Nicaragua Historical Setting
Augusto Cesar Sandino, guerrilla leader in the struggle
against the United States occupation of Nicaragua in the 1920s-30s
Figure 2. Nicaragua in Its Central American Setting, 1993
THROUGHOUT ITS HISTORY, Nicaragua has suffered from
political
instability, civil war, poverty, foreign intervention, and
natural disasters. Governments since colonial times have
been
unable to bring stability and sustainable economic growth.
Personal and foreign special interests have generally
prevailed
over the national interests, and foreign intervention in
Nicaraguan political and economic affairs, especially by
the
United States, has resulted in various forms of populist
and
nationalist reactions. The legacy of the past can be seen
today
in the attitudes toward foreign influence. Although the
upper and
middle classes tend to emulate North American life-styles
and be
supportive of United States policies, the Nicaraguan poor
are
highly suspicious of the culture and political intentions
of the
United States.
Since precolonial times, Nicaragua's fertile Pacific
coast
has attracted settlers, thus concentrating most of the
population
in the western part of the country. The Caribbean coast,
because
of its proximity to the West Indies, historically has been
the
site of foreign intervention and non-Hispanic immigration
from
black and indigenous groups from the Caribbean and from
British
settlers and pirates. The resulting diverse ethnic groups
that
today inhabit the Caribbean coast have for centuries
resisted
Hispanic Nicaraguan governments and demanded political
autonomy.
During most of the twentieth century, Nicaragua has
suffered
under dictatorial regimes. From the mid-1930s until 1979,
the
Somoza family controlled the government, the military, and
an
ever expanding sector of the Nicaraguan economy. On July
19,
1979, Somoza rule came to an end after the triumph of an
insurrection movement led by the Sandinista National
Liberation
Front (Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional--FSLN).
However,
the predominance of the FSLN led to the development of a
different kind of authoritarian regime that lasted for
more than
a decade.
During the 1980s, Nicaragua was the center of Cold War
confrontation in the Western Hemisphere, with the former
Soviet
Union and Cuba providing assistance to the
Sandinista (see Glossary)
government, and the United States supporting
anti-government forces. A regional peace initiative
brought an
end to civil war in the late 1980s. The Sandinistas lost
in the
1990 elections, and a new government headed by President
Violeta
Barrios de Chamorro was installed in April 1990.
Data as of December 1993
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