policy, economic reform and demonstrate how these efforts
enable the goverment to shape the direction of the revolutionary process in
the interests of the lower classes.
The various peace plans (Contadora, Arias, and Esquipulas I, II and
Ill) are also analyzed. The consistent United States pattern of thwarting
acceptance and implementation of any of these peace plans is shown.
The results of this study include the conclusions that the
revolutionary movement as a whole was not committed solely to the
overthrow of the Somoza regime. The movement also sought agrarian
reform, changes in social class structures, economic stability, and self
determination without outside intervention.
It is further concluded that the intervention of the United States
has often been more of a hindrance than a help to the development of the
IV
economy of the country and that such intervention has served the interests
of United States business instead of for the good of the Nicaraguan people.
The form and content of this abstract are approved. I recommend its
publication.
Faculty member in charge of thesis
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I. NICARAGUA'S HISTORY: AN OVERVIEW
Background Information • ••••• • •••••• • • • • · · · · · •
Power Struggles in the Republic • • • • · • • · · • • • • · • ·
Zelaya's Reforms ............................ Politics of Subordination ......................
3
4
6
8
Zelaya and Samoza Compared • • • • • • • . • • • . . • . . . . 9
Sui ld-up of Samozan Power • • • . • • • • . . • • . • • • • . . • I 0
Nicaraguan Political Practices • • • • • . . • . • • • • • • . . II
Controlling Dissident Formations ••••...• · • • • ·. • 12
Formation of New Classes •• • •·• •• •• ·. · • •.•.•... 14
The Final Crisis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
II. PROGRESSIVE STEPS IN THE REVOLUTION • • • • . • • • 24
Introduction . . . . • . . . . . • • . • • • • • • • • • . . . • . • . • • • • • 24
Organizing Revolutionary Groups • • • • • • • . • . . • • • • 25
The Insurrection . . . . . . . . . . • • . • . . . . . • . • . . . . . • . . 31
Ill. POLICIES OF THE REVOLUTION • • • • • • • . • . • • . • . • . 36
Land Reform . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
The Literacy Campaign . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . • 38
Mixed Economy . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Banking System · · ..... · · · ... · · . · ·. · · · · · · · · · · · 45
Infrastructure ·. • · · • · • •... · ••• • • • • · • · • • · • • • · • • · 46
Health Program • • · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 48
vi
CONTENTS (Continued)
IV. UNITED STATES INTERVENTION IN THE NICARGUAN
REVOLUTION . . . . . • . • . • . . . . . . • • . . . • . • . . . . • . • • . . 54
Background of United States Foreign Policy • . . . • • • 54
U.S. Intervention in Nicaragua • • • . . • • • . • • • . • • . . . 58
Carter
Reagan
...................................
................................... 58
59
Costs of the War . • • . • • • • • . • . • • • • • . . . . • • • • • . . . • . . 67
The Contras ......................... ~. . . . . . . . . 72
V. EFFORTS AT PEACE .. .. • .. .. • .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. . 81
Contadora . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Arias Agreement. • . • • . . • . • • • • . • • • • • • • • •.. . • . 87
Esquipu las ......................... ~ . . . . . . 89
VI. CONCLUSION • . . • • . • • • • . . • • • . • • • . • • . • • • • • . • . • • • 96
BIBLIOGRAPHY • • • . • . • • • • • • . . • • • • . • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • . • . . • • I 0 I
4.1
4.2
4.3
4.4
TABLES
Structure of Nicaraguan Foreign Trade .•..•••••..
U.S. Foreign Assistance to Honduras
U.S. Voting Record on Loans to Nicaragua
Counter Revolutionary Activities
62
64
70
76
CHAPTER I
NICARAGUA'S HISTORY: AN OVERVIEW
In order to understand the causes of the insurrection by the
Sandinistas in Nicaragua it is necessary to review the abuses of the Somoza
regime. The purpose of this chapter is to point out the constant repression
of the people and the stagnation of the economy because of the control of
the Somocistas. It explains the old regime's concept of class structure,
limited opportunities for participation in political processes, and the
inability of the masses to change policy by any other method than violence.
The regime of Somoza that was overthrown by the Sandinistas in
1979 was not merely a group of people with political power, now was it
simply a dictatorship with military control of the country. The Somoza
dictatorship was the central power of the country. The Somoza
dictatorship was the central power that controlled all the institutions
around which any state revolves--political, economic, financial,
transportation and education.
In essence, the Somoza family became the sole authority over all
activities in Nicaragua and held this authority for almost half a century.
However, it is unlikely that Somoza could have gained and retained such
widespread control over Nicaragua's institutions without economic and
military assistance from the United States. In 1939, three years after
Somoza, with United States assistance, murdered Sandino and siezed
control of Nicaragua. The United States provided the Somoza regime with
2
$2 million in credit and a group of military advisors to train a strong
national guard. This military and economic aid, it will be demonstrated in
this thesis, was a determining factor in keeping in power the most corrupt
dictatorship in the Western Hemisphere.
Anastasio Somoza was assassinated by Rigoberto Lopez Perez in
1956, and Anastasio's son, Luis, succeeded him. In 1967 a younger son,
Anastasio, Jr., assumed the presidency. He was overthrown by the
Sandinistas in 1979 and murdered in Asuncion, Paraguay in 1980 1•
To understand the establishment of the Somoza dynasty it is
necessary to sumarize the events that resulted in his establishment as the
ruler of Nicaragua. Augusto C. Sandino was not a political theorist but a
leader of guerrilla forces in an insurrection that lasted from 1927 to 1933.
These years of revolution were primarily directed against foreign
domination by foreign ownership. (i.e., the United States) and management
of Nicargua's total economy. Augusto Cesar Sandino was murdered in 1934
by the National Guard whose chief was Somoza Garcia.2
The bourgeoisie is identified as comprised of economic groups
that own the means of production and employ the labor forces through the
various activities of commerce, industry and finance. In colonial
economies or dependent economies the bourgeoisie has a level known as
the "comprador bourgeoisie." This highest level of the bourgeoisie acts as
an intermediary between the foreign capital and the local market. This
group works in close relationship with foreign companies and usually
opposes any movement or activity that would change the existing condition
of dependency upon foreign interests.
3
In underdeveloped countries there also exists the "national
bourgeoisie" which promotes the growth and development of the internal
market and is usually not tied to foreign monopolies or foreign interests.
This group must struggle against the power of foreign capital or conciliate
with them. The course of action depends upon which course will support
the local interests. In Nicaragua small business men, shop owners and
intellectuals found an accomodation within the Sandinista system and still
support the revolution. 3
Background Information
The Nicaraguan social structure is an outgrowth of the Spanish
colonization of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Until recently it
reflected the system of social privileges and class values established at
that time. The development of dependent capital in the sixteenth century
prepared the way for United States intervention in Nicaragua.4
The country has large lakes and rivers offering easy access to its
riches. Its position on the Pacific and Caribbean provides ties to the major
markets of the world. A small number of persons received large land
grants from the Spanish crown to form the original nucleus of a wealthy
upper class. By the beginning of the nineteenth century the country's
commercial life was controlled by a small group of Europeans living in
Central America. Thus, the social structure came to be characterized by
the domination. of native-born Spaniards and national elites over poor
Mestizos and the indigenous population. There also developed an embryonic
bourgeoisie of artisans, traders, and scribes who identified themselves as
distinct from the lower classes and whose interests were tied to the upper
class.S
4
Upper class army and Church officials were able to keep their
social and economic power within this traditional society and were also
able to use the political process to promote its own interests. On the other
hand, the rural population and the poor peasants remained at the bottom of
the social structure and had little voice in political matters. These people
became the backbone of the revolution, because by 1978 the agricultural
sector constituted 50.5 precent of the economically active population. The
service sector accounted for 31.8 percent and the industry accounted for
17.7 percent of the economically active population. The service sector
accounted for 31.8 percent and the industry accounted for 17.7 percent of
the enconomically active populationJ
Power Struggles in the Republic
Almost from the beginning of the republic in 1863, the struggle
for power was focused in two political parties: Conservative and Liberal.
The Conservative Party was in the hands of landowners and rich
commercial elites. Families from these classes were owners of coffee
haciendas and cattle. They conducted the major business of the nation and
represented the previous European aristocracy. Educated primarily in
foreign universities and with means to travel to other countries, the were
attracted to everything foreign. Their unconditional friendship with the
United States served to guarantee their economic interests. Of particular
importance was the interest of both Nicaragua and the United States in
building interoceanic canal through Nicaragua. The Brian-Chamorro
Treaty, signed in 1914 and ratified in 1916 gave the United States exclusive
rights, in perpetuity to build a canal in Nicaragua.8 The proposed canal
would bring prosperity to the country and help the Conservatives who did
not have military strength or popular backing to maintain themselves in
power.
5
Another foetor in the power struggles was the traditional role of
the Church in Nicaragua. Membership in the Catholic Church was almost
universal in Nicaragua and the Conservative Party has always been the
party of the Church. This tradition lost its impact only when liberal
leaders also began professing loyalty to the Church. A chief source of
wealth of the Church was the practice of the Conservative elite to
bequeath property to the priests or the Church at the death of the owner to
secure priestly interpositions on behalf of their souls.9
It was against these practices that the Liberal Party gave its
attention. The consitution of 1893 under Zelaya separated Church and
State and guaranteed freedom of religion and free secular education. The
Liberal Party favored free trade, modernization of the country's
infrastructure, appropriation of communal lands and the creation of o
mobile labor force. I 0
There were constant armed conflicts between the Conservatives
and Liberals that caused serious damage to the economy and prevented the
consolidation of the national bourgeoisie. It was these conflicts that
permitted a foreign adventurer, Williamn Walker, to declare himself
president of Nicaragua in 1856, and eventually led to United States
dominance in Nicaragua. The association of the Liberal Party with Walker
caused it to be discredited and his defeat was followed by 36 years of rule
by the Conservative Party. II
Other factors affecting the history and development of
Nicaragua included the following:
6
I) Beginning with the independence of Central America in 1821, Great
Britain exercised the preponderance of power in the seas and among the
foreign powers with regard to Central America. This influence reached the
point that Robert Charles Frederick was crowned Miskito King under the
protection of the British in 1825. The sudden death of Frederick in 1842
precipitated a period of anarchy and the British seizure of the port of San
Juan del Norte in 1848.12
In 1846, France was trying to complete the construction in
Nicragua of the Canal Napoleon de Nicaragua. Great Britian was
interested in maintaining control of the seas and considered construction of
a canal through Nicaragua. The acquisition of California and the gold rush
initiated United States propositions to Nicaragua for establishing a cheap
overland route from the Atlantic to the Pacific.l3 Finally, the United
States challenged the dominance of Great Britain and the clayton Bulwar
Treaty of 1850 provided that neither nation would control or fortify any
canal through Nicaragua.l4
Zelaya's Reforms
The social structure of production and the preparation for
capitialism took place in the last quarter of the nineteenth century.
Between 1870 and 1890 the Nicaraguan government ordered the sale of lands
not used by native communities and in 1881 ordered the recruitment of
labor. These measures gave legal support for the penetration of outside
corporations in the field of agricultural production.
7
General Jose Santos Zelaya became the President of Nicaragua
by popular revolt against Conservative regime. This Liberal leader owed
his ideas on politics and economics to education and conviction. The
Zelaya constitution of 1893 introduced reforms to public and private
institutions to modernize the social, political and economic structure. The
constitution promoted incorporation of large holdings into coffee
production by confiscating ecclesiastical property. Supported by the
exportation of coffee, major improvements were planned for the expansion
of the railways and new steamship lines. IS
However, Zelaya found the treasury empty as most incoming
executives of Nicaragua did and resorted to contradictory measures. He
opened the doors to foreign investment and have broad concessions for
mining and the exploitation of lumber and bananas. By granting leases to
foreign investors, Zelaya facilitated the domination of the economy by
North American corporations. Zelaya then decreed taxes on foreign
trade. When Americans refused to pay these taxes, Zelaya's troops
resorted to terrorization and conflict with the United States who furnished
air to anti-Zelaya rebels.l6
Although Zelaya's reforms benefited the rising coffee industry he
practiced other methods that were repressive. His conservative opponents
were thrown into prison and their properties were confiscated. He ran the
government operations as if they were private business deals and handed
out concessions to his friends. Many loans and obi igations to foreigners
were irresponsible.
In 1909, Zelaya was convinced that he could not succeed with the
United States so openly opposed to him. He resigned from the presidency
after a stern note of denunciation from the United States Secretary of
State Knox.
8
The Conservatives again regained political power but were
subordinates of the United States. The Conservatives controlled the state
unti I 1926 but the processes of the state were collapsing. Foreign debt
reached such high proportions that the United States took over the Customs
Office, the banks, and the issuing of money. In this way the United States
could direct the country's income into paying off the debt.
In 1916 Emiliano Chamorro led a coup d'etat that became known
as the Constitutional War. The Liberal Army was composed of both
bourgeoisie and worker-peasants groups. This led, in turn, to a new class
consciousness and they drew leaders from among the mine workers.
By 1927, a special presidential envoy, Henry L. Stimson, was sent
from Washington to impose terms. Included in these terms was the handing
over of all arms to the United States Marines until the establishment of the
National Guard under the supervision of United States officers. The pact
was signed by the leaders of the Constitutional War except the 31-year-old
Augusto Cesar Sandino.IB
Politics of Subordination
The United States stated that it had three basic objectives in
creating the National Guard: I) to replace the army and police with a well
disciplines, adequately trained and equipped force; 2} to establish internal
order and suppress the constant uprising against the government; and 3} to
eventually change Nicaragua's armed forces into a non-political force to
guarantee constitutional order. The National Guard was corrupted by the
first national director, Anastasio Somoza Garcia, who was hand picked by
United State intervention and who used the Guard to prepetuate himself
and his family in unlimited power.l9
9
The revolutionary outcome of this situation was the organization
of an army by Sandino. Under his leadership guerrilla warfare continued
for the purpose of expelling the United States Marines. His program was
directed toward national self-determination, non-intervention by the
United States, and restoration of the constitution through popular vote, and
land reforms. The war was limited to the countryside with a small and
weak organization of the working class. The middle class was weary of war
and there were massacres of the peasant population. These limitations
allowed the United States to isolate Sandino's army and build up the
National Guard.
Zelaya and Somoza Compared
Anastasio Somoza Garcia seized power in 1936 and tried to use
the popular slogan "Zelaya the Reformer and Somoza the Peacemaker" to
link his party to Zelaya but there were many differences between the two
presidents.
Zelaya Sornoza
Rise to power by popular revolt
Liberal by education and
conviction
Assassination of Sandino and
coup d'etat against his uncle,
Sacasa
Undefined liberal principles,
chosen by U.S. to end the
Sandi no Affair
Policies conflicted with
U.S. interests
10
Policies could not control the
foreign economic interests
that conflicted with interests
of Nicaraguan people20
Build-up of Somozan Power
Somoza and his supporters built up his armed forces through the
Lend Lease Programs of the United States, and the National Guard was
essential to consolidate his power. The National Guard became a force of
occupation within its own country, replacing the United States Marines.
The Guard was used to maintain control over any rivals in the army or
police and to eliminate them. Gradually power was expanded to control
internal revenue and the national railroad, then to communication, postal
and immigration services. Military control was established over imports of
guns and ammunition. Eventually, even the National Sanitation Service was
put under military control. 22
An astute politician, Somoza transformed civilian institutions to
limit the political influence of the military. They were also used to gain
support of various sections of society or to undermine the strength of any
independent organization. These civilian institutions were manipulated to
give the illusion of a constitutional democracy to a dynasty that became
more and more oppressive. 22
For the elite ruling classes, the government of Somoza created
ideal conditions for accumulating wealth but they were also the victims of
the sole power of Somoza. Suppressing workers and breaking of strikes
translated into a high rate of profit. Loyalty from political parties gained
them seats in Congress, government posts, independent commercial
II
interests, and independent banking interests. On the other hand, the
Somoza family used the loans made by the State and the United States to
finance their own enterprises. Thus, they always dictated the economy and
represented competition in every field too strong for other businesses to
compete or survive.23
The death of Anastasio Somoza in 1956 did not lessen the power
of the regime. One factor in strengthening the dynasty was the American
Ambassador, Thomas E. Whelan's declaration that his government would
recognize only Luis Somoza (elder son of Anastasio Somoza and then·
President of the Nicaragua Senate) as the immediate successor.24
Nicaraguan Political Practices
In Nicaragua, mass participation in political life, especially for
changing conditions of society, was never encouraged. A poorly educated
population under a structure of prolonged oppression and exploitation
allowed the preservation of remannants of the old system committed
primarily to preserving the interests of the wealthy. The masses of
Nicaragua sensed that decision making always remained in the hands of the
privileged and learned that elections only served to express dissatisfaction
with the system. Political participation by the masses found its expression
in violence. By controlling the electoral process, the party in office could
getthe most votes. Fraud and vote buying was common and was used for
re-election, thus, corruption made revolution the only way to remove a
power structure. 25
During the pre-revolutionary period Nicaragua was a democracy
in name only regardless of provisions for free elections. In 1947 Somoza
staged a coup d'etat only 27 days after the election of Leonardo Arguello
12
end sent the newly-elected president into exile. The new dictator adopted
c new constitution to legalize his term in office.26
One characteristic of the Somozcs wcs that they never hod c
problem with maintaining their power because of the constitution. When
they locked popularity, they managed to find constitutional clternctives for
political expression through others. Their relationships with puppet interim
presidents is one type of example. For instance, in 1966, Rene Shick (c very
popular, but mcnipulcted president) died of c heart cttck two days after
Somozc Debcyle wcs announced cs c ccndidcte.27
Although they were disenchanted with the system end widespread
expectations of freud, leaders of the opposition mode political
arrangements with the administration. An example is the "Pccto de los
Generales" mode between the Notional Liberal Party (the administration)
end Emilicno Chcmorro, chief of the Conservative Party. It wcs agreed
that there would be no foreign supervision of the coming notional elections
end that the defected party would be guaranteed one-third of the sects in
the new cssembly.28 The cctucl result wcs that the Notional Liberal
majority approved c riew constitution that gave c few liberal provisions
such cs women's suffercge but extended the president's term from four to
six years; gave the president power to decree lows related to the Notional
Guard without consulting Congress. Further, it gave Somozc absolute
power over the State end the military the ability to control the electoral
end legislative mcchinery.29
Controlling Dissident Formations
It wcs important to the Somozcs to extend their power beyond
the limits of mere political competition. After the assassination of
13
Sandino, Somoza organized and mobilized a large military apparatus to
suppress any political contender. However, it was imperative for Somoza
to have opposition to run against during elections.
In 1944, Somoza collaborated with the Nicaraguan Socialist Party
and sponsored legislation through Congress to create a Labor Code that
theoretically met the most urgent demands of workers. With the support of
the Nicaraguan Socialist Party, Somoza got a huge vote in the elections.
Just a few months later he created conditions to destroy the emerging
party, and after 1945 any militancy from Labor groups met unmerciful
repression. The Labor Code was never implemented. 3D
In spite of United States support of Somoza's dictatorship, many
liberals abandoned him and new organization emerged within the old
tranditional parties. Massive mobilization of liberals against Somoza
during the 1940's began.
The Independent Liberal Party led the national opposition after
splitting from the Nationalist Liberal Party in 1944. The Independent
Liberal Party (PLI) participated in the national elections of 1947 by
combining forces with a part that had lost prestige and influence with the
masses. Their candidate, Enoc Aguado Farfan, lost the election, but the
PLI was active in mobilizing all national sectors-- including workers,
students and peasants. Sectors of the working class had their own
organization but they were recruited by the PLI. After 1973 it was said
that the party had been inflitrated by Communism. The party refused to
compromise with Somoza when the Sandinista Front was fighting the
revolution. The PLI claimed its principles were anti-imperialism, auto
determination and non-intervention.31
14
In 1957 the Social Christian Party broke from the Genuine
Conservative Party. A solid block of opposition was formed with the PLI
and the Nicaraguan Socialist Party. The Social Christian Party was formed
by young Catholic intellectuals under the leadership o Pedro Joaquin
Chamorro Cardenal. They had been inspired by a papal encyclical (Pio XII),
by lay Catholic humanism and Christian democratic ideas from Europe.
Chamorro Cardenal kept anti-communist prejudices and through his paper,
La Prensa, he maintained debates with leftist groups and sectors of
organized labor.32 During the seventies, Chamorro founded the
Democratic Union of Liberation and made an alliance with the Socialist
Party and the Independent Confederation of Workers.
Formation of New Classes
After World War II the economy of Nicaragua changed with the
exporting of agricultural products. Cotton production increased and the
export of coffee and meat helped to develop the modernization of the
economy. The economic changes also resulted in social changes.
Agricultural lands passed into the hands of the most privileged and
produced an imbalance when rural workers migrated to the cities,
especially to Managua. These people became the target of economic
exploitation as work expanded in industry and commerce and in the State
bureaucracy. The economic and social development of the wage-earner
class took place so rapidly that some believe it was intentionally created.
There also developed an emerging capitalist class of cotton
plantation owners. Both the wage-earners and the cotton plantation owners
were dependent on the state for technical and financial assistance. This
dependence strengthened the political dominance of the Somozas and
legtimated the dictatorship. 33
IS
In the face of the strong political legitimation of the regime, the
struggle for power of the traditional political parties continued. They were
able to maintain their economic independence from the state during the
1950's by the production, internal sale and exportation of coffee and
cotton. After the Cuban Revolution in the 1960's the United States
introduced economic strategies designed to avoid the propagation of the
Cuban example. Part of this strategy was the "Alliance for Progress" at
the continental level and the "Central American Common Market" (CACM)
at the regional level. These measures were accompanied by agrarian
reform and distribution of income.
Somoza's reform amounted to a colonization plan that would
pacify the peasant by reducing the pressure on land forming part of export
production. About 16,500 families received titles to agricultural land and
many others were settled in agrarian colonies, mostly on the Atlantic
Coast~34
The Alliance for Progress was not successful because the reforms
did not remove the power held by the dominant classes. The government
continued to rotate around the axis of the dynasty, the latifundists and in
industrial financiers. The Common Market also only opened the door to the
establishment of multinational corporations. By taking advantage of free
commerce and low customs duties these multinational corporations were
able to monopolize industry. In addition, they absorbed industries that had
already been established--Aceitera Corona became United Brands, Galletas
Crista! became Nabisco, Matasa was acquired by US Steel, and Industria
Ceramica South America was controlled by American Standard. These
16
powerful corporations were able to accomplish a degree of industrialization
and modernizaton in Nicaragua. Unfortunately, the state bureaucracy and
agrarian exports grew on a parallel with the industrial and this gave
Somoza control over its development. 35
For foreign corporations, the Common Market was simply a way
of creating new investment opportunities; for the ruling class, the
Common Market meant the indefinite postponement of domestic reforms • .
The collapse of the Common Market in 1970 was the logical outcome of
these unresolved contradictions. 36
The Conservative Party was another victim of the consolidation
of power by the Somozas. Because it was unable to gain control through
elections, rebellions, or coup d'etas. The Conservative Party was forced
into financial dependence of the state, and a pact was made between the
Conservative leader F err-lando Aguero and Anastasio Somoza Debayle. 37
However, the disenchanted people were pushed by a desire for personal and
political freedom by expanding control and increasing concentration of
wealth of the Somozas.
New organizations were formed that were independent of the
traditional political parties. There was a weakening of the Liberal-
Conservative conflict in the 1960's. This created a political vacuum that
was lated filled by fhe Frente Sandinista de Liberacion Nacional. Because
they were politically isolated, the Sandinistas were accumulating
experience. It was a time for them to study and analyze the work of
revolutionary theorists. They could plan practical actions and examine the
past failures.
17
The middle classes of Nicaragua were not taking up the void and
filing the vacuum left by the traditional political parties because they did
not recognize the impending crisis. They did not see the necessity of their
active participation to make a predominant middle class. By this failure,
they allowed the contradictions of social and economic structure of the
society to reach irreversible conditions without some kind of revolt. The
crisis for the dictatorship made it possible for the Sandinistas to fill the
vacuum.38
The Final Crisis
The failure of the Central American Common Market brought on
economic crisis that Somoza was unable to resolve. The decline in
economic development and private investment produced unemployment,
and then the earthquake of 1972 destroyed a large part of the capital,
Managua, and thousands of citizens lost their lives or were dislocated.
However, the destruction created new opportunities for investment and
employment to replace everything that had been destroyed. But Somoza
increased his personal fortune by organizing his own bank, insurance
company, financial institution and construction firms. This created
conflict between Somoza and the traditional bourgeoisie because they had
been excluded from opportunities created by the earthquake.
There were other factors that contributed to the rising tide of
indignation and dissatisfaction of the people. By smuggling and evading
taxes imposed on other sectors, the Samozas were able to realize even
further profits. Somoza permitted the National Guard to plunder and loot
the commercial sections of Managua or to sell international relief
materials. By using the control of government to distribute international
18
relief funds through the political party of the majority, recipients had to
' comply with arbitrary rules to qualify for aid. Ignoring the desperate needs
of the people, Somoza and his allies channeled much fo the international
aid funds into their own pockets.
To finance reconstruction after the earthquake, debts were
contracted with other countries, international institutions and private
banks. In 1972 the government received over $120 million and in 1973 this
figure doubled. Again in 1974 over $185 million was borrowed. This rapidly
accelerating debt (up to $800 million in 1977) was administered by the
inefficient and dishonest banks of Somoza. Very few of the designated
reconstruction projects are known to have received any of this aid. Instead
the Somozas increased their fortunes and their allies became rich while
foreigners got large financial shares and commissions. 39
Another factor leading to the final crisis was the gradual decline
of the traditional support of the Church for the Somozas and the ultimate
participation of the clergy in active revolutionary armed struggle in a just
war.
Some of the events that precipitated this situation were related
to events after the earthquake of 1972. In 1973, Somoza offered the Bishop
of Managua, Miguel Obando y Bravo, $8 million to reconstruct the
cathedral if the Bishop would appear publicly at Somoza's side. When a
mass was held in the Central Plaza (now known as Plaza de Ia Revolucion)
to commemorate the earthquake, Somoza attended so that he could be
photographed with the people and improve his popularity. Instead, the
parishioners chose this moment to demonstrate and Somoza was infuriated
with the Church. Through his paper, Novedades, Somoza asked the
Archbishop to define his position in relation to the revolution. The
19
response of the Church described the situation as "institutional violence."
By January 1978, three groups could be identified within the Church:
I) a small group of Somoza supporters
2) a non-violent group represented by Bravo who were interested
in mediation with Somoza and afraid of a Sandinista victory.
3) a Christian Based Community group working actively for
Sandinista triumph.
The turning point for the Church was the assassination of the
editor of La Prensa, Joaquin Chamorro Cardenal, on February 8, 1978. The
bishops published a pastoral letter which accepted the armed struggle based
on the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas who favored a just war. Some
priests began to participate in revolutionary duties and were ki lied in
action.40
The Sandinists National Liberation Front had emerged from
isolation to become the accepted organization of choice to lead the popular
sectors. Its political program for a post-Somoza government received
broad and enthusiastic support.
The United States pol icy, announced by President Carter,
regarding human rights violations permitted the denunciation of Latin
America's worst human rights offenders-- Chile, Argentina, Paraguay,
Haiti, El Salvador and Nicaragua. This new policy contributed to the final
crisis and made the extreme oppression of the people visible.41
As the participation of the masses increased, the whole structure
of Somozas power was threatened. The whole system of corruption,
repression and exploitation could not fall faster, in spite of its many
weaknesses, because there was no alternative apparatus to replace it. With
the fall of the dictatorship there was a need to reconstruct State
20
institutions. The failure of the national bourgeoisie and Washington to find
a formula of power to replace rule by the masses would mean the loss of
control of the national economy.
NOTES - CHAPTER I
1 Newsweek, September 29, 1980; Ignacio Briones Torres, "Angustia
y esperanza de Nicaragua," Combate 3 (July-August 1961): 44-50.
2sergio Ramirez, lntroduccion al pensamiento Sandinista
(Managua: Coleccion El Chipote, 1981), p. 27.
3 Jorge Detrinidad Martinez, Diccianasio politico-filosofico
popular (Managua: Educiones Monimbo, 1980), p. 14.
4Thomas W. Walker, Nicaragua: The Land of Sandino (Colorado:
Westview Press, 1981), pp. 47-62.
5Ben G. Burnett and Kenneth F. Johnson, Political Forces in Latin
America (Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1968), pp. 57-59.
6Thomas Walker, op. cit., p. 48.
7 Carmen Deere and Peter Marchetti, "Worker-Peasant Alliance in
the First Year of the Nicaraguan Agrarian Reform," Latin American
Perspectives VIII (Spring, 1981): 41.
8Dana G. Munro, Five Republics of Central America: Their
Political and Economic Development and Their Relations with the United
States (New York: Oxford University Press, 1918), p. 25.
9Ephraim George Squier, Nicaragua its People (New York: Harper
and Bros., 1960), pp. 657-679.
IOEdelberto Torres Rivas, "Sintesis Historica del Proceso
Politico," in Edelberto Torres Rivas, et al., Centroamerica: Hoy (Mexico:
Siglo XXI, 1975), p. 123.
11 Richard Millett, Guardians of the Dynasty (New York: Orbis
Books, 1977), p. 19.
12La Mosguitia en Ia revolucion (Managua: Centro de
lnvestigationn y Estudios de Ia Reforma Agraria, 1981), p. 38.
13Ephriam George Squier, op. cit., p. 380.
22
14Robert Naylor, "The BritishRole in Central America Prior to
the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850," Hispanic American Historical Review
40 (August 1960): pp. 361-382.
15Mosguitia en Ia Revolucion (Managua: CIERA, 1981), pp. 42-43.
I6Harold Norman Denny, Dollars for Bullets: The Story of
American Rule in Nicaragua (New York: Dial, 1929), pp. 64-80.
17Rodolfo Puiggross, "Discurso en Ia jornada de solidaridad con el
pueblo de Nicaragua," Suplemento en Gaceta Saninista 6/7 (December 1975
and January 1976): I, p. 2.
18George Black, Triumph of the People: The Sandinista
Revolution in Nicaragua (London: Zed Press, 1981), p. 13-17.
19Richard Millett, op. cit., pp. 47-53.
20Richard Millett, op. cit., p. 20.
21 1bid., p. 251.
22carlos Perez Bermudez and Onofre Guevara Lopez, t!_
movimiento obrero en Nicaragua (Managua: Ediciones Davila Bolanos, 1981)
p. 113.
23NACLA: Report on the Americas, February 1976, pp. 10-12.
24Richard Millett, op. cit. , p. 231.
25Maj. Edwin N. McClellan, "Supervising Nicaraguan Electi.ons,
1928," U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Vol. LIX (January, 1933).
26Eduardo Crawley, Dictators Neve Die (London: C. Hurst and
Company, 1979), pp. 101-114.
23
27Roberto Gutierrez Silva, "Revelaciones intimas de Ia mediacion
politico de 1950 entre Chamorro y Somoza," Revista Conservadora VII
(September 1963): 13-77.
28Britannico, Book of the Year 1951, p. 507.
29George Black, op. cit., p. 29.
3°Fausto Amador, "Rising Opposition to Somoza Dictatorship,"
Intercontinental Press, 28 November 1977, p. 1314.
31 Britannica, Book of the Year 1948, pp. 532-33.
32 Jesus Miguel Blandon, Entre Sandino y Fonseca Amador
(Managua: lmpresiones y Troqueles S.A., 1980), p. 55.
33Epica Task Force, Nicaragua: A People's Revolution,
(Washington D.C., 1980), pp. 3-6.
34Diona Deere and Peter Marchetti, op, cit., 0. 46.
35Gaceta Sandinista 8-9 (February-March 1976), pp. 16-17.
36susanne Jones, "The Roll of the United States in Shaping the
Central American Common Market: A Case STudy in the Politics of
Foreign Aid." Berkeley (Mimeo n.p.), 1972, p. 101.
37Epica Task Force, op. cit., p. 5.
38Ibid., p. 4.
39Francisco Lainez, Terremoto '72: elites y pueblo (Managua:
Editorial Union, 1977), pp. 136-203.
40Michoel Dodson and Tommie Sue Montgomery, "La Iglesia en Ia
revolucion Nicaraguense," Nicaracua 2 (April-June 1981), pp. 145-149.
41 Thomas W. Walker, ed., Nicaragua in Revolution (New York:
Praeger Publishers, 1979), p. 63.
CHAPTER II
PROGRESSIVE STEPS IN THE REVOLUTION
Introduction
In this chapter some aspects of the Nicaraguan revolutionary
process will be discussed and ideological perspectives assessed. Also, the
development of the armed struggle led by the Sandinistas from 1961 to 1979
will be examined.
After the departure of the U.S. Marines in 1933 the Sandinista
I ebellion shifted to political tactics. But the assassination of Sandi no by
the National Guard in 1934 altered conditions and destroyed the political as
well as the military strength of the movement. The death of the Sandinista ('
leaders and the exile of the guerilla fighters marked the decline of
revolutionary activity.
Without leadership and with dispersion of those who were active
in the revolutionary movements that began in 1926, it is important to
examine factors that contributed to the prolonged period of revolutionary
activities. There were factors of internal weaknesses in Nicaragua as well
as some international conditions that affected the Sandino Revolution.
Among the weaknesses of the Sandino revolution we c;:an see that
there were these apparent flaws:
I. failure to prepare effective leaders to replace Sandino;
2. failure to coordinate political and military procedure;
3. weakness of the working class and poor organization
caused by economic conditions;
25
4. failure of the Nicaraguan people to understand the need
for political reform after military success.
International conditions at that time included:
1. weakness of world socialism (it existed only in Russia);
2. existence and challenges of Fascism;
3. prestige gained by the U.S. through its fight against Fascism 1•
The resistance movement declined but never disappeared. There
was a period of prolonged political strategy, accumulation of human and
material forces, and both national and international strategy. In 1956
Anastasio Somoza Garcia was assassinated by Rigoberto Lopez Perez. This
action destroyed the myth that the dictatorship was indestructible. It
helped to show the masses that it was possible to respond to violence by
violence and put an end to the bourgeois opposition. The event marked a
renewal of popular activity and led to the eventual creation of the
Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN).2
Initially, the people of Nicaragua began to break away from
historical practices in accepting the coalition of the political parties and
made possible the acceptance of the vanguard organizational activities of
the FSLN. The next step before the insurrection itself was the
development of amassing political and military power within the country
and also outside the country. The process also included plans to consolidate
revolutionary organizatons into a single popular front to establish governing
mechanism following the eventual overthrow of the dictatorship.
Organizing Revolutionary Groups
In the early stages of the revolutionary movement, the
traditional political parties struggled to remove Somoza. They had failed
26
in attempts at armed revolt and Somoza had gained favorable arrangements
through his various pacts with political parties.
The struggle against the dictatorship gained visibility in 1959
when many demonstrating university students were killed and injured. As a
result, Marxist oriented groups began to study political theory and coupled
it with the Sandinista's past experiences. Most of the students in these
groups became part of the organized efforts of the Nicaraguan Patriotic
Youth which reached into important sectors of the workers and students,
and led to the founding in 1962 of the Revolutionary Student Front. When
the FSLN suffered military defeats in 1963, collaboration between the
Revolutionary Student Front and the Popular Civilian Committees helped
to build support for the armed sector of the struggle. This was through an
effort to establish a semi-legal network that was clandestine because there
was no extisting political operation adequate to support the armed forces
of revolution.3
Opposition to the Revolutionary Youth Front took at least two
strong steps: I) long lists of names of both professionals and students who
were anti-Somoza were sent to the American Embassy (to be anti-Somoza
was tantamount to being a communist), and 2) the Catholic University was
established in Managua and support by Somoza to control revolutionary
activities of students. The result was that the National Youth Front and
Nicaraguan Youth Front were dissolved.4.
Street demonstrations were organized to protest the high cost of
living, poor health and housing conditions and other social problems. The
organization and participation of the people was a critical factor for future
confrontations with the government. It was essential to the mobilization of
workers, peasants, students, intellectuals and others within the population.
27
During 1960 and 1961 the FSLN was organized and its leaders
defined its purpose as the overthrow of Somoza's dictatorship and the
destructions of the bureaucracy-- the military and economic structures-
that maintained the power of the dynasty.5 Between 1960 and 1967 progress
was made by guerrilla actions, but in 1967 the movement emerged with the
support of the peasants. In a central region of Nicaragua, at Pancasan, the
guerrillas suffered a military defeat against Somoza's National Guard and
were forced to retreat. However, Pancasan was important because of the
significant revolutionary ties with the peasants and the beginning of many
of them joining the ranks of the FSLN.6
From the time of Sandino in the 1920's- 1930's, no single
organization had pointed the way to successful overthrow of the Somozan
dynasty until the acceptance of the FSLN. The presence of a revolutionary
vanguard in the mountains and the cities had a marked impact both
nationally and internationally. The ultimate goal was not the changing of
the men in power, but the overthrow and removal of the exploiting classes
so that those who had been exploited for such a long duration could rule.
Several events marked the development of the struggle that brought the
Sandinistas into the role of the vanguard.
One of these situations was the establishment of a guerrilla front
in the mountains of Zinica in 1969. The composition of the guerrilla army
was not different from the one at Pancasan. Now the guerrilla army was
almost exclusively made up of peasants who knew the terrain and were
supported by the peasant population. Although it did not succeed militarily
at Zinica, the situation marked the adoption of the strategy of a prolonged
popular war in the mountainsJ
28
On December 27, 1974, a FSLN unit entered the house of Jose
Maria Castillo Quant where a party was held in honor of American
Ambassador Turner Shelton. After several of Somoza's closest associates
were held, the government gave in to the demands of the FSLN: freedom
for thirteen Sandinistas held in Somoza's jails, one million dollars and
transmission of a 12,000 word communique, explaining to the people the
terms of this action.a
There was a continuing development of the ideology of the FSLN
among the urban and rural working class and students. The revolutionary
forces formed study groups and even in difficult guerrilla situations,
printed and distributed newsletters and periodic literature.9
An active international campaign was organized in support of the
Sandinistas through various human rights and solidarity committees
organized in Europe, Latin America and the United States. This world-wide
campaign drew respect for the revolutionary movement and ended the
international isolation of the movement. The dictatorship, on the other
hand, grew more and more isolated internationally.
During this stage of the struggle, the FSLN intended to establish
a government that would guarantee national independence and the
continuation of an anti-imperialist and anti-reactionary struggle. From the
Sandinista point of view, a popular democratic government was to be a true
people's government representing all sectors of the Nicaraguan society. It
was determined not to reform the system of exploitation but to guarantee a
freedom from foreign and bourgeois domination that would continue after
the Somoza dynasty was overthrown. I 0
The concept was not only the removal of the Somoza dynasty but
the destruction of the system it represented and a rebuilding by:
29
I. establishment of a Revolutionary People's Government;
2. immediate nationalization of the finances of the wealth of the
Somozas and of the financial sector;
3. state intervention in agricultural production;
4. national sovereignty without political or economic domination;
5. developing national industry and peasant participation in their
own interests;
6. creating social and cultural changes, both rural and urban,
that favored the impoverished;
7. maintaining independence internationally and supporting world
revolutionary causes;
8. organizing and mobilizing the working class and peasants to
train them in democratic processes;
9. replace the National Guard with a workers' and peasants'
army;
I 0. control of the banks, fighting high living costs and
unemployment, increase
wages, nationalize foreign monopolies. II
The Sandinista process reached its most active stage between
1974 and 1978 --that was preparation for insurrection and civil war. The
steps leading to this were the development of the revolutionary vanguard,
organization and alliance of the working class and the peasantry with the
strength of the popular army in the mountains and cities.
To ensure its success the Front worked in conjuction with other
organizations: political, trade unions, issue-oriented groups, military and
paramilitary. There was an organized and active campaign of creative
30
Sandinista agitation and propaganda taken to the masses with political
slogans. They built a military infrastructure that made possible the
mobilization, organization and preparation of commando training,
transportation of arms and supplies, manufacture of bombs, incendiaries,
intelligence, safe-houses, and direct and indirect underground
communications. A solid offensive to break and take control of the
defensive positions of the enemy was developed as well as a plan for
organized retreat to avoid disbanding or disorderly withdrawals.12
·The support of the masses was important and active as they
fought against the military elite and informers. The people used automatic
rifles and homemade bombs and even made cannons and mortars using a
lathe shop for arms repair .13
Another activity to strengthen Sandinista unity and to ensure
success of the revolution was inflitration into the National Guard and other
agencies of the pro-Somoza government. The purpose was to win the
sympathy of as many junior officers as possible, of some senior officers,
and to increase the antagonisms that already existed between junior and
senior officers.
Some the of. the conditions favorable to the objectives of the
revolution were the moral and political weakness of the regime, the
discrediting of the Somoza regime both inside and outside the country,
recognition internationally of the regime's human rights violations.
As the tolerance of power shifted and the regime became
progessively weaker, the revolutionary leaders made some bold demands,
such as:
31
I. elimination of the Black Code: a Law of Censorship that
closed ratio stations, levied fines and used other methods of repressing on
the media; 14
2. freeing of political prisoners;
3. explaining the disappearance of peasants. IS
It was in this atmosphere that Pedro Joaquin Chamorro was shot
on his way to work in downtown Managua in January of 1978. Fifty
thousand poured into the capital to attend his funeral. Rioting followed the
funeral and more than a dozen Somoza family businesses were burned and
five people were killed. The official investigation produced four gunmen
and five prominent Somocistas were implicated. Among them was the
manager of a blood plasma export company that Chamorro was attacking in
his newspaper, La Prensa. The death of Chamorro released the bitterness
that had been boiling for many years and shook the economic and political
structures of the Somocismo.l.6
The Insurrection
The people had become aware of the fact that violence appeared
to be the only means of overthrowing the tyranny and there followed
generalized activities in many forms: political strikes, popular local
uprisings, armed struggle within the cities, and finally, a general strike.
The general strike was an attempt of the non-Somocista bourgeoisie to
demobilize the workers and prevent their participation in revolutionary
actions. Many employers tried to dissuade the workers from leaving their
homes and taking to the streets. The purpose was to encourage peaceful
resistance with the coalition of a Broad Opposition Front, Frente Amplio
Opositor (F AO). All the organizations of the bourgeois democratic
32
• opposition joined the FAO and hoped that the FSLN would also join. The
agenda for F AO's negotiatons were to require the Somoza family to leave
the country; to form a national government; to implement a sixteen-point
program that included agrarian reform, release of political prisoners, and
educational improvements.l7
The F AO was really the effort of a group of bourgeois
oppositionists, who tried to put themselves forward to find a solution
through compromise with the United States and, by negotiations with the
Somocitas. The ouster of Somoza would leave intact the apparatus of
repression and exploitation used by the dictatorial regime. For instance,
the National Guard would be reorganized by a Technical Council named and
chosen from among top officers recognized for good conduct and
discipline. Thus, the FAO represented interests that would function and
thrive like the old order and the structure for Somozism without Somoza. 16
Until the middle of 1977 the political forces against Somoza were
divided, but by 1978 the forced against Somoza were united. The Movement
of Popular United (MPU) was an organization that served to combine
various groups of dissent within the population. It served to unite popular
sectors which had been the target of political, social, cultural and
economic repression. The formation of the National Patriotic Front was
the result of these efforts for unity. The Constitution of the National
Patriotic Front (FPN) was signed February I, 1979. Among those signing
this document were the Independent Liberal Party, the Group of Twelve,
the Social Christian Party, the Worker's Front and the Confederation of
Nicraguan workers.
The insurrection itself was the opening of military fronts in the
mountainous zones, in areas not familiar to the National Guard. These
33
actions drew battalions of the National Guard away from the cities where
massacres were conducted. Defeats suffered by the National Guard
contributed to the decline in morale. From the mountains the
revolutionary forces pushed into the cities. These operations opened the
way for widespread activity of the masses in the form of revolutionary
brigades, commandos and militias. The military activity in the cities made
it possible for the populace to destroy the enemy's rearguard. The political
repercussions of the military struggle on the fronts were less significant
because of the distances and the difficulties of spreading information.
However, Radio Sandino contributed to the popular mobilizaton and
agitation that prepared the masses for final insurrection. The active
resistance of the people of Managua, for instance, paralyzed the enemy and
made it possible for the Sandinista forces to relocate where the
revolutionary forces needed strengthening.l9
Guerrilla warfare, the method of armed struggle that depends on
support from the masses in this area of struggle, was successful. As a
result the whole dictatorial apparatus was overthrown and the dynasty lost
all its resources and the revolutionary government was not required to co
exist with any Somoza remanants, imitations or substitutes.20
NOTES - CHAPTER II
I On the General Political-Military Platform of struggle of the
Sandinista Front for National Liberation for the Triumph of the Sandinista
Popular Revolution (Pamphlet), (Managua: National Leadership of the
Sandinista National Liberation Front, May 1977).
2George Black, Triumph of the People: The Sandinista Revolution
in Nicaragua, (London: Zed Press, 1981 ), pp. 32-33.
3 Alejandro Bendana, "Crisis in Nicaragua," NACLA: Report on
the Americas XII (November-December 1978), pp. 32-33.
4Humberto Ortega, 50 anos de lucha Sandinista, (Mimeo, n.p.,
1976), pp. 93-94.
Son the General Political-Military Platform, op. cit., p. 12.
61gnacio Gonzalez Janzen, "La dinastia de los Somoza," Historia
lllustrada, No. 38 (July 1979), pp. 4-19.
7 George Black, Triumph of the People: The Sandinista Revolution
in Nicaragua (London: Zed Press, 1981 ), p. 84.
8Jaime Wheelock, Diciembre Victorioso (Managua: SENAPEP,
1979, pp. 70-90.
p. 321.
35
9on the General Political-Military Platform, op. citl, pp. 11-16.
I Olbid., p. 16.
II Ibid., p. 16.
12Humberto Ortega, op. cit., p. 63.
13Harold N. Denny, Dollars for Bullets (New York: Dial, 1929),
14sEPLA: Seminario Permanente sobre Latino America, No.4,
(December I 979), p. I 0.
151bid., p. I 0.
161bid., p. 6.
17sernard Diederich, Somoza (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1981 ),
p. 21.
18Fausto Amador and Sara Santiago, "Where is Nicaragua Going?"
Intercontinental Press, II June 1979, p. 581.
19Humberto Ortega, Sobre Ia insurreccion (La Havana: Editorial
de Ciencias Sociales, 1981 ), pp. 31-39, 52-57, 68-69.
20tbid., pp. 16-17.
CHAPTER Ill
POLICIES OF THE REVOLUTION
Land Reform
This chapter discusses the changes made by the revolutionary
government that were announced in the program of 1980, the first
anniversary of the revolution. The chapter focuses on the practical
problem of implementing those changes, specifically the nationalization of
components of the economy, the creation of new structures and
mechanisms of governement and to overcome the final obstacles to the
construction of a new society.
The revolutionary government announced the program on July 19,
1980, the first anniversary of the revolution. However, in response to
pressure from the private sector, it withdrew the program to make
modifications. This was necessary to prevent the law of agrarian reform
from eroding national unity and undermining progress towards Nicaragua's
mixed economy
From 1979 to 1981 the revolution used temporary measures to
alleviate pressures for the land. In many of the farms confiscated from
Somoza, peasants who had formed cooperatives were allowed to use,
without charge, the land they needed as an emergency measure to increase
basic grain production. The rental price of land was lowered by decree
from $41 to $5.80. The law was established that any landless peasant,
merely by presenting his request to the Ministry of Agriculture, could rent
idle land at $5.80 per acre per year. I
37
During the Somocismo only 24,000 families were allowed access
to credit. The vast majority of rural producers suffered at the hands of
usurious merchants. In 1980 the number of families in the formal credit
system with subsidized credit rates jumped to over 97,000 families.
The Nicaraguan land reform was, perhaps, the first land reform
to take into account the interests of both the landless peasant and the rural
entrepreneur. It should be pointed out that the abundance of land in
Nicaragua relative to its population made possible this original experiment
in land reform.2
In order to avoid a drastic drop in production, the land reform,
made maintaining and increasing production the primary criteria of its
program. This need was accomplished without disregarding the require
ments of justice and redistribution of land to the poor peasants. The first
article of the law guaranteed the right to private property to every owner
who was using his land for productive purposes. In other words, the main
target of the new law was that idle was land abandoned or dedicated to
pasturing cattle in an overly wasteful way. The law punished only those
owners with more than 850 acres of idle or abandoned land in the interior.
It is estimated that there were, at the time of the revolution, nearly two
million acres of such idle land in Nicaragua.3 All of the individually titled
properties of a family controlling more than 1,700 acres was liable to
expropriation. This measure was justified by the fact that some of the
worst exploiters of the poor peasantry had multiple properties which they
had taken from the poor through economic extortion.
The law of agrarian reform contained very strict provisions
against exploitations of the peasantry through such practices or
sharecropping, a form near servitude. If this occurred, rather than
38
expropriating that land, the government would give the share cropper
peasant family title to land on one of the idle or abandoned properties in
the area.4 The production criterion also played an important role in
determining who would receive the land. The most negligent of the large
producers would be expropriated, the most dedicated poor peasants would
benefit from the land reform.
The most important innovation in the Agrarian Reform Law was
the creation of the Agrarian courts to review the demands of individuals
affected by the resolutions or sentences dictated by the Ministry of
Development and Agrarian Reform.5 The decisions of these agrarian
courts cannot be appealed.
The Literacy Campaign
The first major step in the transformation of the national
educational system was to slash the rate of illiteracy in the nation.
After six years of revolution, Nicaragua was experiencing a real
educational explosion. The Literacy Campaign slased the rate of illiteracy
from fifty percent to twelve percent and made possible establishment of
2,639 educational centers with 1,252 new buildings. The number of students
grew from 500,000 to 1,005,318 in 1983-1984.6
In spite of the physical hazards involved in carrying out this
notable effort, the members of the cultural brigades successfully worked
with the most vulnerable section of the country: the peasantry. In the
remote rural areas of the country, the brigades faced disease, the
inadequate diet of the peasantry and the terrorists attacks of the CIA
supported Somocista-Contras.
39
In some respects, the Nicaraguan literacy campaign taught new
ideological concepts of the revolution. The campaign was a teaching
learning experience of the revolution, in the revolution and for the
revolution. In other words, it was a political project in the sense of being a
project of liberation in which all the organizations of the country
paticipated. The methods used in the literacy campaign stemmed from the
and were compatible with Sandinista revolutionary principles. Methods
used include popular participation and dialogue, study of both local and
national history, understanding of the contradictions between popular and
official language, and the capacity of the adult population for permanent,
continuing education}
The Nicaraguan literacy crusade made significant contributions
to the methodology of universal popular education not only for Nicaragua
but also for the whole world. This was recognized by international
organizations of education such as the United Nations Educational
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESC0),8 which in September 1980
granted the UNESCO award to Nicaragua.
From the political point of view, the literacy campaign was a
project of peace. The international solidarity sought by Nicaragua was not
for arms but for liberation from ignorance. The literacy campaign was a
project of integration of the peasantry into national I if e. For the first time
in the history of Nicaragua, a reverse migration took place as the youth of
the cities migrated to the countryside.9
Deeply affected by this project of integration was the
Nicaraguan Atlantic Coast. The crusade attempted to unite the Atlantic
and the Pacific coastal regions, which traditionally had been separated. In
the Atlantic Coast, 78.07% of the population did not know how to read or
40
write. A literacy campaign in Miskito, Sumo and English began in Octorber
1980. Some 11,800 persons of the Atlantic Coast learned to read and write
in their native languages.
Above all, the eradication of illiteracy was the corner-stone for
future educational projects. Important changes could be expected to follow
in Nicaraguan society, not only in the building of knowledge but also in
individual attitudes and social transformation after generations of isolation
and obscurism.
Mixed Economy
Under the Somoza model, Nicarguan capital did not exist except
within a framework of dependence. The base of the economy was ogre
exportation. The agricultural sector directed toward internal consumption,
to feed the people, was left virtually abandoned. The system was aimed at
exporting solely to gain foreign currency. The internal economy was
attended to only minimally. Under this system the small producer was
never able to get state aid or credit.
The small producer began to receive credit only after the
Sandinista Revolution. The Plan for Economic Reactivation established
measures for raising the production of domestic food supplies. The plan
called for the domestic producton of 68% of the country's four basic food
grains -- rice, corn, beans, and sorghum-- with the rest to be imported.
The structure of the mixed economy is such that 55-60% of the
economy is in private enterprise. People's enterprise has 40-45% of the
economy. The mixed economy established investments within the country
to supply the basic needs of the population.
41
The external component of a mixed economy is a political
pluralism. This means having many external ties and the diversification of
foreign commerce and credits. In 1983 international production increased
5.1%.
The National PI an for Economic Reactivation in benefit of the
people was the first attempt to reorganize the national economy directing
the use of the productive resources in a rational manner, to distribute its
benefits according to the needs of the whole population and not only to the
benefit of a few administrators. The plan brought together wage workers
with small producers and artisans, and professionals and technicians in a
single unbreakable project of national unity. It also meant integrating the
businessmen and offering these businessmen the support of the
government. This was necessary to reactive their sector of the economy in
order to achieve the goals in production which this plan has set for the
private sector. In the past the workers had to fulfill the objectives in
production established by the owners of the captial. Those objectives
existed only in the function of the particular interests of each enterprise
and were determined by the benefits they could generate. I 0
The goals of the government for national unity can be
summarized in the following principles: democracy with transformation
and development of the economy, social welfare and self-determination.
At the same time, the government was a republic that became more and
more defined in four to six years and gained the characteristics of a
political pluralism. The society contained a mixed economy, popular
participation, non-alignment and national defense.
In 1979 Nicaragua became a member of the movement of
nonaligned nations. Since that time Nicaragua has voted in the United
42
Nations in favor of human rights, of limiting the arms race. It has also
been in favor of decolonization and movement toward national I iberation
and for multilateral agreements that would regulate international trade.
Nicaragua has voted according to its principles of nonalignment, with
respect for self-determination of all nations, and has avoided voting with
either capitalist or socialist blocs.
The Program of Economic Reactivation in benefit of the people
has seven political objectives:
I. The defense, consolidation and advancement of the
revolutionary process.
2. The reactivation of the economy in the interest of the lower
classes.
3. The maintenance of national unit.
4. The construction of the Sandinista State.
5. Strengthening of the Area of Public Property.
6. Establishing and maintaining internal and external balances.
7. Initiating the process of transition to a new economy.ll
The plan specifically pressed for cooperation from the private
capitalist. The private sector still had considerable control over a large
portion of Nicaragua's industry and agricultural exports. The plan was that
the property of these capitalists would not be siezed as long as they kept up
the production and followed the guidelines of the economic plan.
Data taken from the 1981 Economic Program showed that Plan 80
almost met the main targets of production recovery. Agriculture reached
76% of its 1978 level (80% of the plan); industry was at 82% (87% in the
plan). This was attributed to the unexpected good response of peasant
farmers and cooperatives; to price incentives and technical assistance for
43
maize on the one hand and to the positive response of the Area of Public
Property (APP) and medium manufacturers. The Gross Domestic Product
(GOP) was back to 83% of its 1978 level in 1980 (a little less than 91% in the
plan).l2
The P Jan for Economic Reactivation had several different
objectives; such as, measures for raising the production of domestic food
supplies and key agricultural export products (cotton, coffee, sugar), basic
industrial goods (medicines, clothing, educational materials, construction
supplies, fertilizers and pesticides). The goal was for an increase of 22% in
order to match the 1978 level of production.
The revolutionary Government believed that the only solution to
the economic crisis was social peace and national unity through a mixed
economy controlled by the logic of increasing justice for the majority. This
meant not only increasing production, but also redistributing income.
One of the most important measures for achieving the
redistribution of income was the creation of new sources of employment
through government spending.
The complexity of the public and private sectors was the key
goal given to the mixed economy. In this new vision of a mixed economy,
the Sandinistas expected the public sector to be more responsive to the
market forces and the private sector more responsive to human needs.
Private enterprise was invited to cooperate in return for
guarantees of reasonable profits and security of ownership so long as the
laws were obeyed and activities such as tax evasion, capital flight, and
sepculation were avoided. The Sandinista State government assumed
administrative functions over all foreign commerce and banking of the
country.
44
The government had the intention of raising rural wages more
rapidly than urban wages in order to work toward the long term objective
of narrowing the income differential between town and country. The
expansion of popular living standards would be in the form of the "social
wage". Therefore, the government expenditures for health,
education,housing and social services would have to increase, but also had
to be contained within reasonable limits of expenditure.
The Sandinista State promotes private enterprise when it turns
over land titles to peasants, and when it provides credit, technology and
.general assistance to small farmers and livestock owner. The Government
of National Reconstruction created two institutions for management of the
Area of Public Property (APP). These were the Institute Nicaraguanse de
Reform Agraria (INRA) which is the Nicaraguan Institute of Agrarian
Reform and the Corporation of People's Industries (COIP). The INRA
administered agrarian reform and the COIP was in charge of more than 250
nationalized industries.
The political approach of the Sandinista government was that the
APP was the axis of the new economy and had to be consolidated,
strengthened, developed and enlarged. The strategic plan of the APP was
not to spread misery or force the workers to be satisfied with scraps from
the employer's tables. The purpose of the APP was to create a strong
economic base to meet the growing needs of the people. The workers in
the APP had to show that they no longer worked for a social class whose
traditional interests were the accumulation of individual wealth and
personal gratification. The intention was to raise the standard of living of
the working people and to use the surplus generated by the APP in new
investments that would permit autonomous accumulation. At the same
45
time, the development of new projects or sources of work would generate
social benefits in the area of health, education, housing and transportation.
Bonking System
It was necessary to restructure the bonking system to make this
on instrument for economic management and planning. The number of
bonks was reduced from more than twenty to only five. Within the
framework of the new financial order, the bonks incorporated
representatives of other state institutions to insure the best possible
coordination of credits with production.
The nationalization of the bonking sector meant that the
country's financial resources, for the first time, were able to be distributed
in rural credit programs within the guidelines of the general revolutionary
project. 13
The nationalization of the foreign trade, combined with the new
lows for progessive taxation on exports, meant that the profits on
agricultural products could be collected directly and administered by the
state for the benefit of Nicaraguan society as a whole.l4 Credit was
expanded by 54% to encourage and support production. This expansion of
credit was for the benefit of small producers, agrarian as well as
industrial. By 1984 the availability of rural credit was four and one-half
times greater than the highest amount ever provided during the Somozo
administration. Special attention was given to small cattlemen who
46
received 268 million cordobas as compared to 12.5 million cordobas in
1978. Credit for small industry doubled in the first five years after July 19,
1979, when the Saninistas came to power. Rural credit benefited the
cooperatives and other joint forms of production. Rural credit reached
55% of land in use and benefited 97,400 small producers, of which 75%
belonged to one of the 2,500 cooperatives or other type of association. In
contrast, the 1978 program benefited 37,500 small producers, of which only
II% were associated with 27 cooperatives.15
Infrastructure
The expansion of the country's infrastructure and basic service·
required large investments on the part of the Government of National
Reconstruction. In the case of roads, transportation and housing, millions
of dollars were spent in local and regional programs.
Two major projects begun early in the 80's were construction of
the Tuma-Waslala-Puerto Cabezas Highway, 462.2 kms., costing 140 million
cordobas; and the Rio Grande-Siuna Highway, 166.9 kms., cosing 355 million
cordobas.
The government gave special priority to the needs of the
Atlantic Coast through the newly-created Nicaraguan Institute of the
Atlantic Coast. In 1983, work began on the final states of a new railway to
link Nicaragua's Pacific and Atlantic coasts. The first stage, the 200 kms.
47
railroad from the Pacific Port of Corinto to the capital (Managua) required
three to four years for completion at an estimated cost of $200,000,000
U.S. dollars. Total project costs, including the 150 kms. second stage from
Managua to the new port of El Bluff was about $500,000,000 U.S.
dollars.l 6 Financing for the project came from Central Governement funds
for the local currency cost elements of the project, while rolling stock,
locomotives, rails, and other equipment (such as signaling system) were
financed by lines of credit from countries like Spain, Bulgaria and
Argentina.l7
In order to develop pub I ic transportation in the urban areas, the
Ministry of Transportation invested more than nine million dollars in 200
buses purchased from Brazi I.
The Ministry of Housing and Community Development completed
repair of housing damaged during the revolutionary war. This work
benefited 4,676 families at a cost of 32 million cordobas. The construction
of new housing was completed in the neighborhoods of San Jacinto in
Managua and in the Monimbo District of Masaya. The first 100 housing
units out of a projected total of 500 were completed in the mining centers
of North Zelaya (Siume, Rosita and Bonanza) with an investment of 20
million cordobas. The Housing units were added to the housing projects El
Porein and Emir Cabezas in the city of Leon at a cost of 30 million
cordobas. Housing went up elsewhere to meet the needs of workers such as
the sugar mi II, rice and tobacco plantation workers in the cities of
Chimanduga, Rivas and Esteli.l8
In urban housing reform, 85, 198 city dwellers benefited from a
program that distributes confiscated housing; and steps were taken to
increase that number by 40,050. Special projects with the participation of
friendly nations (Libya and Spain) made possible additional new housing,
such as the newly-constructed neighborhood of the New Libya.
Health Program
48
The impact of the dictatorship's practices was very detrimental
to the health of the Nicaraguan people. The old Somocista State
maintained for many years a model of exploitation in the area of health
which was manifested in high rates of mortality, malnutrition, and
contagious diseases. There was a lack of health services and sanitary
conditions in the rural areas.
During the Somoza dictatorship, the articulation between health
services and the social structure was made basically on political and
ideological levels. On the ideological level, the services were intended to
create a humanitarian image for the regime. On the political level, health
services were used to decrease social tension, particularly in the zone of
guerrilla struggle.
The Sandinista government assumed responsibility for
transmitting information about health to the people in general and for
individual and collective participation in the area of health. The creation
of the National System of Health made health care a right of the people. It
centered particularly on the health of the mother, the child and the
worker. 19
By 1985-1986, the Sandinista State was devoting more of its
national budget to health than was any other Latin American country, in
spite of the economic difficulties and problems created by the constant
outside aggression. The main objective of the Sandinista health program
49
was first to use its limited resources to eliminate the causes of the major
health problems facing the nation by applying preventive methods and then
in the future to turn attention to curative medicine.
The Ministry of Health organized a series of campaigns for
disease immunization, eradication of malaria-carrying mosquitoes and
cleanup of dumps and sources of water contamination. These campaigns
were carried out with involvement of people through some organizations
such as trade unions, block committees, the national women's organizaton,
schools, etc. Infectious diseases have been controlled through vaccination
campaigns. There were 101 cases of polio in 1979, for example, but none in
1981 or 1982. There were 1,270 cases of measles in 1979, but only 226 in
1982.20
By the year 1984, the number of health posts (first aid clinics)
had grown from 56 to about 200, with an ultimate goal of 400. Six hospitals
were being built to supplement the 36 government and 9 private hospitals
and 32 private clinics with beds. In 1986 sixty physicians were graduated.
Governement plans called for increasing the number to 240 within a year
and doubling that number soon afterward. The average number of doctor
visits per year doubled from 1.1 in 1982 to 2.2 by 1984. In Managua, about
half of the births were in hospitals by 1983, compared to 25% four years
before. Following the creation of 334 new oral dehydration centers,
diarrhea dropped from first to third place as the cause of death in children.
As a result of all these efforts, infant mortality dropped from an
estimated 120 deaths per 1,000 live births before the revolution to 89 per
1,000 in 1984.21
50
In 1981, the Revolutionary Government increased by five times
the amount expended for social programs over the 1978 expenditures under
Somoza. The last budget of the dictatorship included 530.3 million
cordobas (16.1% of the total budget). This figure includes the Ministries of
Health, Education, Social Welfare and Culture-- the last two of which did
not exist as such under the Sococismo. This constitutes an increase of
about 2,000 million cordobas.22
CHAPTER Ill- NOTES
1 The Philosophy and Policies of the Government of Nicaragua, op.
cit., p. 40.
2Jbid, p. 40.
3Jbid., p. 41-42.
4Land title under agrarian reform conveys the property with the
only limitation being that it cannot be sold. Title is given to protect the
interests of the peasant's family and production itself. Barricade
lnternactional 20 August 1951, p. 5.
5Barricada International,. I August 1981, p. 8.
6Speech made by the government Junta coordinator Daniel Ortega
on July 19, 1983, at the fourth anniversary celebration in Leon. Nicaraguan
Perspectives, 7 (Winter 1983), p. 16.
7The Popular Adult Education Program was structured to favor a
solidification of the knowledge gained during the Literacy Crusade and to
provide methodology more systematic and scienctific. Popular Adult
Education is flexible, collective, active and directly related to production.
Adult Education in Nicaragua, a publication of the Ministry of Education,
Managua, I 98 I.
8Consultonts from UNESCO participated in the planning as well as
Paulo Freire, the renowed Brazilian educator whose teaching techniques
formed the basis of the Crusade. Annie O'Connor, "Literacy Campaign: A
Brigodisto Shores his Experiences," Nicaragua Perspectives, July 1981.
52
9carrying out the crusade depended heavily upon Nicaraguan
youth, just as had been the case during the insurrection. Hence the
experience of the Crusade contributed significantly to the maturation of
young people by permitting them to live the hard reality of the
countryside. "Entrevista con Francisco Locoyo," Encuentro: Revista de
Universidad Centroamericana 17 ( 1980).
I Osecretaria Vocional de Propaganda y Education Politica,
Propaganda de Ia Produccion (Managua: Centro de Publicaciones Sylvio
Magaga, 1980) p. 35.
II The Philosophy and the Policies of the Government of
Nicaragua (Managua: Agencio Nueva Nicaragua, 1981 ), p. I 04.
12George Black, Triumph of the People: The Sandinista
Revolution in Nicaragua (London: Zed Press, 1981 ), pp. 201-203.
13Report of the Junta of the government of National
Reconstruction of Nicaragua, May 4, 1981, p. 37.
141bid., p. r.
I 51bid., p. 5.
16Latin America Weekly Report, 23, July 1983, p. 4.
171bid., p. 4.
18Latin America Weekly Report, 14, May 1982, p. 10.
19Report of the Junta of the government of National
Reconstruction of Nicaragua, May 4, 1981, p. 44.
20Tom Frieden, "A Revolution Under Guns," The Nation, 17
December 1983, pp. 630-633.
21 Los Angeles Times, 25 August 1983.
22Report of the Junta of the Government of National
Reconstruction of Nicaragua, May 4, 11981, p. 37.
53
CHAPTER IV
UNITED STATES INTERVENTION
IN THE NICARAGUAN REVOLUTION
This chapter discusses the strategies used by the United States to
impede implementation of the program and consolidation of the Sandinista
revolution. Also, the direct aggression through the combination of internal
and external forces is analyzed.
Background of the United States Foreign Policy
The beginnings of the United States foreign policy toward
Central American countries began in the minds of the founders of the
American Constitution who assumed that some day the nation would
include Mexico and the areas of Central America. In 1810, Mexico and then
Central America gained independence from Spain. In 1823, the Monroe
Doctrine warned European nations not to interfere in the Western
Hemisphere.
The United States was able to develop Central America's
dependency by industrial and economic development and by insuring that
dependency through one or two crop exports. Further dependency was
developed militarily with the building of the Panama Canal and its
operation for the benefit of the United States.
From time to time the United States sent Marines to Central
America, especially Nicaragua, to put down revolutions and decide who was
to govern.
55
We do control the destinies of Central America and we do so for the simple reason that the notional interest absolutely dictates such a course. There is no room for any outside influence other than ours in this region.
Unti I now Central America has always understood that governments which we recognize and support stay in power, while those which we do not recognize and support fall. Nicaragua has become a test lase. It is difficult to see how we can afford to be defeated.
Nicaragua's virtual colonial status, as columnist Wolter Lippmann
noted in 1926, meant that the country was:
••• not on independent republic, that its government is the creature of the State Department, (and) that management of its finances and the direction of its domestic and foreign
2 affairs are determined not in Nicaragua but in Wall Street.
The United States dominance of Nicaragua was particularly
marked by its nearly continuous military presence from 1912 to 1933. The
United States financial advisors directed the fiscal and monetary policy and
subordinated the economy to outside creditors. With this strong United
States dominance, Nicaragua was unable to develop any political structure
for leadership. When the United States ended its occupation, it established
the National Guard to put down uprisings, to rule by suppression. When
civil war broke out in 1936, Somozo gained control of the entire country in
eight days. Warmly received by Washington, he addressed Congress in 1939
and received $2 million in credit and a group of advisers to help run banks
and railroads in Nicoragua.3
Throughout history, the aid that has been provided by the United
States to the small Central American countries has been more military
than economic. The assistance that has been given has had a twofold
purpose: I) to ensure that there are no defections from the capitalist
56
ideology, and 2) to facilitate the penetration of foreign capital into those
countries.
Policy makers in the United States have used four relationaiza-
tions to justify the military aid programs:
I. The "boomerang thesis", or the argument that if the United
States does not supply arms to Latin American rules, they will turn
elsewhere for weapons.
2. The "bulwark thesis" which sees in the military support of
Latin America the best defense against Communism.
3. The "hemisphere thesis" or the argument that the arms
supplied and the training of military units are part of the overall United
States strategy for defense of the Western Hemisphere in the event of
attack.
4. The developmental thesis" which argues that the military can
perform in all sorts of civi I action.
One more thesis should be added: the security and interests of '•
the United States business interests is part of the rationalization.
Dictatorships in Nicaragua, Chile and Guatemala have proved
that the policy of strengthening the military regimes in Latin America has
jeoparized any local efforts to establish stability. The use of the military
for counter-insurgency purposes has contributed to more political unrest.
The present Central American conflict is the direct consequence of large
scale assistance to military elites.
There have been large amounts of military aid given to
Guatemala, Honduras, E I Salvador and Nicaragua which have crippled the
economies. Repressive political systems have never represented the will of
the people of these countries, but those governments have been kept in
power by force and strong influence from outside4. Two essential rights of
57
any sovereign nation are self-determination and a viable economy. These
elements of democracy were denied during the Somoza regime. Nicara
guans were not assured economic security nor was production ever oriented
toward meeting the people's needs. Even before the revolution, real
economic growth was hindered by the gradual increase of military
assistance and tightening of economic ties to United States capital.
The most serious obstacle faced by the Latin American countries
is not caused by failing to integrate them into capitalism, but by the way
the internationl system of laws and economics failed to help their
development.s
An example of how dependence was created through military aid
is shown in the following figures: between fiscal years 1950 and 1978,
Nicargua received $7.7 million in Military Assistance (MAP) grants, $5.6
million in Military Assistance (MAP) grants, $5.6 million in foreign military
sales (FMS) credits, $5.2 million in Excess Defense Articles (EDA) and $11.6
million in International Military Education and Training (IMET) grants.6
Most of the equipment in Nicaragua's arsenal before the
revolution was of United States origin, including tanks of World War II
vintage. Between fiscal years 1961 and 1978, the United States trained
5,670 Nicaraguans under the MAP and IMET programs, making the
Nicaragua military and the highest per capita recipients of United States
training in all Latin American. Private United States companies in the
years 1971-1978 sold Nicaragua $4.1 million in military equipment under the
Commercial Sales Program.
The continuing debate in the United States over economic aid to
Nicaragua reflected the two different views in Congress. One side
represented the interests of transnational banking capital in controlling the
relations of the United States in Nicaragua. This view was an
58
accommodationist view that coincided with the interest of both the banks
and the United states government-- a view that began in the early days of
the United States involvement in Nicaraguan affairs. In 1911, when the
State Department wanted to reduce European influence, it asked Wall
Street to go into Nicaragua and support European loans with North
American capita1.7
The other side of the debate consisted of hardliners in Congress
who were intent upon blocking any attempt to give aid to Nicaragua.
United States Intervention in Nicaragua
Carter
The strategy of the Carter Administration was to contiain the
Sandinistas Revolution by establishing favorable conditions for the
bourgeoisie and the deposed National Guard.
The covert war started during the Carter Administration.
Despite Carter's moralistic view of the world, his approach to Nicaragua
was based on the historical premise of his predecessors -- that the U.S. had
a right to control revolutionary change within Central America.
The objective of U.S. policy during the 1978-1979 popular
insurrection aginst Somoza was to prevent the Frente Sandinista de
Liberacion Nacional (FSLN) from taking power. When the Sandinistas took
power, the U.S. sought to intervene with economic leverage and covert
operations to shape the character and direction of the new revolutionary
government. Carter's policy toward the Nicaraguan insurection rested on
the assumption that Somoza was expendable, but that the institutional
structure of his regime, particularly the Nicaraguan National Guard had to
be saved to stop the Sandinista revolution. If Somoza could be induced to
59
resign, U.S. officials reasoned, power could be transferred to "derate
elements." If the National Guard remained intact, it would prevent the
FSLN from playing a prominent role in a post-Somozan government.
Carter's government hoped to moderate the course of the revolution. It
shifted its policy from hostility to cautious accommodation. The
administration advanced $15 million in emergency reconstruction aid to
Nicaragua and pushed a $75 million economic assistance package through
congress. The Sandinista leaders even received an invitation to the White
House. However, covertly the Carter administration took another tack.
The U.S. began setting the stage for a counter revolution. On July 19, U.S.
operatives mounted a clandestine mission to evacuate commanders of the
Nicaraguan National Guard who had been unable to flee Nicaragua. Dozens
of Guardsmen and their families were air-lifted to Miami on a DC-8
disguised as a Red Cross plane and piloted by an American known as Bill
Furillo. In Miami these guardsmen could recorganize and renew their fight
against the Sandinistas.8
In late 1980, President Carter authorized the CIA to pass funds
to anti-Sandinista labor, press and political organizations--an operation
resembling thae agency's destabilization campaign against the Socialist
government of Salvador Allende in Chile a decade earlier.
When Ronald Reagan took office on January 20, 1981, he inherited
a CIA covert operation against the Sandinistas that was already in place.9
Regan
The Reagan administration would go beyond Carter's
containment policy into a policy aimed a "rolling back" the Nicaraguan
revolution.
60
After President Reagan took office, U.S. policy toward
Nicaragua was directed away from accommodation of any kind. The
Reagan administration aligned itself with the most conservative forces in
the area, leaving to Nicaragua no alternative than to increase its military
power, 10
Under President Reagan the United States again assumed the
right to armed interference in the domestic affairs of countries with
regimes that Washington labels as objectionable. 11 The entire foreign
policy is based on the idea that any world conflict must be seen as East
West confrontation. In Central America this has resulted in a permanent
military presence in this region. This is the basis for Reagan's hostility to
the Sandinista government and to rhetoric of losing any part of that region
to communist ideology.
The Reagan Administration has forced Nicaragua to look for
assistance from Socialist nations such as Bulgaria, East Germany, and the
Soviet Union. This has been done by divesting Nicaraguan of most external
financial aid and forcing them to divert their scarce resources to the
military.
Economic sanctions deprived Nicaragua of $345 million in lost
trade and loans in 1983, while U.S. pressure internationally resulted in the
loss of an additional $1,125 million in multilateral loans since 1980. 12 It was
only a few days after taking office that Reagan suspended most forms of
economic assistance to Nicaragua.
Nicaragua was banned from government programs which
promoted U.S. foreign investment and trade, such as, trade credits of the
import-export banks and the insurance of United States investments
offered by the Overseas Private Investment Corporation. Another
61
suspension cut off Nicaragua's supply of bread by suspending $9.8 million
previously authorized under Public Law 480 (Food for Peace)-- this was in
the form of food credits for the purchase of wheat. Also in the area of
trade, the Reagan administration cut Nicaragua's quota of 59,000 tons of
sugar exports for fiscal year 1983 by 90% to only 6,000 tons. This reduction
meant a loss of $15.6 million in export earning in a period of severe
shortage of foreign exchange for Nicaragua. 13 Table I, Structure of
Nicaraguan Foreign Trade, which follows, gives an indication of the trend
from 1980 until mid-1986. This table gives the impact that the United
States foreign exchange policies had on Nicaragua.)
Another action fo the United States to prevent the consolidation
of the revolution was to aid in the j:>reparation for a counter revolutionary
war. Military aid was given to other governments in the region. In
Honduras the Somocista National Guard was trained, first by Argentina and
later by Israel to carry out terrorist attacks inside Nicaragua. It was
intended to create panic in the civilian population and destroy the
infrastructure and means of production. There were even murders of
teachers during the Literacy Campaign.
The United States Naval Blockade (19 ships with 16,456 troops, 12
fighter jets) off the coast of Nicaragua was used to stop shipments of food,
medicines and armaments into Nicaragua and complemented the terrorist
activities within Nicaragua.l4
There were also some outright acts of war. On October 10, 1983,
a counter revolutionary commando squad shelled the Port of Corinto. The
explosion caused an estimated minimum of $5 million in damage. Another
TABLE 4.1 STRUCTURE OF NICARAGUAN FOREIGN TRADE
EXPORTS AND IMPORTS Percentage by Region
1980 1984 1985 1986°
United States 30.4 14.9 7.3b Central America 28.1 9.2 6.8 Latin America 13.5 12.8 8.5 Western Europe 17.6 25.2 28.0 Eastern Europe 1.0 15.4 28.8 Japan 3.0 9.9 7.7 Canada 2.6 2.9 1.6 Cuba 4.0 4.4 Others 3.8 5.7 6.9
TOTAL I 00.0 100.0 100.0
0- F orecost
b- January-May 1985 Sources: Nicaraguan Ministry of Trade
Overseas Development Council/Center for International Policy
62
0 7.4 7 .I
37.7 27.2 9.0 2.4 4.2 5.0
100.0
such action was the CIA backed operation of mining three Nicaraguan ports
to isolate the country internationally.! 5
The United States used Honduras as on instrument of
intervention. Honduras offered extraordinary military advantages by its
geographical location and as a state with mi litory and pol iticol structure
willing to collaborate with the United States.l6 A permanent military
presence of the United States by the construction of military bases in
Honduras was created. After 1979, $13 million was allocated for
modernization of runways at Comoyagua, Ceibu and Son Pedro Sulo
airfields; for strategic roads and bridges; and for setting up sophisticated
63
communication centers, and for drilling wells. 17 (The table which follows
on U.S. Foreign Assistance to Honduras shows in millions of dollars the
extent to which the United States extended aid to Honduras.)
In 1981 the "Halcon Vista" naval operations on the Atlantic Coast
along the Nicaraguan shores were intended to warn Cuba and the Soviet
Union that they would not be permitted to continue intervening in Central
America. During the same year a combined Deployment Operation was
mounted in Mosquitia (only 40 Km north of the Nicaraguan border) with the
participation of 600 United States soldiers and 4,000 Honduran soldiers.
The cost of these joint manuevers was $5.2 million. 18
To establish a pattern of using the manuevers as a pretext for
construction of military bases the United States Army Engineers upgraded
a dirt airstrip at Puerto Lampura on Honduras' Atlantic coast to handle
United States fighter and transport planes. Ten United States C-130 cargo
planes, thirteen helicopters, and two United States Navy landing craft
participated in this operation.
Big Pine II began on August 3, 1983. These maneuvers involved
II ,000 American soldiers, including seventy men from the U.S. Army
Special Forces, 2,100 U.S. Marines and two Pacific battleship groups. These
exercises lasted six months -- longer than any previous maneuvers in U.S.
military history. They included aerial bombing, airlifts, amphibious
landings, and counter insurgency techniques. Big Pine II officially
64
TABLE 4.2- U.S. FOREIGN ASSISTANCE TO. HONDURAS
(Millions$)
FY82 FY83 FY84 FY85 FY86 FY87 (est) · (req)
Development Aid 31.1 31.3 31.0 44.3 43.2 51.0 (Loans) (19.5) (24.0) (17 .3) (19.8) (15.6) (20.3) (Grants) (I 1.6) (7.3) (13.7) (24.5) (27 .6) (30.7)
Other Economic Aid 2.7 3.2 3.8 5.0 5.3 5.4 (Loans) (Grants) (2.7) (3.2) (3.8) (5.0) (5.3) (5.4)
Food Aid 10.1 15~5 20.2 18.4 18.3 11 .a (Loans) (7.0) (10.0) (15.0) (15.0) (15.0) (14.0) (Grants) (3.1) (5.5) (5.2) (3.4) (3.3) (3.8)
ESF 36.8 56.0 40.0 147.5 61.2 (90.0) (Loans) (35.0) 11.0 (6.0) (Grants) ( 1.8) (45.0) (34.0) (147 .5) (61.2) (90.0)
Military Aid 31.3 48.3 77.4 73.9 79.7 88.8 (Loans) (19.0) (9.0) (Grants) (12.3) (39.3) (77.4) (73.9) (79.7) (88.8)
TOTAL 112.0 154.3 175.3 289.1 207.8 253.0 (Loans) (80.5) (54.0) (38.3) (34.8) (30.6) (34.3) (Grants) (31.5) (I 00.3) ( 134.1) (254.3) (157 .3) (218.7)
Total U.S. aid FY46-86: $1,334.25 Million (current$) $1,998.30 Million (constant 1987 $).
Hondura's rank among U.S. aid recipients: FY85-8th FY86-9th
Source: CRS, Jonathan Sanford, "Honduras: US Foreign Assistance Facts," November 25, 1986.
65
ended on February 8, 1984; however, the Department of Defense announced
that U.S. military maneuvers would con;inue indefinitely. 19
In March, the U.S. special forces conducted a series of
"emergency deployment readiness exercises" to make the point, according
to the American Embassy in Honduras, that the U.S. was still in the region
and would remain there.
During the Grenada I exercises, U.S. combat engineers
constructed two more air strips: one at Jeamstown on the
Nicaraguan/Honduras border, and the other at Cucuyagua in northern '
Honduras. By mid-1985 the U.S. had built or modernized eight airstrips,
two training centers, two radar stations, four military base camps, and a
twelve-mile long "tank Trap" near the Nicaraguan frontier at a cost of
more than $50 million. The Grenada I exercises was a name clearly chosen
to remind the Sandinistas of Grenada that involved 1,200 American
personnel. 20
Ocean Venture was a massive Caribbean naval exercise deploying
over 30,000 men in April 1984. In November 1984, the month of Nicaragua's
elections, the Pentagon conducted four unnamed military maneuvers in
Honduras and a large naval exercise off the Gulf of Fonseca.
Big Pine Ill, involving 4,500 troops was held from January to
April 1985. In April and May, Universal Trek deployed over 6,000 Marine;
Navy and Army troops into Honduras to practice amphibious and air
assaults on the Atlantic Coast near Puerto Castilla.
66
In May 1987, the Pentagon began its largest operation to date.
Solid Shield brought 50,000 U.S. personnel to the region for a mock attack
on Nicaragua. 21 By then U.S. war games constituted a permanent
component of Reagan administration policy in Central America. High level
administration officials told the press that U.S. military exercises in
Honduras would continue indefinitely "each year for the foreseeable future,
and perhaps for as long as 20 years. ,.22
In 1981 Washington issued a white paper indicating the flow of
arms into E I Salvador. This proved to be an embarrassment when the
credibility was destroyed by the North American press. In spite of no other
evidence of Nicaraguan intervention, the administration consistently uses
this issue to justify its policy toward Nicaragua.
The problem with the Reagan administration's Nicaragua policy
is not so much that it is immoral, as that it is a muddle. Policy is made
more on the basis of images than on realities, through tactical reactions to
events rather than through a broader strategy, and without thinking where
United States actions will lead and what the likely consequences will be.
The United States is creating a mess in Central America that will plague
future generations here and there. 23
The Reagan administration argues that there are three issues
preventing cordial relations; interference in El Salvador, the military
buildup of Nicaragua, and the alleged destruction of pluralism in Nicaragua
society. The Sandinistas ore not the only target of Reagan's war. The final
component of U.S. policy is a systematic campaign to enlist "hearts and
minds" at home by manipulating public perceptions of U.S. policy toward
Nicaragua. Through concerted "public diplomacy" the Reagan Adminis
tration has sought to convince the North American public, the Congress,
67
and allied governments that the Sandinistas constitute a threat to U.S.
national security and that the U.S. is a force for peace and democracy in
Central America.
Seven years of official exaggeration, misinformation, and
rhetorical fabrication have obscured how U.S. intervention in Nicaragua
evolved, why it continues, and what it means for North American society.
The Iran-Contra Scandal, which has shaken the foundation of American
politics, is but the most visible price of intervention.
A former U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica, Frank McNeil,
describes the United States vision of Central America as a fantasy of our
own creation.
Central America is a Fantasy Isthmus, a region of the American mind, peopled by our own political demonds, wht::jtf too often expedience rules, and rhetoric substitutes for policy.
Costs of the War
E.V.K. Fitzgerald has estimated several direct and indirect costs
to Nicaraguan by the war between 1980-1984.
A. Direct material loses during that period were $97.1 million,
and production losses due largely to the disruption of
agriculture totaled $282.5 million.
B. Defense spending: military spending ballooned to one-fourth
the national budget by 1983, one-third by 1984, and about one
half of the budget in 1985.25 In 1984, therefore, defense
spending amounted to about IS% o Nicaragua's gross domestic
product (GOP) and by 1986 it escalated to about one-fourth of
the GDP\2
68
C. Loss of production of key primary products: goods produced
mainly in the war zones-- lumber, fish, metals, corn and bean
production have suffered dramatic declines. An estimate of
$282.5 million was lost in 1980-1984, with some 60% of those
losses taking place in 1984 alone.26
The lost production of basic grains obliged Nicaragua to import
corn and beans. Lost coffee, lumber and seafood exports from 1982 through
1984 are estimated to have totaled over $300 million.
These direct effects have lead to indirect costs.
A. Defense spending is necessarily subtracted from any
resources that could be spent for health, education, and
productive investment that the rest of the budget
represents. Drastic cuts in the education budget since 1984,
for example, have dramatically reduced school construction
and maintenance, curtailed the availability of educational
materials, and forced the suspension of a free textbook
program.27 Similar serious disruptions have occurred in
health care and urban services and have contributed to public
dissatisfaction.
B. Decline in export earnings, which has forced the government
to implement a Draconian austerity program to curtail all by
the most critical imports. Economic austerity has reduced
the amount of fertilizers, oil, industrial raw materials, repair
parts, agricultural machinery, trucks and other essential
materials for production, and so has diminished the
productivity of the Nicragauan economy.
C. Inflation: Military spending has swollen government
expenditure, much of which has been financed simply by
printing money, a powerful contributor to the inflationary
spiral in 1985 and 1986.28
69
D. Increased foreign borrowing: External debt had risen to a
staggering $4.7 billion by 1985 almost double the annual GOP
so that debt service has slowed economic growth. In 1981 and
1982, Nicaragua spent about 20% of its total export earnings
on debt service. Since 1983, the government has continued to
borrow abroad; however, it has re-negotiated its debt package
to reduce debt service to about 10% of export earnings each
year.
Other problems have slowed the Nicaraguan economy and
disrupted its development. The United States has worked to deny
Nicaraguan foreign credit since 1981. Reagan's administration cut off the
United States credits and grants in 1981, and successfully pressured private
and multilateral lenders to stop lending to Nicaragua. Under United States
pressure the World Bank suspended credit to Nicaragua in 1982 and the
Inter-American Development Bank followed suit in 1983. (The table which
follows on the United States Voting Records on Loans to Nicaragua for the
years 1982-1983 shows the consistent pattern of the United States in voting
against loans for Nicaragua. Further, it indicates the inadequacy of the
United States reason for voting against financial loans to Nicaragua that
would be of benefit to the general population of that country.)
TABLE 4.3 -U.S. VOTING RECORD ON LOANS TO NICARAGUA
Institution Dote Amount Project Vote Reason (approved) (millions) given
World Bonk Jon. 1982 16.0 Municipal No Inappropriate development macro-economic
policies
IDB Jon. 1982 0.5 Agriculture No Inappropriate macro-economic policies
IDB Jul. 1982 0.5 Fishing No Inappropriate co-ops macro-economic
policies
IDB Sept. 1982 34.4 Hydro- No Inappropriate electric macro-economic power policies
IDB June 1983 2.2 Rood con- No Inappropriate production macro-economic
policies
IDB July 1983 0.5 Furniture No Inappropriate production macro-economic
policies
IDB Sept. 1983 30.4 Fishing No Inappropriate industry mocro-economi c rehab iii- policies tot ion
Source: Deportment of the Treasury memorandum, "U.S. Negative Votes and Abstentions in the MOB's ""-J
for Economic and/or Financial Reasons," June 19, 1984, pp. 3-4. 0
effects:
71
This United States and multilateral credit boycott has had four
-It forced Nicaragua to turn to the Socialist bloc for an
increasing portion of its aid.
- It cut the overall amount of foreign credit avai I able to
Nicaragua to about half the 1982 levels by 1984.
-It raised the cost of credit by forcing Nicaragua to replace
low interest multilateral loans with bilateral loans on higher
interest terms.
-The credit crunch has also retarded government investment
in developmental projects.29
An estimate of the war's economic damage to Nicaragua
approaches $1.5 billion.
To show that Nicaragua was forced to seek loans from other
lenders we find that in 1987, $80 million in grants were given by Sweden,
Spain, Finland, Norway, Canada, Argentina, Yugoslavia and India. Italy and
Nicaragua have signed a $150 million agreement for long-term credits and
development projects. Sweden gave $60 million in development in 1987,
Italy $50 million, Soviet Union $50 million, Spain $22 million and Canada
$10 million.
In the fall of 1986 India pledged $10 million in easy-term credit to
Nicaragua under whcih the Nicaraguan government would buy India
textiles, machinery and consumer goods.30
For Nicaragua, the cost of maintaining the decline of the counter
revolution has been growing economic deterioration. One indicator that
clearly shows this is the rate of inflation:
1984- 33%
1985- 220%
1986- 657%
1987- 1200%
72
Another indicator is the drop in foreign currency from exports:
1984- $385 million
1985- $294 million
1986- $218 million
As a consequence of the economic crisis, the full production and
other factors, it is estimated that 50% of the economically active
population has moved into the informal sector of the economy. Without
hard currency to bring in inputs for production, and with difficulties in
improving labor stability, the specter of an ever worsening spiral of
scarcities and high inflation continues.
To these concrete factors of the crisis must be added the direct
effect of the war on the economy. In 1987, alone the economic impact of
the destruction totaled $376.7 million. In April 1987 the U.S. Government
renewed the economic embargo it had imposed on Nicaragua in May 1985
and continued to pressure international organizations not to provide loans
to Nicaragua.
The Contras
The contras' top leadership has been selected by the Reagan
administration, which first created the Nicaraguan Democratic Force
(FDN) and then its umbrella organization, the United Nicaraguan
Opposition (UNO).
73
The "founding fathers" of the contras are National Guardsmen
who fled Nicaragua after Somoza's defeat. In exile, many worked initially
as hired killers in the Guatemalan death squads or participated in
extortions and robberies.
A recent congressional study noted that 46 out of 48 positions in
the FDN's military command structure are held by former Guardsmen.31
The contras early activities consisted of spreading violence and
terrorism throughout Central America. In Guatemala, Legion members
committed robberies, kidnappings, and deathguard murders on contract for
right-wing oligarchs who provided some initial funding for contra
operations.
The FDN received the bulk of CIA resources and thereby
emerged as the vanguard of the counter revolution. The organization and
its leaders were, according to Edgar Chamorro, a former member of the
FDN directorate, "nothing more than executions of the CIA's orders.'a2
The contras kidnapped 60% of their ranks -- the contras raided
villages and routinely forced young men to march backto FDN base camps
in Honduras. Edgar Chamorro explained how this was done.
FDN units would arrive at an undefended village, assemble all the residents in the town square and then proceed to kill-- in full view of the others all persons suspected of working for rthe Nicaraguan government or the FSLN, including police, local militia members, part members, health workers, teachers and farmers from government sponsored cooperatives. In this atmosphere it was not difficult to persuade those able-bodied men left alive to return with the FDN units to the~3base camps in Honduras and enlist in the force.
Contra leaders and their supporters were assisting Colombian
drug smuggling, transporting narcotics through Costa Rica to the U.S.
Contra forces had received funds from known drug traffickers and rebel
members were directly engaged in the drug trade.
74
In December 1985 the Associated Press reported that officials
from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), the FBI, and Customs had
reliable evidence that contras were involved in guarding and refueling
cocaine-laden planes at remote airstrips in northern Costa Rica and
transporting drugs to a stash house in San Jose for shipment to the U.S.
Colombian traffickers were paying the contras $50,000 a load for
assistance. One Nicaraguan rebel told U.S. authorities the money "would
go for the cause" of fighting the Sandinistas. 34 According to Eden Pastor a,
small planes using John Hull's landing strips in northern Costa Rica were
"linked to narcotics trafficking."35 One classified CIA National
Intelligence estimate indicated that in 1985 ARDE had used $250,000 in
cocaine money from Colombian drug smugglers to pay for contra arms and
aircraft.36 Another contra financial supporter, Norwin Meneses, was also a
$1.68 million a month cocaine trafficker. A confidential 1984 DEA report
described Meneses as "the apparent head of a criminal organization
responsible for smuggling kilogram quantities of cocaine into the United
States." Meneses hosted California fund raisers for the FDN and met
several times with Adolfo Colero and Enrique Bermudez in Honduras. He
also employed FDN members in his drug business. One of them, Renato
Pena-Cabrera, the FDN's San Francisco spokesman, was found guilty of
cocaine possession in 1985.37
The contras Human Rights record is the worst record among
insurgent groups in Central America. Their reputation for murder, rape,
pillage, and attacks on unarmed civilians in health centers and schools has
undercut President Reagan's best efforts to depict them as "freedom
75
fighters" and the "moral equivalent of our Founding F others." The record
also shows that contra operations have often been aimed at "soft" civilian
targets rather than military objectives.
The $100,000,000 in contra aid voted by the Congress of the
United States in 1986 set aide at $300,000 for the promotion of human
rights in its activities, but even contra partisans do not claim any
significant progrress. The February 1987 American Watch Report states:
During 1986, a major human rights problem in Nicaragua was widespread and continuing violation of the laws of war regarding treatment of civilians by the contra forces. The leadership of the contra organization has taken no meaningful steps to investigate and punish these abuses, which range from civilians, to selective murder, mis-treatment, and kidnapping. A significant number of kidnap victims are children.·
In October of 1988 rebels killed nine people, including two children, a
pregnant woman, and a Sandinista Army official by firing on a bus at 9:30
a.m.38
The table which follows on Counter Revolutionary Activities
shows one four-month period of counter revolutionary kidnappings, murders
or civilians, and military casualties.
Allegations of drug trafficking and diversion of funds to private
accounts continue to cast suspicion on contra lenders and others who are
the subject of continuing investigation by Congressional committees.
In May of 1988 it was stated that in the three months since the
Congress had cut off mi I itary aid to the contras, thousands of rebels went
to Honduras to create a mini-state on the border. The Honduran military
works closely with them, as a matter of fact, one of the contra camps is
only 500 yards from a Honduran military post. The contras assumed control
over an area covering about 120 square miles. 39
TABLE 4.4
COUNTER REVOLUTIONARY ACTIVITIES
APRIL I TO JULY 30, 1988
AErii/Mal
Counter Revolutionary Activities (Ambushes, attacks on Sandinista 178 Army troops and cooperatives and settlement, and sabotage)
Nicaraguan military casualties 80
Nicaraguan military deaths 18
Civilian deaths 24
Civilians wounded 26
Civilians kidnapped 312
Counter revolutionaries who took amnesty 49
Violations of Nicaraguan airspace from Honduras and Costa R icc 43 (espionage and contra supply flights)
Flights coming from the United States for electronic and photo- 79 graphic spying
Source: Nicaraguan Ministry of Defense communiques.
76
June ~
n/a 79
77 n/a
IS 39
9 29
9 25
184 98
99 NA
32 46
6 9
77
The confrontation between Nicaragua and the imperial politics of
the United States has been going on for over a decode. What Nicaragua has
been defending for many years of pain, death and hope is the right to
sovereignty and self-determination for the countries of the third world.
The Sondinisto government is politically more flexible and
economically less inept than its detractors admit. United States pressure
has forced Sondinista leaders to adjust and innovate in order to defend their
regime, but it also appears to hove strengthened rather than weakened
their will and capacity to rule.
CHAPTER IV - NOTES
1 Department of State memorandum on the Nicaraguan situation,
approximate date January 2, 1927. Signed by Robert Olds, Under Secretary
of States.
2walter Lippman, 1926.
3walter LaFeber, Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in
Central America, (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., 1984), pp. 64-69.
4Seymour Martin Upset, et al., Latin American Radicalism
(Boston, Mass.: Porter Sargent Pub! ishers, 1971 ), pp. 234-235.
5K. T. Fann and Donald C. Hodges, eds., Readings on U.S.
Imperialism (Boston, Mass.: Porter Sargent Publishers, 1971 ), pp. 234-235.
61nstitute for Policy Studies, Nicaragua Fact Sheet: Security
Assistance (Washington, D.C., Apri I, 1981 ).
7Harold Denny, Dollars for Bullets (New York: Dial, 1929, p. II.
8Christopher Dickey, With the Contras: A Report in the Wills of
Nicaragua (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985), p. 55.
9The Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1985.
1 ORichard Newfarmer, From Gunboats to Diplomacy: US Policies
for Latin America (Maryland: The John Hopkins University Press, 1984),
pp. 120-1 21.
II New Times, December 1983.
12counterspy 8 (March-May 1984), p. 13.
13Barricada, II May 1983.
14Roy Gutman, "Nicaragua: American's Diplomatic Charade,11
Foreign Pol icy 56 (Fall 1984), p. 16.
ISLos Angeles Times, 12 April 1984.
16contemporary Marxism 8 (Spring 1984)
171bid., pp. 81-83
I 81bid., p. 84.
19The Washington Post, March 21, 1984.
201bid, March 22, 1985.
211bid., March 22, 1987.
22New York Times, February 24, 1984.
79
23viron P. Vaky, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
Washington, D.C., Number 70, Spring 1988, Foreign Policy.
24The Washington Post, March I, 1987, OP-ed column.
25E.V.K. Fitzgeral, 11Una evolucion del costo economico de Ia
agresion del Gobierno estaunidense contra el pueblo de Nicaragua," (Paper
presented to the Latin American Studies Associaton, Albuquerque, New
Mexico, Apri I 1985).
261bid, p. 7.
271bid, p. 12.
281bid, p. 16.
29Barricada International, Augsut 28, 1986, p. 6.
30F orbes, August 22, 1988, pp. 38-39.
31 Arms Control and Foreign Pol icy Caucus, "Who Are the
Contras?" (Washington, D.C., Apri I 18, 1985).
32Affidavid to the World Court, September 5, 1985, p. 23.
1986.
34The Associated Press, December 20, 1986.
351nterview for the CBS program "West 57th Street", June 25,
36The Washington Post, December 26, 1986.
37The San Francisco Examiner, June 23, 1986.
38Rocky Mountain News, Sunday, October 30, 1988, p. 55.
39The Denver Post, May 19, 1988, p. 16A.
80
CHAPTER V
EFFORTS AT PEACE
The various peace plans that have been presented, revised and
rejected are discussed in this chapter. The discussion will show that
through the long period of counter-revolutionary activities and attemps to
negotiate peace, the United States has consistently thwarted any and all of
the plans that strive for self-determination and non-intervention for
Central American countries.
Contadora
The Contadora peace plans are so-called because the foreign
ministers of Colombia, Mexico, Panama and Venezuela met on the small
Panamanian island of Contadora. The Contadora support group is composed
of Argentina, Brazi I, Peru and Uruguay. The actual parties to the process
are Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.
The contadora peace treaty is a document drafted by eight Latin
American nations. It calls for a reduction of armed forces, a ban on
foreign military bases and advisers, respect for nations' borders and
democratic rights in each Central American nation.
In January 1983, in response to escalating United States
intervention, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and Panama established a forum
for ending the conflict in Central America. In a communique, these foreign
82
ministers stated that they had:
decided to join forces ••• in order to insure the observance of the principles of non-inter~ention, and free determination of Central American peoples.
Reagan officials paid lip-service to Contadero, viewing it as a
propaganda tool. The Sandinistas saw Contadero as a means to secure a
stable peace. In September 1984, they announced their intention to sign a
Contadero-prepared treaty which committed all riationas in the region to
end external support for insurgent movements, to expatriate foreign
military bases, and to set a ceiling on the growth of military forces. These
were the same demands the United States had made on Nicaragua and were
the stated goals of United States pressure.
Over the past five years the Contadero agreement has gone
through several drafts. The central thrust of all the drafts has been to
extricate the region from big-power rivalries. To accomplish this, the
Contradora agreement would require the five Central American nations to:
-Cut off arms imports. Not another Soviet helicopter or rifle to
Nicaragua, no more military aid to El Salvador.
-Expel all military advisers (Cuban and Soviet) out of Nicaragua
and American advisers out of El Salvador and Honduras.
-Stop arms smuggling. No aid for the Salvadoran guerrillas from
Nicaragua and no military aid from the United States to El Salvador.
-Bar foreign military exercises, dose foreign military bases.
-Limit army sizes.
-Let in verification commission with powers of on-site inspection.
A careful analysis of the most recent Contadero draft indicates
that it strikes a balance between the Nicaraguan and United States
83
positions. It asks each side to give up something it wants in order to attain
the larger goal of peace.
Although the State Department insists that Nicaragua is to
blame for blocking Contadora, the fact remains that Nicaragua is the only
government that has stated in writing its willingness to sign an
agreement. The September 1984 agreement was not just a working draft.
Rather it was officially transmitted to the five Central American nations
for signatures. Two weeks later Nicaragua said it would sign.
The official United States position is that the United States
supports the Contadora process and "will act in accord" with any agreement
signed by all the Central Americans. The real United States position,
however, is one of determined obstruction of any agreement that would set
limits on United States military activity in a region where it has always had
a free hand.
Behind the scenes the Reagan administration took steps to
thwart the signing of any Contadora treaty that would ratify the Sandinista
government and restrict United States intervention in the region. On
September 21, 1984 after Nicaragua agreed to sign the Contadora
agreement, the United States initiated "intensive consultations" with Costa
Rica, Honduras and El Salvador, who then insisted on further revisions. A
month later the National Security Council could exult in a secret memo.
This classified background paper was prepared for an October 30, 1984
National Security Council meeting attended by President Reagan.
We have effectively blocked Contadora group e-tforts to impose the second draft of the revised Contadora Act.
84 The document also reveals that the Reagan administration
undertook "intensive efforts' to pressure Guatemala to join the core group
to form four nations that oppose the treaty. It states:
We will continue to exert strong pre~sure on Guatemala to support the basic core four position.
To maintain the facade of "showcase diplomacy" during the 1984
presendential campaign, President Reagan accepted Nicaragua's
longstanding offer to enter into bilateral talks in June 1984. The United
States envoy, Harry Schlaudeman, and the Nicaraguan Deputy Foreign
Minister, Victor Tinoco, met nine times at the Mexican resort of
Manzanillo. The initial session at Manzanillo promised success but the
talks came to a standstill when Schlaudeman presented new United States
proposals that called for major security concessions and internal political
change in Nicaragua. The United States demanded that the Sandinistas
expell all Soviet and Cuban advisors within nine months of a bilateral
agreement and that they hold a new election. In return, according to the
proposals, the United States would do nothing to alter its military and
par ami I itary aggression against Nicaragua other than take Nicaragua's
concessions "into consideration"4
While publicly continuing to support the negotiations, the Reagan
administration privately rejoiced:
We have trumped the latest Nicaraguan/Mexican efforts to rush signature for an un·satisfactory contadero agreememt.S
In January 1985, sixteen months and two drafts after it had agreed
to sign the Contadero agreement, Nicaragua's basic position was to insist
on a return to the agreement of September 1984 when it had originally
85
agreed to sign. Everything since then, Nicaragua believes, hod moved the
agreement closer to the United States position and weakened the
restrictions on United States military presence in the region.
The Reagan administration unilaterally broke off the talks
claiming that Nicaragua was using bilateral negoiotions to undermine
Contadero. In fact, it was Reagan's unwov~ring support for the Contros
and refusal to recognize any treaty that permitted the Sondinistos to stay
in power that blocked any peaceful resolution.
A confidential briefing paper prepared for Assistant Secretory of
State Elliot Abrahams in August 1985, indicated Washington's attitude
toward Contadero:
(O)ur interests continue to be served by the process. Nevertheless, its collopsi· wouldn't be a total disaster for United States policy.
In January 1986, ministers from the Contadero notions and the
Contadero support group met in Corobolledo, Venezuela to revive the peace
process. The Corobolledo initiative endorsed by all the Central American
notions, the EEC, and Japan explicitly called for a "termination of external
support to irregular forces operating in the region." That is on end to
United States support for the Contros. However, when the foreign
ministers of eight major Latin American notions personally presented this
request to Secretory of State George Shultz on F ebruory II, 1986, he
summarily rejected it.
86
In March 1986, the Pentagon released a report opposing
Contadora on the ground that a peace treaty would increase the likelihood
of war. During the time the Contadora Act is in effect, according to the
Pentagon's conclusions:
••• the restrictions imposed by the Act will result in a significant reduction in the military capability of Nicaragua's neighbors. The United States strictly complies with the agreement, with reduction in presence and support to Central American nations and no support to the Democratic Resistance Forces. Nicaragua begins violating the agreement. At the three year period, Honduras and Costa Rica ask the United States for assistance to contain Nicaragua's efforts to subvert its neighbors ••• (and) the United States Government would have to agree to a protracted commitment of United States forces with major impact on its world-~ide responsibility.7
The problem with the United States policy is that the Reagan
administration is not sincere about its policy objectives. Nicaragua has
already demonstrated flexibility about the Contadora peace process,
including a willingness to send home Cuban military advisers, to prohibit
the establishment of Soviet or Cuban bases, and to refrain from supporting
insurgencies elsewhere in the region.
The Sandinistas showed, in fact, a willingness to reach a solid,
verifiable agreement, in return for an agreement from the United States
and its friends in Central America neither to invade Nicaragua nor to assist
insurgencies against it.
87
To date, bilateral negotiations between the United States and
persons from the region have not provided a workable answer to these
problems. Also, United Nations involvement in the conflict has been
opposed by the United States, which prefers to keep Central America an
issue of the Western Hemisphere; and, therefore, removed from the
influence of the United Nation's Third World Coalition.
Arias Agreement
On February IS, 1987, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias
presented a modified peace plan based on the Contadora Act. It presented
Liberal Democratic visions of an alternative Central American policy
wihtout the Contadora's security provisions. Arias was dealing with the
political issues first; and then, after trust had been built up among the five
presidents, he proposed moving on to the more difficulty security questions.
Arias also realized that a United Staes invasion of Nicaragua
implied serious costs for Costa Rican society as a whole, endangering the
democratic model of which Costa Ricans are so proud.
These objective factors were combined with other, more
subjective, ones. Although the Costa Ricans are anti-Sandinista based on
their deeply rooted anti-communist sentiments, and anti-Nicaraguan for
reasons that include a deep-seated racism, they are not willing to
88
involve themselves actively in a military conflict. In this sense, they are
peace-loving people. Arias was intelligent enough to grasp the importance
of this cluster of factors and use it to win the election.8
As President, Arias opposed the military route and lent his
support to a political solution to the region's problems. But at first he used
this route to seek a political capituation on the part of the Sandinista
government. During his inauguration, in the presence of a number of the
Contradora and Support Group countries' presidents, Arias unsuccessfully
tried to secure their signatures on a document making nearly the same
demands of Nicaragua as Reagan had in 1985, such as:
-Dissolution of the National Assembly.
-New elections to be held immediately, etc.9
Arias was seeking the same objectives as Reagan, but using
political, rather than military, means. It wasn't until the beginning of 1987,
when the irreversible decline of the counter-revolution was apparent to all,
the Democratic Party in the United States had won November elections to
Congress and Reagan was bogged down by the Jran/Conta scandal, that
Arias changes his position. His new Peace Plan, a creative variation of the
latest Contradora Plan, provided for a truly negotiated solution. 1 0
Although the Reagan Administration expressed verbal support for
the proposal, it was confident that, thanks to the docility of Honduras and
El Salvador, it would be able to change the plan to make it work against
Nicaragua.
On June 4, 1987 in Paris, as President Arias was winding up his
European trip looking for support for his peace plan, he described his
89
initiative as within the framework of the Contadora concept. In this
statement he only reflected the reaction he had received from the
European governments that he had visited. All of them were interested in
maintaining that framework. II
The Arias plan does not offer any guarantees of peace and
promotes skepticism regarding progressive steps for maintaining peace.
History is littered with diplomatic documents which purport to reconcile conflict among nations, or among people who would become nations. But the Arias plan pretends to do something even more: to rearr~e the political order within countries.
The Arias plan was seen by some as a variant on the Contadora
Treaty, and in May of 1986 the Central American Presidents met in
Esquipulas but were unable to sign the agreement.
Esguipulas
In the little town of Esquipulas, the five presidents of the five
Central American countries had a meeting for the purpose of getting an
agreement for the region without the intervention of the United States.
The agreements are referred to by the name of the town where the
meetings took place.
The characteristics of Esquipulas was the effort of the five
governments to legitimize themselves by establishing self-determination
90
without the domination of United States presence. They established the
International Commission on Verification and Follow-up (CIVS) to express
their sincere desire for peace that would establish democratic, pluralistic,
and participitory governments with free expression at the polls. It was
their desire to break the economic stagnation of the region and remove the
legitimacy of political-military struggles.
The first meeting in May 1986 established the National
Reconciliation Commission and the International Commission on
Verification and Follow-up. These commisions were to follow up on the
accords regarding amnesty, cease-fire, democratization and free election.
In each country there were to be National Reconciliation Commissions with
one government representative, one representative of the legal opposition
parties, one Catholic bishop and one notable citizen who did not serve in
either the government or in the ruling party.
The CIVS was to begin at the same time and would be made up of
the foreign ministers of the Contadora, the support group and from Central
American countries, the secretaries general (or their representatives) of
the Organization of American States and the United Nations. Outstanding
matters of security (arms control, verification and limitation) would
continue to be negotiated through the Contadora Group. 13
91
Later, on August 7, 1987, a summit meeting was held in
Guatemala and was known as Esquipulas II. The objective was that the
social forces waging war in Central American should negotiate peace terms
among the nations affected by the armed conflicts.
The peace accords signed at Espuipulas II sought to have the
social forces waging war in Central America achieve by political means
what they have been trying to do through military means. For the rebels in
arms and those who support them, this implied abandoning war as a form of
struggle. At the same time the Central American governments were to
widen internal political space to further democracy. Actually, the
Guatemala accords were agreement for both peace and democracy. The
Central American presidents determined that their actions in favor of
peace and democracy should be executed within the constitutional
framework of each country.
Esquipulas II was a tool to prod the Central American
governments and movements into a more Western democracy. Its intent
was to be a regional political (not military) accord at the highest level by
involving presidents and with the support of the United Nations, the
Organization of American States and the Contadora and Support
92
Countries. The more the Contadora and Support Countries defend the
principles of Latin American sollutions to Latin American conflicts, the
characteristic of self-determination and non-intervention into the internal
affairs of other states become more valid. This validity is reinforced by
increased participation of the civilian society into the affairs of the
government, the peace accords, and human rights in general.l4
On January 15-16, 1988, a new presidential summit was held in
San Jose, Costa Rica and is known as Esquipulas Ill. It was concluded that
the actions carried out so far by the governments of Central America had
not been entirely satisfactory. As a consequence of this summit, there was
agreement to fulfill their obligations in an unconditional and unilateral
manner without further excuses.
Three significant elements emerged from comparison of
Esquipulas II and Ill. First, the Costa Rican summit does not cancel but
endorses the essential content of the Guatemala accords; i.e., the
substitution of strictly political forms of struggle for military forms. Also,
it ratifies, without additions or subtractions, all the specific measures that
the Central American governments and the other countries should take to
achieve peace and democracy in the region.
Second, Esquipulas Ill drastically alters the procedure for
fulfilling the accords, substituting unconditional and unilateral compliance
by the governments in the shortest possible time for the mechanism of
gradual and simultaneous compliance by all countries within specific
deadlines.
93
Third, the Costa Rican summit gave the responsibility for
verification and follow-up to the Central American foreign ministers who
comprise the Executive Commission of CIVS. This task was previously the
responsibility of CIVS as a whole, composed of the Secretary General (or
their representatives) of the United Nations and the Organixation of
American States and the foreign miminsters of the eight Contadora and
Support Group nations as well as the five Central American nations. This
measure has the intention of pushing to the side the contadora and its
Support Group, the Organization of American States and the United
Nations. 15
The willingness of the leaders of these five countries, couples
with the efforts of other Latin American Countries, indicates that the
responsibility for peace within their own region and within their own
borders is not the responsibility of other world powers. Consistently, these
nations have pressed for the right of self-determination and non
intervention.
Esquipulas I identified the problems and the procedures for their
solution at the highest level--that of the presidents of the five countries.
Esquipulas II demonstrated that while the military alternative provides no
solution, the political alternative is extremely complex and difficult. The
94
Joint Declaration of Esquipulas Ill of the five presidents ratifies the
Esquipulas II Accord and commits each government to compliance. It
includes dialogue to arrange cease-file, general amnesty, cessation of aid
to irregular groups, non-use of territory to support such groups, and
democratization.
CHAPTER 5
END NOTES
1 New York Times, October 3, 1984.
2National Security Council, "Background Paper," p. I.
31bid.
4New York Times, November 2, 1984.
5washington Post, November 6, 1984, p. 15.
6confidential agenda for the "Chiefs of Mission Conference," Panama,
September 8-1 0, 1985, p. 4.
7 Op. cit., NSC, "Background Paper," p.3.
8Envio (Managua, Nicaragua: lnstituto Historico Centroamericano),
Vol. 6, September 1987, pp. 3-4.
91bid., p. 3-4.
I 01bid., p. 5.
II Envio, July 1987, p. 3.
12Mark Folcoff, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 85, No.6, June 1988, pp. 17.
13Envio, September 1987, p. 4.
14Envio, Vol., 7, No. 81, Apri I 1988, pp. 60-61.
15Envio, Vol. 7, No. 80, February-March 1988, p.l7.
CONCLUSIONS
As a whole the Sandinista revolutionary movement had as its goal
a commitment to more than overthrowing Somoza. It was an effort to
institute political, social and economic changes. Changes through the
creation of new structures and mechanics of government. This meant the
nationalization of some parts of the economy and the development of
education toward political awareness of the general population. The
Sandinista government is based on ideals that include freedom from
exploitation, oppression and backwardness. A major goal of the
revolutionary movement was the guaranteed freedom for the worker-union
movement that would inClude the organization of peasants, students and
women. It also had promised to develop agrarian reforms with a policy that
would effectively redistribute the land. The plan also included the
elimination of drastic inequities of housing, health care, education and
living conditions suffered by the general population under Somoza.
The Nicaraguan foreign policy assumed a position of
independence and non-alignment as a means to eliminate the tranditional
submission to the United States dominance.
The Nicaraguan situation is not a situation that can be attributed
to any one particular U.S. administration, past or present. There has been
a cumulative effect of the U.S. policies toward dictatorships in the region
that were paternatistic protection of oppressive regimes. There is a need
97
for the U.S. diplomats and politicians to act more prudently, to recognize
the needs of the populace, and to react with compassion and creativity. As
long as the United States is unwilling to accept social and political
alternatives of self-determination by the middle-class and the poor
in Central American, there is little hope for peaceful resolutions and
improved relations. Nicaragua has been the surrogate battleground of
East-West interests and only Nicaraguan blood has been spilled. Direct
military invervention is not a realistic action and is not morally
acceptable. Continued military aid to the contras is not a viable option to
the pursuit of peace.
Nicaragua is a good example of the failed U.S. foreign policy in
Central America. There has been a tactical shift in U.S. foreign policy
aimed at maintaining its political and economic dominance over
Nicaragua. The Carter administration tried an accommodationist view
that represented the interests of the transnational banking capital in
controlling the relations of the U.S. in Nicaragua. The Reagan
administration's policy attempted to roll back the revolution. By using the
rhetoric of losing Nicaragua to the Communist bloc, the Reagan
administration suspended all economic aid to Nicaragua after 1980. Aid to
the private sector became more focused, and wheat and sugar quotas were
cut drastically to destabilize the economy. In order to prevent the
consolidation of the revolution, several lines of acton were put in motion
98
including a naval blockade, mining of the Nicaraguan ports, economic and
military support given to counter-revolutionary forces stations in Honduras,
and eventually an economic blockade.
Basically, the pol icy failed because it did not consider the need
to inspire the majority of the people with a reasonable alternative to either
leftist revolutionary regimes or suppressive greed-ridden dictatorship. The
Reagan administration intended Nicaragua's economic deterioration to
enhance the effects of their military aggression. However, the grave
economic deterioration has not automatically provoked a political crisis as
hoped, and the counter-revolutionaries have been unable to exploit the
economic crisis. There is no denying that there has been some effect on
the Sandinista support but it has never reached the proportions intended by
the U.S. The Nicarguan people have not forgotten the urban reforms,
which between 1979 and 1983 benefitted a third of the urban population by
giving them access to their own homes. They have not forgotten that the
Agrarian reform has helped 57% of the rural people.
The successes of the literacy campaign and several ground
breaking health campaigns were achieved before the Reagan
Administration used direct aggression against Nicaragua. All these
improvements have left their imprint on the nation's consciousness, helping
the people recognize tht the cause of the economic crisis does not
automatically turn into a political-ideological crisis.
Nicaragua has produced a revolution that is a unique mixture of
Marxist ideology, fierce nationalism, and Christian militancy. Perceptions
of this revolution differ so widely among North Americans that it is
99
scarcely possible to believe they are looking at the same phenomenon.
North Americans are making political choices concerning the people of that
small tropical nation of scarcely three million people, mostly children,
which may literally mean life or death for them.
It is evident that diplomacy offers the best hope for bringing the
Sandinistas and the Central American nations into reasonable participation
in Latin American affairs. There is a need to focus more on the people in a
war-ravaged land, to recognize their need for self-respect and self
determination, and a recognizable place in the family of nations. This is
similar to action taken in regard to German and Japan after World War II,
and more recently toward China and Russia.
United States intervention in Nicaragua has come full circle.
For over seven years President Reagan has disregarded American principles
and flouted congressional suthority to advance his own low-intensity war
against the Sandinistas. But the Congress has also acted passively in the
fact of clear-cut illicit operations following the disclosure of the mining of
harbors, distribution of murder manuals, support for mercenaries, and
constructon of unauthorized military bases that were beyond U.S. law.
Nicaragua's goals, as could be expected, are diametrically
opposed to those of the U.S. While the Reagan Administration finds it
necessary to scrap the Esquipulas accords in order to achieve its objectives,
the Nicaraguan government has continued to work within the framework of
negotiations established by this accord, as the most viable way to reach a
peaceful solution to the U.S.-Nicaraguan conflict.
While the U.S. is trying to unite the four other Central American
countries to isolate Nicaragua, the Sandinista government is seeking
100
another meeting of the five Central American nations, with the proposal
that they revive the fulfillment of the Esquipulas II accords.
The United States should follow the stated intent of its
forefathers:
The true America goes not abroad in search of monsters to destroy. She well knows that by once enlisting under other banners than her own, were they even the banners of foreign independence, she would involve herself, beyond the power of extrication, in all the wars of interest and intrigue, of individual avarice, envy and ambition. She might become the dictatress of the world; she would not longer be the ruler of her own spirit.
-John Quincy Adams July 4, 1821
Now that the U.S. has entered an era of warmer relations with Russia, it
seems reasonable to expect that the same accord would be extended to all
people on this hemisphere. Although there is not agreement with the
political ideology of Russia, there has been an about-face in the direction
of change in attitude toward the nation--acceptance. This is the policy
that will gain the U.S. the most in this hemisphere as well.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adult Education in Nicaragua. A Publication of the Ministry of Education, Managua, 1981 ~
Affidavit to the World Court. September 5, 1985.
Amador, Fausto. "Rising Opposition to Soinoza Dictatorship." Intercontinental Press,
28 November I 977.
Amador, Fausto and Santiago, Sara. "Where is Nicaragua Going?" Intercontinental
Press, II June 1979.
Arms Control and Foreign Pol icy Caucus. "Who are the Contras?" Washington, D.C., April 18, 1985.
Associated Press, December 20, 1986.
Barricade lnternacional, 20 August 1951.
Barricade International, I August 1981.
Barricade International, II May 1983.
Barricade International, 28 August 1986.
Bendana, Alejandro. "Chrisis in Nicaragua. 11 NACLA: Report on the Americas,
XII, November-Decembe 1978.
Bermudez, Carlos Perez and Lopez, Onofre Guevara. El movimiento obrero en Nicaragua. Managua: Ediciones Davila Bolanos, 1981.
Black, George. Triumph of the Peorle: The Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua. London: Zed Press, 198 •
Blandon, Jesus Miguel. Entre Sandino y Fonseca Amador. Managua: lmpresiones y Troqueles S.A., 1980.
Britannica. Book of the Year 1948.
Britannica. Book of the Year 1951.
Burnet, Ben G. and Johnson, Kenneth F. Political Forces in Latin America. Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing Co., 1968.
Confidential agenda for the "Chiefs of Mission Conference." Panama, September, 8-1 0, 1987.
Conte~porary Marxism, 8, Spring 1984.
Counterspy, 8, March-May 1984.
102
Crawley, Eduardo. Dictators Never Die. London: C. Hurst and Company, 1979.
Deere, Carmen and Marchetti, Peter. "Worker-Peasant Alliance in the ·First Year of the Nicraguan Agrarian Reform." Latin American Perspectives, VIII. Spring 1981.
Denny; Harold Norman. Dollars for Bullets: The Story of American Rule in Nicaragua. New York: Dial, 1929.
Denver Post, May 19, 1988.
Department of State Memorandum on the Nicaraguan situation, approximate date January 21, 1927. Signed by Robert 0 Ids, Under Secretary of State.
Dickey, Christopher. With the Contras: A Report in the Wills of Nicaragua. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1985.
Diederich, Bernard. Somoza. New York: E. P. Dutton, 1981.
Dodson, Michael and Montgomery, Tommie Sue. "La lglasia en Ia revalue ion Nicaraguense." Nicaragua, 2, Apri 1-June, 1981.
Envio, July 1987
Envio, September 1987.
Env.io, February-Match 1988.
Envio, April 1988.
Epica Task Force, Nicaragua: A People's Revolution. Washington, D.C., 1980.
Fann, K. T., Hodges, Donald C., eds. Readings on U.S. Imperialism. Bast, Mass.: Porter Sargent Publishers, 1971. ·
Fitzgerald, E. V. K .. "Una evolucion del cost econornico de Ia agresion del gobierno estaunidense contra el pueblo de Nicaragua." Paper presented to the Latin American Studies Association, Albuquerque, New Mexico, April 1985.
Folcoff, Mark. Foreign Affairs, Vol. 85, No.6, June 1988.
Forbes, August 22, 1988.
Frieden, Tom. "A Revolution Under Guns." The Nation, 17 December 1983.
Gaceta Sandinista, 8-9, February-March 1976.
Gutman, Roy. ''Nicaragua: America's Diplornatic Char.ade." Foreign Policy, 56, Fall 1984.
103
Interview for the CBS program "West 56th Street," June 25, 1986.
Institute for Policy Studies. Nicaragua Fact Sheet. Security Assistance. Washington, D.C., Apri I 1981. ·
Janzen, Ignacio Gonzalez. "La Dinastia de los Somoza." Historia lllustrada, No. 38, July 1979.
Jones, Susanne. "The Role of the United States in Shaping the Central American Common Market: A case Study in the Politicis of J="oreign Aid." Barkeley (Mimeo), 1972.
Las Mosquitia en Ia revolucion. Managua: Centro de Investigation y Estudios de Ia Heforma Agraria, 1981.
LaF eber, Walter. Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., 1984.
Lainez, Francisco. Terremoto '72" elites y pueblo. Managua: Editorial Union 1977.
Latin America Weekly Report, 14 May 1982.
Latin America Weekly Report, 23 July 1983.
Lippman, Walter, 1926.
Lipset, Seymour Martin, et al. Latin Merican Radicalism. New York: Vintage Books,-1969.
Los Angeles Times, 25 August 1983.
Los Angeles Times, 12 April 1984.
Los Angeles Times, March 3, 1985.
Martinez, Jorge Detrinidad. Diccionario politico-filosofico popular. -Managua: Educiones Monimbo, 1980.
104
McClellan, Maj. Edwin N. "Supervising Nicaraguan Elections, 1928." U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Vol. LIX, January 1933.
Millett, Richard. Guardians of the Dynasty. New York: Orbis Books, 1977.
Mosquitio en Ia Revolucion. Managua: CIERS, 1981.
Munro, Dana G. Five Republics of Central America:. Their Political and Economic Development and Their Reltaitons with the United States. New York: Oxford University Press.
NACLA: Report on the Americas, February 1976.
National Security Council. "Background Paper."
Naylor, Robert. "The British Role in Central America Prior to the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of the 1850." Hispanic American Historical Review 40, August 1960.
New York Times, December 1983.
New York Times, February 24, 1984.
New York Times, October 3, 1984.
New York Times, November 2, 1984.
Newfarmer, Richard. From Gunboats to Diplomacy: US PoliCies for Latin America~ Maryland: The John Hopkins Univeristy Press, 1984.
Newsweek, September 29, 1980.
O'Connor, Annie. "Literacy Campaign: A Brigadista Shares his experiences.'' Nicaragua Perspectives, July 1981.
On the General Political-Military Platform of struggle of the Sandinista Front for National Liberation for the Triumph of the Saridinista Popular Revolution (Pamphlet). Managua: National Leadership of the Sandinista · National Liberation Front, May 1977.
Ortega, Daniel. "Speech made by the government Junta coordinator Daniel Ortega on July 19, 1983, at the fourth anniversary celebration in Leon." Nicaraguan Perspectives, 7, Winter 1983.
Ortega, Humberto. 50 anos de lucha Sandinista. (Mimeo), 1976.
Ortega, Humberto. Sobre Ia insurrection. La Havana: Editorial de Ciencias Sociales, 1982.
105
Philosophy and.Policies of the Government of Nicaragua. Managua: Agencio Nueva Nicaragua, 1982 •. ·.
Puiggross:, Roldol fo. "Di.scurso en Ia jornada de sol idasidad con el pueblo de Nicaragua." Suplemento en Gaceta Sandinista, 6/7, December 1975 and January 1976.
Ramirez, Sergio. lntroduccion al pensamiento Sandinista. Mariagua: Coleccion El Chipote, 1981. ··
Report .of the Junta of the Governement of National Reconstruction of Nicaragua, May 4, I 981. ·
Rivas, Eledberto Torres. "Sintesis Historica Del Proceso Politico." in. Edelberto Torees Rivas, et. as., Centro-america: Hoy. Mexico: Siglo SSt, 1975.
Rocky Mountain News, Sunday, October 30, 1988. ·
San Francisco Examiner, June 23, 1986.
Secretaria. Vocional de Propaganda y Education Politico, Prop·aganda de Ia Produccion. Managua: Centro de Publicaciones Sy!vio Magaga, 1980.
SEPLA: Seminario Perrnanete sobre Latino America, No. 4, December
Silva, Roberto Gutierrez. "Revelaciones intimas de Ia mediacion politico de 1950 entre Chammorro y Somoza." Revista Conservadora, VII, September 1963.
Squier, Ephraim George. Nicaragua its People. New York: Harper and Bros., 1960.
Torres, Ignacio Briones. "Angustia y esperanza de Nicaragua." Combate, 3, July-August 1961 ~
Vaky, Viron P. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington, D.C., Number 70, Spring 1988. Foreign Policy.
Walker, Thomas W., ed. Nicaragua in Revolution. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1979.
Walker, Thomas W. Nicaragua: The Land of Sandino. Colorado: Westview Press, 1981.
Washington Post, March 21, 1984.
Washington Post, November 6, 1984.
Washington Post, March 22, 1985~
Washington Post, December 26, 1986.
Washington Post, Mar~h I, 1987.
Washington Post, March 22, 1987.
Wheelock, Jaime. Diciembre Victorioso. Managua: SENAPEP, 1979.
106