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The Sandinista Record


Article # : 10205 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 8 / 1986  3,104 Words
Author : Col. Lawrence L. Tracy
Col. Lawrence L. Tracy (U.S. Army, retired) has been deeply involved in Central American policy formation since 1980, in assignments in the Office of the Secretary of Defense (1980- 1983) and in the State Department's of State Department's Public Diplomacy office (1984-1986). He was the principal writer of the Departments of State and Defense publications The Soviet-Cuban Connection in Central American and the Caribbean (March 1985), and The Challenge to Democracy in Central America (June 1986), from which much of this article was derived.

       Few governments that have come to power by force have enjoyed as much international goodwill and support as did the Sandinistas when they seized power in Nicaragua on July 19, 1979. They were seen as young Davids who had vanquished a brutal Goliath.
       
        The fall of Anastasio Somoza seemed to usher in a new dawn for Nicaragua, a country with little history of representative government. The Sandinistas were generally viewed as populists, determined to open the political process and let the Nicaraguan people select their own leaders.
       
        By 1986, only the most politically biased - or naïve - still judge the Sandinistas as social democrats. Nicaragua's rulers are now seen, even by critics of the Reagan administration's Central American policy, as Marxist-Leninists, dedicated to imposing a dictatorship even more total and brutal than that of Somoza. Sandinista Nicaragua is considered to be firmly in the camp of the Soviet Union and its hemispheric client state Cuba.
       
        Has there been a sharp turn to the left by the Sandinista leaders? Have they been forced to adopt draconian internal control measures because of U.S. hostility, including support of a "counterrevolutionary" army? In short, is the communization of Nicaragua the fault of the United States?
       
        A look at the record of the Sandinista leaders prior to 1979, and their statements and actions since coming to power, shows conclusively that there was no change in Sandinista political views. The Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) was Marxist-Leninist from its beginnings. As Pulitzer Prize winner ... (1995 of 19731 Characters)
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