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Did the Intellectuals Lose Nicaragua?
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13421 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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9 / 1987 |
6,262 Words |
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Daniel James Daniel James has written extensively on Cuba. He is the author
of Cuba: First Soviet Satellite in the Americas and Che
Guevara: a Bibliography, and editor-translator of The Complete
Bolivian Diaries of Che Guevara and Other Captured Documents. |
THE JAGUAR SMILE: A NICARAGUAN JOURNEY
Salman Rushdie
New York: Viking, 1987
171 pp., $12.95
NICARGUA: REVOLUTION IN THE FAMILY
Shirley Christian
New York: Random House, 1986
450 pp., $10.00
TURNING IN THE TIDE
Noam Chomsky
Boston: South End Press
300 pp., $10.00
A debate over who lost Nicaragua is sure to follow the Reagan administration's departure from office, if it does not erupt during the presidential campaign. It will probably focus on the administration itself, in the first place, and the Congress, in the second. The reason for that order is obvious: The reason for that order is obvious: The executive proved unable to frame a Central America policy that was viable and win a consensus for it among the public (and, for that reason, in the Congress as well). The Congress then seized the opportunity to make policy, as it has frequently tried to do since Vietnam. However, after faulting Reagan for a bad policy, it presented no alternative - and likewise failed to lead. The end result has been the tragicomic Iran-Contra hearings on Capitol Hill. A third culprit, however, and one that history may decide is as much, or even more to blame, is the American
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