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Can the Contras Win?
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10209 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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8 / 1986 |
2,113 Words |
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Gen. John K. Singlaub Gen. John K. Singlaub is currently chairman of the U.S.
Council for World Freedom and of the World Anti-Communist
League. He retired from the U.S. Army in 1978 after
criticizing President Carter's decision to withdraw U.S.
troops from South Korea. |
The recent vote in the House of Representatives in favor of a $100 million military and humanitarian aid package to the freedom fighters in Nicaragua by no means resolves the question of whether U.S. support will continue, or, for that matter, when democracy will be restored in Nicaragua.
Perhaps the most immediate, short-term effect of the vote has been to quiet the debate - at least temporarily - on whether to support the so-called Contras.
In the ensuring lull before the aid is scheduled for shipment, it is useful to review the combatants - their strengths, their weaknesses, and what is likely to happen now that both the House and the Senate favor supporting the democratic resistance in Nicaragua.
Sandinista military machine
First, it is useful to look at the Sandinista army. It is important to remember that it is not a national army but the armed forces of the Sandinista party. There are, at a minimum, 65,000 regulars who can be mobilized to any point in the country. In addition, the Sandinistas have about 55,000 militia who are generally based in a given geographical area; while they can be moved, normally these troops are based in the area where they live. The Sandinistas have about 120,000 men under arms, 10 times number former Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza commanded at the height of his power.
The main military strengths of the Sandinistas are the large numbers of troops and equipment at their disposal. In fact, they have more
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