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Exporter of Revolution
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13846 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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12 / 1988 |
3,644 Words |
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Constantine Menges Constantine Menges, a resident scholar at the America
Enterprise Institute, is former special assistant to the
president for national security affairs (1983-86). |
In April 1959, only four months after taking power, Fidel Castro sent a guerrilla squad to destabilize Panama. The Organization of American States (OAS) investigated the incursion and the guerrillas were captured. This abortive action against Panama marked the beginning of nearly 30 years of Cuban aggression against free nations through both armed and unarmed subversion.
Two months later, in June 1959, Castro sent an armed guerrilla group to begin operating in Nicaragua. Dictator Anastasio Somoza's National Guard captured them, and the OAS again condemned Cuba's subversive aggression. In the summer of 1959 Castro began a decade-long guerrilla and terrorist war against the fragile new Social Democratic government of Romulo Betancourt in Venezuela, which only a year before had replaced the military dictatorship of Marcos Perez Jimenez. After confirming and condemning this act of aggression, in 1964 the OAS voted sanctions against Cuba and declared that its armed subversion had constituted illegal aggression. In that same year, the OAS stated:
"The Republic of Venezuela has been the target of a series of actions sponsored and directed by … Cuba … to overthrow the democratic government of Venezuela through terrorism, sabotage, assault and guerrilla warfare, and … [the OAS] resolves to declare that the acts … are considered an aggression of Cuba in the internal affairs of Venezuela, which affect all member states. "
With help from the United States and other democracies, Venezuela's democratic leaders eventually contained and isolated the guerrillas. In the context of the 1980s, only a small number of Marxist-Leninist terrorists (mostly
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