Difference between revisions of "Sandinista National Liberation Front" - New World Encyclopedia

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The '''Sandinista National Liberation Front''' (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional) is a socialist political party in [[Nicaragua]] that first came to power in 1979 by overthrowing the dictatorship of [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle]]. Generally referred to by the initials FSLN, the party took its name from the 1930s struggle of [[Augusto César Sandino]], a charismatic peasant leader who organized and led a resistance to the [[United States]]' occupation of Nicaragua, which the U.S. had declared a protectorate.<ref>Timeline of Augusto Cesar Sandino,http://www.google.com/archivesearch?hl=en&q=Augusto+Cesar+Sandino&um=1&ie=UTF-8&scoring=t&sa=X&oi=timeline_result&resnum=11&ct=title. Accessed 11/24/08</ref>
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The '''Sandinista National Liberation Front''' (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional) is a leftist political party in [[Nicaragua]] that first came to power in 1979, by overthrowing the dictatorship of [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle]]. Generally referred to by the initials FSLN, the party took its name from the 1930s struggle of [[Augusto César Sandino]], a charismatic peasant leader who organized and led a resistance to the [[United States]]' occupation of Nicaragua, which the United States had declared a protectorate. The party first held power from 1979 through 1990, initially as part of a ruling [[Junta of National Reconstruction]]. Voted out of power in 1990, it was reinstated in 2006 with the re-election of President [[Daniel Ortega]] (José Daniel Ortega Saavedra), its long-time leader.
The party first held power from 1979 through 1990, initially as part of a ruling [[Junta of National Reconstruction]], and eventually on its own. Voted out of power in 1990, it was reinstated in 2006 with the re-election of President [[Daniel Ortega]], its long time leader.
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Although it has been credited with implementing improved health care, and vocational training, among other reforms, it has faced continuing dissension, occasionally violent. Dissenters have included former FSLN allies as well as supporters of the former Somoza regime. More recent opposition includes segments of the Nicaraguan population that support the [[Constitutional Liberal Party]], the major opposition party which is generally allied with the [[Catholic Church]] and big business.
Although it has been credited with implementing improved health care,<ref>R.G. Slater, "Reflections on Curative Health Care in Nicaragua," American Journal of Public Health, May 1989</ref> education,<ref>Alec I. Gershberg, "Empowering Parents While Making Them Pay: Autonomous Schools in Nicaragua," New School University's Milano Center, at http://www.newschool.edu/milano/cdrc/schoolreport/index.html, accessed November 24, 2008</ref> and vocational training, among other reforms, it has faced continuing dissension, occasionally violent. Dissenters include segments of the Nicaraguan population who support the [[Constitutional Liberal Party]], the major opposition party which is generally allied with the [[Catholic Church]] and big business. In the fall of 2008, for example, armed clashes erupted between supporters of both parties, over allegations of mayoral electoral fraud.<ref>New York Times, November 20, 2008, page A6</ref>
 
 
 
==Formative Years: 1961&ndash;1970==
 
The Sandinistas, as FSLN members are widely known, began in 1961 as a group of student activists at the [[National Autonomous University of Nicaragua]] (UNAN) in Managua.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0022) Library of Congress Country Studies]: Nicaragua - The rise of the FSLN</ref> They sought to overthrow the Somoza regime, which had held power from 1936 (and which eventually began to receive strong United States backing), and establish a [[Marxist]] society.
 
Founded by [[Carlos Fonseca Amador|Carlos Fonseca]], [[Silvio Mayorga]], [[Tomás Borge Martínez|Tomás Borge]] and others, the group first called itself The National Liberation Front (FLN). (Only Tomás Borge lived long enough to see the Sandinista victory in 1979.) The term "Sandinista" was added two years later, as a way to identify with Sandino's movement, and use his legacy to promote the newer movement's ideology and strategy.<ref>{{PDFlink|[http://www2.asanet.org/sectioncbsm/Jansen-aug-2004.pdf American Sociological Association]|334&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 342028 bytes —>}}: Resurrection and Reappropriation: Political Uses of Historical Figures in Comparative Perspective</ref> By the early 1970s, the FSLN was launching limited military initiatives.<ref name="guerillaWarfare">{{cite book|last=Davies Jr.|first=Thomas M. M.|title=Guerrilla Warfare|publisher=SR Books|year=2002|month=January|isbn=0-84202678-9|page=p. 359}}</ref> Initially, however, according to an official Nicaraguan  source, "Its first military action ended in a massacre because the group was surrounded by the National Guard and the Honduran army at the national border in the department of Jinotega, a place that used to be the setting of numerous battles directed by Sandino against North American marines."<ref>"History of the Sandinista Revolution: The Union of a Whole Nation," Vianica.com, at http://www.vianica.com/go/specials/15-sandinista-revolution-in-nicaragua.html, accessed 11/24/08.</ref>
 
  
== History 1970 - 1979 ==
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==Formative years: 1961&ndash;1970==
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The ''Sandinistas,'' as FSLN members are widely known, began in 1961 as a group of student activists at the [[National Autonomous University of Nicaragua]] (UNAN) in Managua.<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0022) Library of Congress Country Studies: Nicaragua—The rise of the FSLN.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> They sought to overthrow the Somoza regime, which had held power from 1936 (and which eventually began to receive strong United States backing), and establish a [[Marxism|Marxist]] society.
 +
Founded by [[Carlos Fonseca Amador|Carlos Fonseca]], [[Silvio Mayorga]], [[Tomás Borge Martínez|Tomás Borge]], and others, the group first called itself The National Liberation Front (FLN). (Only Tomás Borge lived long enough to see the Sandinista victory in 1979.) The term "Sandinista" was added two years later, as a way to identify with Sandino's movement, and use his legacy to promote the newer movement's ideology and strategy.<ref>American Sociological Association, [http://www2.asanet.org/sectioncbsm/Jansen-aug-2004.pdf Resurrection and Reappropriation: Political Uses of Historical Figures in Comparative Perspective.] Retrieved February 2, 2009.</ref> By the early 1970s, the FSLN was launching limited military initiatives.<ref name="guerillaWarfare">Thomas M.M. Davies Jr. ''Guerrilla Warfare'' (SR Books, 2002, ISBN 0842026789), 359.</ref> Initially, however, according to an official Nicaraguan source, "Its first military action ended in a massacre because the group was surrounded by the National Guard and the Honduran army at the national border in the department of Jinotega, a place that used to be the setting of numerous battles directed by Sandino against North American marines."<ref>Vianica.com, [http://www.vianica.com/go/specials/15-sandinista-revolution-in-nicaragua.html"History of the Sandinista Revolution: The Union of a Whole Nation."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
===Earthquake, Kidnapping, and Reaction===
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== History 1970-1979 ==
On December 23, 1972, [[Managua]], the capital city, was leveled by earthquake that killed some 10,000 of the city's 400,000 residents and rendered homeless another 50,000 families. About 80 percent of Managua's commercial buildings were reportedly destroyed.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/23/newsid_2540000/2540045.stm BBC News]: 1972: Earthquake wreaks devastation in Nicaragua</ref> Much of the foreign aid intended for the victims, however, was appropriated by President Somoza,<ref name=walker>{{cite book
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===Earthquake, kidnapping, and reaction===
|last= Walker
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On December 23, 1972, [[Managua]], the capital city, was leveled by an earthquake that killed some 10,000 of the city's 400,000 residents, rendering another 50,000 families homeless. About 80 percent of Managua's commercial buildings were reportedly destroyed.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/23/newsid_2540000/2540045.stm BBC News]: 1972: Earthquake wreaks devastation in Nicaragua.</ref> Much of the foreign aid intended for the victims, however, was appropriated by President Somoza,<ref name=walker>Thomas Walker, ''Nicaragua,'' 4th ed. (Cambridge: Westview Press, 2003, ISBN 0813338824).</ref><ref name = hist>University of Pittsburgh, [http://www.ucis.pitt.edu/clas/nicaragua_proj/history/somoza/Hist-Somoza-dinasty.pdf The Somoza Dynasty.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> and several parts of downtown Managua were never rebuilt. "By some estimates," according to one source, "Somoza's personal wealth soared to US $400 million in 1974."<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0021) Country Studies: Nicaragua - The Somoza Era, 1936-74.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> This overt corruption and lack of concern for rebuilding Managua caused even some people who had previously supported the regime, such as segments of the business community, to turn against Somoza and call for his overthrow.
|first= Thomas
 
|title= Nicaragua
 
|month= January
 
|year= 2003
 
|edition= 4th edition
 
|publisher= Westview Press  
 
|location= Cambridge, MA
 
|language= English
 
|id= ISBN 0-8133-3882-4
 
|pages= p. 31}}</ref><ref name = hist>{{cite web |url =http://www.ucis.pitt.edu/clas/nicaragua_proj/history/somoza/Hist-Somoza-dinasty.pdf  
 
|title = The Somoza Dynasty
 
|publisher = University of Pittsburgh
 
|accessmonthday=2 September
 
|accessyear = 2006
 
|format=PDF}}</ref> and several parts of downtown Managua were never rebuilt. "By some estimates," according to one source, "Somoza's personal wealth soared to US$400 million in 1974."<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0021) Library of Congress Country Studies]: Nicaragua - The Somoza Era, 1936-74</ref> This overt corruption and lack of concern for rebuilding Managua caused even some people who had previously supported the regime, such as segments of the business community, to turn against Somoza and call for his overthrow.
 
  
Meanwhile, the FSLN had been intensifying its military actions. For example, in October of 1971, "Sandinista commandos hijacked an air plane in Costa Rica and obtained the freedom of Sandinista prisoners in Costa Rican jails." A few years later, in December December 1974, a guerrilla group affiliated with FSLN, led by [[Germán Pomares]] and [[Eduardo Contreras]], seized government hostages at a party in the house of Somoza ally and former Minister of Agriculture, Jose María "Chema" Castillo, in the Managua suburb Los Robles. Among the hostages were several Somoza relatives. (The seizure, undertaken just after the departure of U.S. Ambassador [[Turner Shelton]], resulted in the death of the Minister, who reportedly reached for a gun to defend himself).<ref>"History of Nicaragua" at http://www.ans.edu.ni/Academics/history/somozatachito.html, accessed 11/26/08</ref> The guerrillas received US$1 million ransom, and had their official communiqué read over the radio and printed in the newspaper ''[[La Prensa (Managua)|La Prensa]]''.  
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Meanwhile, the FSLN had been intensifying its military actions. For example, in October 1971, "Sandinista commandos hijacked an air plane in Costa Rica and obtained the freedom of Sandinista prisoners in Costa Rican jails." A few years later, in December 1974, a guerrilla group affiliated with FSLN, led by [[Germán Pomares]] and [[Eduardo Contreras]], seized government hostages at a party in the house of Somoza ally and former Minister of Agriculture, [[Jose María "Chema" Castillo]], in the [[Managua]] suburb Los Robles. Among the hostages were several Somoza relatives. (The seizure, undertaken just after the departure of U.S. Ambassador [[Turner Shelton]], resulted in the death of the Minister, who reportedly reached for a gun to defend himself).<ref>ANS, [http://www.ans.edu.ni/Academics/history/somozatachito.html "History of Nicaragua"] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> The guerrillas received U.S. $1 million ransom, and had their official communiqué read over the radio and printed in the newspaper ''[[La Prensa (Managua)|La Prensa]]''.  
  
The guerrillas also succeeded in getting 14 Sandinista prisoners released from jail and flown to Cuba. One of the released prisoners was [[Daniel Ortega]], who would later become the president of Nicaragua (1985-1990, 2006- ).<ref>Encyclopedia of World Biography on Daniel Ortega, 2005-2006</ref> To garner popular support, the rebels also lobbied for an increase in wages for National Guard soldiers to 500 [[Nicaraguan córdoba|córdoba]]s ($71 at the time).<ref>{{cite book|last=Lopez|first=George A.|title=Liberalization and Redemocratization in Latin America|publisher=Greenwood Press|year=1987|month=December|isbn=0-31325299-8|page=63}}</ref>
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The guerrillas also succeeded in getting 14 Sandinista prisoners released from jail and flown to Cuba. One of the released prisoners was [[Daniel Ortega]], who would later become the president of Nicaragua (1985-1990, 2006- ).<ref>Encyclopedia of World Biography on Daniel Ortega, 2005-2006</ref> To garner popular support, the rebels also lobbied for an increase in wages for National Guard soldiers to 500 [[Nicaraguan córdoba|córdoba]]s ($71 at the time).<ref>George A. Lopez, ''Liberalization and Redemocratization in Latin America'' (Greenwood Press, 1987, ISBN 0313252998), 63.</ref>
 
   
 
   
The Somoza government responded by imposing martial law in 1975, tightening censorship and reportedly allowing the National Guard to torture and murder individuals suspected of collaborating with the Sandinistas.<ref name="autogenerated2">{{cite book|title = Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America |last = Lafeber |first = Walter |year = 1993 |month = January |publisher = W. W. Norton & Company |ISBN = 0-39330964-9 |pages = 229}}</ref> During the crackdown, many of the FSLN guerrillas were killed, including in 1976 its leader and founder [[Carlos Fonseca]], who had returned from Cuba to try to resolve fissures which had developed in the organization. <ref>[http://revolutions.truman.edu/nicaragua/pre.htm Truman State University]: Pre-Revolutionary Nicaragua</ref>
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The Somoza government responded by imposing martial law in 1975, tightening censorship and reportedly allowing the National Guard to torture and murder individuals suspected of collaborating with the Sandinistas.<ref name="autogenerated2">Walter Lafeber, ''Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America'' (W. W. Norton & Company, 1993, ISBN 0393309649).</ref> During the crackdown, many of the FSLN guerrillas were killed, including in 1976 its leader and founder [[Carlos Fonseca]], who had returned from Cuba to try to resolve fissures which had developed in the organization. <ref>Truman State University, Pre-Revolutionary Nicaragua. </ref>
  
===Three Factions Emerge===
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===Three factions emerge===
Initial military setbacks, including a significant defeat in 1967, led the FSLN to reorient itself from its sole focus on urban activism towards reaching out to peasants, who they felt were increasingly radicalized by the National Guard's crackdown on Sandinistas, a crackdown that was often waged against civilians as well as revolutionaries. This strategy became known as the [[Prolonged Popular War]] (Guerra Popular Prolongada, or GPP). Now peasants as well as students and urban dwellers were mobilized into small-scale military attacks against the Somoza's National Guard.<ref>[http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/aureview/1986/jul-aug/nolan.html United States Air Force - Maxwell-Gunter AFB - Air & Space Power Journal]: From FOCO to Insurrection: Sandinista Strategies of Revolution</ref> <ref>Morris H. Morley, "Washington, Somoza and the Sandinistas," Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN 10:0521450810, at http://books.google.com/books?id=_9yo4m21NGcC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=Prolonged+Popular+War+Nicaragua&source=web&ots=5xtE-J0hsg&sig=LSlIAKw0Fd3OziNU-L2nFmP5h1s&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result#PPA59,M1, accessed 11/26/08</ref>
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Initial military setbacks, including a significant defeat in 1967, led the FSLN to reorient its focus on urban activism, towards reaching out to peasants, who they felt were increasingly radicalized by the National Guard's crackdown on Sandinistas, a crackdown that was often waged against civilians as well as revolutionaries. This strategy became known as the [[Prolonged Popular War]] (Guerra Popular Prolongada, or GPP). Henceforth peasants, through a "silent accumulation of forces," would be mobilized, along with students and urban dwellers, into small-scale military attacks against the Somoza's National Guard.<ref>United States Air Force, [http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/aureview/1986/jul-aug/nolan.html Maxwell-Gunter AFB - Air & Space Power Journal: From FOCO to Insurrection: Sandinista Strategies of Revolution.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> <ref>Morris H. Morley, [http://books.google.com/books?id=_9yo4m21NGcC&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=Prolonged+Popular+War+Nicaragua&source=web&ots=5xtE-J0hsg&sig=LSlIAKw0Fd3OziNU-L2nFmP5h1s&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=4&ct=result#PPA59,M1 Washington, Somoza and the Sandinistas] (Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN 10:0521450810). Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
But during the 1975 state of siege, the Guard's increasingly brutal and effective crackdowns led some Marxist intellectuals to reject the rural guerrilla strategy in favor of self-defense and urban commando actions by armed union members. These Marxists defined themselves as the [[Proletarian Tendency]], in opposition to the GPP faction.
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But during the 1975 state of siege, the Guard's increasingly brutal and effective crackdowns led some [[Marxism|Marxist]] intellectuals to reject the rural guerrilla strategy in favor of self-defense and urban commando actions by armed union members. These Marxists defined themselves as the [[Proletarian Tendency]], in opposition to the GPP faction.
 
   
 
   
Shortly thereafter, a third faction arose, the [[Terceristas]]. Known alternately as the "Insurrectional Tendency" and the "Third Way," it was led by [[Daniel Ortega]] and his brother [[Humberto Ortega]], who followed a more pragmatic approach and called for tactical, temporary alliances with non-communists, including the conservative opposition, in a [[popular front]]which embraced both armed and unarmed action, such as riotingagainst the Somoza regime.<ref name=ortega>{{cite book
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Shortly thereafter, a third faction arose, the ''[[Terceristas]]''. Known alternately as the "Insurrectional Tendency" and the "Third Way," it was led by [[Daniel Ortega]] and his brother [[Humberto Ortega]], who followed a more pragmatic or eclectic approach and called for tactical, temporary alliances with non-communists, including the conservative opposition, in a [[popular front]]&mdash;which embraced both armed and unarmed action, such as rioting&mdash;against the Somoza regime.<ref name=ortega>Ortega Saavedra Humberto, ''Cincuenta Años de Lucha Sandinista'' (Mexico: Editorial Diogenes).</ref> Conservatives would join, they argued, because of growing disgust with Somoza. Further, by attacking the Guard directly, the Terceristas would demonstrate the weakness of the regime and encourage others to take up arms.
|last= Ortega Saavedra
 
|first= Humberto
 
|title= Cincuenta Años de Lucha Sandinista
 
|month=
 
|year= 1979
 
|edition=
 
|publisher= Editorial Diogenes  
 
|location= Mexico
 
|language= Spanish
 
|id=
 
|pages=
 
}}</ref> Conservatives would join, they argued, because of growing disgust with Somoza. Further, by attacking the Guard directly, the Terceristas would demonstrate the weakness of the regime and encourage others to take up arms.
 
  
On January 10, 1978, [[Pedro Joaquin Chamorro]], editor of the opposition newspaper ''[[La Prensa (Managua)|La Prensa]]'' was assassinated, with some evidence pointing to Somoza's son and members of the National Guard.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0023) Library of Congress Country Studies]: The End of the Anastasio Somoza Debayle Era</ref> Rioting broke out in several cities, and even members of the business community called a general strike, which effectively parlyzed the country for ten days. (Revenue losses, however, led most of the participating businesses to shortly cease their support for the strike.) During the turmoil, the Terceristas launched attacks in several cities, provoking even further repressive actions by the National Guard, which responded with intensified crackdowns on all opposition.  
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On January 10, 1978, [[Pedro Joaquin Chamorro]], editor of the opposition newspaper ''[[La Prensa (Managua)|La Prensa]]'' was assassinated, with some evidence pointing to Somoza's son and members of the National Guard.<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0023) The End of the Anastasio Somoza Debayle Era.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> Rioting broke out in several cities, and even members of the business community called a general strike, which effectively paralyzed the country for ten days. (Revenue losses, however, led most of the participating businesses to shortly cease their support for the strike.) During the turmoil, the Terceristas launched attacks in several cities, provoking even further repressive actions by the National Guard, which responded with intensified crackdowns on all opposition.  
  
The United States, meanwhile, ceased all military assistance to the Somoza regime, but allowed humanitarian aid to continue.
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The [[United States]], meanwhile, ceased all military assistance to the Somoza regime, but allowed humanitarian aid to continue.
  
In August, 23 Tercerista commandos led by [[Edén Pastora]] seized the entire Nicaraguan congress and took nearly 1,000 hostages including [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza's]] nephew [[José Somoza Abrego]] and cousin [[Luis Pallais Debayle]]. [[Anastasio Somoza Garcia|Somoza]] paid a $500,000 ransom, released 59 political prisoners (including GPP chief [[Tomás Borge]]), and broadcasted a communiqué with FSLN's call for general insurrection. The guerrillas were flown to exile in Panama.<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/hispanic_heritage/article-9058683 Encyclopædia Britannica]: Guide to Hispanic Heritage</ref>  
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In August, 23 Tercerista commandos led by [[Edén Pastora]] seized the entire Nicaraguan congress and took nearly 1,000 hostages including [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza's]] nephew [[José Somoza Abrego]] and cousin [[Luis Pallais Debayle]]. [[Anastasio Somoza Garcia|Somoza]] paid a $500,000 ransom, released 59 political prisoners (including GPP chief [[Tomás Borge]]), and broadcasted a communiqué with FSLN's call for general insurrection. The guerrillas were flown to exile in Panama.<ref>Encyclopædia Britannica, Guide to Hispanic Heritage.</ref>  
  
A few days later six Nicaraguan cities rose in revolt. Armed youths took over the highland city of [[Matagalpa]]. Tercerista cadres attacked Guard posts in [[Managua]], [[Masaya]], [[León, Nicaragua|León]], [[Chinandega]] and [[Estelí]]. Large numbers of semiarmed civilians joined the revolt and put the Guard garrisons of the latter four cities under siege. Members of all three FSLN factions fought in these uprisings, which began to blur the distinctions among them and prepare the way for unified action.<ref name="RevNicaragua">[http://revolutions.truman.edu/nicaragua/rev.htm Truman State University]: Revolutionary Nicaragua</ref>
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A few days later six Nicaraguan cities rose in revolt. Armed youths took over the highland city of [[Matagalpa]]. Tercerista cadres attacked Guard posts in [[Managua]], [[Masaya]], [[León, Nicaragua|León]], [[Chinandega]] and [[Estelí]]. Large numbers of semi-armed civilians joined the revolt and put the Guard garrisons of the latter four cities under siege. Members of all three FSLN factions fought in these uprisings, which began to blur the distinctions among them and prepare the way for unified action.<ref name="RevNicaragua">Truman State University, Revolutionary Nicaragua. </ref>
  
 
===Reunification of the FSLN===
 
===Reunification of the FSLN===
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By early 1979, the United States government, under President [[Jimmy Carter]], no longer supported the [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza]] regime. But its equally strong opposition to a left-wing government led it to support a moderate group, the [["Broad Opposition Front"]] (Frente Amplio Opositon, or FAO), composed of Nicaraguan government dissidents and a group of business leaders known as [["The Twelve"]] (el Grupo de los Doce), who had originally been organized by the Terceristas. The FAO and Carter proposed a plan that would remove Somoza from office but would also prevent government power for the FSLN.<ref name=pastor>Robert A. Pastor, ''Condemned to Repetition. The United States and Nicaragua'' (Princeton Univ Press, 1987, ISBN 0691077525).</ref>
  
By early 1979, the United States government, under President [[Jimmy Carter]], no longer supported the [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza]] regime. But its equally strong opposition to  having a left-wing government take power led to support for a moderate group, the[["Broad Opposition Front"]] (Frente Amplio Opositon, or FAO), composed of Nicaraguan government dissidents and a group of business leaders known as [[The Twelve]] (el Grupo de los Doces), who were sympathetic to the Terceristas. The FAO and Carter proposed a plan that would remove Somoza from office but would also prevent government power for the FSLN.<ref name=pastor>{{cite book
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This plan, however, became known as "Somocismo sin Somoza" (Somocism without Somoza), which cost the FAO and The Twelve a loss of popular support. As a consequence, tens of thousands of youths joined the FSLN. On March 7, 1979, three representatives from each FSLN faction formed the organization's National Directorate. They were: [[Daniel Ortega]], [[Humberto Ortega]] and [[Víctor Tirado]] (Terceristas); [[Tomás Borge]], [[Bayardo Arce]], and [[Henry Ruiz]] (GPP faction); and [[Jaime Wheelock]], [[Luis Carrión]] and [[Carlos Núñez]] (Proletarian Tendency).<ref name="RevNicaragua"/>
|last= Pastor
 
|first= Robert A.
 
|title= Condemned to Repetition. The United States and Nicaragua
 
|month= September
 
|year= 1987
 
|edition=
 
|publisher= Princeton Univ Press
 
|location= United States of America
 
|language= English
 
|id= ISBN 0-691-07752-5
 
|pages=
 
}}</ref>
 
 
 
This plan, however, became known as "Somocismo sin Somoza" (Somocism without Somoza), which cost the FAO and The Twelve a loss of popular support. As a consequence, tens of thousands of youths joined the FSLN. On March 7, 1979, three reprenstatives from each FSLN faction formed the organization's National Directorate. They were: [[Daniel Ortega]], [[Humberto Ortega]] and [[Víctor Tirado]] (Terceristas); [[Tomás Borge]], [[Bayardo Arce]], and [[Henry Ruiz]] (GPP faction); and [[Jaime Wheelock]], [[Luis Carrión]] and Carlos Núñez (Proletarian faction).<ref name="RevNicaragua"/>
 
 
 
===Formation of a Provisional Government===
 
 
 
On June 16, the FSLN and several other groups announced the formation of a provisional Nicaraguan government in exile, the [[Junta of National Reconstruction]]. Its members were [[Daniel Ortega]] (FSLN), [[Moisés Hassan Morales|Moisés Hassan]] (FPN), [[Sergio Ramírez]] (The Twelve), [[Alfonso Robelo]] (MDN) and [[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], widow of assassinated La Prensa editor [[Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal|Pedro Joaquín Chamorro]]. By the end of that month, most of Nicaragua, except for Managua, the capital, was under FSLN control.
 
 
 
The provisional government in exile released a government program on July 9 in which it pledged to organize a democratic regime, promote political pluralism and universal suffrage, and ban ideological discrimination—except for those promoting the "return of Somoza's rule." [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza]] resigned on July 17 1979, handed over power to [[Francisco Urcuyo]], and fled to Miami. Urcuyo, in turn, was supposed to transfer the government to the revolutionary junta, but decided  to remain in power until the end of Somoza's presidential term in 1981. Two days later Urcuyo left power and fled to [[Guatemala]]. The five-member junta entered the Nicaraguan capital the next day and assumed power, reiterating its pledge to work for political pluralism, a mixed economic system, and a nonaligned foreign policy.<ref>[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0024) Library of Congress Country Studies]: Nicaragua: The Sandinista Revolution</ref>
 
 
 
In the wake of the insurrection, approximately 50,000 Nicaraguans dead and 150,000 were in exile.
 
 
 
==Ideologies==
 
{{main|Sandinista Ideologies}}
 
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image: Augusto-sandino-2.jpg|thumbnail|right|[[Augusto César Sandino]] ]] —>
 
 
 
Through the media and the works of FSLN leaders such as [[Carlos Fonseca]], the life and times of [[Augusto César Sandino]] became the unique symbol of this revolutionary force in [[Nicaragua]]. The ideology of Sandinismo gained momentum in 1974, when a Sandinista initiated hostage situation resulted in the Somoza government adhering to FSLN demands and publicly printing and airing work on Sandino in well known newspapers and media outlets.
 
 
 
During the long struggle against [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza]], the FSLN leaders' internal disagreements over strategy and tactics were reflected in three main factions:
 
*The {{lang|es|''guerra popular prolongada''}} (GPP, "prolonged popular war") faction was rural-based and sought long-term "silent accumulation of forces" within the country's large peasant population, which it saw as the main social base for the revolution.
 
*The {{lang|es|''tendencia proletaria''}} (TP, "proletarian tendency"), led by [[Jaime Wheelock]], reflected an orthodox [[Marxism|Marxist]] approach that sought to organize urban workers.
 
*The ''{{lang|es|tercerista}}/{{lang|es|insurrecctionista}}'' (TI, "third way/insurrectionist") faction, led by [[Humberto Ortega|Humberto]] and [[Daniel Ortega]], was ideologically eclectic, favoring a more rapid insurrectional strategy in alliance with diverse sectors of the country, including business owners, churches, students, the middle class, unemployed youth and the inhabitants of shantytowns. The {{lang|es|''terceristas''}} also helped attract popular and international support by organizing a group of prominent Nicaraguan professionals, business leaders, and clergymen (known as "the Twelve"), who called for Somoza's removal and sought to organize a provisional government from Costa Rica.
 
 
 
Nevertheless, while ideologies varied between FSLN leaders, all leaders essentially agreed that Sandino provided a path for the Nicaragua masses to take charge, and the FSLN would act as the legitimate vanguard. The extreme end of the ideology links Sandino to [[Roman Catholicism]] and portrays him as descending from the mountains in Nicaragua knowing he would be betrayed and killed. Generally however, most Sandinistas associated Sandino on a more practical level, as a heroic and honest person who tried to combat the evil forces of imperialist national and international governments that existed in Nicaragua's history.
 
 
 
==Cuban assistance==
 
Beginning in 1967, the [[Cuba]]n [[General Intelligence Directorate]], or DGI, had begun to establish ties with various Nicaraguan revolutionary organizations. By 1970 the DGI had managed to train hundreds of Sandinista guerrilla leaders and had vast influence over the organization. In 1969 the DGI had financed and organized an operation to free the jailed Sandinista leader [[Carlos Fonseca]] from his prison in [[Costa Rica]]. Fonseca was re-captured shortly after the jail break, but after a plane carrying executives from the [[United Fruit Company]] was hijacked by the FSLN,<ref>{{cite book|title = The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB |publisher = Basic Books |ISBN = 0-46500312-5 |first = Christopher |last = Andrew |month = September |year = 2000 |page = 385}}</ref> he was freed and allowed to travel to Cuba.
 
 
 
DGI chief [[Manuel Piñeiro|Manuel "Redbeard" Piñeiro]] commented that "of all the countries in Latin America, the most active work being carried out by us is in Nicaragua."  However, one should keep in mind that there were many other Cuban operations throughout the world. <!--[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cuban_espionage_and_related_extraterritorial_activity_revised&action=edit&section=5]—>
 
 
 
The DGI, with [[Fidel Castro]]'s personal blessing, also collaborated with the FSLN on the botched assassination attempt of [[Turner B. Shelton]], the U.S. ambassador in Managua and a close friend to the Somoza family. The FSLN managed to secure several hostages exchanging them for safe passage to Cuba and a one million dollar ransom.{{Fact|date=August 2008}}
 
 
 
After the successful ouster of Somoza, DGI involvement in the new Sandinista government expanded rapidly. An early indication of the central role that the DGI would play in the Cuban-Nicaraguan relationship is a meeting in [[Havana]] on July 27, 1979, at which diplomatic ties between the two countries were re-established after more than 25 years. [[Julián López Díaz]], a prominent DGI agent, was named Ambassador to Nicaragua.
 
  
Cuban military and DGI advisors, initially brought in during the Sandinista insurgency, would swell to over 2,500 and operated at all levels of the new Nicaraguan government.
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===End of the Insurrection===
  
While the Cubans would like to have helped more in the development of Nicaragua towards socialism, they realized that they were no match for the United States' influence throughout [[Latin America]]. Following the US invasion of [[Grenada]], countries previously looking for support from Cuba saw that that the United States was likely to take violent action to discourage this. [Banana Republic, Roy Gutman, 1988]
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On June 16, the FSLN and several other groups announced the formation in [[Costa Rica]] of a provisional Nicaraguan government in exile, the [[Junta of National Reconstruction]]. Its members were [[Daniel Ortega]] and [[Moisés Hassan Morales|Moisés Hassan]] (FSLN), [[Sergio Ramírez]] (The Twelve), [[Alfonso Robelo]] (Nicaraguan Democratic Movement or MDN) and [[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], widow of assassinated La Prensa editor [[Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal|Pedro Joaquín Chamorro]]. By the end of that month, most of Nicaragua, except for Managua, the capital, was under FSLN control.  
  
===Cuban assistance after the revolution===
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The provisional government in exile released a policy paper on July 9 in which it pledged to organize a democratic regime, promote political pluralism and universal suffrage, and ban ideological discrimination&mdash;except for those promoting the "return of Somoza's rule." [[Anastasio Somoza Debayle|Somoza]] resigned on July 17, 1979, handing power to [[Francisco Urcuyo]], chairman of the lower house of Congress, and fled to Miami. Urcuyo, in turn, was supposed to transfer the government to the revolutionary junta, but announced he would remain in power until the end of Somoza's presidential term in 1981.<ref>British Broadcasting Company, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/july/17/newsid_3870000/3870281.stm "On This Day."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> Negative reaction to that attempt, however, was so intense and pervasive that two days later Urcuyo fled to [[Guatemala]]. The five-member junta entered the Nicaraguan capital the next day and assumed power, reiterating its pledge to work for political pluralism, a mixed economic system, and a nonaligned foreign policy.<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0024) Nicaragua: The Sandinista Revolution.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
The early years of the Nicaraguan revolution had strong ties to Cuba. The Sandinista leaders acknowledged that the FSLN owed a great debt to the communist island. The relationship was made possible because of Cuba's commitment to the strategy of revolutionary guerrilla warfare. Once the Sandinistas assumed power, Cuba not only gave [[Nicaragua]] military advice but also gave sickness assistance and aid to the impoverished Nicaraguan economy. Cuban aid came in the form of educational assistance, health care, vocational training and industry building. In return, Nicaragua provided Cuba with [[grain]]s and other [[foodstuff]]s in order to help them overcome the effects of the [[United States embargo against Cuba|US embargo]] . Once the Sandinistas assumed power, Cuba's restraint on [[aid]] was lifted and it became an essential component of Nicaraguan development strategy. Cuban aid became important because it came in the form of grants and unconditional loans. (Roberto Perez, 1987) Nicaragua during the [[Somoza]] period had been nearly 90% dependent on the United States for assistance. In 1980 Cuban-Nicaraguan aid relations became formalized with the formation of the [[Mixed Commission for Scientific, Economic and Technical Cooperation]]. This commission is represented on the Cuban side by the State of Committee for Economic Cooperation and on the Nicaraguan side by the Ministry of Economic Cooperation. New aid agreements were negotiated every year within the framework of the commission. In this context the commission provides a vehicle for Nicaragua to present its various needs and for the Cubans to evaluate which ones they can fulfill (Gary Prevost, 126). The commission has overseen approximately 300 million dollars (U.S) between the years 1979 and 1987 in assistance to Nicaragua and according to Prevost it does not include [[military aid]] or the cost of schooling Nicaraguans in Cuba.
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The insurrection was over. In its wake, approximately 50,000 Nicaraguans were dead and 150,000 were in exile.
 
 
==Relationship with East Bloc Intelligence Agencies ==
 
===Pre-Revolution===
 
According to [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge University]] [[historian]] [[Christopher Andrew]], who undertook the task of processing the [[Mitrokhin Archive]], [[Carlos Fonseca Amador]], one of the original three founding members of the FSLN had been recruited by the KGB in 1959 while on a trip to Moscow. This was one part of [[Aleksandr Shelepin]]'s 'grand strategy' of using national liberation movements as a spearhead of the Soviet Union's foreign policy in the [[Third World]], and in 1960 the KGB organized funding and training for twelve individuals that Fonseca handpicked. These individuals were to be the core of the new Sandinista organization. In the following several years, the FSLN tried with little success to organize [[guerrilla warfare]] against the government of [[Luis Somoza Debayle]]. After several failed attempts to attack government strongholds and little initial support from the local population, the National Guard nearly annihilated the Sandinistas in a series of attacks in 1963. Disappointed with the performance of Shelepin's new Latin American "revolutionary vanguard," the KGB reconstituted its core of the Sandinista leadership into the ISKRA group and used them for other activities in Latin America.
 
 
 
According to Andrew, [[Vasili Mitrokhin|Mitrokhin]] says during the following three years the KGB handpicked several dozen Sandinistas for intelligence and sabotage operations in the United States. Andrew and Mitrokhin say that in 1966, this KGB-controlled Sandinista sabotage and intelligence group was sent to northern [[Mexico]] near the U.S. border to conduct surveillance for possible [[sabotage]]. <ref name="Mitrokhin"> [[Christopher Andrew]] and Vasili Mitrokhin (2000). The Mitrokhin Archive: The KGB in Europe and the West. Gardners Books. ISBN 0-14-028487-7.</ref>
 
 
 
In July 1961 during the [[Berlin Crisis of 1961]] KGB chief Alexander Shelepin sent a memorandum to [[Khrushchev]] containing an array of proposals to create a situation in various areas of the world which would favor dispersion of attention and forces by the USA and their satellites, and would tie them down during the settlement of the question of a German peace treaty and [[West Berlin]]. It was planned, inter alia, to organize an armed mutity in Nikaragua in coordination with [[Fidel Castro|Castro]]'s Cubans and with the "Revolutionary Front Sandino." Shelepin proposed to make appropriations from KGB funds in addition to the previous assistance $10,000 for purchase of arms.
 
 
 
Khrushchev sent the memo with his approval to his deputy [[Frol Kozlov]] and on August 1 it was, with minor revisions, passed as a [[Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|CPSU Central Committee]] directive. The KGB and the Ministry of Defense were instructed to work out more; specific measures and present them for consideration by the Central Committee.[http://www.videofact.com/english/cia_kgb.html]
 
 
 
===Cooperation with foreign intelligence agencies during the 1980s===
 
 
 
Other researchers have documented the contribution made from other Warsaw Pact Intelligence agencies to the fledgling Sandinista government including the [[East Germany]] secret police, the [[Stasi]], by using recently declassified documents from Berlin<ref name = Koehler >{{cite book | last = Koehler | first = John | year = 2000 | month = November | url = | title = Stasi: The Untold Story of the East German Secret Police | format = | work = | pages = | publisher = Basic Books  | accessdate =|accessyear = }} </ref> as well as from former Stasi spymaster [[Markus Wolf]] who described the Stasi's orchestration of the creation of a [[secret police]] force modeled after East Germany's<ref name = Wolf >{{cite book | last = Marcus  Wolf | first = Anne McElvoy, | year = 1999 | month = July | url = | title = Man Without A Face | format = | work = | pages = | publisher = PublicAffairs  | accessdate = | accessyear = }} </ref>
 
 
 
===Educational assistance===
 
 
 
Cuba was instrumental in the [[Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign]]. Nicaragua was a country with a very high rate of illiteracy, but the campaign succeeded in lowering the rate from 50% to 12%. The revolution in [[Education in Cuba|Cuban education]] since the ousting of the US-backed [[Fulgencio Batista|Batista]] regime not only served as a model for Nicaragua but also provided technical assistance and advice. The Literacy Campaign was one of the success{{Fact|date=October 2008}} stories of the Sandinistas' reign and Cuba played an important part in this, providing teachers on a yearly basis after the revolution. Prevost states that ''"Teachers were not the only ones studying in Cuba, about 2,000 primary and secondary students were studying on the Isle of Youth and the cost was covered by the host country (Cuba)"'' (Prevost, 126).
 
 
 
===Health care===
 
 
 
According to Gary Prevost, health care was another area where the Sandinistas made incredible gains and are widely recognized for this accomplishment. In this area Cuba also played a role by again offering expertise and know-how to Nicaragua. Over 1,500 Cuban doctors worked in Nicaragua and provided more than five million consultations. Also Cuban personnel have been essential in the elimination of [[polio]], decrease in [[measles]] and lowering the infant mortality rate. He also states that Cuban personnel have made it possible for Nicaragua to have a truly national health care system reaching a majority of its citizens. (Prevost 127)
 
 
 
===Vocational assistance===
 
 
 
Cuba has participated in the training of Nicaraguan workers in the use of new machinery imported to Nicaragua. The Nicaraguan revolution put the country's government on the United States' black book; therefore the Sandinistas would not receive any aid from the United States. The [[United States embargo against Nicaragua]], imposed by the [[Ronald Reagan]] in May 1985,<ref name="MM">{{cite news | title=Embargo Politics | url =http://multinationalmonitor.org/hyper/issues/1989/12/editorial.html | work =The Multinational Monitor | accessdate = 2007-02-15}}</ref> made it impossible for Nicaragua to receive spare parts for American-made machines, so this led Nicaragua to look to other socialist countries for help. Cuba was the best choice because of the shared language and proximity and also because it had imported similar machinery over the years. Nicaraguans would come to Cuba for short periods of 3 to 6 months and this training closely involved close to 3,000 workers (Prevost, 128). Many countries, including Canada and the UK sent farm equipment to Nicaragua.
 
 
 
===Industry building===
 
 
 
Cuba helped Nicaragua in huge projects such as building roads, [[power plant]]s and [[sugar]] mills. Cuba also attempted to help Nicaragua build the first overland route linking Nicaragua's Atlantic and Pacific coasts in order to expedite the flow of the $1 Billion of [[USSR|Soviet]] military aid used to enable the FSLN administration. The road was meant to traverse {{convert|260|mi|km}} of [[jungle]]. Full completion of the road and usage was hindered by the [[Contras|Contra war]], and it was never completed.{{Fact|date=March 2008}}
 
 
 
Another significant feat was the building of the Tipitapa-Malacatoya sugar mill. It was completed and inaugurated during a visit by Fidel Castro in January 1985. The plant used the newest technology available and was built by workers trained in Cuba. Also during this visit Castro announced that all debts incurred on this project were absolved (Prevost, 127). Cuba also provided numerous technicians to aid in the sugar harvest and assist in the rejuvenation of several old sugar mills. Cubans also assisted in building schools and similar projects.{{Fact|date=March 2008}}
 
  
 
==Sandinista rule (1979&ndash;1990)==
 
==Sandinista rule (1979&ndash;1990)==
{{Cleanup-section|date=September 2006}}
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===Establishment of government entities===
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The Sandinistas inherited a country in ruins with a debt of US $1.6 billion, an estimated 50,000 war dead, 600,000 homeless, and a devastated economic infrastructure.<ref>Thomas W. Walker, ''Nicaragua: The Land of Sandino'' (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1981).</ref> To begin the task of establishing a new government, on August 22, 1979, "the junta proclaimed the Fundamental Statute of the Republic of Nicaragua. This statute abolished the constitution, presidency, Congress, and all courts. The junta ruled by unappealable decree under emergency powers. National government policy, however, was generally made by the nine-member Joint National Directorate (Dirección Nacional Conjunto—DNC), the ruling body of the FSLN, and then transmitted to the junta by Daniel Ortega for the junta's discussion and approval."<ref>Tim Merrill (ed.), [http://countrystudies.us/nicaragua/ "Nicaragua: A Country Study."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
The Sandinistas inherited a country in ruins with a debt of 1.6 [[1000000000 (number)|billion]] [[United States dollar|dollars (US)]], an estimated 50,000 war dead, 600,000 homeless, and a devastated economic infrastructure.<ref>Nicaragua: The Land of Sandino by Thomas W. Walker. Westview Press. Boulder, Colorado. 1981</ref> To begin the task of establishing a new government, they created a Council (or {{lang|es|''junta''}}) of National Reconstruction, made up of five appointed members. Three of the appointed members belonged to FSLN, which included &ndash; Sandinista militants [[Daniel Ortega]], [[Moises Hassan]], and novelist [[Sergio Ramírez]] (a member of [[Los Doce]] "the Twelve"). Two opposition members, businessman [[Alfonso Robelo]], and [[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]] (the widow of Pedro Joaquín Chamorro), were also appointed. Only three votes were needed to pass law.
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The junta also created a Council of State as a consultative entity, empowered both to develop its own legislation and to approve laws of the junta. However, the junta retained veto power of council-initiated legislation, as well as over much of the budget. Members of the Council were appointed by political groups, with the FSLN having the right to name 12 of its 33 members. Soon after, the FSLN decided to increase the Council's membership to 47, and to allocate another 12 members.<ref name="autogenerated3">Phillip Williams, =Dual Transition from Authoritarian Rule: Popular and Electoral Democracy in Nicaragua) ''Comparative Politics'' 26 (2): 177.</ref>  
The FSLN also established a Council of State, subordinate to the junta, which was composed of representative bodies. However, the Council of State only gave political parties twelve of forty-seven seats, the rest of the seats were given to Sandinista mass-organizations. <ref name="autogenerated3">{{cite journal|author=Williams, Philip|title=Dual Transition from Authoritarian Rule: Popular and Electoral Democracy in Nicaragua)|publisher=Comparative Politics|year=1994|month=January|volume=26|number=2|pages=177}}</ref> Of the twelve seats reserved for political parties, only three were not allied to the FSLN. <ref name="autogenerated3" /> Due to the rules governing the Council of State, in 1980 both non-FSLN junta members resigned. Nevertheless, as of the 1982 State of Emergency, opposition parties were no longer given representation in the council.<ref name="autogenerated3" />
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"Opponents of the FSLN viewed the addition of the new members as a power grab, but the FSLN responded that new groups had been formed since the revolution and that they needed to be represented."<ref>Tim Merrill (ed.), [http://countrystudies.us/nicaragua/ Nicaragua: A Country Study.] Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1993. Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
The preponderance of power also remained with the Sandinistas through their mass organizations, including the Sandinista Workers' Federation ({{lang|es|''Central Sandinista de Trabajadores''}}), the Luisa Amanda Espinoza Nicaraguan Women's Association ({{lang|es|''Asociación de Mujeres Nicaragüenses Luisa Amanda Espinoza''}}), the National Union of Farmers and Ranchers ({{lang|es|''Unión Nacional de Agricultores y Ganaderos''}}), and most importantly the Sandinista Defense Committees (CDS). The Sandinista controlled mass organizations were extremely influential over civil society and saw their power and popularity peak in the mid-1980s. <ref name="autogenerated3" />
 
  
Upon assuming power, the FSLNs political platform included the following, nationalization of property owned by the Somozas and their supporters; land reform; improved rural and urban working conditions; free unionization for all workers, both urban and rural; price fixing for commodities of basic necessity; improved public services, housing conditions, education; abolition of torture{{Fact|date=October 2008}}, political assassination{{Fact|date=October 2008}} and the death penalty; protection of democratic liberties; Equality for women; non-aligned foreign policy; formation of a 'popular army' under the leadership of the FSLN and Humberto Ortega.
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In 1980, both non-FSLN junta members resigned, and as of the 1982 State of Emergency, opposition parties were no longer given representation in the Council.<ref name="autogenerated3" />
  
The FSLN's literacy campaign, which saw teachers flood the countryside, is often noted as their greatest success{{Fact|date=October 2008}}. Within six months, half a million people had been taught rudimentary reading, bringing the national illiteracy rate down from over 50% to just under 12%. Over 100,000 Nicaraguans participated as literacy teachers. One of the stated aims of the literacy campaign was to create a literate electorate which would be able to make informed choices at the promised elections. The successes of the literacy campaign was recognized by [[UNESCO]] with the award of a [[Nadezhda Krupskaya]] International Prize.
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===FSLN-based civic organizations and neighborhood committees===
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Outside of the formal government, the Sandinistas developed sources of power through their mass organizations, including the Sandinista Workers' Federation ''(Central Sandinista de Trabajadores)'', the Luisa Amanda Espinoza Nicaraguan Women's Association ''(Asociación de Mujeres Nicaragüenses Luisa Amanda Espinoza)'', the National Union of Farmers and Ranchers ''(Unión Nacional de Agricultores y Ganaderos)'', and most importantly the neighborhood-based Sandinista Defense Committees (''Comités de Defensa Sandinista,'' or CDS). Modeled on Cuba's [[Committees for the Defense of the Revolution]], the Sandinista CDS were often castigated as spy organizations designed to stifle political dissent.  
  
The FSLN also created neighborhood groups similar to the Cuban [[Committees for the Defense of the Revolution]], called [[Sandinista Defense Committees]] ({{lang|es|''Comités de Defensa Sandinista''}} or CDS). Especially in the early days following the overthrow of Somoza, the CDS's served as ''de facto'' units of local governance. Their obligations included political education, the organization of Sandinista rallies, the distribution of food rations, organization of neighborhood/regional cleanup and recreational activities, and policing to control looting, and the apprehension of counter-revolutionaries. The CDS's organized civilian defense efforts against Contra activities and a network of intelligence systems in order to apprehend their supporters. These activities led critics of the Sandinistas to argue that the CDS was a system of local spy networks for the government used to stifle political dissent, and it is true that the CDS did hold limited powers—such as the ability to suspend privileges such as driver licenses and passports—if locals refused to cooperate with the new government. After the initiation of full-scale U.S. military involvement in the Nicaraguan conflict the CDS was empowered to enforce wartime bans on political assembly and association with other political parties (i.e.—parties associated with the "Contras")..{{Fact|date=March 2008}}
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Their activities included political education, organizing Sandinista rallies, distributing food rations, organizing neighborhood/regional cleanup and recreational activities, and policing both to control looting and apprehend counter-revolutionaries. The CDS's also organized civilian defense efforts against [[Contra]] (counter-revolutionaries) activities and a network of intelligence systems to apprehend Contra supporters. As de facto lesser units of the government, the CDS were empowered to suspend privileges such as drivers' licenses and passports of locals who refused to cooperate with the new government.  
  
By 1980, conflicts began to emerge between the Sandinista and non-Sandinista members of the governing junta. [[Violeta Chamorro]] and [[Alfonso Robelo]] resigned from the governing junta in 1980, and rumours began that members of the Ortega junta would consolidate power amongst themselves. These allegations spread, and rumors intensified that it was Ortega's goal to turn Nicaragua into a state modeled after [[Cuba]]n [[Communism]]. In 1979 and 1980, former Somoza supporters and ex-members of Somoza's National Guard formed irregular military forces, while the original core of the FSLN began to splinter. Armed opposition to the Sandinista Government eventually divided into two main groups: The Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (FDN), a U.S. supported army formed in 1981 by  the CIA, U.S. State Department, and former members of the widely condemned Somoza-era Nicaraguan National Guard; and the Alianza Revolucionaria Democratica (ARDE), a group that had existed since before the FSLN and was led by Sandinista founder and former FSLN supreme commander, Edén Pastora, a.k.a. "Commander Zero".<ref>{{cite book|author=International Court Of Justice|title=Case Concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicaragua V. United States of America)|publisher=United Nations Press|year=2000|month=January|isbn=9-21070826-1|page=512}}</ref> and Milpistas, former anti-Somoza rural militias, which eventually formed the largest pool of recruits for the Contras. Although independent and often at conflict with each other, these guerrilla bands—along with a few others—all became generally known as "Contras" (short for "{{lang|es|contrarrevolucionarios}}," en. "counter-revolutionaries").<ref>{{cite book|last=Brown|first=Timothy C.|title=When the Ak-47s Fall Silent: Revolutionaries, Guerrillas, and the Dangers of Peace|publisher=Hoover Institute Press|year=2000|month=October|isbn=0-81799842-X|page=162}}</ref>
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These Sandinista-controlled mass organizations were extremely influential over civil society and saw their power and popularity peak in the mid-1980s.<ref name="autogenerated3" />
  
The opposition militias were initially organized and largely remained segregated according to regional affiliation and political backgrounds. They  conducted attacks on economic, military, and civilian targets. During the Contra war, the Sandinistas arrested suspected members of the Contra militias and censored publications they accused of collaborating with the enemy (i.e. the U.S., the FDN, and ARDE, among others).
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===FSLN political platform===
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Upon assuming power, the FSLNs political platform included the following: nationalization of property owned by the Somozas and their supporters; land reform; improved rural and urban working conditions; free unionization for all urban and rural workers; and fixed prices for commodities of basic necessity. In addition, it included improved public services, housing conditions, and education; abolition of torture, political assassination, and the death penalty; protection of democratic liberties; and equality for women.<ref>Nation master, [http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/FSLN#Sandinista_Rule_.281979-1990.29 Sandinista Rule.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> It also established a non-aligned foreign policy; and began the formation of a "popular army" under the leadership of the FSLN and Humberto Ortega.
  
== 1982 - 1988 State of Emergency ==
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The FSLN's literacy campaign, under which teachers flooded the countryside, is often noted as its greatest success.<ref>Britannica Concise Encyclopedia, [http://www.answers.com/topic/sandinista-3 Sandinista.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> Within six months, half a million people reportedly had been taught rudimentary reading, bringing the national illiteracy rate down from over 50 percent to just under 12 percent. Over 100,000 Nicaraguans participated as literacy teachers. The successes of the literacy campaign was recognized by [[UNESCO]] with the award of a [[Nadezhda Krupskaya]] International Prize. Critics pointed out that the materials used in the reading campaign were heavily politicized, serving as [[propaganda]] to indoctrinate the population in Sandinista ideology.
In March 1982 the Sandinistas declared an official State of Emergency. They argued that this was a response to attacks by counter-revolutionary forces.<ref>{{cite book|last=Prevost|first=Gary|title=Democracy and Socialism in Sandinista Nicaragua|publisher=Lynne Rienner Publishers|year=1993|isbn=1-55587227-1|page=153}}</ref> The State of Emergency lasted six years, until January 1988, when it was lifted.
 
Under the new "Law for the Maintenance of Order and Public Security" the "Tribunales Populares Anti-Somozistas" allowed for the indefinite holding of suspected counter-revolutionaries without trial.
 
The State of Emergency, however, most notably affected rights and guarantees contained in the "Statute on Rights and Guarantees of Nicaraguans. [http://www.reds.msh-paris.fr/publications/revue/pdf/ds22/ds022-03.pdf] Many civil liberties were curtailed or canceled such as the freedom to organize demonstrations, the inviolability of the home, freedom of the press, freedom of speech and, the freedom to strike.[http://www.reds.msh-paris.fr/publications/revue/pdf/ds22/ds022-03.pdf]
 
All independent news program broadcasts were suspended. In total, twenty-four programs were cancelled. In addition, Sandinista censor Nelba Cecilia Blandón issued a decree ordering all radio stations to hook up every six hours to government radio station, La Voz de La Defensa de La Patria.<ref name="autogenerated5">{{cite book|author= Chomorro Cardenal, Jaime|title= La Prensa, The Republic of Paper |publisher=University Freedom House|year=1988|page=p. 20}}</ref>
 
  
The rights affected also included certain procedural guarantees in the case of detention including habeas corpus.[http://www.reds.msh-paris.fr/publications/revue/pdf/ds22/ds022-03.pdf] The State of Emergency was not lifted during the 1984 elections. There were many instances where rallies of opposition parties were physically broken up by Sandinsta youth or pro-Sandinista mobs. Opponents to the State of Emergency argued its intent was to crush resistance to the FSLN. James Wheelock justified the actions of the Directorate by saying "… We are annulling the license of the false prophets and the oligarchs to attack the revolution."<ref name="envio53">{{Cite web|url=http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3413|title=Behind the State of Emergency|accessdate=2008-02-16|publisher=[[Envío]]|year=1985|month=November}}</ref>
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===Domestic and U.S. opposition===
On October 5, 1985 the Sandinistas broadened the 1982 State of Emergency and suspended many more civil rights. A new regulation also forced any organization outside of the government to first submit any statement it wanted to make public to the censorsip bureau for prior censorship. <ref>{{cite book|last=Chamorro Cardenal|first=Jaime|title=La Prensa, A Republic of Paper|publisher=Freedom House|year=1988|page=23}}</ref>
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By 1980, conflicts began to emerge between the Sandinista and non-Sandinista members of the governing junta. [[Violeta Chamorro]] and [[Alfonso Robelo]] resigned from the junta in 1980, and rumors began that members of the Ortega junta would consolidate power among themselves. These allegations spread, leading to rumors that it was Ortega's goal to turn Nicaragua into a state modeled after [[Cuba]]n [[Communism]]. In 1979 and 1980, former Somoza supporters and ex-members of Somoza's National Guard formed irregular military forces, while the original core of the FSLN began to splinter. Armed opposition to the Sandinista Government eventually divided into two main groups: The Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (FDN), a United States-supported army formed in 1981 by the CIA, U.S. State Department, and former members of the widely condemned Somoza-era Nicaraguan National Guard; and the Alianza Revolucionaria Democratica (ARDE), a group that had existed since before the FSLN and was led by Sandinista founder and former FSLN supreme leader, Edén Pastora&mdash;also known as "Commander Zero"<ref>International Court Of Justice, ''Case Concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicaragua V. United States of America)'' (United Nations Press, 2000, ISBN 9210708261), 512.</ref> and Milpistas, former anti-Somoza rural militias, which eventually formed the largest pool of recruits for the [[Contras]].<ref>Timothy C. Brown, ''When the Ak-47s Fall Silent: Revolutionaries, Guerrillas, and the Dangers of Peace'' (Hoover Institute Press, 2000, ISBN 081799842X), 162.</ref> Independent and often at conflict with each other, these opposition militias were initially organized and largely remained segregated according to regional affiliation and political backgrounds. They conducted attacks on economic, military, and civilian targets. During the Contra war, the Sandinistas arrested suspected members of the militias and censored publications they accused of collaborating with the enemy (that is, the U.S., the FDN, and ARDE, among others).
Notably, emergency measures were already in place before 1982 under the FSLN. In December 1979 special courts called "Tribunales Especiales" were established to process trial of ex-Guardia and Contra rebels. These courts operated through relaxed rules of evidence and due process and were often staffed by new law students and inexperienced lawyers. Under these courts, up to 8,000 ex-Guardia members were tried. By 1986 only 2157 remained in incarceration, out of these, only 39 were left alive by 1989.
 
  
.<ref name="autogenerated5" />
+
Opposition to the Sandinistas also came from the [[Catholic Church]], long one of Nicaragua's dominant institutions. The Church's concern, aside from their opposition to "[[atheism|Godless Communism]]," focused on the growth of [[Liberation Theology]], a populist Catholic movement which began in the 1960s. Under it, local priests and other Catholic workers joined with secular forces "in the struggle for social and political liberation, with the ultimate aim of complete and integral liberation."<ref>Leonardo and Clodovis Bof, [http://www.landreform.org/boff2.htm "A Concise History of Liberation Theology,"] Orbis Books, 1987, Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> Catholic conservatives in the Church hierarchy, however, saw Liberation Theology as contradicting traditional Church doctrine.
  
== 1984 election ==
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===The Contra War===
 +
{{main|Contras}}
 +
Opposition to the Sandinistas, promoted by the United States government and segments of the Nicaraguan population&mdash;especially but not entirely groups sympathetic to the former Somoza regime&mdash;led directly to an uprising against the FSLN by the [[Contra]]s. The war, which began in 1981, did not end with the 1984 elections, but continued throughout the decade. Its effects were devastating. As reported by a multi-university association of United States observers (including those from Columbia University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base), the Contra war began "a little over a month after President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s 1981 inauguration." The war "was a frighteningly effective instrument of economic aggression. The displacement of farmers by Contra attacks reduced agricultural production significantly. Attacks on granaries, schools, health clinics, bridges and electrical plants forced public funds away from productive activities. Investment by producers was discouraged by Contra threats against the fundamentally private sector of the Nicaraguan export economy. And the United States blocked loans in private and multilateral lending agencies, restricted foreign assistance and embargoed trade between Nicaragua and the United States The International Court of Justice ruled that the United States military actions violated international law, but the United States ignored the decision."<ref>University of Pittsburgh,  [http://www.williamgbecker.com/lasa1990report.pdf "Electoral Democracy Under International Pressure,"] Report of the American Studies Association Commission to Observe the 1990 Nicaraguan Election," March 15, 1990. Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
While the Sandinistas encouraged grassroots pluralism, they were considerably less enthusiastic about national elections. They argued that popular support was expressed in the insurrection and that further appeals to popular support would be a waste of scarce resources.<ref name="autogenerated6">{{cite book|last=Anderson|first=Leslie E.|title=Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001|publisher=University Of Chicago Press|year=2005|month=May|isbn=0-22601971-3|page=64}}</ref>  International pressure and domestic opposition eventually pressed the government toward a national election.<ref name="autogenerated6" /> Tomás Borge warned that the elections were a concession, an act of generosity and of political necessity. <ref>{{cite journal|title=La Necesidad de un Nuevo Modelo de Comunicación en Nicaragua|publisher=University Revista de la Escuela de Perdiodismo |year=1984|month=December}}</ref>A broad range of political parties, ranging in political orientation from far-left to far-right, competed for power. <ref>{{cite book|last=Anderson|first=Leslie E.|title=Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001|publisher=University Of Chicago Press|year=2005|month=May|isbn=0-22601971-3|page=65}}</ref> Following promulgation of a new populist constitution, Nicaragua held national elections in 1984. Independent electoral observers from around the world – including groups from the [[United Nations|UN]] as well as observers from [[Western Europe]] – found that the elections had been fair.<ref name="bbc19841105">{{Cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/november/5/newsid_2538000/2538379.stm|title=1984: Sandinistas claim election victory|accessdate=2008-02-16|publisher=[[BBC News]]|work=On This Day – 5 November}}</ref> Several groups, however, disputed this:  including UNO, a broad coalition of anti-Sandinista activists, COSEP, an organization of business leaders, the Contra group "FDN," organized by former Somozan-era National Guardsmen, landowners, businessmen, peasant highlanders, and what some claimed as their patron, the [[U.S. government]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Mileti|first=Dennis|title=Disasters by Design: A Reassessment of Natural Hazards in the United States|publisher=Joseph Henry Press|year=1999|month=May|isbn=0-30906360-4|page=465}}</ref> Although initially willing to stand in the '84 elections, the UNO, headed by [[Arturo Cruz]] (a former Sandinista) declined participation in the elections based on their own objections to the restrictions placed on the electoral process by the State of Emergency and the official advisement of President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s [[United States State Department|State Department]], who feared that their participation would legitimize the election process. Among other parties that abstained was COSEP, who had warned the FSLN that they would decline participation unless freedom of the press was reinstituted. Coordinadora Democrática (CD) also refused to file candidates and urged Nicaraguans not to take part in the election, the Independent Liberal Party (PLI), headed by Virgilio Godoy Reyes announced its refusal to participate in October..<ref name="SandinistaYears"> {{cite web | title=Country Studies: Nicaragua:The Sandinista Years| work=Library of Congress | url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/nitoc.html }}</ref> Consequently, when the elections went ahead the U.S. raised objections based upon political restrictions instituted by the State of Emergency (e.g. censorship of the press, cancellation of habeas corpus, and the curtailing of free assembly).
+
While waged within Nicaragua, there is no question that the war was stoked by outside interests, especially the [[United States]], which was still engaged in [[Cold War]] proxy battles with the former [[Soviet Union]]. As the multi-university association noted, "In March 1981, the U.S. media began reporting that Nicaraguan exiles were undergoing paramilitary training at several private camps in Florida and other parts of the United States…. In November 1981 President Reagan formally authorized the creation of a small contra army."<ref>"Electoral Democracy Under International Pressure," Page 5</ref>
 +
For its part, the U.S. viewed with alarm the close relations between Nicaragua and Cuba.<ref>William N. Leogrande, [http://www.foreignaffairs.org/19790901faessay8205/william-m-leogrande/the-revolution-in-nicaragua-another-cuba.html "The Revolution in Nicaragua: Another Cuba?"] ''Foreign Affairs,'' Fall 1979, Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
Daniel Ortega and Sergio Ramírez were elected president and vice-president, and the FSLN won an overwhelming 61 out of 96 seats in the new [[National Assembly of Nicaragua|National Assembly]], having taken 67% of the vote on a turnout of 75%.<ref name="SandinistaYears" /> Despite international validation of the elections by multiple political and independent observers (virtually all from among U.S. allies) the United States refused to recognize the elections, with President Ronald Reagan denouncing the elections as a sham.
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In an effort to end the war, [[Costa Rica]]n President [[Oscar Arias Sanchez]] authored a peace plan that was signed on August 7, 1987 by five Central American nations, including [[El Salvador]], [[Guatemala]], [[Honduras]], and Nicaragua, along with Costa Rica. Known as the Arias Plan, it "set specific guidelines and target dates for each nation to comply with an order to stabilize Central America and bring peace to the region."<ref>Skeptific Files, [http://www.skepticfiles.org/mys1/pc07.htm BIASED COVERAGE OF THE ARIAS PEACE PLAN BY AMERICA'S PRESS.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> The plan "called for dialogue between governments and opposition groups, amnesty for political prisoners, cease-fires in ongoing insurgent conflicts, democratization, and free elections in all five regional states. The plan also called for renewed negotiations on arms reductions and an end to outside aid to insurgent forces."<ref>U.S. Library of Congress, [http://countrystudies.us/el-salvador/86.htm The Arias Plan.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
Daniel Ortega began his six-year presidential term on January 10, 1985. After the United States Congress turned down continued funding of the Contras in April 1985, the Reagan administration ordered a total embargo on United States trade with Nicaragua the following month, accusing the Sandinista regime of threatening United States security in the region.<ref name="SandinistaYears"/>
+
Fighting nevertheless continued, and the Arias plan eventually collapsed. The Contra war came to an actual end only in 1990, with the election of the first female president of Nicaragua, [[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], a former anti-Somoza junta member and the widow of La Prensa editor Joaquin Chamorro, who had been assassinated a decade earlier.
  
== 1990 election ==
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=== 1982-1988 State of Emergency ===
 +
In March 1982, in response to the Contra war, the Sandinistas declared an official State of Emergency,<ref>Gary Prevost, ''Democracy and Socialism in Sandinista Nicaragua'' (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1993, ISBN 1555872271), 153.</ref> which would last six years, until January 1988. Under the new "Law for the Maintenance of Order and Public Security," which largely affected the rights guaranteed in the "Statute on Rights and Guarantees of Nicaraguans,"<ref>Droit et Societe, [http://www.reds.msh-paris.fr/publications/revue/pdf/ds22/ds022-03.pdf The Sadinista Record on Human Rights in Nicaragua.] Retrieved February 1, 2009.</ref> many civil liberties were curtailed or canceled such as the freedom to organize demonstrations, the inviolability of the home, [[freedom of the press]], [[freedom of speech]] and the freedom to strike.<ref>Reds, [http://www.reds.msh-paris.fr/publications/revue/pdf/ds22/ds022-03.pdf The Sadinista Record on Human Rights in Nicaragua.] Retrieved February 1, 2009.</ref> [[Habeas corpus]] was restricted. The new law also provided for "Tribunales Populares Anti-Somozistas," which allowed for the indefinite holding of suspected counter-revolutionaries without trial. Further, all independent news program broadcasts were suspended. In addition, according to the editor of ''La Prensa'', Sandinista censor Nelba Cecilia Blandón issued a decree ordering all radio stations to hook up every six hours to the government radio station, La Voz de La Defensa de La Patria.<ref name="autogenerated5">Jaime Chomorro Cardenal, ''La Prensa, The Republic of Paper'' (University Freedom House, 1988), 20.</ref>
  
Due to factors such as natural disasters, state corruption, the Contras, and inefficient economic policies, the state of the Nicaraguan economy declined.{{Fact|date=March 2008}}  The elections of 1990, which had been mandated by the constitution passed in 1987, saw the Bush administration funnel $49.75 million of ‘non-lethal’ aid to the Contras, as well as $9m to the opposition UNO&mdash;equivalent to $2 billion worth of intervention by a foreign power in a US election at the time, and proportionately five times the amount George Bush had spent on his own election campaign.<ref>Christian Smith, ''Resisting Reagan: The US Central America Peace Movement'', University of Chicago Press, 1996</ref><ref>Noam Chomsky, ''Deterring Democracy'', Vintage, 1992</ref>. When Violetta Chamorro visited the White House in November 1989, the US pledged to maintain the embargo against Nicaragua unless Violeta Chamorro won. <ref>Rita Beamish, ‘Bush Will Lift Trade Embargo if Nicaraguan Opposition Candidate Wins’, ''Associated Press'', 8 November 1989</ref>.  
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During the 1984 elections, critics of the Sandinistas alleged that rallies of opposition parties were often physically broken up by Sandinsta youth or pro-Sandinista mobs.  
  
In August 1989, the month that campaigning began, the Contras redeployed 8,000 troops into Nicaragua, after a funding boost from Washington, becoming in effect the armed wing of the UNO, carrying out a violent campaign of intimidation. No fewer than 50 FSLN candidates were assassinated. The Contras also distributed thousands of UNO leaflets.  
+
James Wheelock, the FSLN member and founder of the [[Marxism|Marxist]]-oriented [[Proletarian Tendency]], justified the Directorate's state of emergency by saying "… We are annulling the license of the false prophets and the oligarchs to attack the revolution."<ref name="envio53">Envio, http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3413 Behind the State of Emergency.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
Years of conflict had left 50,000 casualties and $12b of damages in a society of 3.5m people and an annual GNP of $2b. The proportionately equivalent figures for the US would have been 5 million casualties and $25 trillion lost. After the war, a survey was taken of voters: 75.6% agreed that if the Sandinistas had won, the war would never have ended. 91.8% of those who voted for the UNO agreed with this. (William I Robinson, op cit)<ref>{{cite book|title = The 1990 Elections in Nicaragua and Their Aftermath |publisher = Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc. |year = 1992 |month = September |pages = 31 |last = Castro |first = Vanessa}}</ref> The [[Library of Congress Country Studies]] on Nicaragua states:
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On October 5, 1985 the Sandinistas broadened the 1982 State of Emergency. A new regulation also required organizations outside of the government to first submit any statement it wanted to make public to the censorship bureau.<ref>Jaime Chamorro Cardenal, ''La Prensa, A Republic of Paper'' (Freedom House, 1988), 23.</ref>
{{cquote|Despite limited resources and poor organization, the UNO coalition under [[Violeta Chamorro]] directed a campaign centered around the failing economy and promises of peace. Many Nicaraguans expected the country's economic crisis to deepen and the Contra conflict to continue if the Sandinistas remained in power. Chamorro promised to end the unpopular military draft, bring about democratic reconciliation, and promote economic growth. In the February 25, 1990, elections, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro carried 55 percent of the popular vote against Daniel Ortega's 41 percent.<ref name="SandinistaYears"/>}}
 
  
== Economy ==
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====Human Rights under the FSLN====
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The situation of human rights in general under the FSLN has been a subject of controversy, but clearly the abuses were considerable, including against the indigenous [[Miskito Indians]]. However, Contra human rights abuses were notable as well.
  
The new government, formed in 1979 and dominated by the Sandinistas, resulted in a socialist model of economic development. The new leadership was conscious of the social inequities produced during the previous thirty years of unrestricted economic growth and was determined to make the country's workers and peasants, the "economically underprivileged," the prime beneficiaries of the new society. Consequently, in 1980 and 1981, unbridled incentives to private investment gave way to institutions designed to redistribute wealth and income. Private property would continue to be allowed, but all land belonging to the Somozas was confiscated.<ref name="autogenerated7"> {{cite web | title=Country Studies: Nicaragua:Chapter 3:The Sandinista Era, 1979-90 | work=Library of Congress | url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/nitoc.html }}</ref>  
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The United States government, and conservative American think tanks, like the [[Heritage Foundation]], portrayed the situation as dire.<ref name="autogenerated4">Richard Araujo, [http://www.heritage.org/Research/LatinAmerica/upload/87214_1.pdf The Sandinista War on Human Rights.] Retrieved February 2, 2009.</ref>
  
However, the ideology of the Sandinistas put the future of the private sector and of private ownership of the means of production in doubt. Even though under the new government both public and private ownership were accepted, government spokespersons occasionally referred to a reconstruction phase in the country's development, in which property owners and the professional class would be tapped for their managerial and technical expertise. After reconstruction and recovery, the private sector would give way to expanded public ownership in most areas of the economy. Despite such ideas, which represented the point of view of a faction of the government, the Sandinista government remained officially committed to a mixed economy.<ref name="autogenerated7" />  
+
Yet, according to the NGO [[Human Rights Watch]], "U.S. pronouncements on human rights exaggerated and distorted the real human rights violations of the Sandinista regime, and exculpated those of the U.S.-supported insurgents, known as the contras."<ref>HRW, [http://www.hrw.org/reports/1989/WR89/Nicaragu.htm#TopOfPage Nicaragua.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>  
  
Economic growth was uneven in the 1980s. Restructuring of the economy and the rebuilding immediately following the end of the civil war caused the GDP to jump about 5 percent in 1980 and 1981. Each year from 1984 to 1990, however, showed a drop in the GDP. Reasons for the contraction included the reluctance of foreign banks to offer new loans, the diversion of funds to fight the new insurrection against the government, and, after 1985, the total embargo on trade with the United States, formerly Nicaragua's largest trading partner. After 1985 the government chose to fill the gap between decreasing revenues and mushrooming military expenditures by printing large amounts of paper money. [[Inflation]] skyrocketed, peaking in 1988 at more than 14,000 percent annually.<ref name="autogenerated7" />  
+
A 1984 report of the [[Inter-American Commission on Human Rights]]&mdash;an agency of the [[Organization of American States]], a mulitlateral institution in Washington, D.C.&mdash;noted that "the right of movement and residence has been curtailed, and it has been suspended in those regions where the government has considered that confrontations with the armed groups operating in Nicaragua have been occurring with the greatest intensity. These forced displacements have affected a large number of people…" The Commission also objected to the Sandinista policy of "restricting the effectiveness of the habeas corpus remedy" and said it had been told of "situations where persons are held for short periods without their families being informed about their whereabouts and the charges made against them."<ref>CIDH, [https://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/84.85eng/chap.4d.htm Report of the Inter American Commission on Human Rights.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
Measures taken by the government to lower inflation were largely wiped out by natural disaster. In early 1988, the administration of Daniel José Ortega Saavedra (Sandinista junta coordinator 1979-85, president 1985-90) established an austerity program to lower inflation. Price controls were tightened, and a new currency was introduced. As a result, by August 1988, inflation had dropped to an annual rate of 240 percent. The following month, however, Hurricane Joan cut a devastating path directly across the center of the country. Damage was extensive, and the government's program of massive spending to repair the infrastructure destroyed its anti-inflation measures.<ref name="autogenerated7" />  
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===1984 election===
 +
While the Sandinistas expressed a support for grassroots pluralism, they were less than enthusiastic about national elections. They argued that popular support had already been expressed in the insurrection, and that further appeals to popular support would be a waste of scarce resources.<ref name="autogenerated6">Leslie E. Anderson, Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001 (University Of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0226019713), 64.</ref> But under international pressure and domestic opposition, the government made provisions for a national election, eventually held in 1984.<ref name="autogenerated6" /> Tomás Borge warned that the elections were a concession, an act of generosity and of political necessity.<ref>La Necesidad de un Nuevo Modelo de Comunicación en Nicaragua, University Revista de la Escuela de Perdiodismo.</ref> A broad range of political parties, from far-left to far-right, competed for power.<ref>Leslie E. Anderson, ''Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001'' (University Of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0226019713), 65.</ref> Electoral observers from around the world&mdash;including groups from the [[United Nations|UN]] as well as observers from [[Western Europe]]&mdash;certified the result.<ref name="bbc19841105">BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/november/5/newsid_2538000/2538379.stm 1984: Sandinistas claim election victory.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
In its eleven years in power, the Sandinista government never overcame most of the economic inequalities that it inherited from the Somoza era. Years of war, policy missteps, natural disasters, and the effects of the United States trade embargo all hindered economic development. The early economic gains of the Sandinistas were wiped out by seven years of sometimes precipitous economic decline, and in 1990, by most standards, Nicaragua and most Nicaraguans were considerably poorer than they were in the 1970s.<ref name="autogenerated7" />
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Several groups, however, refused to participate. They included UNO (National Opposition Union), a broad coalition of anti-Sandinista activists headed by [[Arturo Cruz]], a former Sandinista; COSEP (Private Enterprise Superior Council, or el Consejo Superior de la Empressa Privad), an organization of business leaders; the Contra group FDN (Nicaraguan Democratic Force, or Fuerza Democrática Nicaragüense), organized by former Somozan-era National Guardsmen, landowners, businessmen, and peasant highlanders.<ref>Dennis Mileti, ''Disasters by Design: A Reassessment of Natural Hazards in the United States'' (Joseph Henry Press, 1999, ISBN 0309063604).</ref> 
 +
COSEP's decision to withdraw was based on the FSLN's refusal to lift press censorship. UNO's decision was based on electoral process restrictions, and on the advisement of United States President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s [[United States State Department|State Department]], which feared that their participation would legitimize the election process. In addition, Coordinadora Democrática (CD) refused to file candidates and urged Nicaraguans not to take part. And the Independent Liberal Party (PLI), headed by Virgilio Godoy Reyes, announced its refusal to participate in October.<ref name="SandinistaYears">Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/nitoc.html Country Studies: Nicaragua: The Sandinista Years.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
==Women in revolutionary Nicaragua==
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When the elections went ahead in spite of these withdrawals, the United States continued its objections, citing political restrictions under the State of Emergency (such as censorship of the press, restriction of habeas corpus, and the curtailing of free assembly).
{{main|Role of women in Nicaraguan Revolution|Women and the Armed Struggle in Nicaragua}}
 
  
The women of Nicaragua prior to, during and after the revolution played a prominent role within the nation's society as they have commonly been recognized, throughout history and across all Latin American states, as its backbone. Nicaraguan women were therefore directly affected by all of the positive and negative events that took place during this revolutionary period. The victory of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) in 1979 brought about major changes and gains for women, mainly in legislation, broad educational opportunities, training programs for working women, childcare programs to help women enter the work force and greatly increased participation and even leadership positions in a whole range of political activities.<ref name="WIN">{{cite news | first=Luz Marina | last=Torres | title=Women in Nicaragua: The Revolution on Hold | url =http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2912 | publisher =[[Envío|Revista Envío]]|date=June 1991 | accessdate = 2008-02-22}}</ref> This, in turn, reduced the great burdens that the women of Nicaragua were faced with prior to the revolution. During the Sandinista government, women were more active politically. The great majority of members of the neighborhood committees (Comités de Defensa Sandinista) were women. By 1987, 31% of the executive positions in the Sandinista government, 27% of the leadership positions of the FSLN, and 25% of the FSLN's active membership were women.<ref>{{cite news | first=Alicia | last=Giriazzo| title=Ten Years After: Women in Sandinista Nicaragua | url =http://www.epica.org/Library/women/nica_women.htm | work =Epica | accessdate = 2008-02-22}}</ref>
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Daniel Ortega and Sergio Ramírez were elected president and vice-president, respectively, and the FSLN won 61 out of 96 seats in the new [[National Assembly of Nicaragua|National Assembly]], having taken 67 percent of the vote on a turnout of 75 percent.<ref name="SandinistaYears" /> Despite international validation of the elections by numerous political and independent observers (virtually all from among United States allies), the United States refused to accept their legitimacy. President Ronald Reagan denounced them as a sham.
  
Supporters of the Sandinistas see their era as characterized by the creation and implementation of successful social programs which were free and made widely available to the entire nation. Some of the more successful programs for women that were implemented by the Sandinistas were in the areas of Education [[Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign]], Health, and Housing. Providing subsidies for basic foodstuffs and the introduction of mass employment were also memorable contributions of the FSLN. The Sandinistas were particularly advantageous for the women of Nicaraguan as they promoted progressive views on gender as early as 1969 claiming that the revolution would "abolish the detestable discrimination that women have suffered with regard to men and establish economic, political and cultural equality between men and women." This was evident as the FSLN began integrating women into their ranks by 1967, unlike other left-wing guerilla groups in the region. Considering the [[Feminist Ideology During the Sandinista Revolution]] however, demonstrates that this goal was not fully reached because the roots of gender inequality were not explicitly challenged or deconstructed. Women's participation within the public sphere was also substantial, as many took part in the armed struggle as part of the FSLN or as part of counter-revolutionary forces.<ref>{{cite book|title = Rascally Signs in Sacred Places: The Politics of Culture in Nicaragua |first = David E. |last = Whisnant |publisher = University of North Carolina Press |ISBN = 0-80784523-X |year = 1995 |month = September |pages = 417}}</ref>
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Daniel Ortega began his six-year presidential term on January 10, 1985. After the United States Congress voted to discontinue funding the Contras in April 1985, the Reagan administration ordered a total embargo on United States trade with Nicaragua the following month, accusing the Sandinista regime of threatening United States security in the region.<ref name="SandinistaYears"/>
 
 
Nicaraguan women also organized independently in support of the revolution and their cause. Some of those organizations were the Socialist Party (1963), Federación Democrática (which support the FSLN in rural areas), and [[Luisa Amanda Espinoza Association of Nicaraguan Women]] ({{lang|es|''Asociacion de Mujeres Nicaraguenses Luisa Amanda Espinosa''}}, AMNLAE). However, since [[Daniel Ortega]], was defeated in the 1990 election by the [[United Nicaraguan Opposition]] (UNO) coalition headed by [[Violeta Chamorro]], the situation for women in Nicaragua was seriously altered. In terms of women and the labor market, by the end of 1991 AMNLAE reported that almost 16,000 working women- 9,000 agricultural laborers, 3,000 industrial workers, and 3,800 civil servants, including 2,000 in health, 800 in education, and 1,000 in administration- had lost their jobs.<ref> {{cite journal|title=The Disruptions of Adjustment: Women in Nicaragua |journal=Latin American Perspectives|year=1996|first=Anna M.|last=Fernandez Poncela|coauthors=Bill Steiger|volume=23|issue=1|pages=49–66|doi=10.1177/0094582X9602300104 }}</ref> The change in government also resulted in the drastic reduction or suspension of all Nicaraguan social programs, which brought back the burdens characteristic of pre-revolutionary Nicaragua. The women were forced to maintain and supplement community social services on their own without economic aid or technical and human resource.
 
  
[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3693/is_199512/ai_n8722943][http://www.epica.org/Library/women/nica_women.htm]
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==Nicaraguan economy during the FSLN's administration==
 +
The FSLN officially advocated a mixed economy, under which both public and private ownership of the means of production were accepted. Nevertheless, government spokespersons occasionally referred to a reconstruction phase in the country's development, in which property owners and the professional class would be tapped for their managerial and technical expertise. After reconstruction and recovery, the private sector was to give way to expanded public ownership in most areas of the economy.<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/nitoc.html The Sandinista Era, 1979-90.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
== 1980 literacy campaign ==
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Economic growth was uneven in the 1980s. Restructuring of the economy and the rebuilding immediately following the end of the civil war caused the [[Gross Domestic Product]] (GDP) to jump about 5 percent in 1980 and 1981. Each year from 1984 to 1990, however, showed a drop in the GDP. Reasons for the contraction included the reluctance of foreign banks to offer new loans, the diversion of funds to fight the new insurrection against the government, and, after 1985, the total embargo on trade with the United States, formerly Nicaragua's largest trading partner. After 1985 the government chose to fill the gap between decreasing revenues and mushrooming military expenditures by printing large amounts of paper money. [[Inflation]] skyrocketed, peaking in 1988 at more than 14,000 percent annually.
{{main|Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign}}
 
  
[[Image:literacy2.jpg|thumbnail|right|[[Nicaraguan Literacy Campaign|Literacy Campaign]] poster|1979 FSLN poster. Text of the image: "Consolidate the Revolution in the rearguard and with literacy." (Spanish: a consolidar la Revolución en la Retaguardia y la Alfabetización)
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Measures taken by the government to lower inflation were largely wiped out by natural disaster. In early 1988, the administration established an austerity program to lower inflation. Price controls were tightened, and a new currency was introduced. As a result, by August 1988, inflation had dropped to an annual rate of 240 percent. The following month, however, Hurricane Joan cut a devastating path directly across the center of the country. Damage was extensive, and the government's program of massive spending to repair the infrastructure destroyed its anti-inflation measures.
]]
 
  
The 1980 Literacy Campaign is considered to have been a major contribution to Nicaraguan society during the Sandinista rule{{Fact|date=October 2008}}. The goals of the literacy campaign were socio-political, strategic as well as educational. It was the most prominent campaign with regards to the new education system. Illiteracy in Nicaragua was significantly reduced from 50.3% to 12.9%. One of the government's major concerns was the previous education system under the Somoza regime which did not see education as a major factor on the development of the country. As mentioned in the Historical Program of the FSLN of 1969, education was seen as a right and the pressure to stay committed to the promises made in the program was even stronger. 1980 was declared the "Year of Literacy" and the major goals of the campaign that started only 8 months after the FSLN took over. This included the eradication of illiteracy, the integration of different classes, races, gender and age. Political awareness and the strengthening of political and economic participation of the Nicaraguan people was also a central goal of the Literacy Campaign. The campaign was a key component of the FSLN's cultural transformation agenda.
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In its 11 years in power, the Sandinista government never overcame most of the economic inequalities that it inherited from the Somoza era. Years of war, policy missteps, natural disasters, and the effects of the United States trade embargo all hindered economic development. The early economic gains of the Sandinistas were wiped out by seven years of sometimes precipitous economic decline, and in 1990, by most standards, Nicaragua and most Nicaraguans were considerably poorer than they were in the 1970s.
The basic reader which was disseminated and used by teacher was called "Dawn of the People" based around the themes of Sandino, Carlos Fonseca, and the Sandinista struggle against imperialism and defending the revolution. Political education was aimed at creating a new social values based around the principles of Sandinista socialism, such as social solidarity, worker's democracy, egalitarianism, and anti-imperialism. <ref>{{cite journal|last=Arnove|first=Robert|title=The Nicaraguan National Literacy Campaign|publisher=Comparative Education Review|year=1981|month=June|pages = 252}}</ref> <ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1132/is_v37/ai_3835906 Nicaraguan literacy campaign: its democratic essence | Monthly Review | Find Articles at BNET.com<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref> <ref>http://www.multilingual-matters.net/beb/002/0214/beb0020214.pdf</ref> <ref>[http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0014/001460/146007e.pdf Nicaragua's literacy campaign; Background paper for the Education for all global monitoring report 2006: literacy for life; 2005<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref> <ref>[http://faculty.philau.edu/kleinbachr/literacy.htm Literacy<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>
 
  
==Sandinistas vs. Contras==
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==1990 election==
{{main|Contras|Iran-Contra affair}}
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In preparation for the 1990 elections, which were mandated by Nicaragua's 1987 constitution, anti-Sandinista activists formed a coalition to compete with the far better organized FSLN. The coalition, known as the [[National Opposition Union]] (''Unión Nacional Opositora'', or UNO), drew support from "conservative and liberal parties as well as two of Nicaragua's traditional communist factions," according to a report by the United States Library of Congress.<ref>Library of Congress, [http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+ni0029) Nicaragua: The UNO Electoral Victory.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> Intense campaigning began immediately, with the UNO nominating [[Violetta Barrios de Chamorro]], one of the initial members of the anti-Somoza ruling junta. Chamorro, a member of one of Nicaragua's wealthiest but politically divided families,<ref>Answers.com, [http://www.answers.com/topic/violeta-chamorro "Biography: Violeta Barrios de Chamorro."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> at the time was publisher of ''La Prensa,'' the anti-Somoza newspaper where her late husband was editor when he was assassinated. Her running mate was [[Virgilio Godoy Reyes]], a former Sandinista minister of labor.
  
Upon assuming office in 1981, [[U.S. President]] [[Ronald Reagan]] condemned the FSLN for joining with Cuba in supporting Marxist revolutionary movements in other [[Latin America]]n countries such as [[El Salvador]]. His administration authorized the [[Central Intelligence Agency|CIA]] to begin financing, arming and training rebels, most of whom were the remnants of Somoza's National Guard, as anti-Sandinista guerrillas that were branded "counter-revolutionary" by leftists ({{lang|es|''contrarrevolucionarios''}} in Spanish).<ref name="CA">{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=Nicaragua: Growth of Opposition, 1981-83 | date= | publisher= | url =http://www.ciaonet.org/atlas/countries/ni_data_loc.html | work =Ciao Atlas | pages = | accessdate = 2007-08-21 | language = }}</ref> This was shortened to ''[[Contras]]'', a label the anti-Communist forces chose to embrace. [[Edén Pastora]] and many of the indigenous guerrilla forces, who were not associated with the "Somozistas," also resisted the Sandinistas.
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The FSLN nominated its long time leader [[Daniel Ortega]] for President, and [[Sergio Ramirez Mercado]] as his running mate.
  
The Contras operated out of camps in the neighboring countries of [[Honduras]] to the north and [[Costa Rica]] (see Edén Pastora cited below) to the south. As was typical in guerrilla warfare, they were engaged in a campaign of economic sabotage in an attempt to combat the Sandinista government and disrupted shipping by planting [[underwater mine]]s in Nicaragua's [[Corinto (Nicaragua)|Corinto]] harbour,<ref>{{cite news | first=Scott C. | last=Truver | coauthors= | title=Mines and Underwater IEDs in U.S. Ports and Waterways... | date= | publisher= | url =http://www.mast.udel.edu/873/Spring%202007/ScottTruves.pdf | work = | pages =4 | accessdate = 2007-08-21 | language = |format=PDF}}</ref> an action condemned by the [[World Court]] as illegal. The U.S. also sought to place economic pressure on the Sandinistas, and, as with Cuba, the [[Reagan administration]] imposed a full trade embargo.<ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=US Policy: Economic Embargo: The War Goes On | date= | publisher=Central American University - UCA | url =http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2695 | work =Envío | pages = | accessdate = 2007-08-21 | language = }}</ref>
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According to the [[Library of Congress]] report, the campaign, while intense and marred by occasional violence, "was carried out in relative peace." It was monitored by an international delegation of the Organization of American States (OAS), under the leadership of former United States President [[Jimmy Carter]].  
  
The armed resistance to the Sandinistas in Costa Rica initially called itself the [[Nicaraguan Revolutionary Democratic Alliance]] (ADREN) and was known as the 15th of September Legion. It later formed an alliance, called the [[Nicaraguan Democratic Force]] (FDN), which comprised other groups including [[MISURASATA]] and the [[Nicaraguan Democratic Union]]. Together, the members of these groups were generally called Contras. The Sandinistas condemned them as [[terrorist]]s, and human rights organizations expressed serious concerns about the nature and frequency of Contra attacks on civilians. In 1982, under pressure from [[United States Congress|Congress]], the [[United States Department of State|U.S. State Department]] declared Contra activities terrorism.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} This meant the US could no longer openly support the Contras. The [[Congressional Intelligence Committee]] confirmed reports of Contra atrocities such as rape, torture, summary executions, and indiscriminate killings.
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In general, the Sandinistas campaigned on a policy of patriotism and support for their revolution. They portrayed UNO supporters as pro-Somoza and handmaidens of United States foreign policy. For its part, the UNO focused on the crumbling economy, and promised to end the military draft. Financial assistance amounting to tens of millions of dollars to the UNO came from the United States,<ref>Christian Smith, ''Resisting Reagan: The US Central America Peace Movement'' (University of Chicago Press, 1996).</ref><ref>Noam Chomsky, ''Deterring Democracy'' (Vintage, 1992).</ref> much of it through the [[Central Intelligence Agency]] and the [[National Endowment for Democracy]], a non-profit group founded in 1983 during the Reagan Administration to promote democracy. Critics accused it of promoting United States political interests in various countries.
  
After the U.S. Congress prohibited federal funding of the Contras in 1983, the Reagan administration continued to back the Contras by covertly selling arms to [[Iran]] (then engaged in a vicious war with [[Iraq]], which was also receiving US military aid at the time) and channelling the proceeds to the Contras (see the [[Iran-Contra Affair]]).<ref>{{cite book |author=Baker, Dean |title=The United States since 1980 (The World Since 1980) |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year= |pages= 101 |isbn=0-521-86017-2 |oclc= |doi=}}</ref> When this scheme was revealed, Reagan admitted that he knew about Iranian "arms for hostages" dealings but professed ignorance about the proceeds funding the Contras; for this, [[United States National Security Council|National Security Council]] aide [[Lieutenant Colonel|Lt. Col.]] [[Oliver North]] took much of the blame.
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Chamorro won the popular vote over Ortega by 55 percent to 41 percent. Soon thereafter, the FSLN and UNO worked out a peaceful transfer of power, and the Contras "completed their demobilization." Despite the expectation on the part of some that Ortega would not relinquish power, the transition took place as scheduled.
  
Senator [[John Kerry]]'s 1988 [[U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations]] report on links between the Contras and drug imports to the US concluded that "senior U.S. policy makers were not immune to the idea that drug money was a perfect solution to the Contras' funding problems."[http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB113/index.htm] According to the [[National Security Archive]], Oliver North had been in contact with [[Manuel Noriega]], the US-backed president of [[Panama]].
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==2006: Corruption, poverty and FSLN's return to power==
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Following the FSLN loss of power in the 1990 elections, Sandinista leaders have been widely accused of participating in corruption. Many Sandinistas were said to have stolen government property upon leaving office,<ref>Global Integrity, [http://www.globalintegrity.org/reports/2006/Nicaragua/timeline.cfm Nicaragua Timeline.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> an action known as ''pinata'' and tolerated by the Chamorro government.<ref>Nation Master, [http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Nicaraguan-Revolution#Opposition_.28since_1990.29 "Nicaraguan Revolution."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> One history source noted that as the Sandinistas "left power, many simply absconded with government assets, taking what they could while they could in desperation or plain greed."<ref>Joe DeRaymond, [http://www.raceandhistory.com/historicalviews/2005/0705.html "Another Look at Daniel Ortega and the Sandinista Struggle, May 7, 2005."] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref> The source, however, also said the Chamorro government reversed the social gains implemented by the former FSLN administration, having "dismantled the social programs of the Sandinistas, [after which] indigenous rights were neglected and the historic project of the Sandinistas to consolidate the Autonomous Regions of the East Coast languished. Under Violeta [Chamorro], Nicaragua became a 'heavily indebted poor country' and the gains of the early 1980s were replaced with poverty, maquilas and debt."
  
The Reagan administration's support for the Contras continued to stir controversy well into the 1990s. In August 1996, ''[[San Jose Mercury News]]'' reporter [[Gary Webb]] published a series titled ''Dark Alliance'',<ref>[http://www.narconews.com/darkalliance/drugs/start.htm Restored version of the original ''"Dark Alliance"'' web page], ''San Jose Mercury News'', now hosted by narconews.com</ref> linking the origins of [[crack cocaine]] in [[California]] (largely aimed at its [[African-American]] population) to the CIA-Contra alliance. [[Freedom of Information Act (United States)|Freedom of Information Act]] inquiries by the National Security Archive and other investigators unearthed a number of documents showing that White House officials, including Oliver North, knew about and supported using money raised via [[drug trafficking]] to fund the Contras. Sen. John Kerry's report in 1988 led to the same conclusions. However, the [[US Justice Department|Justice Department]] denied the allegations, and the mainstream US media downplayed them.
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Following the 1990 elections, the FSLN lost twice more, in 1996 and 2001. But in 2006, Daniel Ortega, selecting as his running mate fomer Contra spokesman [[Jaime Morales]], won back the presidency with 38 percent of the ballots.
  
The Contra war unfolded differently in the northern and southern zones of Nicaragua. Contras based in Costa Rica operated on Nicaragua's Atlantic coast, which is sparsely populated by indigenous groups including the [[Miskito]], [[Sumo (people)|Sumo]], [[Rama (people)|Rama]], [[Garifuna]], and [[Mestizo]]. Unlike Spanish-speaking western Nicaragua, the Atlantic Coast is predominantly English-speaking and was largely ignored by the Somoza regime. The ''costeños'' did not participate in the uprising against Somoza and viewed Sandinismo with suspicion from the outset.
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==Current situation==
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Economic issues facing the new Nicaraguan administration remain serious. Foreign aid amounts to around a quarter of the country's Gross Domestic Product, and the richest 10 percent of the population controls nearly half of GDP. According to NationMaster, "Nicaragua has widespread underemployment and the third lowest per capita income in the Western Hemisphere. Distribution of income is one of the most unequal on the globe. While the country has progressed toward macroeconomic stability in the past few years, GDP annual growth has been far too low to meet the country's needs, forcing the country to rely on international economic assistance to meet fiscal and debt financing obligations."<ref>Nation Master, [http://www.nationmaster.com/red/country/nu-nicaragua/eco-economy&all=1 NationMaster: Nicaraguan Economy Statistics.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.</ref>
  
==Relationship with the Catholic Church==
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Politically, the FSLN remains beset by traditional opponents, most notably the Constitutional Liberal Party, largely supported by big business, and the [[Catholic Church]]. In the fall of 2008, for example, armed clashes erupted between supporters of both parties, over allegations of mayoral electoral fraud.<ref>New York Times, November 20, 2008, page A6.</ref>
{{main|The Catholic Church and the Nicaraguan Revolution}}
 
  
The [[Roman Catholic Church]]'s relationship with the Sandinistas was extremely complex. Initially, the Church was committed to supporting the Somoza regime. The Somoza dynasty was willing to secure the Church a prominent place in society as long as it did not attempt to subvert the authority of the regime. Under the constitution of 1950 the Roman Catholic Church was recognized as the official religion and church-run schools flourished. It was not until the late 1970s that the Church began to speak out against the corruption and human rights abuses that characterized the Somoza regime.
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==Prominent sandinistas==
 
 
The Catholic hierarchy initially disapproved of the Sandinistas' revolutionary struggle against the Somoza dynasty. In fact, the revolutionaries were perceived as proponents of "godless communism" that posed a threat to the traditionally privileged place that the Church occupied within Nicaraguan society. Nevertheless, the increasing corruption and repression characterizing the Somoza rule and the likelihood that the Sandinistas would emerge victorious ultimately influenced Archbishop [[Miguel Obando y Bravo]] to declare formal support for the Sandinistas' armed struggle. Throughout the revolutionary struggle, the Sandinistas enjoyed the grassroots support of clergy who were influenced by the reforming zeal of [[Vatican II]] and dedicated to a "preferential option for the poor" (for comparison, see [[liberation theology]]). Numerous Christian base communities (CEBs) were created in which lower level clergy and laity took part in consciousness raising initiatives to educate the peasants about the institutionalized violence they were suffering from. Some priests took a more active role in supporting the revolutionary struggle. For example, Father [[Gaspar García Laviana]] took up arms and became a member of FSLN.
 
 
 
Soon after the Sandinistas assumed power, the hierarchy began to oppose the Sandinistas government. The Archbishop was a vocal source of domestic opposition. The hierarchy was alleged to be motivated by fear of the emergence of the 'popular church' which challenged their centralized authority. The hierarchy also opposed social reforms implemented by the Sandinistas to aid the poor, allegedly because they saw it as a threat to their traditionally privileged position within society.
 
 
 
In response to this perceived opposition, the Sandinistas shut down the church-run Radio Católica radio station on multiple occasions.
 
 
 
The Sandinistas' relationship with the [[Roman Catholic Church]] deteriorated as the [[Contras|Contra]] War dragged on. The hierarchy refused to speak out against the counterrevolutionary activities of the contras and failed to denounce American military aid. State media accused the Catholic Church of being reactionary and supporting the Contras. According to former President Ortega, "The conflict with the church was strong, and it costs us, but I don't think it was our fault… …There were so many people being wounded every day, so many people dying, and it was hard for us to understand the position of the church hierarchy in refusing to condemn the contras."  The hierarchy-state tensions were brought to the forefront with [[Pope John Paul II 1983 visit to Nicaragua]]. Hostility to the Catholic Church became so great that at one point, FSLN militants shouted down Pope John Paul II as he tried to say Mass.[http://www.fiu.edu/~yaf/sand71899.html]  Therefore, while the activities of the 'popular church' contributed to the success of the Sandinista revolution, the hierarchy's opposition was a major factor in the downfall of the revolutionary government.
 
 
 
== Reported human rights violations by the Sandinistas ==
 
 
 
[[TIME magazine|''TIME'' magazine]] in 1983 published reports of human rights violations in an article which stated that "According to Nicaragua's [[Permanent Commission on Human Rights]], the regime detains several hundred people a month; about half of them are eventually released, but the rest simply disappear." ''TIME'' also interviewed a former deputy chief of Nicaraguan military counterintelligence, who stated that he had fled Nicaragua after being ordered to eliminate 800 [[Miskito]] prisoners and make it look like as if they had died in combat.<ref>''[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,950831,00.html New Regime, Old Methods]'' (January 24, 1983), TIME.</ref> Another article described Sandinista neighbourhood "Defense Committees," modeled on similar Cuban [[Committees for the Defense of the Revolution]], which according to critics were used unleash mobs on anyone who is labeled a counterrevolutionary. Nicaragua's only opposition newspaper, [[La Prensa]], was subject to strict censorship. That newspaper's editors are forbidden to print anything negative about the Sandinistas either at home or abroad.[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,952200-1,00.html]
 
 
 
In 1983, The [[Heritage Foundation]], a conservative U.S. [[think tank]], reported on various human rights violations, including censorship, the creating of a neighborhood system which encouraged spying and reporting by neighbors, torture by state security forces, thousands of political prisoners, assassinations both inside and outside Nicaragua, and that a former Sandinista Intelligence officer had stated that 5,000 were killed in the early months of Sandinsta rule.<ref name="autogenerated4">Richard Araujo, ''{{PDFlink|[http://www.heritage.org/Research/LatinAmerica/upload/87214_1.pdf The Sandinista War on Human Righs]|480&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 491894 bytes —>}}'' (July 19, 1983), Heritage Foundation.</ref>
 
 
 
The [[Inter-American Commission on Human Rights]] (IACHR) in a 1981 report found evidence for mass executions in the period following the revolution. It stated "In the Commission's view, while the government of Nicaragua clearly intended to respect the lives of all those defeated in the civil war. During the weeks immediately subsequent to the Revolutionary triumph, when the government was not in effective control, illegal executions took place which violated the right to life, and these acts have not been investigated and the persons responsible have not been punished."<ref>''[http://www.cidh.org/countryrep/Nica81eng/TOC.htm Report on the Situation of Human Rights in the Republic of Nicaragua]'' (1981), Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.</ref> The IACHR also stated that: "The Commission is of the view that the new regime did not have, and does not now have, a policy of violating the right to life of political enemies, including among the latter the former guardsmen of the Government of General Somoza, whom a large sector of the population of Nicaragua held responsible for serious human rights violations during the former regime; proof of the foregoing is the abolition of the death penalty and the high number of former guardsmen who were prisoners and brought to trial for crimes that constituted violations of human rights." <ref>''[http://www.cidh.oas.org/countryrep/Nica81eng/chap.2.htm Report on the Situation of Human Rights in the Republic of Nicaragua]'' (1981), Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.]</ref>
 
 
 
A 1983 report from the same source documented allegations of human rights violations against the Miskito Indians, which were alleged to have taken place after opposition forces (the [[Contras]]) infiltrated a Miskito village in order to launch attacks against government soldiers, and as part of a subsequent forced relocation program. Allegations included arbitrary imprisonment without trial, "[[Forced disappearance|disappearances]]" of such prisoners, forced relocations, and destruction of property.<ref>''[http://www.cidh.oas.org/countryrep/Miskitoeng/toc.htm Report on the Situation of Human Rights of a Segment of the Nicaraguan Population of Miskito Origin]'' (1983), Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.</ref>
 
 
 
The 1991 annual report by the same organization, "In September 1990, the Commission was informed of the discovery of common graves in Nicaragua, especially in areas where fighting had occurred. The information was provided by the Nicaraguan Pro Human Rights Association, which had received its first complaint in June 1990. By December 1991, that Association had received reports of 60 common graves and had investigated 15 of them. While most of the graves seem to be the result of summary executions by members of the Sandinista People's Army or the State Security, some contain the bodies of individuals executed by the Nicaraguan Resistance."[http://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/91eng/chap.4d.htm]
 
 
 
The 1992 annual report by the same organization contains details of mass graves and investigations which suggest that mass executions had been carried out. One such grave contained 75 corpses of peasants who were believed to have been executed in 1984 by government security forces pretending to be members of the contras. Another grave was also found in the town of [[Quininowas]] which contained six corpses, believed to be an entire family killed by government forces when the town was invaded. A further 72 graves were reported as being found, containing bodies of people, the majority of whom were believed to have been executed by agents of the state and some also by the contras.[http://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/92eng/chap.4b.htm]
 
 
 
[[R. J. Rummel]] in his 1997 book ''Statistics of Democide'' lists many sources and estimates regarding how many were killed during the Sandinista government. Rummel's own estimate, based on those sources, is that the Sandinistas were responsible for 5,000 non-battle related deaths.<ref> R.J. Rummel, ''Statistics of Democide'' (1997) [http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.TAB15.1E.GIF Table][http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.REF.HTM References]</ref>
 
 
 
A 2004 article in the Washington-based [[peer-reviewed]] academic journal ''[[Demokratizatsiya (journal)|Demokratizatsiya]]'' describes many human rights violations, both during and after their period in power, like that Sandinista security forces assassinated more than two hundred resistance commanders who had accepted the terms of the United Nations-brokered peace accords and had laid down their arms to join the democratic process.<ref>J. Michael Waller [http://www.iwp.edu/news/newsID.126/news_detail.asp Tropical Chekists: The Sandinista secret police legacy in Nicaragua] Summer 2004</ref>
 
 
 
===Politicization of human rights===
 
 
 
The issue of human rights also became highly politicised at this time as human rights is claimed to be a key component of propaganda created by the Sandinistas[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_mhttp://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,952200-3,00.html1282/is_n6_v41/ai_7483153] and the Reagan administration to help legitimise its policies in the region. The [[Inter-Church Committee on Human Rights in Latin America]] (ICCHRLA) in its ''Newsletter'' stated in 1985 that:  "The hostility with which the Nicaraguan government is viewed by the Reagan administration is an unfortunate development. Even more unfortunate is the expression of that hostility in the destabilization campaign developed by the US administration... An important aspect of this campaign is misinformation and frequent allegations of serious human rights violations by the Nicaraguan authorities."<ref name="autogenerated1">Report on Nicaragua, ''Newsletter'' Numbers 1&2, 1985. Toronto: Inter-Church Committee on Human Rights in Latin America.</ref> Among the accusations in the [[Heritage Foundation]] report and the [[Demokratizatsiya]] article are references to alleged policies of religious persecution, particularly anti-semitism. The ICCHRLA in its newsletter stated that: "From time to time the current U.S. administration, and private organizations sympathetic to it, have made serious and extensive allegations of religious persecution in Nicaragua. Colleague churches in the United States undertook onsite investigation of these charges in 1984. In their report, the delegation organized by the Division of Overseas Ministries of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States concluded that there is 'no basis for the charge of systematic religious persecution'. The delegation 'considers this issue to be a device being used to justify aggressive opposition to the present Nicaraguan government.'"<ref name="autogenerated1" /> On the other hand, some elements of the Catholic Church in Nicaragua, among them Archbishop [[Miguel Obando y Bravo]], strongly criticized the Sandinistas. The Archbishop stated "The government wants a church that is aligned with the Marxist-Leninist regime."[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,952447,00.html] The [[Inter-American Commission on Human Rights]] states that: "Although it is true that much of the friction between the Government and the churches arises from positions that are directly or indirectly linked to the political situation of the country, it is also true that statements by high government officials, official press statements, and the actions of groups under the control of the Government have gone beyond the limits within which political discussions should take place and have become obstacles to certain specifically religious activities."[http://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/83.84.eng/chap.4e.htm]
 
 
 
[[Human Rights Watch]] also stated in its 1989 report on Nicaragua that: "Under the Reagan administration, U.S. policy toward Nicaragua's Sandinista government was marked by constant hostility. This hostility yielded, among other things, an inordinate amount of publicity about human rights issues. Almost invariably, U.S. pronouncements on human rights exaggerated and distorted the real human rights violations of the Sandinista regime, and exculpated those of the U.S.-supported insurgents, known as the ''contras''."<ref>[http://www.hrw.org/reports/1989/WR89/Nicaragu.htm#TopOfPage Nicaragua<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>
 
 
 
In 1987 a report was published by the UK based NGO [[Progressio|Catholic Institute for International Relations]] (CIIR, now known as "Progressio"), a human rights organization which identifies itself with [[Liberation theology]]. The Progressio website states: "Throughout its history, the organisation has sought to influence church and state, most notably to support liberation struggles, grassroots developments and to strengthen a moral voice against human rights abuses. ... CIIR's then education department supported the progressive elements of the church in various liberation and human rights struggles in Central America, southern Africa and Asia. CIIR published booklets on liberation theology and promoted progressive church speakers."[http://www.ciir.org/progressio/Internal/89624/91445/progressios_history/] The report, "Right to Survive - Human Rights in Nicaragua",<ref>Right to Survive - Human Rights in Nicaragua, (1987. London: CIIR</ref> discussed the politicisation of the human rights issue: "The Reagan administration, with scant regard for the truth, has made a concerted effort to paint as evil a picture as possible of Nicaragua, describing it as a 'totalitarian dungeon'. Supporters of the Sandinistas  ... have argued that Nicaragua has a good record of human rights compared with other Central American countries and have compared Nicaragua with other countries at war." The CIIR report refers to estimates made by the NGO [[Americas Watch]] which count the number of non-battle related deaths and disappearances for which the government was responsible up to the year 1986 as "close to 300." According to the CIIR report, Amnesty International and Americas Watch stated that there is no evidence that the use of torture was sanctioned by the Nicaraguan authorities, although prisoners reported the use of conditions of detention and interrogation techniques that could be described as psychological torture. The Red Cross made repeated requests to be given access to prisoners held in state security detention centers, but were refused. The CIIR was critical of the [[Permanent Commission on Human Rights]] (PCHR or CPDH in Spanish), claiming that the organisation had a tendency to immediately publish accusations against the government without first establishing a factual basis for the allegations. The CIIR report also questioned the independence of the Permanent Commission on Human Rights, referring to an article in the ''[[Washington Post]]'' which claims that the [[National Endowment for Democracy]], an organization funded by the US government, allocated a concession of US$50,000 for assistance in the translation and distribution outside Nicaragua of its monthly report, and that these funds were administered by [[Prodemca]], a US-based organization which later published full-page adverisments in the ''Washington Post ''and ''[[New York Times]]'' supporting military aid to the Contras. The Permanent Commission denies that it received any money which it claims was instead used by others for translating and distributing their monthly reports in other nations.[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2774]
 
 
 
The Nicaraguan based magazine ''[[Revista Envio]]'', which describes its stance as one of "critical support for the Sandinistas," refers to the report: "The CPDH: Can It Be Trusted?" written by Scottish lawyer Paul Laverty. In the report, Laverty observes that: "The entire board of directors [of the Permanent Commission], are members of or closely identify with the 'Nicaraguan Democratic Coordinating Committee' (Coordinadora), an alliance of the more rightwing parties and COSEP, the business organization."  He goes on to express concern about CPDH's alleged tendency to provide relatively few names and other details in connection with alleged violations. "According to the 11 monthly bulletins of 1987 (July being the only month without an issue), the CPDH claims to have received information on 1,236 abuses of all types. However, of those cases, only 144 names are provided. The majority of those 144 cases give dates and places of alleged incidents, but not all. This means that only in 11.65% of its cases is there the minimal detail provided to identify the person, place, date, incident and perpetrator of the abuse."<ref>[http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/2774] Revista Envio: Human Rights: Opposition Rights Group Continues Attack</ref>
 
 
 
On the other hand, the [[Inter-American Commission on Human Rights]] states: "During its on-site observation in 1978 under the Government of General Somoza, the Permanent Commission on Human Rights in Nicaragua, (CPDH) gave the Commission notable assistance, which certainly helped it to prepare its report promptly and correctly." and in 1980 "It cannot be denied that the CPDH continues to play an important role in the protection of human rights, and that a good number of people who consider that their human rights have been ignored by the Government are constantly coming to it."[http://www.cidh.oas.org/countryrep/Nica81eng/chap.8.htm] The IACHR also continued to meet with representatives of the Permanent Commission and report their assessments in later years.[http://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/87.88eng/chap4c.htm][http://www.cidh.oas.org/annualrep/86.87eng/chap.4d.htm]
 
 
 
The [[Heritage Foundation]] stated that: "While elements of the Somoza National Guard tortured political opponents, they did not employ psychological torture."<ref name="autogenerated4" /> The [[International Commission of Jurists]] stated that under the Somoza regime cruel physical torture was regularly used in the interrogation of political prisoners.<ref>[http://www.historiansagainstwar.org/resources/torture/grossman.html Nicaragua a Tortured Nation]'' Historians Against War</ref>
 
 
 
== US government allegations of support for foreign rebels ==
 
The [[United States State Department]] accused the Sandinistas of many cases of illegal foreign intervention.<ref name = ussds>{{cite web
 
|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1079/is_v86/ai_4549750
 
|title=Nicaragua's role in revolutionary internationalism - statement by Vernon A. Walters
 
|author=Vernon A. Walters
 
|year=1986
 
|month=October
 
}}</ref>
 
 
 
One was supporting the [[FMLN]] rebels in [[El Salvador]] with safehaven; training; command-and-control headquarters and advice; and weapons, ammunition, and other vital supplies. As evidence was cited captured documents, testimonials of former rebels and Sandinistas, aerial photographs, tracing captured weapons back to Nicaragua, and captured vehicles from Nicaragua smuggling weapons.<ref name = "ussds"/> However El Salvador was in the midst of a Civil War in the period in question and that the US was intervening at the behest of El Salvador against the FMLN guerrillas.
 
 
 
There were also accusations of subversive activities in [[Honduras]], [[Costa Rica]], and [[Colombia]] and in the case of Honduras and Costa Rica outright military operations by Nicaraguan troops.<ref name = "ussds"/>
 
 
 
In 1993 an FMLN weapons cache exploded in Managua that was left there from the revolutionary period.
 
 
 
==Opposition (1990 - 2006)==
 
{{Refimprovesect|date=September 2006}}
 
 
 
In 1987, due to a stalemate with the Contras, the Esquipulas II treaty was brokered by Costa Rican President [[Óscar Arias Sánchez]]. The treaty's provisions included a call for a cease-fire, freedom of expression, and national elections. After the February 26, 1990 elections, the Sandinistas lost and peacefully passed power to the [[National Opposition Union]] (UNO), an alliance of 14 opposition parties ranging from the conservative business organization COSEP to [[Nicaraguan Socialist Party|Nicaraguan communists]]. UNO's candidate, [[Violeta Barrios de Chamorro]], replaced Daniel Ortega as president of Nicaragua.
 
 
 
Reasons for the Sandinista loss in 1990 are disputed. Defenders of the defeated government assert that Nicaraguans voted for the opposition due to the continuing U.S. economic embargo and potential Contra threat. Opponents claim that Contra warfare had largely died down, and that the Sandinistas had grown increasingly unpopular, particularly due to forced conscription and crackdowns on political freedoms. An important reason, regardless of perspective, was that after a decade of the U.S. backed war and embargo, Nicaragua's economy and infrastructure were badly damaged and the United States promised aid only if the Sandinistas lost.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} The U.S. also helped keep the rightist factions united so there would not be two strong rightist candidates.
 
 
 
At the personal level, most Nicaraguans voted against the Sandinistas to end a bloody war and food shortages. {{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
After their loss, most of the Sandinista leaders held most of the private property and businesses that had been confiscated and nationalized by the FSLN government. This process became known as the piñata and was tolerated by the new Chamorro government. Ortega also claimed to "rule from below" through groups he controls such as labor unions and student groups. Prominent Sandinistas also created a number of nongovernmental organizations to promote their ideas and social goals.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
Daniel Ortega remained the head of the FSLN, but his brother Humberto resigned from the party and remained at the head of the Sandinista Army, becoming a close confidante and supporter of Chamorro. The party also experienced a number of internal divisions, with prominent Sandinistas such as [[Ernesto Cardenal]] and [[Sergio Ramírez]] resigning to protest what they described as heavy-handed domination of the party by Daniel Ortega. Ramírez also founded a separate political party, the [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS); his faction came to be known as the {{lang|es|''renovistas''}}, who favor a more [[social democracy|social democratic]] approach than the ''ortodoxos'', or hardliners. In the 1996 Nicaraguan election, Ortega and Ramírez both campaigned unsuccessfully as presidential candidates on behalf of their respective parties, with Ortega receiving 43% of the vote while [[Arnoldo Alemán]] of the Constitutional Liberal Party received 51%. The Sandinistas won second place in the congressional elections, with 36 of 93 seats.
 
 
 
Daniel Ortega was re-elected as leader of the FSLN in 1998. Municipal elections in November 2000 saw a strong Sandinista vote, especially in urban areas, and former Tourism Minister [[Herty Lewites]] was elected mayor of Managua. This significant result led to expectations of a close race in the presidential elections scheduled for November 2001. Daniel Ortega and [[Enrique Bolaños]] of the [[Constitutional Liberal Party]] (PLC) ran neck-and-neck in the polls for much of the campaign, but in the end the PLC won a clear victory. The results of [[Nicaraguan general election, 2001|these elections]] were that the FSLN won 42.6% of the vote for parliament (versus 52.6% for the PLC), giving them 41 out of the 92 seats in the National Assembly (versus 48 for the PLC). In the presidential race, Ortega lost to Bolaños 46.3% to 53.6%.
 
 
 
Daniel Ortega was once again re-elected as leader of the FSLN in March 2002 and re-elected as president of Nicaragua in November 2006.
 
 
 
==2006, back in government==
 
In 2006, [[Daniel Ortega]] was elected president with 38% of the vote (see [[Nicaraguan general election, 2006]]). This occurred despite the fact that the  breakaway [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] continued to oppose the FSLN, running former Sandinista [[Herty Lewites]] as its candidate for president. However, Lewites died just several month before the elections.
 
 
 
The FSLN also won 38 seats in the congressional elections, becoming the party with the largest representation in parliament. The split in the Constitutionalist Liberal Party helped to allow the FSLN to become the largest party in Congress, however it should be noted that the Sandinista vote had a minuscule split between the FSLN and MRS.
 
 
 
==="Zero Hunger project"===
 
 
 
The "Zero Hunger Program," which aims to reduce poverty in the rural areas over a five-year period, was inaugurated by President Daniel Ortega and other members of his administration in the northern department of Jinotega. The program was designed to achieve the first objective of the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals, "to eradicate extreme poverty and reduce hunger to zero."
 
 
 
"Zero Hunger" with its budget of US$150 million plans to deliver a US$2,000 bond or voucher to 75,000 rural families between 2007 and 2012. The voucher will consist of the delivery of a pregnant cow and a pregnant sow, five chickens and a rooster, seeds, fruit- bearing plants and plants for reforestation.<ref name="PL">{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=Nicaragua Gets to Roots of Hunger | date= | publisher= | url =http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=%7B641B840F-9D25-43B.C.E.-9FA9-0E7472635D4F%7D)&language=EN | work =Prensa Latina | pages = | accessdate = 2007-05-15 | language = }}</ref> The project's short-term objective is to have each rural family capable of producing enough milk, meat, eggs, fruits, vegetables and cereals to cover its basic needs while its medium range objective is to establish local markets and export certain products.
 
 
 
The families that benefit from the project will be required to pay back 20 percent of the amount that they receive in order to create a rural fund that will guarantee the continuity of the program. NGOs and representatives from each community will be in charge of managing the project.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==Symbols==
 
[[Image:Sandinoflagusmc.jpg|thumb|240px|[[US Marines]] with the captured flag of [[Augusto César Sandino]], [[Nicaragua]], 1932]]
 
The flag of the FSLN consists of an upper half in red, a lower half in black, and the letters F S L N in white. It is a modified version of the flag [[Sandino]] used in the 1930s, during the war against the U.S. [[occupation of Nicaragua]] which consisted of two vertical stripes, equally in size, one red and the other black with a skull (like the traditional [[Jolly Roger]] flag). These colors came from the Mexican [[anarchist]] movements that Sandino got involved with during his stay in [[Mexico]] in the early 1920s.[http://www.cipres.org/Institucion/Actualidad/Articulo_74.asp]
 
 
 
In recent times, there has been a dispute between the FSLN and the dissident [[Sandinista Renovation Movement]] (MRS) about the use of the red and black flag in public activities. Despite the fact that the MRS has its own flag (orange with a silhouette of Sandino's hat in black), they also use the red and black flag in honor of Sandino's legacy. They state that the red and black flag is a symbol of [[Sandinismo]] as a whole, not only of the FSLN party.
 
 
 
==Popular culture==
 
 
 
Since the conflict with Nicaragua in the 1980s, variations of the term "Sandinista" are now sometimes used in the United States to refer to fanatical supporters of a certain cause. In the Spanish language, the suffix "-ista" is used to indicate a predilection towards the root. (It is the equivalent of "-ist" in English, as in "idealist," "Calvinist" or "communist.") For example "fashionistas" for those excessively obsessed with [[fashion]]. Also, Bill and Hillary Clinton supporters, or people in the Clintons' political circle, are sometimes referred to as "Clintonistas" by their opponents. Another example would be "Somocistas," supporters of former dictator Anastasio Somoza. Likewise in the UK the term "Guardianista" was coined by right-wing journalist [[Richard Littlejohn]] as a derogatory term for middle class, "[[politically correct]]" liberals who are identified as being typical readers of ''[[The Guardian]]''.
 
 
 
As a reaction to an anti-Sandinista statement by British Prime Minister [[Margaret Thatcher]] and her proposal to ban the use of the word itself, punk rock group [[The Clash]] used the title ''[[Sandinista!]]'' for their 1980 triple album. The album contains the song "[[Washington Bullets (song)|Washington Bullets]]" which references the Sandinistas and other events and groups involved in Latin American history, starting from 1959.
 
 
 
In 2007, the popular [[Puerto Rico|Puerto Rican]] Reggaeton/Rap band [[Calle 13]] mentioned the Sandinista movement in their song "Llegale a mi guarida." The lyrics claimed: ''"Respeto a Nicaragua y a la lucha sandinista"'' ("I respect Nicaragua and the Sandinista struggle").
 
 
 
SECTIONS CUT THAT MAY BE INCLUDED LATER
 
(although such idealism appears to have been at least partly opportunistic, rather than devoted, as a means to secure [[Eastern Bloc]] military support to enable seizing and maintaining power by force<ref name="The Marxist Turned Caudillo: A Family Story">{{cite news | first=Stephen| last=Kinzer| coauthors= | title=The Marxist Turned Caudillo: A Family Story | date=2006-11-12| publisher=The New York Times: Week In Review| url =http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/12/weekinreview/12kinzer.html?n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/People/O/Ortega,%20Daniel | accessdate = 2008-05-15}}</ref>).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
==Prominent Sandinistas==
 
 
*Bayardo Arce, hard-line National Directorate member in the 1980s
 
*Bayardo Arce, hard-line National Directorate member in the 1980s
 
*[[Patrick Arguello]], a Sandinista involved with the [[Dawson's Field hijackings]]
 
*[[Patrick Arguello]], a Sandinista involved with the [[Dawson's Field hijackings]]
 
*[[Nora Astorga]], Sandinista UN ambassador
 
*[[Nora Astorga]], Sandinista UN ambassador
*Monica Baltodano
+
*[[Idania Fernandez]] Martyr Of the Sandinista Revolution, member of the ill fated [[Rigoberto López Pérez]] Regional Command fallen in Leon April 16, 1979
*[[Idania Fernandez]] Martyr Of the Sandinista Revolution, member of the ill fated [[Rigoberto López Pérez]] Regional Command fallen in Leon April 16th, 1979
 
 
*[[Gioconda Belli]], novelist and poet, handled media relations for the FSLN government
 
*[[Gioconda Belli]], novelist and poet, handled media relations for the FSLN government
 
*[[Tomás Borge]], one of the FSLN's founders, leader of the Prolonged [[People's War]] tendency in the 1970s, Minister of Interior in the 1980s
 
*[[Tomás Borge]], one of the FSLN's founders, leader of the Prolonged [[People's War]] tendency in the 1970s, Minister of Interior in the 1980s
 
*[[Oscar Sanchez]] rallied many young men in Managua to join ranks during the civl war.
 
*[[Oscar Sanchez]] rallied many young men in Managua to join ranks during the civl war.
*[[Omar Cabezas]]
 
 
*[[Ernesto Cardenal]] poet and [[Jesuit]] priest, Minister of Culture in the 1980s
 
*[[Ernesto Cardenal]] poet and [[Jesuit]] priest, Minister of Culture in the 1980s
 
*Fernando Cardenal, [[Jesuit]] priest and brother of Ernesto, directed the [[literacy]] campaign as Minister of Education.
 
*Fernando Cardenal, [[Jesuit]] priest and brother of Ernesto, directed the [[literacy]] campaign as Minister of Education.
Line 401: Line 171:
 
*[[Rigoberto Cruz]] (Pablo Ubeda), early FSLN member
 
*[[Rigoberto Cruz]] (Pablo Ubeda), early FSLN member
 
*[[Joaquín Cuadra]]. internal front leader, later chief of staff of the army
 
*[[Joaquín Cuadra]]. internal front leader, later chief of staff of the army
*[[Miguel D'Escoto]], a [[Maryknoll]] [[Roman Catholic]] priest, served as Nicaragua's foreign minister
+
*[[Miguel D'Escoto]], a [[Maryknoll]] [[Roman Catholic]] priest, served as Nicaragua's foreign minister. He is the current President of the [[United Nations General Assembly]], taking up his one year term in September 2008 and presiding over the 63rd Session of the General Assembly.
 
*[[Carlos Fonseca]], one of the FSLN's principal founders and leading ideologist in the 1960s
 
*[[Carlos Fonseca]], one of the FSLN's principal founders and leading ideologist in the 1960s
 
*[[Herty Lewites]], former mayor of Managua, opponent of Daniel Ortega in 2005
 
*[[Herty Lewites]], former mayor of Managua, opponent of Daniel Ortega in 2005
 
*Silvio Mayorga, FSLN co-founder
 
*Silvio Mayorga, FSLN co-founder
*Vilma Núñez
 
 
*[[Daniel Ortega]], post-revolution junta head, then President from 1985, lost presidential elections in 1990, 1996, and 2001, but continues to control the FSLN party
 
*[[Daniel Ortega]], post-revolution junta head, then President from 1985, lost presidential elections in 1990, 1996, and 2001, but continues to control the FSLN party
 
*[[Humberto Ortega]], leader of the FSLN Insurrectional Tendency (Tercerista) in the 1970s, chief strategist of the anti-Somoza urban insurrection, Minister of Defense in the 1980s during the Contra war   
 
*[[Humberto Ortega]], leader of the FSLN Insurrectional Tendency (Tercerista) in the 1970s, chief strategist of the anti-Somoza urban insurrection, Minister of Defense in the 1980s during the Contra war   
Line 413: Line 182:
 
*[[Henry Ruíz]], "{{lang|es|Comandante Modesto}}," FSLN rural guerrilla commander in the 1970s, member of the National Directorate in the 1980s
 
*[[Henry Ruíz]], "{{lang|es|Comandante Modesto}}," FSLN rural guerrilla commander in the 1970s, member of the National Directorate in the 1980s
 
*[[Arlen Siu]], is considered to be one of the first female martyrs of the Sandinista revolution
 
*[[Arlen Siu]], is considered to be one of the first female martyrs of the Sandinista revolution
*[[Dora María Téllez]]
 
*[[Oscar Turcios]]
 
 
*[[Jaime Wheelock]], leader of the FSLN Proletarian Tendency, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development
 
*[[Jaime Wheelock]], leader of the FSLN Proletarian Tendency, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development
  
Line 422: Line 189:
 
*[[Nicaraguan Sign Language]], language that was born as a result of Sandinistas bringing deaf children together in schools for the deaf
 
*[[Nicaraguan Sign Language]], language that was born as a result of Sandinistas bringing deaf children together in schools for the deaf
 
*[[Carlos Mejía Godoy]]
 
*[[Carlos Mejía Godoy]]
* [[List of Films and Books about Nicaragua]]
+
*[[List of Films and Books about Nicaragua]]
 +
 
 +
== Notes ==
 +
<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. ''The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World''. Basic Books (2005)
+
*Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. ''The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World''. Basic Books, 2005. ISBN 9780465003112.
*Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. ''The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB''. Basic Books (2001)
+
*Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. ''The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB''. Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 9780465003105.
*Arias, Pilar. {{lang|es|''Nicaragua: Revolución. Relatos de combatientes del Frente Sandinista''}}. Mexico: Siglo XXI Editores, 1980.
+
*Arias, Pilar. {{lang|es|''Nicaragua: Revolución. Relatos de combatientes del Frente Sandinista''}}. Mexico: Siglo XXI Editores, 1980. ISBN 9789682310133.
*Asleson, Vern. ''Nicaragua: Those Passed By''. Galde Press ISBN 1-931942-16-1, 2004
+
*Asleson, Vern. ''Nicaragua: Those Passed By''. Galde Press, 2004. ISBN 1931942161.
*Belli, Humberto. ''Breaking Faith: The Sandinista Revolution and Its Impact on Freedom and Christian Faith in Nicaragua.'' Crossway Books/The Puebla Institute, 1985.
+
*Belli, Humberto. ''Breaking Faith: The Sandinista Revolution and Its Impact on Freedom and Christian Faith in Nicaragua.'' Crossway Books/The Puebla Institute, 1985. ISBN 9780891073598.
*Christian, Shirley. ''Nicaragua, Revolution In the Family.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1986.
+
*Christian, Shirley. ''Nicaragua, Revolution In the Family.'' New York: Vintage Books, 1986. ISBN 9780394535753.
*Cox, Jack. ''Requiem in the Tropics: Inside Central America.'' UCA Books, 1987.
+
*Cox, Jack. ''Requiem in the Tropics: Inside Central America.'' UCA Books, 1987. ISBN 9780937047057.
*Gilbert, Dennis. ''Sandinistas: The Party And The Revolution.'' Blackwell Publishers, 1988.
+
*Gilbert, Dennis. ''Sandinistas: The Party And The Revolution.'' Blackwell Publishers, 1988. ISBN 9781557860729.
*Hodges, Donald C. ''Intellectual Foundations of the Nicaraguan Revolution.''  Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986.
+
*Hodges, Donald C. ''Intellectual Foundations of the Nicaraguan Revolution.''  Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986. ISBN 9780292738430.
*[[Stephen Kinzer|Kinzer, Stephen]]. ''[[Blood of Brothers: Life and War in Nicaragua]]'', Putnam Pub Group, ISBN 0-399-13594-4, 1991.
+
*Kinzer, Stephen. ''Blood of Brothers: Life and War in Nicaragua'', Putnam Pub Group, 1991. ISBN 0399135944.
*Kirkpatrick, Jean. ''Dictatorships and Double Standards.'' Touchstone, 1982.
+
*Kirkpatrick, Jean. ''Dictatorships and Double Standards.'' Touchstone, 1982. ISBN 9780671438364.
*Miranda, Roger, and William Ratliff. ''The Civil War in Nicaragua: Inside the Sandinistas.'' New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1993.
+
*Miranda, Roger, and William Ratliff. ''The Civil War in Nicaragua: Inside the Sandinistas.'' New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1993. ISBN 9781560000648.
*Moore, John Norton, ''The Secret War in Central America: Sandinista Assault on World Order.'' university Publications of America, 1987.
+
*Moore, John Norton, ''The Secret War in Central America: Sandinista Assault on World Order.'' University Publications of America, 1987. ISBN 9780890939628.
*Nolan, David. ''The Ideology of the Sandinistas and the Nicaraguan Revolution.'' Coral Gables, Florida: University of Miami Press, 1984.  
+
*Nolan, David. ''The Ideology of the Sandinistas and the Nicaraguan Revolution.'' Coral Gables, Florida: University of Miami Press, 1984. {{OCLC| 10993528}}.
* Prevost, Gary. "Cuba and Nicaragua: A special Relationship?." ''The Sandinista Legacy: The Construction of Democracy, Latin American Perspectives''.17.3 (1990)  
+
* Prevost, Gary. "Cuba and Nicaragua: A special Relationship?." ''The Sandinista Legacy: The Construction of Democracy, Latin American Perspectives''.17.3 (1990) {{OCLC| 22147855}}.
* Smith, Hazel. ''Nicaragua: Self-determination and Survival.'' Pluto Press, 1991. ISBN 0-7453-0475-3
+
* Sirias, Silvio. ''Bernardo and the Virgin.'' Northwestern University Press, 2005. ISBN 9780810122406.
* Sirias, Silvio. ''Bernardo and the Virgin: A Novel.'' Northwestern University Press, 2005.
+
* Smith, Hazel. ''Nicaragua: Self-determination and Survival.'' Pluto Press, 1991. ISBN 0745304753.
* Zimmermann, Matilde. ''Sandinista: Carlos Fonseca and the Nicaraguan Revolution.''  Duke University Press, 2001.
+
* Zimmermann, Matilde. ''Sandinista: Carlos Fonseca and the Nicaraguan Revolution.''  Duke University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780822325956.
 
 
== Notes ==
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* {{es icon}} [http://www.fsln-nicaragua.com/ FSLN-Nicaragua.com] &mdash; Official Sandinista web page
+
All links retrieved December 22, 2022.
* {{es icon}} [http://www.lavozdelsandinismo.com/ La Voz del Sandinismo - News of the FSLN, Nicaragua and the World]
+
* [http://www.vianica.com/go/specials/15-sandinista-revolution-in-nicaragua.html History of the Sandinista Revolution: the union of a whole nation].  
* [http://www.nicanet.org/sandinista_anniversary.php 25th Anniversary Celebration of the Sandinista Revolution] at [http://www.nicanet.org/ NicaNet]
+
* [https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/literature/2005/pinter/lecture/ Art, Truth & Politics] &ndash; Harold Pinter delivers Nobel Prize in Literature 2005 lecture in which he explains the Sandinista conflict and condemns the U.S.  
* [http://www.vianica.com/go/specials/15-sandinista-revolution-in-nicaragua.html History of the Sandinista Revolution: the union of a whole nation] at [http://www.vianica.com ViaNica].
 
* [http://www.envio.org.ni/ Revista Envío - Nicaraguan magazine, "critically supportive" of the Sandinistas, with archive documenting events throughout the 80s]
 
* [http://nobelprize.org/literature/laureates/2005/pinter-lecture-e.html Art, Truth & Politics] &mdash; [[Harold Pinter]] delivers [[Nobel Prize in Literature]] lecture in which he explains the Sandinista conflict and condemns the U.S.
 
* {{es icon}} [http://www.alianzamrs.com MRS homepage]
 
  
 
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{{Nicaraguan political parties}}
 
 
{{Cold War}}
 
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Latest revision as of 01:19, 21 April 2023


Sandinista National Liberation Front
Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional
FSLN.png
Leader Daniel Ortega
Founded 1961
Headquarters Managua, Nicaragua
Official ideology/
political position
Socialism,
Marxism,
Sandinism
International affiliation Socialist International and the Foro de São Paulo
Website www.fsln-nicaragua.com

The Sandinista National Liberation Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional) is a leftist political party in Nicaragua that first came to power in 1979, by overthrowing the dictatorship of Anastasio Somoza Debayle. Generally referred to by the initials FSLN, the party took its name from the 1930s struggle of Augusto César Sandino, a charismatic peasant leader who organized and led a resistance to the United States' occupation of Nicaragua, which the United States had declared a protectorate. The party first held power from 1979 through 1990, initially as part of a ruling Junta of National Reconstruction. Voted out of power in 1990, it was reinstated in 2006 with the re-election of President Daniel Ortega (José Daniel Ortega Saavedra), its long-time leader.

Although it has been credited with implementing improved health care, and vocational training, among other reforms, it has faced continuing dissension, occasionally violent. Dissenters have included former FSLN allies as well as supporters of the former Somoza regime. More recent opposition includes segments of the Nicaraguan population that support the Constitutional Liberal Party, the major opposition party which is generally allied with the Catholic Church and big business.

Formative years: 1961–1970

The Sandinistas, as FSLN members are widely known, began in 1961 as a group of student activists at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN) in Managua.[1] They sought to overthrow the Somoza regime, which had held power from 1936 (and which eventually began to receive strong United States backing), and establish a Marxist society. Founded by Carlos Fonseca, Silvio Mayorga, Tomás Borge, and others, the group first called itself The National Liberation Front (FLN). (Only Tomás Borge lived long enough to see the Sandinista victory in 1979.) The term "Sandinista" was added two years later, as a way to identify with Sandino's movement, and use his legacy to promote the newer movement's ideology and strategy.[2] By the early 1970s, the FSLN was launching limited military initiatives.[3] Initially, however, according to an official Nicaraguan source, "Its first military action ended in a massacre because the group was surrounded by the National Guard and the Honduran army at the national border in the department of Jinotega, a place that used to be the setting of numerous battles directed by Sandino against North American marines."[4]

History 1970-1979

Earthquake, kidnapping, and reaction

On December 23, 1972, Managua, the capital city, was leveled by an earthquake that killed some 10,000 of the city's 400,000 residents, rendering another 50,000 families homeless. About 80 percent of Managua's commercial buildings were reportedly destroyed.[5] Much of the foreign aid intended for the victims, however, was appropriated by President Somoza,[6][7] and several parts of downtown Managua were never rebuilt. "By some estimates," according to one source, "Somoza's personal wealth soared to US $400 million in 1974."[8] This overt corruption and lack of concern for rebuilding Managua caused even some people who had previously supported the regime, such as segments of the business community, to turn against Somoza and call for his overthrow.

Meanwhile, the FSLN had been intensifying its military actions. For example, in October 1971, "Sandinista commandos hijacked an air plane in Costa Rica and obtained the freedom of Sandinista prisoners in Costa Rican jails." A few years later, in December 1974, a guerrilla group affiliated with FSLN, led by Germán Pomares and Eduardo Contreras, seized government hostages at a party in the house of Somoza ally and former Minister of Agriculture, Jose María "Chema" Castillo, in the Managua suburb Los Robles. Among the hostages were several Somoza relatives. (The seizure, undertaken just after the departure of U.S. Ambassador Turner Shelton, resulted in the death of the Minister, who reportedly reached for a gun to defend himself).[9] The guerrillas received U.S. $1 million ransom, and had their official communiqué read over the radio and printed in the newspaper La Prensa.

The guerrillas also succeeded in getting 14 Sandinista prisoners released from jail and flown to Cuba. One of the released prisoners was Daniel Ortega, who would later become the president of Nicaragua (1985-1990, 2006- ).[10] To garner popular support, the rebels also lobbied for an increase in wages for National Guard soldiers to 500 córdobas ($71 at the time).[11]

The Somoza government responded by imposing martial law in 1975, tightening censorship and reportedly allowing the National Guard to torture and murder individuals suspected of collaborating with the Sandinistas.[12] During the crackdown, many of the FSLN guerrillas were killed, including in 1976 its leader and founder Carlos Fonseca, who had returned from Cuba to try to resolve fissures which had developed in the organization. [13]

Three factions emerge

Initial military setbacks, including a significant defeat in 1967, led the FSLN to reorient its focus on urban activism, towards reaching out to peasants, who they felt were increasingly radicalized by the National Guard's crackdown on Sandinistas, a crackdown that was often waged against civilians as well as revolutionaries. This strategy became known as the Prolonged Popular War (Guerra Popular Prolongada, or GPP). Henceforth peasants, through a "silent accumulation of forces," would be mobilized, along with students and urban dwellers, into small-scale military attacks against the Somoza's National Guard.[14] [15]

But during the 1975 state of siege, the Guard's increasingly brutal and effective crackdowns led some Marxist intellectuals to reject the rural guerrilla strategy in favor of self-defense and urban commando actions by armed union members. These Marxists defined themselves as the Proletarian Tendency, in opposition to the GPP faction.

Shortly thereafter, a third faction arose, the Terceristas. Known alternately as the "Insurrectional Tendency" and the "Third Way," it was led by Daniel Ortega and his brother Humberto Ortega, who followed a more pragmatic or eclectic approach and called for tactical, temporary alliances with non-communists, including the conservative opposition, in a popular front—which embraced both armed and unarmed action, such as rioting—against the Somoza regime.[16] Conservatives would join, they argued, because of growing disgust with Somoza. Further, by attacking the Guard directly, the Terceristas would demonstrate the weakness of the regime and encourage others to take up arms.

On January 10, 1978, Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, editor of the opposition newspaper La Prensa was assassinated, with some evidence pointing to Somoza's son and members of the National Guard.[17] Rioting broke out in several cities, and even members of the business community called a general strike, which effectively paralyzed the country for ten days. (Revenue losses, however, led most of the participating businesses to shortly cease their support for the strike.) During the turmoil, the Terceristas launched attacks in several cities, provoking even further repressive actions by the National Guard, which responded with intensified crackdowns on all opposition.

The United States, meanwhile, ceased all military assistance to the Somoza regime, but allowed humanitarian aid to continue.

In August, 23 Tercerista commandos led by Edén Pastora seized the entire Nicaraguan congress and took nearly 1,000 hostages including Somoza's nephew José Somoza Abrego and cousin Luis Pallais Debayle. Somoza paid a $500,000 ransom, released 59 political prisoners (including GPP chief Tomás Borge), and broadcasted a communiqué with FSLN's call for general insurrection. The guerrillas were flown to exile in Panama.[18]

A few days later six Nicaraguan cities rose in revolt. Armed youths took over the highland city of Matagalpa. Tercerista cadres attacked Guard posts in Managua, Masaya, León, Chinandega and Estelí. Large numbers of semi-armed civilians joined the revolt and put the Guard garrisons of the latter four cities under siege. Members of all three FSLN factions fought in these uprisings, which began to blur the distinctions among them and prepare the way for unified action.[19]

Reunification of the FSLN

By early 1979, the United States government, under President Jimmy Carter, no longer supported the Somoza regime. But its equally strong opposition to a left-wing government led it to support a moderate group, the "Broad Opposition Front" (Frente Amplio Opositon, or FAO), composed of Nicaraguan government dissidents and a group of business leaders known as "The Twelve" (el Grupo de los Doce), who had originally been organized by the Terceristas. The FAO and Carter proposed a plan that would remove Somoza from office but would also prevent government power for the FSLN.[20]

This plan, however, became known as "Somocismo sin Somoza" (Somocism without Somoza), which cost the FAO and The Twelve a loss of popular support. As a consequence, tens of thousands of youths joined the FSLN. On March 7, 1979, three representatives from each FSLN faction formed the organization's National Directorate. They were: Daniel Ortega, Humberto Ortega and Víctor Tirado (Terceristas); Tomás Borge, Bayardo Arce, and Henry Ruiz (GPP faction); and Jaime Wheelock, Luis Carrión and Carlos Núñez (Proletarian Tendency).[19]

End of the Insurrection

On June 16, the FSLN and several other groups announced the formation in Costa Rica of a provisional Nicaraguan government in exile, the Junta of National Reconstruction. Its members were Daniel Ortega and Moisés Hassan (FSLN), Sergio Ramírez (The Twelve), Alfonso Robelo (Nicaraguan Democratic Movement or MDN) and Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, widow of assassinated La Prensa editor Pedro Joaquín Chamorro. By the end of that month, most of Nicaragua, except for Managua, the capital, was under FSLN control.

The provisional government in exile released a policy paper on July 9 in which it pledged to organize a democratic regime, promote political pluralism and universal suffrage, and ban ideological discrimination—except for those promoting the "return of Somoza's rule." Somoza resigned on July 17, 1979, handing power to Francisco Urcuyo, chairman of the lower house of Congress, and fled to Miami. Urcuyo, in turn, was supposed to transfer the government to the revolutionary junta, but announced he would remain in power until the end of Somoza's presidential term in 1981.[21] Negative reaction to that attempt, however, was so intense and pervasive that two days later Urcuyo fled to Guatemala. The five-member junta entered the Nicaraguan capital the next day and assumed power, reiterating its pledge to work for political pluralism, a mixed economic system, and a nonaligned foreign policy.[22]

The insurrection was over. In its wake, approximately 50,000 Nicaraguans were dead and 150,000 were in exile.

Sandinista rule (1979–1990)

Establishment of government entities

The Sandinistas inherited a country in ruins with a debt of US $1.6 billion, an estimated 50,000 war dead, 600,000 homeless, and a devastated economic infrastructure.[23] To begin the task of establishing a new government, on August 22, 1979, "the junta proclaimed the Fundamental Statute of the Republic of Nicaragua. This statute abolished the constitution, presidency, Congress, and all courts. The junta ruled by unappealable decree under emergency powers. National government policy, however, was generally made by the nine-member Joint National Directorate (Dirección Nacional Conjunto—DNC), the ruling body of the FSLN, and then transmitted to the junta by Daniel Ortega for the junta's discussion and approval."[24]

The junta also created a Council of State as a consultative entity, empowered both to develop its own legislation and to approve laws of the junta. However, the junta retained veto power of council-initiated legislation, as well as over much of the budget. Members of the Council were appointed by political groups, with the FSLN having the right to name 12 of its 33 members. Soon after, the FSLN decided to increase the Council's membership to 47, and to allocate another 12 members.[25] "Opponents of the FSLN viewed the addition of the new members as a power grab, but the FSLN responded that new groups had been formed since the revolution and that they needed to be represented."[26]

In 1980, both non-FSLN junta members resigned, and as of the 1982 State of Emergency, opposition parties were no longer given representation in the Council.[25]

FSLN-based civic organizations and neighborhood committees

Outside of the formal government, the Sandinistas developed sources of power through their mass organizations, including the Sandinista Workers' Federation (Central Sandinista de Trabajadores), the Luisa Amanda Espinoza Nicaraguan Women's Association (Asociación de Mujeres Nicaragüenses Luisa Amanda Espinoza), the National Union of Farmers and Ranchers (Unión Nacional de Agricultores y Ganaderos), and most importantly the neighborhood-based Sandinista Defense Committees (Comités de Defensa Sandinista, or CDS). Modeled on Cuba's Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, the Sandinista CDS were often castigated as spy organizations designed to stifle political dissent.

Their activities included political education, organizing Sandinista rallies, distributing food rations, organizing neighborhood/regional cleanup and recreational activities, and policing both to control looting and apprehend counter-revolutionaries. The CDS's also organized civilian defense efforts against Contra (counter-revolutionaries) activities and a network of intelligence systems to apprehend Contra supporters. As de facto lesser units of the government, the CDS were empowered to suspend privileges such as drivers' licenses and passports of locals who refused to cooperate with the new government.

These Sandinista-controlled mass organizations were extremely influential over civil society and saw their power and popularity peak in the mid-1980s.[25]

FSLN political platform

Upon assuming power, the FSLNs political platform included the following: nationalization of property owned by the Somozas and their supporters; land reform; improved rural and urban working conditions; free unionization for all urban and rural workers; and fixed prices for commodities of basic necessity. In addition, it included improved public services, housing conditions, and education; abolition of torture, political assassination, and the death penalty; protection of democratic liberties; and equality for women.[27] It also established a non-aligned foreign policy; and began the formation of a "popular army" under the leadership of the FSLN and Humberto Ortega.

The FSLN's literacy campaign, under which teachers flooded the countryside, is often noted as its greatest success.[28] Within six months, half a million people reportedly had been taught rudimentary reading, bringing the national illiteracy rate down from over 50 percent to just under 12 percent. Over 100,000 Nicaraguans participated as literacy teachers. The successes of the literacy campaign was recognized by UNESCO with the award of a Nadezhda Krupskaya International Prize. Critics pointed out that the materials used in the reading campaign were heavily politicized, serving as propaganda to indoctrinate the population in Sandinista ideology.

Domestic and U.S. opposition

By 1980, conflicts began to emerge between the Sandinista and non-Sandinista members of the governing junta. Violeta Chamorro and Alfonso Robelo resigned from the junta in 1980, and rumors began that members of the Ortega junta would consolidate power among themselves. These allegations spread, leading to rumors that it was Ortega's goal to turn Nicaragua into a state modeled after Cuban Communism. In 1979 and 1980, former Somoza supporters and ex-members of Somoza's National Guard formed irregular military forces, while the original core of the FSLN began to splinter. Armed opposition to the Sandinista Government eventually divided into two main groups: The Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (FDN), a United States-supported army formed in 1981 by the CIA, U.S. State Department, and former members of the widely condemned Somoza-era Nicaraguan National Guard; and the Alianza Revolucionaria Democratica (ARDE), a group that had existed since before the FSLN and was led by Sandinista founder and former FSLN supreme leader, Edén Pastora—also known as "Commander Zero"[29] and Milpistas, former anti-Somoza rural militias, which eventually formed the largest pool of recruits for the Contras.[30] Independent and often at conflict with each other, these opposition militias were initially organized and largely remained segregated according to regional affiliation and political backgrounds. They conducted attacks on economic, military, and civilian targets. During the Contra war, the Sandinistas arrested suspected members of the militias and censored publications they accused of collaborating with the enemy (that is, the U.S., the FDN, and ARDE, among others).

Opposition to the Sandinistas also came from the Catholic Church, long one of Nicaragua's dominant institutions. The Church's concern, aside from their opposition to "Godless Communism," focused on the growth of Liberation Theology, a populist Catholic movement which began in the 1960s. Under it, local priests and other Catholic workers joined with secular forces "in the struggle for social and political liberation, with the ultimate aim of complete and integral liberation."[31] Catholic conservatives in the Church hierarchy, however, saw Liberation Theology as contradicting traditional Church doctrine.

The Contra War

Main article: Contras

Opposition to the Sandinistas, promoted by the United States government and segments of the Nicaraguan population—especially but not entirely groups sympathetic to the former Somoza regime—led directly to an uprising against the FSLN by the Contras. The war, which began in 1981, did not end with the 1984 elections, but continued throughout the decade. Its effects were devastating. As reported by a multi-university association of United States observers (including those from Columbia University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base), the Contra war began "a little over a month after President Ronald Reagan's 1981 inauguration." The war "was a frighteningly effective instrument of economic aggression. The displacement of farmers by Contra attacks reduced agricultural production significantly. Attacks on granaries, schools, health clinics, bridges and electrical plants forced public funds away from productive activities. Investment by producers was discouraged by Contra threats against the fundamentally private sector of the Nicaraguan export economy. And the United States blocked loans in private and multilateral lending agencies, restricted foreign assistance and embargoed trade between Nicaragua and the United States The International Court of Justice ruled that the United States military actions violated international law, but the United States ignored the decision."[32]

While waged within Nicaragua, there is no question that the war was stoked by outside interests, especially the United States, which was still engaged in Cold War proxy battles with the former Soviet Union. As the multi-university association noted, "In March 1981, the U.S. media began reporting that Nicaraguan exiles were undergoing paramilitary training at several private camps in Florida and other parts of the United States…. In November 1981 President Reagan formally authorized the creation of a small contra army."[33] For its part, the U.S. viewed with alarm the close relations between Nicaragua and Cuba.[34]

In an effort to end the war, Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez authored a peace plan that was signed on August 7, 1987 by five Central American nations, including El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, along with Costa Rica. Known as the Arias Plan, it "set specific guidelines and target dates for each nation to comply with an order to stabilize Central America and bring peace to the region."[35] The plan "called for dialogue between governments and opposition groups, amnesty for political prisoners, cease-fires in ongoing insurgent conflicts, democratization, and free elections in all five regional states. The plan also called for renewed negotiations on arms reductions and an end to outside aid to insurgent forces."[36]

Fighting nevertheless continued, and the Arias plan eventually collapsed. The Contra war came to an actual end only in 1990, with the election of the first female president of Nicaragua, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, a former anti-Somoza junta member and the widow of La Prensa editor Joaquin Chamorro, who had been assassinated a decade earlier.

1982-1988 State of Emergency

In March 1982, in response to the Contra war, the Sandinistas declared an official State of Emergency,[37] which would last six years, until January 1988. Under the new "Law for the Maintenance of Order and Public Security," which largely affected the rights guaranteed in the "Statute on Rights and Guarantees of Nicaraguans,"[38] many civil liberties were curtailed or canceled such as the freedom to organize demonstrations, the inviolability of the home, freedom of the press, freedom of speech and the freedom to strike.[39] Habeas corpus was restricted. The new law also provided for "Tribunales Populares Anti-Somozistas," which allowed for the indefinite holding of suspected counter-revolutionaries without trial. Further, all independent news program broadcasts were suspended. In addition, according to the editor of La Prensa, Sandinista censor Nelba Cecilia Blandón issued a decree ordering all radio stations to hook up every six hours to the government radio station, La Voz de La Defensa de La Patria.[40]

During the 1984 elections, critics of the Sandinistas alleged that rallies of opposition parties were often physically broken up by Sandinsta youth or pro-Sandinista mobs.

James Wheelock, the FSLN member and founder of the Marxist-oriented Proletarian Tendency, justified the Directorate's state of emergency by saying "… We are annulling the license of the false prophets and the oligarchs to attack the revolution."[41]

On October 5, 1985 the Sandinistas broadened the 1982 State of Emergency. A new regulation also required organizations outside of the government to first submit any statement it wanted to make public to the censorship bureau.[42]

Human Rights under the FSLN

The situation of human rights in general under the FSLN has been a subject of controversy, but clearly the abuses were considerable, including against the indigenous Miskito Indians. However, Contra human rights abuses were notable as well.

The United States government, and conservative American think tanks, like the Heritage Foundation, portrayed the situation as dire.[43]

Yet, according to the NGO Human Rights Watch, "U.S. pronouncements on human rights exaggerated and distorted the real human rights violations of the Sandinista regime, and exculpated those of the U.S.-supported insurgents, known as the contras."[44]

A 1984 report of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights—an agency of the Organization of American States, a mulitlateral institution in Washington, D.C.—noted that "the right of movement and residence has been curtailed, and it has been suspended in those regions where the government has considered that confrontations with the armed groups operating in Nicaragua have been occurring with the greatest intensity. These forced displacements have affected a large number of people…" The Commission also objected to the Sandinista policy of "restricting the effectiveness of the habeas corpus remedy" and said it had been told of "situations where persons are held for short periods without their families being informed about their whereabouts and the charges made against them."[45]

1984 election

While the Sandinistas expressed a support for grassroots pluralism, they were less than enthusiastic about national elections. They argued that popular support had already been expressed in the insurrection, and that further appeals to popular support would be a waste of scarce resources.[46] But under international pressure and domestic opposition, the government made provisions for a national election, eventually held in 1984.[46] Tomás Borge warned that the elections were a concession, an act of generosity and of political necessity.[47] A broad range of political parties, from far-left to far-right, competed for power.[48] Electoral observers from around the world—including groups from the UN as well as observers from Western Europe—certified the result.[49]

Several groups, however, refused to participate. They included UNO (National Opposition Union), a broad coalition of anti-Sandinista activists headed by Arturo Cruz, a former Sandinista; COSEP (Private Enterprise Superior Council, or el Consejo Superior de la Empressa Privad), an organization of business leaders; the Contra group FDN (Nicaraguan Democratic Force, or Fuerza Democrática Nicaragüense), organized by former Somozan-era National Guardsmen, landowners, businessmen, and peasant highlanders.[50] COSEP's decision to withdraw was based on the FSLN's refusal to lift press censorship. UNO's decision was based on electoral process restrictions, and on the advisement of United States President Ronald Reagan's State Department, which feared that their participation would legitimize the election process. In addition, Coordinadora Democrática (CD) refused to file candidates and urged Nicaraguans not to take part. And the Independent Liberal Party (PLI), headed by Virgilio Godoy Reyes, announced its refusal to participate in October.[51]

When the elections went ahead in spite of these withdrawals, the United States continued its objections, citing political restrictions under the State of Emergency (such as censorship of the press, restriction of habeas corpus, and the curtailing of free assembly).

Daniel Ortega and Sergio Ramírez were elected president and vice-president, respectively, and the FSLN won 61 out of 96 seats in the new National Assembly, having taken 67 percent of the vote on a turnout of 75 percent.[51] Despite international validation of the elections by numerous political and independent observers (virtually all from among United States allies), the United States refused to accept their legitimacy. President Ronald Reagan denounced them as a sham.

Daniel Ortega began his six-year presidential term on January 10, 1985. After the United States Congress voted to discontinue funding the Contras in April 1985, the Reagan administration ordered a total embargo on United States trade with Nicaragua the following month, accusing the Sandinista regime of threatening United States security in the region.[51]

Nicaraguan economy during the FSLN's administration

The FSLN officially advocated a mixed economy, under which both public and private ownership of the means of production were accepted. Nevertheless, government spokespersons occasionally referred to a reconstruction phase in the country's development, in which property owners and the professional class would be tapped for their managerial and technical expertise. After reconstruction and recovery, the private sector was to give way to expanded public ownership in most areas of the economy.[52]

Economic growth was uneven in the 1980s. Restructuring of the economy and the rebuilding immediately following the end of the civil war caused the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to jump about 5 percent in 1980 and 1981. Each year from 1984 to 1990, however, showed a drop in the GDP. Reasons for the contraction included the reluctance of foreign banks to offer new loans, the diversion of funds to fight the new insurrection against the government, and, after 1985, the total embargo on trade with the United States, formerly Nicaragua's largest trading partner. After 1985 the government chose to fill the gap between decreasing revenues and mushrooming military expenditures by printing large amounts of paper money. Inflation skyrocketed, peaking in 1988 at more than 14,000 percent annually.

Measures taken by the government to lower inflation were largely wiped out by natural disaster. In early 1988, the administration established an austerity program to lower inflation. Price controls were tightened, and a new currency was introduced. As a result, by August 1988, inflation had dropped to an annual rate of 240 percent. The following month, however, Hurricane Joan cut a devastating path directly across the center of the country. Damage was extensive, and the government's program of massive spending to repair the infrastructure destroyed its anti-inflation measures.

In its 11 years in power, the Sandinista government never overcame most of the economic inequalities that it inherited from the Somoza era. Years of war, policy missteps, natural disasters, and the effects of the United States trade embargo all hindered economic development. The early economic gains of the Sandinistas were wiped out by seven years of sometimes precipitous economic decline, and in 1990, by most standards, Nicaragua and most Nicaraguans were considerably poorer than they were in the 1970s.

1990 election

In preparation for the 1990 elections, which were mandated by Nicaragua's 1987 constitution, anti-Sandinista activists formed a coalition to compete with the far better organized FSLN. The coalition, known as the National Opposition Union (Unión Nacional Opositora, or UNO), drew support from "conservative and liberal parties as well as two of Nicaragua's traditional communist factions," according to a report by the United States Library of Congress.[53] Intense campaigning began immediately, with the UNO nominating Violetta Barrios de Chamorro, one of the initial members of the anti-Somoza ruling junta. Chamorro, a member of one of Nicaragua's wealthiest but politically divided families,[54] at the time was publisher of La Prensa, the anti-Somoza newspaper where her late husband was editor when he was assassinated. Her running mate was Virgilio Godoy Reyes, a former Sandinista minister of labor.

The FSLN nominated its long time leader Daniel Ortega for President, and Sergio Ramirez Mercado as his running mate.

According to the Library of Congress report, the campaign, while intense and marred by occasional violence, "was carried out in relative peace." It was monitored by an international delegation of the Organization of American States (OAS), under the leadership of former United States President Jimmy Carter.

In general, the Sandinistas campaigned on a policy of patriotism and support for their revolution. They portrayed UNO supporters as pro-Somoza and handmaidens of United States foreign policy. For its part, the UNO focused on the crumbling economy, and promised to end the military draft. Financial assistance amounting to tens of millions of dollars to the UNO came from the United States,[55][56] much of it through the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Endowment for Democracy, a non-profit group founded in 1983 during the Reagan Administration to promote democracy. Critics accused it of promoting United States political interests in various countries.

Chamorro won the popular vote over Ortega by 55 percent to 41 percent. Soon thereafter, the FSLN and UNO worked out a peaceful transfer of power, and the Contras "completed their demobilization." Despite the expectation on the part of some that Ortega would not relinquish power, the transition took place as scheduled.

2006: Corruption, poverty and FSLN's return to power

Following the FSLN loss of power in the 1990 elections, Sandinista leaders have been widely accused of participating in corruption. Many Sandinistas were said to have stolen government property upon leaving office,[57] an action known as pinata and tolerated by the Chamorro government.[58] One history source noted that as the Sandinistas "left power, many simply absconded with government assets, taking what they could while they could in desperation or plain greed."[59] The source, however, also said the Chamorro government reversed the social gains implemented by the former FSLN administration, having "dismantled the social programs of the Sandinistas, [after which] indigenous rights were neglected and the historic project of the Sandinistas to consolidate the Autonomous Regions of the East Coast languished. Under Violeta [Chamorro], Nicaragua became a 'heavily indebted poor country' and the gains of the early 1980s were replaced with poverty, maquilas and debt."

Following the 1990 elections, the FSLN lost twice more, in 1996 and 2001. But in 2006, Daniel Ortega, selecting as his running mate fomer Contra spokesman Jaime Morales, won back the presidency with 38 percent of the ballots.

Current situation

Economic issues facing the new Nicaraguan administration remain serious. Foreign aid amounts to around a quarter of the country's Gross Domestic Product, and the richest 10 percent of the population controls nearly half of GDP. According to NationMaster, "Nicaragua has widespread underemployment and the third lowest per capita income in the Western Hemisphere. Distribution of income is one of the most unequal on the globe. While the country has progressed toward macroeconomic stability in the past few years, GDP annual growth has been far too low to meet the country's needs, forcing the country to rely on international economic assistance to meet fiscal and debt financing obligations."[60]

Politically, the FSLN remains beset by traditional opponents, most notably the Constitutional Liberal Party, largely supported by big business, and the Catholic Church. In the fall of 2008, for example, armed clashes erupted between supporters of both parties, over allegations of mayoral electoral fraud.[61]

Prominent sandinistas

  • Bayardo Arce, hard-line National Directorate member in the 1980s
  • Patrick Arguello, a Sandinista involved with the Dawson's Field hijackings
  • Nora Astorga, Sandinista UN ambassador
  • Idania Fernandez Martyr Of the Sandinista Revolution, member of the ill fated Rigoberto López Pérez Regional Command fallen in Leon April 16, 1979
  • Gioconda Belli, novelist and poet, handled media relations for the FSLN government
  • Tomás Borge, one of the FSLN's founders, leader of the Prolonged People's War tendency in the 1970s, Minister of Interior in the 1980s
  • Oscar Sanchez rallied many young men in Managua to join ranks during the civl war.
  • Ernesto Cardenal poet and Jesuit priest, Minister of Culture in the 1980s
  • Fernando Cardenal, Jesuit priest and brother of Ernesto, directed the literacy campaign as Minister of Education.
  • Luis Carrión, National Directorate member in the 1980s
  • Rigoberto Cruz (Pablo Ubeda), early FSLN member
  • Joaquín Cuadra. internal front leader, later chief of staff of the army
  • Miguel D'Escoto, a Maryknoll Roman Catholic priest, served as Nicaragua's foreign minister. He is the current President of the United Nations General Assembly, taking up his one year term in September 2008 and presiding over the 63rd Session of the General Assembly.
  • Carlos Fonseca, one of the FSLN's principal founders and leading ideologist in the 1960s
  • Herty Lewites, former mayor of Managua, opponent of Daniel Ortega in 2005
  • Silvio Mayorga, FSLN co-founder
  • Daniel Ortega, post-revolution junta head, then President from 1985, lost presidential elections in 1990, 1996, and 2001, but continues to control the FSLN party
  • Humberto Ortega, leader of the FSLN Insurrectional Tendency (Tercerista) in the 1970s, chief strategist of the anti-Somoza urban insurrection, Minister of Defense in the 1980s during the Contra war
  • Edén Pastora, "Comandante Cero," social democratic guerrilla leader who joined the Terceristas during the anti-Somoza insurrection, broke with FSLN to lead center-left ARDE contra group based in Costa Rica during the early 1980s
  • Germán Pomares, "Comandante Danto," early Sandinista, killed shortly before the 1979 victory
  • Sergio Ramirez, novelist and civilian Sandinista, architect of alliance with moderates in 1970s, Vice President in 1980s, opponent of Daniel Ortega in 1990s
  • Henry Ruíz, "Comandante Modesto," FSLN rural guerrilla commander in the 1970s, member of the National Directorate in the 1980s
  • Arlen Siu, is considered to be one of the first female martyrs of the Sandinista revolution
  • Jaime Wheelock, leader of the FSLN Proletarian Tendency, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development

See also

  • Iran-Contra Affair
  • Nicaragua vs. United States
  • Nicaraguan Sign Language, language that was born as a result of Sandinistas bringing deaf children together in schools for the deaf
  • Carlos Mejía Godoy
  • List of Films and Books about Nicaragua

Notes

  1. Library of Congress, Library of Congress Country Studies: Nicaragua—The rise of the FSLN. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  2. American Sociological Association, Resurrection and Reappropriation: Political Uses of Historical Figures in Comparative Perspective. Retrieved February 2, 2009.
  3. Thomas M.M. Davies Jr. Guerrilla Warfare (SR Books, 2002, ISBN 0842026789), 359.
  4. Vianica.com, "History of the Sandinista Revolution: The Union of a Whole Nation." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  5. BBC News: 1972: Earthquake wreaks devastation in Nicaragua.
  6. Thomas Walker, Nicaragua, 4th ed. (Cambridge: Westview Press, 2003, ISBN 0813338824).
  7. University of Pittsburgh, The Somoza Dynasty. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  8. Library of Congress, Country Studies: Nicaragua - The Somoza Era, 1936-74. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  9. ANS, "History of Nicaragua" Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  10. Encyclopedia of World Biography on Daniel Ortega, 2005-2006
  11. George A. Lopez, Liberalization and Redemocratization in Latin America (Greenwood Press, 1987, ISBN 0313252998), 63.
  12. Walter Lafeber, Inevitable Revolutions: The United States in Central America (W. W. Norton & Company, 1993, ISBN 0393309649).
  13. Truman State University, Pre-Revolutionary Nicaragua.
  14. United States Air Force, Maxwell-Gunter AFB - Air & Space Power Journal: From FOCO to Insurrection: Sandinista Strategies of Revolution. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  15. Morris H. Morley, Washington, Somoza and the Sandinistas (Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN 10:0521450810). Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  16. Ortega Saavedra Humberto, Cincuenta Años de Lucha Sandinista (Mexico: Editorial Diogenes).
  17. Library of Congress, The End of the Anastasio Somoza Debayle Era. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  18. Encyclopædia Britannica, Guide to Hispanic Heritage.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Truman State University, Revolutionary Nicaragua.
  20. Robert A. Pastor, Condemned to Repetition. The United States and Nicaragua (Princeton Univ Press, 1987, ISBN 0691077525).
  21. British Broadcasting Company, "On This Day." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  22. Library of Congress, Nicaragua: The Sandinista Revolution. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  23. Thomas W. Walker, Nicaragua: The Land of Sandino (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1981).
  24. Tim Merrill (ed.), "Nicaragua: A Country Study." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 Phillip Williams, =Dual Transition from Authoritarian Rule: Popular and Electoral Democracy in Nicaragua) Comparative Politics 26 (2): 177.
  26. Tim Merrill (ed.), Nicaragua: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1993. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  27. Nation master, Sandinista Rule. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  28. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia, Sandinista. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  29. International Court Of Justice, Case Concerning Military and Paramilitary Activities in and Against Nicaragua (Nicaragua V. United States of America) (United Nations Press, 2000, ISBN 9210708261), 512.
  30. Timothy C. Brown, When the Ak-47s Fall Silent: Revolutionaries, Guerrillas, and the Dangers of Peace (Hoover Institute Press, 2000, ISBN 081799842X), 162.
  31. Leonardo and Clodovis Bof, "A Concise History of Liberation Theology," Orbis Books, 1987, Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  32. University of Pittsburgh, "Electoral Democracy Under International Pressure," Report of the American Studies Association Commission to Observe the 1990 Nicaraguan Election," March 15, 1990. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  33. "Electoral Democracy Under International Pressure," Page 5
  34. William N. Leogrande, "The Revolution in Nicaragua: Another Cuba?" Foreign Affairs, Fall 1979, Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  35. Skeptific Files, BIASED COVERAGE OF THE ARIAS PEACE PLAN BY AMERICA'S PRESS. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  36. U.S. Library of Congress, The Arias Plan. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  37. Gary Prevost, Democracy and Socialism in Sandinista Nicaragua (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1993, ISBN 1555872271), 153.
  38. Droit et Societe, The Sadinista Record on Human Rights in Nicaragua. Retrieved February 1, 2009.
  39. Reds, The Sadinista Record on Human Rights in Nicaragua. Retrieved February 1, 2009.
  40. Jaime Chomorro Cardenal, La Prensa, The Republic of Paper (University Freedom House, 1988), 20.
  41. Envio, http://www.envio.org.ni/articulo/3413 Behind the State of Emergency.] Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  42. Jaime Chamorro Cardenal, La Prensa, A Republic of Paper (Freedom House, 1988), 23.
  43. Richard Araujo, The Sandinista War on Human Rights. Retrieved February 2, 2009.
  44. HRW, Nicaragua. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  45. CIDH, Report of the Inter American Commission on Human Rights. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  46. 46.0 46.1 Leslie E. Anderson, Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001 (University Of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0226019713), 64.
  47. La Necesidad de un Nuevo Modelo de Comunicación en Nicaragua, University Revista de la Escuela de Perdiodismo.
  48. Leslie E. Anderson, Learning Democracy: Citizen Engagement and Electoral Choice in Nicaragua, 1990-2001 (University Of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0226019713), 65.
  49. BBC, 1984: Sandinistas claim election victory. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  50. Dennis Mileti, Disasters by Design: A Reassessment of Natural Hazards in the United States (Joseph Henry Press, 1999, ISBN 0309063604).
  51. 51.0 51.1 51.2 Library of Congress, Country Studies: Nicaragua: The Sandinista Years. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  52. Library of Congress, The Sandinista Era, 1979-90. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  53. Library of Congress, Nicaragua: The UNO Electoral Victory. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  54. Answers.com, "Biography: Violeta Barrios de Chamorro." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  55. Christian Smith, Resisting Reagan: The US Central America Peace Movement (University of Chicago Press, 1996).
  56. Noam Chomsky, Deterring Democracy (Vintage, 1992).
  57. Global Integrity, Nicaragua Timeline. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  58. Nation Master, "Nicaraguan Revolution." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  59. Joe DeRaymond, "Another Look at Daniel Ortega and the Sandinista Struggle, May 7, 2005." Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  60. Nation Master, NationMaster: Nicaraguan Economy Statistics. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  61. New York Times, November 20, 2008, page A6.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World. Basic Books, 2005. ISBN 9780465003112.
  • Andrew, Christopher; Mitrokhin, Vasili. The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB. Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 9780465003105.
  • Arias, Pilar. Nicaragua: Revolución. Relatos de combatientes del Frente Sandinista. Mexico: Siglo XXI Editores, 1980. ISBN 9789682310133.
  • Asleson, Vern. Nicaragua: Those Passed By. Galde Press, 2004. ISBN 1931942161.
  • Belli, Humberto. Breaking Faith: The Sandinista Revolution and Its Impact on Freedom and Christian Faith in Nicaragua. Crossway Books/The Puebla Institute, 1985. ISBN 9780891073598.
  • Christian, Shirley. Nicaragua, Revolution In the Family. New York: Vintage Books, 1986. ISBN 9780394535753.
  • Cox, Jack. Requiem in the Tropics: Inside Central America. UCA Books, 1987. ISBN 9780937047057.
  • Gilbert, Dennis. Sandinistas: The Party And The Revolution. Blackwell Publishers, 1988. ISBN 9781557860729.
  • Hodges, Donald C. Intellectual Foundations of the Nicaraguan Revolution. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1986. ISBN 9780292738430.
  • Kinzer, Stephen. Blood of Brothers: Life and War in Nicaragua, Putnam Pub Group, 1991. ISBN 0399135944.
  • Kirkpatrick, Jean. Dictatorships and Double Standards. Touchstone, 1982. ISBN 9780671438364.
  • Miranda, Roger, and William Ratliff. The Civil War in Nicaragua: Inside the Sandinistas. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 1993. ISBN 9781560000648.
  • Moore, John Norton, The Secret War in Central America: Sandinista Assault on World Order. University Publications of America, 1987. ISBN 9780890939628.
  • Nolan, David. The Ideology of the Sandinistas and the Nicaraguan Revolution. Coral Gables, Florida: University of Miami Press, 1984. OCLC 10993528.
  • Prevost, Gary. "Cuba and Nicaragua: A special Relationship?." The Sandinista Legacy: The Construction of Democracy, Latin American Perspectives.17.3 (1990) OCLC 22147855.
  • Sirias, Silvio. Bernardo and the Virgin. Northwestern University Press, 2005. ISBN 9780810122406.
  • Smith, Hazel. Nicaragua: Self-determination and Survival. Pluto Press, 1991. ISBN 0745304753.
  • Zimmermann, Matilde. Sandinista: Carlos Fonseca and the Nicaraguan Revolution. Duke University Press, 2001. ISBN 9780822325956.

External links

All links retrieved December 22, 2022.

Preceded by:
Francisco Urcuyo Maliaños
Presidency of Nicaragua
(Junta of National Reconstruction)

1979–1984
Succeeded by:
Daniel Ortega Saavedra

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