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Contras
Contras
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In the history of Nicaragua, the Contras (Spanish: La contrarrevolución, lit.'the counter-revolution') were the anti-communist right-wing rebels who waged a guerilla war (1979–1990) against the Marxist governments of the Sandinista National Liberation Front and the Junta of National Reconstruction, which came to power after the Nicaraguan Revolution in 1979.[6][7]

In the aftermath of the Nicaraguan Revolution, where the political dynasty (1936–1979) of the Somoza family was overthrown by the Sandinistas, various groups were formed in opposition to the Sandinistas, including by Samoza allies and former members of the National Guard, and also by Anti-Somozistas' groups whom had previously been aligned with and fought alongside the Sandinistas. The United States and several other countries provided military assistance and financial aid to the Contras. In 1981, the CIA and Argentina's Secretariat of Intelligence persuaded several Contra groups to unite into the larger Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN). In 1986, the Boland Amendment was passed to end U.S. aid to the Contras; yet the Reagan administration continued to illegally fund the Contras, which resulted in a scandal known as the Iran–Contra affair. By 1987, most of the Contra militias had united into the Nicaraguan Resistance, within which the Nicaraguan Democratic Force was the largest group.

During the war, the Contras' tactics featured terrorism and human rights violations against civilians.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14] The Reagan administration said that the Contras' tactics did not include attacks against civilians.[15] The CIA said that Contra terrorism resulted from "the poor discipline characteristic of irregular forces", that terrorism was not an official military doctrine of the Contras,[15] and that the Contra leader responsible was executed.[15] The Global Terrorism Database reports that Contras carried out more than 1,300 terrorist attacks.[16]

After a cutoff in U.S. military support, and with both sides facing international pressure to bring an end to the conflict, the contras agreed to negotiations with the FSLN. With the help of five Central American presidents, including Daniel Ortega (then-President of Nicaragua), the sides agreed that a voluntary demobilization of the contras should start in early December 1989. They chose this date to facilitate free and fair elections in Nicaragua in February 1990.

History

[edit]

Origins

[edit]

The Contras were not a monolithic group, but a combination of three distinct elements of Nicaraguan society:[17]

  • Ex-guardsmen of the Nicaraguan National Guard and other right-wing figures who had fought for Nicaragua's ex-dictator Somoza[17]—these later were especially found in the military wing of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN).[18] Remnants of the Guard later formed groups such as the Fifteenth of September Legion, the Anti-Sandinista Guerrilla Special Forces, and the National Army of Liberation.[citation needed] Initially however, these groups were small and conducted little active raiding into Nicaragua.[19]
  • Anti-Somozistas who had supported the revolution but felt betrayed by the Sandinista government[17] – e.g. Édgar Chamorro, prominent member of the political directorate of the FDN,[20] or José Francisco Cardenal, who had briefly served in the Council of State before leaving Nicaragua out of disagreement with the Sandinista government's policies and founding the Nicaraguan Democratic Union (UDN), an opposition group of Nicaraguan exiles in Miami.[21] Another example are the MILPAS (Milicias Populares Anti-Sandinistas), peasant militias led by disillusioned Sandinista veterans from the northern mountains. Founded by Pedro Joaquín González (known as "Dimas"), the Milpistas were also known as chilotes (green corn). Even after his death, other MILPAS bands sprouted during 1980–1981. The Milpistas were composed largely of campesino (peasant) highlanders and rural workers.[22][23][24][25]
  • Nicaraguans who had avoided direct involvement in the revolution but opposed the Sandinistas.[17]

Main groups

[edit]
Contra Commandos from FDN and ARDE Frente Sur in the Nueva Guinea region of Nicaragua in 1987
Members of ARDE Frente Sur

The CIA and Argentine intelligence, seeking to unify the anti-Sandinista cause before initiating large-scale aid, persuaded 15 September Legion, the UDN and several former smaller groups to merge in September 1981 as the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (Fuerza Democrática Nicaragüense, FDN).[26] Although the FDN had its roots in two groups made up of former National Guardsmen (of the Somoza regime), its joint political directorate was led by businessman and former anti-Somoza activist Adolfo Calero Portocarrero.[27] Édgar Chamorro later stated that there was strong opposition within the UDN against working with the Guardsmen and that the merging only took place because of insistence by the CIA.[28]

Based in Honduras, Nicaragua's northern neighbor, under the command of former National Guard Colonel Enrique Bermúdez, the new FDN commenced to draw in other smaller insurgent forces in the north.[citation needed] Largely financed, trained, equipped, armed and organized by the U.S.,[29] it emerged as the largest and most active Contra group.[30]

In April 1982, Edén Pastora (Comandante Cero), one of the heroes in the fight against Somoza, organized the Sandinista Revolutionary Front (FRS) – embedded in the Democratic Revolutionary Alliance (ARDE)[31] – and declared war on the Sandinista government.[32] Himself a former Sandinista who had held several high posts in the government, he had resigned abruptly in 1981 and defected,[32] believing that the newly found power had corrupted the Sandinistas' original ideas.[31] A popular and charismatic leader, Pastora initially saw his group develop quickly.[32] He confined himself to operate in the southern part of Nicaragua;[33] after a press conference he was holding on 30 May 1984 was bombed, he "voluntarily withdrew" from the Contra struggle.[31]

A third force, Misurasata, appeared among the Miskito, Sumo and Rama Amerindian peoples of Nicaragua's Atlantic coast, who in December 1981 found themselves in conflict with the authorities following the government's efforts to nationalize Indian land. In the course of this conflict, forced removal of at least 10,000 Indians to relocation centers in the interior of the country and subsequent burning of some villages took place.[34] The Misurasata movement split in 1983, with the breakaway Misura group of Stedman Fagoth Muller allying itself more closely with the FDN, and the rest accommodating themselves with the Sandinistas: on 8 December 1984 a ceasefire agreement known as the Bogota Accord was signed by Misurasata and the Nicaraguan government.[35] A subsequent autonomy statute in September 1987 largely defused Miskito resistance.[36]

Unity efforts

[edit]

U.S. officials were active in attempting to unite the Contra groups. In June 1985 most of the groups reorganized as the United Nicaraguan Opposition (UNO), under the leadership of Adolfo Calero, Arturo Cruz and Alfonso Robelo, all originally supporters of the anti-Somoza revolution. After UNO's dissolution early in 1987, the Nicaraguan Resistance (RN) was organized along similar lines in May.

U.S. military and financial assistance

[edit]

In front of the International Court of Justice, the Nicaraguan government claimed that the Contras were altogether a creation of the U.S.[37] This claim was rejected[37] but the evidence of a very close relationship between the Contras and the United States was considered overwhelming and incontrovertible.[38] The U.S. played a very large role in financing, training, arming, and advising the Contras over a long period, and it is unlikely that the Contras would have been capable of carrying out significant military operations without this support, given the large amount of training and weapons shipments that the Sandinistas had received from Cuba and the Soviet Union.[39]

Political background

[edit]

The U.S. government viewed the leftist Sandinistas as a threat to economic interests of American corporations in Nicaragua and to national security. U.S. President Ronald Reagan stated in 1983 that "The defense of [the USA's] southern frontier" was at stake.[40] "In spite of the Sandinista victory being declared fair, the United States continued to oppose the left-wing Nicaraguan government."[41][42] and opposed its ties to Cuba and the Soviet Union.[43][44] Ronald Reagan, who had assumed the American presidency in January 1981, accused the Sandinistas of importing Cuban-style socialism and aiding leftist guerrillas in El Salvador.[45] The Reagan administration continued to view the Sandinistas as undemocratic despite the 1984 Nicaraguan elections being generally declared fair by foreign observers.[46][41][47] Throughout the 1980s the Sandinista government was regarded as "Partly Free" by Freedom House, an organization financed by the U.S. government.[48]

President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George Bush in 1984

On 4 January 1982, Reagan signed the top secret National Security Decision Directive 17 (NSDD-17),[45] giving the CIA the authority to recruit and support the Contras with $19 million in military aid. The effort to support the Contras was one component of the Reagan Doctrine, which called for providing military support to movements opposing Soviet-supported, communist governments.

By December 1981, the United States had already begun to support armed opponents of the Sandinista government. From the beginning, the CIA was in charge.[49] The arming, clothing, feeding, and supervision of the Contras[50] became the most ambitious paramilitary and political action operation mounted by the agency in nearly a decade.[51]

In the fiscal year 1984, the U.S. Congress approved $24 million in aid to the Contras.[50] After this, since the Contras failed to win widespread popular support or military victories within Nicaragua,[50] opinion polls indicated that a majority of the U.S. public was not supportive of the Contras,[52] the Reagan administration lost much of its support regarding its Contra policy within Congress after disclosure of CIA mining of Nicaraguan ports,[53] and a report of the Bureau of Intelligence and Research commissioned by the State Department found Reagan's allegations about Soviet influence in Nicaragua "exaggerated",[54] Congress cut off all funds for the Contras in 1985 by the third Boland Amendment.[50] The Boland Amendment had first been passed by Congress in December 1982. At this time, it only outlawed U.S. assistance to the contras "for the purpose of overthrowing the Nicaraguan government", while allowing assistance for other purposes.[55] In October 1984, it was amended to forbid action by not only the Defense Department and the Central Intelligence Agency but all U.S. government agencies.

Nevertheless, the case for support of the Contras continued to be made in Washington, D.C., by both the Reagan administration and the Heritage Foundation, which argued that support for the Contras would counter Soviet influence in Nicaragua.[56][57]

On 1 May 1985 President Reagan announced that his administration perceived Nicaragua to be "an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States", and declared a "national emergency" and a trade embargo against Nicaragua to "deal with that threat".[58] It "is now a given; it is true", the Washington Post declared in 1986, "the Sandinistas are communists of the Cuban or Soviet school"; that "The Reagan administration is right to take Nicaragua as a serious menace—to civil peace and democracy in Nicaragua and to the stability and security of the region"; that we must "fit Nicaragua back into a Central American mode" and "turn Nicaragua back toward democracy", and with the "Latin American democracies" "demand reasonable conduct by regional standard."[59]

Soon after the embargo was established, Managua re-declared "a policy of nonalignment" and sought the aid of Western Europe, who were opposed to U.S. policy, to escape dependency on the Soviet Union.[60] Since 1981 U.S. pressures had curtailed Western credit to and trade with Nicaragua, forcing the government to rely almost totally on the Eastern bloc for credit, other aid, and trade by 1985.[61] In his 1997 study on U.S. low intensity warfare, Kermit D. Johnson, a former Chief of the U.S. Army Chaplains, contends that U.S. hostility toward the revolutionary government was motivated not by any concern for "national security", but rather by what the world relief organization Oxfam termed "the threat of a good example":

It was alarming that in just a few months after the Sandinista revolution, Nicaragua received international acclaim for its rapid progress in the fields of literacy and health. It was alarming that a socialist-mixed-economy state could do in a few short months what the Somoza dynasty, a U.S. client state, could not do in 45 years! It was truly alarming that the Sandinistas were intent on providing the very services that establish a government's political and moral legitimacy.[62]<

The government's program included increased wages, subsidized food prices, and expanded health, welfare, and education services. And though it nationalized Somoza's former properties, it preserved a private sector that accounted for between 50 and 60 percent of GDP.[63]

Atrocities

[edit]

The United States began to support Contra activities against the Sandinista government by December 1981, with the CIA at the forefront of operations. The CIA supplied the funds and the equipment, coordinated training programs, and provided intelligence and target lists. While the Contras had little military successes, they did prove adept at carrying out CIA guerrilla warfare strategies from training manuals which advised them to incite mob violence, "neutralize" civilian leaders and government officials and attack "soft targets"—including schools, health clinics and cooperatives. The agency added to the Contras' sabotage efforts by blowing up refineries and pipelines, and mining ports.[63][64][66] Finally, according to former Contra leader Edgar Chamorro, CIA trainers also gave Contra soldiers large knives. "A commando knife [was given], and our people, everybody wanted to have a knife like that, to kill people, to cut their throats".[67][68]: 11:34 [full citation needed] In 1985 Newsweek published a series of photos taken by Frank Wohl, a conservative student admirer traveling with the Contras, entitled "Execution in the Jungle":

The victim dug his own grave, scooping the dirt out with his hands ... He crossed himself. Then a contra executioner knelt and rammed a k-bar knife into his throat. A second enforcer stabbed at his jugular, then his abdomen. When the corpse was finally still, the contras threw dirt over the shallow grave—and walked away.[65]: 268 [68]: 11:20 

The CIA officer in charge of the covert war, Duane "Dewey" Clarridge, admitted to the House Intelligence Committee staff in a secret briefing in 1984 that the Contras were routinely murdering "civilians and Sandinista officials in the provinces, as well as heads of cooperatives, nurses, doctors and judges". But he claimed that this did not violate President Reagan's executive order prohibiting assassinations because the agency defined it as just 'killing'. "After all, this is war—a paramilitary operation", Clarridge said in conclusion.[69] Edgar Chamorro explained the rationale behind this to a U.S. reporter. "Sometimes terror is very productive. This is the policy, to keep putting pressure until the people cry 'uncle'".[70][68]: 1:50  The CIA manual for the Contras, Tayacan, states that the Contras should gather the local population for a public tribunal to "shame, ridicule and humiliate" Sandinista officials to "reduce their influence". It also recommends gathering the local population to witness and take part in public executions.[65]: 179  These types of activities continued throughout the war.

In April 1987, an American aid worker named Benjamin Linder was killed by Contras. After the signing of the Central American Peace Accord in August 1987, the year war related deaths and economic destruction reached its peak, the Contras eventually entered negotiations with the Sandinista government (1988), and the war began to deescalate.[63]

By 1989 the U.S.-backed Contra war and economic isolation had inflicted severe economic suffering on Nicaraguans. The U.S. government knew that the Nicaraguans had been exhausted from the war, which had cost 30,865 lives, and that voters usually vote the incumbents out during economic decline. By the late 1980s Nicaragua's internal conditions had changed so radically that the U.S. approach to the 1990 elections differed greatly from 1984. A united opposition of 14 political parties organized into the National Opposition Union (Unión Nacional Oppositora, UNO) with the support of the United States National Endowment for Democracy. UNO presidential nominee Violeta Chamorro was received by President George H. W. Bush at the White House.

The Contra war escalated over the year before the election. The U.S. promised to end the economic embargo should Chamorro win.[71]

The UNO scored a decisive victory on 25 February 1990. Chamorro won with 55 percent of the presidential vote as compared to Daniel Ortega's 41 percent. Of 92 seats in the National Assembly, UNO gained 51, and the FSLN won 39. On 25 April 1990, Chamorro assumed presidency from Ortega.[71]

Illegal covert operations

[edit]

With Congress blocking further aid to the Contras, the Reagan administration sought to arrange funding and military supplies by means of third countries and private sources.[72] Between 1984 and 1986, $34 million from third countries and $2.7 million from private sources were raised this way.[72] The secret Contra assistance was run by the National Security Council, with officer Lt. Col. Oliver North in charge.[72] With the third-party funds, North created an organization called The Enterprise, which served as the secret arm of the NSC staff and had its own airplanes, pilots, airfield, ship, operatives, and secret Swiss bank accounts.[72] It also received assistance from personnel from other government agencies, especially from CIA personnel in Central America.[72] This operation functioned, however, without any of the accountability required of U.S. government activities.[72] The Enterprise's efforts culminated in the Iran–Contra Affair of 1986–1987, which facilitated contra funding through the proceeds of arms sales to Iran.

According to the London Spectator, U.S. journalists in Central America had long known that the CIA was flying in supplies to the Contras inside Nicaragua before the scandal broke. No journalist paid it any attention until the alleged CIA supply man, Eugene Hasenfus, was shot down and captured by the Nicaraguan army. Similarly, reporters neglected to investigate many leads indicating that Oliver North was running the Contra operation from his office in the National Security Council.[73]

According to the National Security Archive, Oliver North had been in contact with Manuel Noriega, the military leader of Panama later convicted on drug charges, whom he personally met. The issue of drug money and its importance in funding the Nicaraguan conflict was the subject of various reports and publications. The contras were funded by drug trafficking, of which the United States was aware.[74] Senator John Kerry's 1988 Committee on Foreign Relations report on Contra drug links concluded that "senior U.S. policy makers were not immune to the idea that drug money was a perfect solution to the Contras' funding problems".[75]

The Reagan administration's support for the Contras continued to stir controversy well into the 1990s. In August 1996, San Jose Mercury News reporter Gary Webb published a series titled Dark Alliance, alleging that the Contras contributed to the rise of crack cocaine in California.[76]

Gary Webb's career as a journalist was subsequently discredited by the leading U.S. papers, The New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times. An internal CIA report, entitled, "Managing a Nightmare", shows the agency used "a ground base of already productive relations with journalists" to help counter what it called "a genuine public relations crisis."[77] In the 1980s, Douglas Farah worked as a journalist, covering the civil wars in Central America for the Washington Post. According to Farah, while it was common knowledge that the Contras were involved in cocaine trafficking, the editors of the Washington Post refused to take it seriously:

If you're talking about our intelligence community tolerating — if not promoting — drugs to pay for black ops, it's rather an uncomfortable thing to do when you're an establishment paper like the Post. If you were going to be directly rubbing up against the government, they wanted it more solid than it could probably ever be done.[78]

An investigation by the United States Department of Justice also stated that their "review did not substantiate the main allegations stated and implied in the Mercury News articles." Regarding the specific charges towards the CIA, the DOJ wrote "the implication that the drug trafficking by the individuals discussed in the Mercury News articles was connected to the CIA was also not supported by the facts."[79] The CIA also investigated and rejected the allegations.[80]

Propaganda

[edit]

During the time the U.S. Congress blocked funding for the contras, the Reagan government engaged in a campaign to alter public opinion and change the vote in Congress on contra aid.[81] For this purpose, the NSC established an interagency working group, which in turn coordinated the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean (managed by Otto Reich), which conducted the campaign.[81] The S/LPD produced and widely disseminated a variety of pro-contra publications, arranged speeches and press conferences.[81] It also disseminated "white propaganda"—pro-Contra newspaper articles by paid consultants who did not disclose their connection to the Reagan administration.[82]

On top of that, Oliver North helped Carl Channell's tax-exempt organization, the National Endowment for the Preservation of Liberty, to raise $10 million, by arranging numerous briefings for groups of potential contributors at the premises of the White House and by facilitating private visits and photo sessions with President Reagan for major contributors.[83] Channell in turn, used part of that money to run a series of television advertisements directed at home districts of Congressmen considered swing votes on Contra aid.[83] Out of the $10 million raised, more than $1 million was spent on pro-Contra publicity.[83]

International Court of Justice ruling

[edit]

In 1984 the Sandinista government filed a suit in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) against the United States (Nicaragua v. United States), which resulted in a 1986 judgment against the United States. The ICJ held that the U.S. had violated international law as well as a 1956 treaty by supporting the contras in their rebellion against the Nicaraguan government and by mining Nicaragua's harbors. Regarding the alleged human rights violations by the contras, however, the ICJ took the view that the United States could be held accountable for them only if it would have been proven that the U.S. had effective control of the Contra operations resulting in these alleged violations.[84] Nevertheless, the ICJ found that the U.S. encouraged acts contrary to general principles of humanitarian law by producing the manual Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare (Operaciones sicológicas en guerra de guerrillas) and disseminating it to the contras.[85] The manual, amongst other things, advised on how to rationalize killings of civilians[86] and recommended to hire professional killers for specific selective tasks.[87]

The United States, which did not participate in the merits phase of the proceedings, maintained that the ICJ's power did not supersede the Constitution of the United States and argued that the court did not seriously consider the Nicaraguan role in El Salvador, while it accused Nicaragua of actively supporting armed groups there, specifically in the form of supply of arms.[88] The ICJ had found that evidence of a responsibility of the Nicaraguan government in this matter was insufficient.[89] The U.S. argument was affirmed, however, by the dissenting opinion of ICJ member U.S. Judge Schwebel,[90] who concluded that in supporting the Contras, the United States acted lawfully in collective self-defence in El Salvador's support.[91] The U.S. blocked enforcement of the ICJ judgment by the United Nations Security Council and thereby prevented Nicaragua from obtaining any actual compensation.[92] The Nicaraguan government finally withdrew the complaint from the court in September 1992 (under the later, post-FSLN, government of Violeta Chamorro), following a repeal of the law requiring the country to seek compensation.[93]

Human rights violations

[edit]

Americas Watch, which subsequently became part of Human Rights Watch, accused the Contras of:[94]

  • targeting health care clinics and health care workers for assassination[95]
  • kidnapping civilians[96]
  • torturing civilians[97]
  • executing civilians, including children, who were captured in combat[98]
  • raping women[95]
  • indiscriminately attacking civilians and civilian houses[96]
  • seizing civilian property[95]
  • burning civilian houses in captured towns.[95]

Human Rights Watch released a report on the situation in 1989, which stated: "[The] contras were major and systematic violators of the most basic standards of the laws of armed conflict, including by launching indiscriminate attacks on civilians, selectively murdering non-combatants, and mistreating prisoners."[99]

In his affidavit to the World Court, former contra Edgar Chamorro testified that "The CIA did not discourage such tactics. To the contrary, the Agency severely criticized me when I admitted to the press that the FDN had regularly kidnapped and executed agrarian reform workers and civilians. We were told that the only way to defeat the Sandinistas was to ...kill, kidnap, rob and torture".[100]

Contra leader Adolfo Calero denied that his forces deliberately targeted civilians: "What they call a cooperative is also a troop concentration full of armed people. We are not killing civilians. We are fighting armed people and returning fire when fire is directed at us."[101]

Controversy

[edit]

Several articles were published by U.S. press, including by The Wall Street Journal and The New Republic, accusing Americas Watch and other bodies of ideological bias and unreliable reporting. The articles alleged that Americas Watch gave too much credence to alleged Contra abuses and systematically tried to discredit Nicaraguan human rights groups such as the Permanent Commission on Human Rights, which blamed the most human rights abuses on the Sandinistas.[102]

In 1985, The Wall Street Journal reported:

Three weeks ago, Americas Watch issued a report on human rights abuses in Nicaragua. One member of the Permanent Commission for Human Rights commented on the Americas Watch report and its chief investigator Juan Mendez: "The Sandinistas are laying the groundwork for a totalitarian society here and yet all Mendez wanted to hear about were abuses by the contras. How can we get people in the U.S. to see what's happening here when so many of the groups who come down are pro-Sandinista?"[103]

Human Rights Watch, the umbrella organization of Americas Watch, replied to these allegations: "Almost invariably, U.S. pronouncements on human rights exaggerated and distorted the real human rights violations of the Sandinista regime, and exculpated those of the U.S.-supported insurgents, known as the contras ... The Bush administration is responsible for these abuses, not only because the contras are, for all practical purposes, a U.S. force, but also because the Bush administration has continued to minimize and deny these violations, and has refused to investigate them seriously."[99]

Military successes and election of Violeta Chamorro

[edit]

By 1986 the contras were besieged by charges of corruption, human-rights abuses, and military ineptitude.[104] A much-vaunted early 1986 offensive never materialized, and Contra forces were largely reduced to isolated acts of terrorism.[10] In October 1987, however, the contras staged a successful attack in southern Nicaragua.[105] Then on 21 December 1987, the FDN launched attacks at Bonanza, Siuna, and Rosita in Zelaya province, resulting in heavy fighting.[106] ARDE Frente Sur attacked at El Almendro and along the Rama road.[106][107][108] These large-scale raids mainly became possible as the contras were able to use U.S.-provided Redeye missiles against Sandinista Mi-24 helicopter gunships, which had been supplied by the Soviets.[106][109] Nevertheless, the Contras remained tenuously encamped within Honduras and were not able to hold Nicaraguan territory.[110][111]

There were isolated protests among the population against the draft implemented by the Sandinista government, which even resulted in full-blown street clashes in Masaya in 1988.[112] However, a June 1988 survey in Managua showed the Sandinista government still enjoyed strong support but that support had declined since 1984. Three times as many people identified with the Sandinistas (28%) than with all the opposition parties put together (9%); 59% did not identify with any political party. Of those polled, 85% opposed any further US aid to the Contras; 40% believed the Sandinista government to be democratic, while 48% believed it to be not democratic. People identified the war as the largest problem but were less likely to blame it for economic problems compared to a December 1986 poll; 19% blamed the war and US blockade as the main cause of economic problems while 10% blamed the government.[113] Political opposition groups were splintered and the Contras began to experience defections, although United States aid maintained them as a viable military force.[114][115]

After a cutoff in U.S. military support, and with both sides facing international pressure to bring an end to the conflict, the contras agreed to negotiations with the FSLN. With the help of five Central American presidents, including Ortega, the sides agreed that a voluntary demobilization of the contras should start in early December 1989. They chose this date to facilitate free and fair elections in Nicaragua in February 1990 (even though the Reagan administration had pushed for a delay of contra disbandment).[116]

In the resulting February 1990 elections, Violeta Chamorro and her party the UNO won an upset victory of 55% to 41% over Daniel Ortega.[117] Opinion polls leading up to the elections divided along partisan lines, with 10 of 17 polls analyzed in a contemporary study predicting an UNO victory while seven predicted the Sandinistas would retain power.[118][119]

Possible explanations include that the Nicaraguan people were disenchanted with the Ortega government as well as the fact that already in November 1989, the White House had announced that the economic embargo against Nicaragua would continue unless Violeta Chamorro won.[120] Also, there had been reports of intimidation from the side of the Contras,[121] with a Canadian observer mission claiming that 42 people were killed by the Contras in "election violence" in October 1989.[122] Sandinistas were also accused of intimidation and abuses during the election campaign. According to the Puebla Institute, by mid-December 1989, seven opposition leaders had been murdered, 12 had disappeared, 20 had been arrested, and 30 others assaulted. In late January 1990, the OAS observer team reported that "a convoy of troops attacked four truckloads of UNO sympathizers with bayonets and rifle butts, threatening to kill them."[123] This led many commentators to conclude that Nicaraguans voted against the Sandinistas out of fear of a continuation of the Contra war and economic deprivation.[119]

[edit]
  • In The Last Thing He Wanted, a journalist for the fictitious Atlanta Post stops her coverage of the 1984 U.S. Presidential election to care for her dying father. In the process, she inherits his position as an arms dealer for Central America, and learns of the Iran–Contra affair.
  • In Season 4 of the TV series American Dad!, the titular father, Stan Smith, sings a song to his son Steve about Oliver North, the person allegedly responsible for covertly funding the Contras through the Iran–Contra affair, after claiming the remaining gold from the affair was hidden under their house.
  • The Americans, the TV series features an episode on KGB agents infiltrating a Contra camp.
  • American Made, a film loosely based on Barry Seal's life.
  • In Season 3 of the Amazon Prime TV series The Boys, the American superhero team Payback is clandestinely deployed to Nicaragua in 1984 to assist Contra units supported by the CIA.
  • Carla's Song, a fictional film by Ken Loach set in part against the backdrop of the conflict in Nicaragua.
  • Contra, a popular video game series by Konami.[124] While it is unclear whether the game was deliberately named after the Nicaraguan Contra rebels, the ending theme of the original game was titled "Sandinista" (サンディニスタ), after the adversaries of the real-life Contras.[125]
  • Contra, the second studio album by the American indie rock band Vampire Weekend, released in January 2010 on XL Recordings. It debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200. The album title is intended as a thematic allegory and a complex reference to the Nicaraguan counter-revolutionaries. The song "I Think Ur a Contra" is from this album.
  • Sandinista!, an album by The Clash, features songs about The Contras in Nicaragua. It was released in 1980. The song "Washington Bullets" is from this album.
  • Student Visas, a song by Corb Lund from the album "Horse Soldier! Horse Soldier!", is about US Clandestine soldiers (such as SFOD-D and CIA Paramilitary) interacting with Contras in El Salvador and Nicaragua.
  • Fragile The song is a tribute to Ben Linder, an American civil engineer who was killed by the Contras in 1987 while working on a hydroelectric project in Nicaragua.
  • Narcos: Mexico features an episode where Felix has to deliver guns to Nicaragua with Amado and a CIA operative for Salvador Nava and Mexico's Minister of Defense
  • The Mighty Quinn involves a CIA operative and a Latino right-wing assassin trying to recover large sums of untraceable US dollars which were to fund anti-communist counter-revolution on the mainland (Nicaragua is not mentioned).
  • Snowfall a TV series following several characters, including an undercover CIA officer facilitating cocaine smuggling into the US on the behalf of the Nicaraguan Contras and his connection to a 20-year-old drug dealer in Los Angeles in the mid-1980s, the early days of the crack cocaine epidemic.
  • The Last Narc, a 2020 documentary about the kidnapping and murder of DEA agent Kiki Camarena by Mexican drug cartels, ends up covering parts of the Iran-Contra scandal.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Notes

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The Contras, short for contrarrevolucionarios, were a coalition of Nicaraguan rebel groups that waged against the (FSLN) government from 1981 to 1990, aiming to dismantle its Marxist regime and reestablish democratic governance. Emerging in the wake of the FSLN's 1979 overthrow of Anastasio Somoza's dictatorship, the Contras drew from former loyalists, rural peasants displaced by Sandinista collectivization policies, and Atlantic indigenous communities resisting cultural suppression. The Sandinista leadership, exhibiting authoritarian tendencies through media censorship, arbitrary arrests of opponents, and alignment with and the , provoked widespread internal resistance that coalesced into armed opposition. Under the , the provided the Contras with CIA-orchestrated training, funding, and logistics to counter Soviet expansionism in , viewing Nicaragua as a potential proxy for communist subversion akin to . Though plagued by factionalism, illicit funding scandals like the Iran-Contra affair, and mutual atrocities in a conflict claiming 45,000 to 65,000 lives, the Contras' sustained compelled the Sandinistas to accept internationally monitored elections in 1990, resulting in their electoral defeat and the transition to a non-Sandinista government under .

Historical Context

Sandinista Revolution and Governance

The Sandinista Revolution, led by the Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional (FSLN), overthrew the dictatorship of on July 19, 1979, after a year-long uprising that intensified following the August 22, 1978, seizure of the National Palace by Sandinista commandos, who held over 100 hostages and secured the release of political prisoners, ransom payments, and safe passage for insurgents. This event marked the collapse of the Somoza family's 46-year rule, characterized by corruption and repression, amid widespread popular discontent fueled by and the regime's brutal response to protests, including the January 1978 assassination of opposition leader Pedro Joaquín Chamorro. The revolution drew support from diverse Nicaraguan sectors, including students, peasants, and business elites alienated by Somoza's excesses, though the FSLN's Marxist-oriented factions dominated post-victory power structures. Upon assuming control, the FSLN established the Government of National Reconstruction (GRN), initially a five-member junta that included non-Sandinista figures, but real authority rested with the FSLN's nine-member National Directorate, comprising leaders like and , which directed policy without formal accountability to the junta or broader populace. Governance emphasized rapid : agrarian reforms expropriated over 20% of by 1981, redistributing it via state farms, cooperatives, and individual plots to address , while nationalizing banking, , , and foreign , alongside key Somoza-linked industries, aiming to dismantle oligarchic control but resulting in production disruptions and . Economic inheritance was dire—approximately 30,000 deaths, 500,000 homeless, and infrastructure devastated—yet policies prioritized mixed-economy rhetoric initially, shifting toward centralized planning influenced by Cuban models, leading to exceeding 33,000% by 1988 and GDP contraction amid war and mismanagement. Politically, the regime consolidated one-party dominance by merging FSLN structures with state institutions, postponing elections until 1984 under international pressure, and suppressing dissent through mass organizations like the Sandinista Defense Committees, which monitored citizens and curtailed opposition media and parties. practices drew criticism for arbitrary detentions, forced into the , and reprisals against perceived counterrevolutionaries, with documenting thousands of political prisoners and extrajudicial killings, though Sandinista defenders attributed excesses to counterinsurgent threats. aligned with nonalignment claims but featured substantial military and economic aid from —over 2,000 advisors by 1981—and the , totaling hundreds of millions in arms and credits, while exporting revolution through support for Salvadoran and Guatemalan guerrillas, escalating regional tensions. These measures, intended to secure socialist consolidation, alienated Miskito indigenous groups via forced relocations and cultural impositions, fostering internal divisions that paralleled external resistance.

Catalyst for Contra Resistance

The (FSLN), after overthrowing on July 19, 1979, initially governed through a five-member junta promising pluralism and elections within 18 months, but swiftly moved to consolidate power by sidelining non-FSLN revolutionaries and independent voices. By early 1980, the government had arrested or exiled key opposition figures, including former allies like the Independent Liberal Party leaders, and imposed on media outlets critical of FSLN policies, such as La Prensa. This shift from coalition governance to FSLN dominance, justified internally as necessary against counterrevolutionary threats, eroded support among urban professionals, business owners, and moderate revolutionaries who had joined the anti-Somoza struggle. Agrarian reforms enacted in accelerated disaffection in rural areas, as the government expropriated over 800,000 hectares of private farmland without compensation, redistributing it to state-controlled cooperatives and FSLN loyalists, which disrupted traditional smallholder farming and sparked resentment among peasants who viewed the measures as ideologically driven seizures favoring urban elites and party cadres. On the Atlantic Coast, Sandinista efforts to impose centralized control included forced relocations of Miskito, , and indigenous populations—displacing thousands from onward—and suppression of their languages and autonomy, framing resistance as collaboration with imperialists despite local grievances rooted in cultural erasure and economic neglect. These policies, coupled with mandatory and literacy campaigns that doubled as political , alienated broad sectors, including church leaders who documented over 1,000 political prisoners by mid-. The FSLN's deepening ties to —evident in the arrival of 2,000 advisors by 1981—and deferral of elections until 1984, amid declarations of a "popular church" state aligned with Marxist principles, crystallized fears of permanent one-party rule modeled on , prompting ex-Somoza National Guard remnants, dispossessed farmers, and exiled democrats to form armed bands in and . Initial resistance actions, such as border raids in November 1981, emerged organically from these groups' grievances before external aid scaled operations, reflecting a causal chain from internal repression to rather than mere foreign orchestration.

Formation and Structure

Origins from Disaffected Elements

The Contras originated primarily from remnants of Anastasio Somoza's , who fled following the Sandinista victory on July 19, 1979. These ex-soldiers, numbering in the thousands, regrouped in exile camps along the Honduras- border, forming early armed bands such as the Fifteenth of September Legion, which evolved into the (FDN) by 1981. Disaffected by the Sandinistas' dissolution of the Guard and perceived alignment with , these elements provided the initial military core, launching cross-border raids from Honduran bases as early as 1980. Internal dissent within further swelled Contra ranks, particularly among peasants in the north-central highlands who resisted Sandinista land expropriations and drives. Groups like the MILPAS (Milicias Populares Anti-Sandinistas), formed by disillusioned Sandinista veterans, represented early peasant-based militias that conducted and ambushes inside the country starting around 1980-1981. Similarly, former Sandinista commander , who had participated in the 1978 palace assault against Somoza, broke with the regime over its authoritarian turn and established the Democratic Revolutionary Alliance (ARDE) in by 1982, drawing recruits opposed to centralized control. Indigenous communities on the Atlantic Coast, including Miskito Indians, contributed significantly due to Sandinista efforts at forced reincorporation and cultural assimilation, which sparked armed resistance by 1981. This led to the formation of MISURA, an ethnic-based faction allied with Contras, as Miskitos fled repression—including village relocations and reported killings—toward and joined guerrilla operations against coastal outposts. These diverse disaffected groups coalesced around grievances over economic policies, ethnic marginalization, and political exclusion, expanding the beyond mere exiles.

Key Factions and Leadership

The Contras emerged as a coalition of anti-Sandinista groups, with the primary factions being the (FDN) and the Democratic Revolutionary Alliance (ARDE), alongside smaller ethnic militias such as MISURA representing Miskito indigenous interests. The FDN, established in August 1981 following CIA coordination with former Nicaraguan officers in , became the largest and most militarily active faction, operating primarily from bases along the northern border. Military command was held by Colonel , a Somoza-era exiled to , who directed operations emphasizing guerrilla raids and served as the de facto overall military strategist for the broader Contra effort. Politically, the FDN was led by Portocarrero, a Managua businessman and anti-Somoza advocate who assumed the presidency of the group in 1983, focusing on diplomatic outreach and coalition-building. ARDE, formed in May 1982 in by disaffected Sandinistas, concentrated operations on the southern front near the Costa Rican border, drawing from ex-Sandinista revolutionaries opposed to the regime's authoritarian turn and Cuban influence. Its leader, Eden Pastora Gómez, known as "Comandante Cero" for leading the assault on Somoza's presidential palace, commanded ARDE's forces until internal disputes and a assassination attempt prompted his resignation from frontline roles, though he retained symbolic influence. MISURA, founded in 1981 by Miskito leaders amid Sandinista relocation policies displacing indigenous communities, fought for regional autonomy and allied variably with ARDE; key figures included Steadman Fagoth, who criticized Sandinista cultural suppression, and later Brooklyn Rivera, who integrated Miskito forces into broader Contra structures. Efforts to unify these factions culminated in the June 1985 formation of the United Nicaraguan Opposition (UNO), a political directorate comprising Calero as president, Arturo Cruz—a former Sandinista to the U.S. and economist jailed under Somoza—as , and Alfonso Robelo, an industrialist and ex-Sandinista assembly member, to present a democratic face amid U.S. debates. Bermúdez continued as military chief under UNO's umbrella, which evolved into the Nicaraguan Resistance by , incorporating 15 groups but plagued by factional rivalries over command and ideology, with ex-Somocistas in FDN clashing against Pastora's revolutionary credentials. This leadership structure reflected the Contras' diverse origins—ex-guardsmen, disillusioned revolutionaries, and indigenous autonomists—yet struggled with cohesion, as evidenced by Pastora's withdrawal from UNO in 1986 over perceived FDN dominance.

Attempts at Coordination and Unity

The Contra movement initially comprised disparate factions with ideological, ethnic, and personal divisions that hindered effective coordination. The (FDN), formed in 1982 under and drawing primarily from former Somoza members, emerged as the largest group, controlling the northern front from . The Democratic Revolutionary Alliance (ARDE), led by Eden Pastora on the southern front from , consisted of ex-Sandinistas seeking a more democratic alternative, while the Miskito, , Indian Unity (MISURA), under Steadman Fagoth, represented indigenous interests on the Atlantic coast and allied loosely with the FDN. These groups operated independently, leading to fragmented operations and internal rivalries that U.S. policymakers viewed as obstacles to securing ional aid. U.S. diplomatic pressure intensified in 1985 to foster unity ahead of aid votes, culminating in the formation of the United Nicaraguan Opposition (UNO) on June 16, 1985, as a political . UNO's leadership included Calero as president, civilian intellectual Arturo Cruz as foreign relations director, and businessman Alfonso Robelo (a former ARDE co-founder) as deputy, aiming to broaden appeal beyond military elements and incorporate democratic credentials. However, Pastora refused to subordinate ARDE to UNO, citing dominance by perceived Somocistas in the FDN and rejecting Calero's overarching command, which exacerbated funding shortages for his forces and led to ARDE's operational decline. MISURA's Fagoth criticized UNO as an FDN extension insufficient for true integration, though his group maintained tactical alignment with northern operations. By 1986, Pastora's isolation prompted his retirement in May, with subordinates defecting to UNO-aligned commands, further consolidating control under Calero. Renewed unification efforts in 1987, amid peace talks and the Sapoá Accord, produced the Nicaraguan Resistance (RN) in May as a unified military structure incorporating FDN, remaining ARDE elements, and MISURA under Calero's political direction, marking near-complete alignment of major factions save minor holdouts. This coordination improved logistics and political legitimacy but persisted amid leadership tensions and U.S. oversight, reflecting pragmatic rather than ideological harmony.

Military Engagements

Initial Operations and Tactics

The Contras' initial operations commenced in late 1981, shortly after the formation of the (FDN) on August 11, 1981, which unified several groups opposed to Sandinista rule. Operating primarily from base camps along the Honduras-Nicaragua border, these early efforts focused on cross-border raids into northern departments such as Nueva and Jinotega, targeting Sandinista military patrols, outposts, and supply lines to interdict arms flows to Salvadoran guerrillas. By September 1981, the FDN had escalated activities, conducting ambushes and sabotage against infrastructure like bridges and power facilities to impose economic costs on the Sandinista regime without seeking territorial control. Guerrilla tactics defined these operations, emphasizing mobility, surprise, and avoidance of pitched battles against the larger, better-equipped Sandinista army. Small units of 20-50 fighters, often former National Guardsmen supplemented by local recruits, executed hit-and-run assaults, leveraging terrain familiarity and Honduran sanctuary for resupply and retreat. U.S. support, authorized by a , 1981, presidential finding, provided initial non-lethal aid such as communications gear and training, enabling deeper incursions by late 1982. These actions resulted in limited but cumulative disruption, with Contra attacks causing 167 deaths in 1981-1982, primarily , while forcing Sandinista resource diversion to border defenses. The first major coordinated offensive occurred in March 1982, when Contra forces assaulted Sandinista positions in the north, marking a shift from sporadic skirmishes to sustained pressure that compelled to expand its military by thousands of conscripts. Tactics prioritized psychological impact, including broadcasts from border sites to erode Sandinista morale and recruit defectors, alongside selective economic sabotage like crop destruction to exacerbate food shortages. Despite numerical inferiority—initial Contra strength estimated at under 1,000 fighters—these methods exploited Sandinista overextension, achieving early successes in delaying arms shipments to without decisive engagements.

Major Offensives and Defensive Actions

The Contras initiated their first coordinated major offensive against Sandinista forces on March 10, 1982, targeting military outposts and infrastructure near the Honduran border in an effort to disrupt supply lines and demonstrate operational capability. This operation involved several hundred fighters from early Contra groups, such as the (FDN), and marked a shift from sporadic raids to more structured guerrilla assaults, though specific casualty figures remain disputed with Sandinista reports claiming dozens of rebels killed. In response, the Sandinista government accelerated its military expansion, increasing troop numbers and acquiring Soviet-supplied equipment to counter such incursions. By 1987, bolstered by renewed U.S. aid under the Reagan administration's $100 million package, the Contras launched extensive dry-season offensives across northern and southern fronts, aiming to seize and hold key towns to expand controlled territory and strain Sandinista resources. In the north, FDN units attacked San José de Bocay on March 12, overrunning a major Sandinista garrison and reportedly capturing ammunition stockpiles before withdrawing under counterattack; Contra sources claimed over 100 Sandinista casualties, while official Nicaraguan tallies disputed this, reporting minimal losses. Further actions included raids on three northern towns in July, where Sandinista forces reported killing 27 attackers, and coordinated strikes on five Chontales province settlements in October, destroying bridges and military posts to logistics. In the south, ARDE factions targeted border areas, downing helicopters and briefly occupying outposts like Muelle de los Bueyes. These operations, involving up to 15,000 fighters at peak, controlled intermittent rural zones but faced Sandinista aerial superiority, leading to retreats rather than permanent gains. Defensive actions intensified in amid Sandinista Operation Danto, a large-scale incursion into launched March 12 to dismantle Contra rear bases, involving 3,000-5,000 troops that overran camps and inflicted heavy rebel losses estimated at hundreds killed or dispersed. Contras, numbering around 10,000 in border enclaves, mounted ambushes and fought alongside Honduran forces, which conducted airstrikes on Nicaraguan positions, ultimately forcing a Sandinista withdrawal after U.S. threats of intervention; this halted the offensive but weakened Contra logistics ahead of cease-fire talks. Such defenses highlighted the Contras' reliance on cross-border sanctuaries, with casualties from 1981-1990 exceeding 30,000 on both sides, predominantly in rural engagements.

Achievements in Disrupting Sandinista Control

The Contra forces, through persistent guerrilla operations along Nicaragua's northern and southern borders, compelled the Sandinista regime to expand its military apparatus dramatically, growing the from approximately 5,000 personnel in 1978 to 119,000 by early 1985, with much of this buildup attributable to the ongoing . This diversion of resources strained the government's capacity, as Contra raids and ambushes inflicted steady attrition, with Sandinista reports attributing hundreds of military deaths annually to such actions—for instance, 273 soldiers in 1982 and 300 in 1983. Specific engagements, such as the Contra overrun of a Sandinista outpost in east-central Nicaragua in early May 1987, resulted in 22 government troops killed, demonstrating tactical successes in penetrating defended positions. Contra sabotage campaigns targeted critical infrastructure, disrupting economic output and logistics; operations focused on Nicaragua's electric power grid and state-run agricultural facilities, hampering production and forcing reallocations of defensive forces to protect urban and industrial centers. In 1984, Contra mining of Nicaraguan harbors, supported by U.S. intelligence, severely curtailed maritime trade, exacerbating import shortages and contributing to broader economic destabilization estimated at nearly $1 billion in direct war-related damages—equivalent to three years of export earnings. These actions compounded the regime's fiscal burdens, as military engagements tied down large troop contingents in rural frontiers, preventing full consolidation of control over peripheral regions and eroding the Sandinistas' ability to pursue internal development projects. By maintaining a military stalemate, the Contras eroded public support for the Sandinistas amid mounting casualties—part of 45,000 to 65,000 total deaths from 1978 to —and economic hardship, pressuring the regime toward concessions like the 1988 Sapoá Accords, which established cease-fires and paved the way for demilitarization and internationally supervised elections in , ultimately resulting in the Sandinistas' electoral defeat. Although unable to seize permanent territorial bases covering more than isolated border swaths, Contra presence in central areas by September 1987 further demonstrated the insurgency's reach in challenging Sandinista dominance beyond peripheral zones. This sustained pressure highlighted the Contras' strategic utility in exposing the regime's vulnerabilities without requiring outright victory on the battlefield.

External Support and Geopolitics

U.S. Policy Rationale and Aid

The Reagan administration regarded the (FSLN) government, which seized power in July 1979, as a Marxist-Leninist regime with deep ties to the and , enabling it to serve as a conduit for arms and training to leftist guerrillas in and potentially destabilizing the entire Central American region. This alignment was seen as a direct challenge to U.S. interests, echoing the Cuban Missile Crisis-era fears of communist expansion in the , and prompting a aimed at pressuring the Sandinistas to cease external subversion, democratize internally, and negotiate regionally rather than pursue military overthrow. President Reagan articulated this stance in public addresses, framing Contra support as essential to preventing a "totalitarian dynamo" from dominating and exporting violence southward. On November 17, 1981, Reagan signed National Security Decision Directive 17, authorizing the (CIA) to provide covert paramilitary support to anti-Sandinista forces, including recruitment, training, arms, and equipment channeled through third countries like to interdict Nicaraguan arms shipments to Salvadoran insurgents. Initial CIA funding totaled approximately $19 million in fiscal year 1982 for these operations, focusing on building Contra capabilities from ex-Somoza elements and disaffected civilians. Congress later formalized limited aid, appropriating $24 million in 1983 under restrictions from the , which barred funds for overthrowing the Sandinista government but permitted defensive and interdiction activities. Aid fluctuated amid congressional debates, with cuts in 1984 following revelations of CIA involvement in harbor mining, followed by $27 million in humanitarian assistance approved in June 1985. A pivotal resumption occurred on October 18, 1986, when Reagan signed legislation authorizing $100 million, of which $70 million was for lethal military aid including weapons and ammunition, enabling Contra offensives into Nicaragua's interior. Overall, U.S. appropriations for the Contras from 1982 to 1990 exceeded $300 million, combining military, humanitarian, and non-lethal support, though delivery was often delayed by legal and political constraints. This assistance emphasized logistics, intelligence, and sustained pressure to compel Sandinista concessions, aligning with broader Reagan Doctrine efforts to counter Soviet-backed insurgencies globally.

Logistics of Funding and Armament

The primary funding for the Contras originated from the government through the (CIA), with initial authorization in late 1981 allowing for financial and material support channeled partly via Argentine military assistance. By 1984, approved $24 million in aid to sustain operations for approximately 10,000 fighters. This official support faced interruptions due to legislative restrictions, prompting reliance on private U.S. donors, who provided an estimated $32 million over nine months following the expiration of direct U.S. arms aid in 1984. Additional private contributions supplemented these efforts, often directed toward refugee support in Honduran camps but extending to operational needs. Foreign governments contributed variably to Contra logistics. Argentina's Secretariat of State Intelligence collaborated with the CIA from , providing training and initial arms shipments to bootstrap the rebel groups. Taiwan's government facilitated approximately $1 million in donations from private businessmen to the Contras, as acknowledged in 1987. engaged in arms procurement on behalf of the Contras, including acquisitions of captured stockpiles, though it declined direct financial aid requests in 1984. These contributions were coordinated through diplomatic channels and third-party intermediaries to circumvent U.S. . Armament logistics centered on cross-border supply lines from for the Northern Front and for the Southern Front, with weapons stored in Honduran warehouses and delivered via air drops and ground convoys. Early supplies included small arms, ammunition, and light infantry equipment procured from U.S. sources and allies like , supplemented by captured Sandinista weaponry during operations. Private funds enabled purchases of additional arms from international markets, such as Lisbon-based dealers, reducing transportation costs through efficient routing via Central American hubs like El Salvador's Ilopango airfield. By 1986, renewed U.S. of $100 million incorporated hardware to bolster these networks, ensuring sustained capability despite interdiction risks.

Iran-Contra Affair and Congressional Constraints

Congressional opposition to U.S. aid for the Contras intensified in the early 1980s, leading to the passage of the s, a series of legislative restrictions aimed at limiting federal support for the Nicaraguan rebels. The first , attached to the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1983 and signed into law on December 21, 1982, prohibited the (CIA) and the Department of Defense from using appropriated funds "for the purpose of overthrowing the or provocatively attacking the territorial integrity" of the country. This measure reflected Democratic concerns in Congress over the Contras' alleged involvement in abuses and fears of escalating U.S. entanglement in , though administration officials argued it hampered efforts to counter Soviet-backed expansionism in the region. Subsequent amendments tightened these restrictions. The second Boland Amendment, part of the Defense Appropriations Act for 1985 and effective from October 1984 to September 1985, barred the CIA, the Defense Department, and any other agency or entity involved in activities from providing "any equipment, training, or advice" to the Contras, while permitting only non- humanitarian assistance. Funding for the Contras was effectively cut off after September 1985, prompting the Reagan administration to solicit private donations and third-country contributions, which were deemed legal by some legal interpretations as outside direct federal appropriations. However, these efforts proved insufficient to sustain Contra operations amid ongoing pressures from Sandinista forces. In response to these constraints, senior (NSC) officials orchestrated the Iran-Contra operation, a covert scheme to sell arms to —despite a U.S. embargo—and divert the proceeds to the Contras. Initiated in 1985, the plan involved NSC staffer Lieutenant Colonel coordinating with intermediaries to facilitate the sale of approximately 1,500 TOW and Hawk missiles to , generating profits estimated at $30 million, of which about $3.8 million was illegally funneled to the Contras via accounts in Switzerland and elsewhere. President Reagan approved the arms sales on January 17, 1986, ostensibly to secure the release of American hostages held by in , but denied knowledge of the diversion, which violated the Boland restrictions by using non-appropriated funds for prohibited military support. The operation bypassed , as required by the National Security Act for covert actions, and relied on a "bodyguard of lies" to obscure its true purpose from lawmakers. The erupted publicly on November 3, 1986, after a Lebanese magazine revealed the arms sales, followed by Edwin Meese's disclosure of the Contra diversion on November 25, 1986. This triggered multiple investigations: the , appointed by Reagan on November 26, 1986, issued a report on February 26, 1987, criticizing NSC overreach but finding no evidence of Reagan's direct involvement in the diversion; joint congressional committees held televised hearings from May to August 1987, interviewing over 500 witnesses and reviewing 1 million documents, concluding that the operations undermined constitutional checks on executive power. Independent counsel Lawrence Walsh's probe, launched in December 1986, led to 14 indictments, including North and National Security Advisor , though many convictions were overturned or pardoned by President in 1992. The affair temporarily disrupted Contra funding, exacerbating their logistical challenges in 1987, but ultimately prompted to reverse course. On October 18, 1986—just weeks before the scandal broke—Reagan signed legislation providing $100 million in aid, including $70 million for military support, signaling a bipartisan shift amid of Sandinista and Soviet ties. Investigations highlighted systemic flaws in inter-branch relations, with critics arguing the Boland Amendments unconstitutionally micromanaged , while defenders viewed the diversions as a necessary circumvention of obstructionist oversight that prioritized domestic politics over anti-communist imperatives. The episode underscored enduring tensions between executive prerogatives in and congressional purse-string authority, influencing subsequent debates on covert operations.

Controversies

Alleged Atrocities by Contras

The Contra forces faced numerous allegations of violations during their against the Sandinista government, including targeted killings of civilians, , , and destruction of such as schools and health clinics. A report by Americas Watch, based on 145 sworn affidavits from Nicaraguan civilians, documented 118 incidents of Contra abuses, encompassing 399 kidnappings, 116 murders, 19 , and 24 cases of , often directed at non-combatants perceived as Sandinista sympathizers or to terrorize rural populations. These claims were corroborated by similar findings from the Washington Office on (WOLA), which highlighted patterns of violence against individuals without evident military ties, though the reports relied primarily on victim testimonies collected in Sandinista-controlled areas, raising questions about potential coercion or exaggeration amid the government's efforts. A notable controversy involved a 1983 CIA-produced manual titled Psychological Operations in Guerrilla Warfare, distributed to Contra units for training in ; it advocated "neutralizations" (implying assassinations) of government informants and judges, as well as techniques such as , threats to family members, and inducing pain short of permanent injury, which critics classified as endorsing -like methods. The manual's Spanish translation, printed in 10,000 copies by a CIA , explicitly instructed on creating a "climate of despair" through selective violence against civilian infrastructure, though CIA Director William Casey defended it as a toned-down version omitting explicit endorsements from earlier drafts, and only isolated sections were deemed problematic by congressional reviewers. Contra leadership, including figures like , publicly denied systematic atrocities, attributing verified incidents to undisciplined recruits or Sandinista infiltrators, while U.S. intelligence assessments dismissed many high-profile claims—such as the alleged 1983 kidnapping and murder of U.S. Bishop John Schlaeffer—as fabrications traced to . Amnesty International and other NGOs reported additional cases, such as the 1984 murder of schoolteachers and health workers in northern , framing them as deliberate efforts to undermine Sandinista social programs, but these organizations' reliance on from conflict zones drew criticism for insufficient verification and alignment with anti-U.S. narratives prevalent in academic and media circles. Empirical analysis of casualty patterns indicates that while Contra operations caused civilian deaths—estimated at several hundred annually in peak years like 1985-1987—the majority stemmed from or reprisals in guerrilla contexts rather than premeditated , contrasting with unsubstantiated Sandinista claims of massacres exceeding 10,000 victims. Independent probes, including those by attorney Reed Brody, affirmed patterns of abuse but noted the challenges of distinguishing combatants in rural ambushes, underscoring how guerrilla warfare's inherent asymmetries incentivized both sides to amplify enemy atrocities for .

Comparative Human Rights Record of Sandinistas

The Sandinista regime, upon seizing power in July 1979, established revolutionary tribunals that conducted summary trials and executions of perceived enemies, including former members and Somoza supporters, resulting in at least 187 documented executions by October 1979, with estimates reaching several hundred in the initial post-revolutionary period. Throughout the , the government maintained a secret program of summary executions termed "special measures," targeting suspected Contra collaborators and internal dissenters, contributing to thousands of political killings as acknowledged in declassified assessments of regime practices. These actions contrasted with initial revolutionary rhetoric promising democratic reforms, as the regime prioritized consolidating Marxist-Leninist control amid . Torture and arbitrary detention were systematic tools of state security apparatus, particularly through the Dirección General de Seguridad del Estado (DGSE), where methods included beatings, electric shocks, and ; Interior Minister publicly admitted instances of physical abuse and isolated killings by security forces but defended them as necessary against counterrevolutionaries. By mid-decade, political prisoners numbered around 1,300 to 10,000, many held without or trial for years in facilities like El Chipote prison, where prolonged isolation and mistreatment were reported by monitoring groups. Forced conscription into the , enforced via roundups and penalties including execution for , exacerbated civilian suffering, with desertion rates leading to further punitive measures. Censorship and suppression of formed a core policy, with the regime confiscating opposition media outlets by and enforcing a on information; independent journalists faced , and the 1986 Media Law criminalized critical reporting until partially relaxed in 1989. These measures enabled pervasive control, including and infiltration of unions and churches, fostering a climate of fear that affected broader beyond wartime zones. In comparison to Contra forces, whose documented abuses—such as village attacks killing civilians and mistreatment of captives—totaled around 139 incidents in 1985 alone, often decentralized and sporadically punished by commanders, Sandinista violations operated through centralized state institutions, enabling scale and on a larger order. noted that while both sides committed excesses, the government's capacity for arbitrary arrest, prolonged detention, and judicial manipulation amplified its impact, with Sandinista agents executing suspected sympathizers in rural sweeps and maintaining formal prisons for systematic abuse, unlike the Contras' guerrilla constraints. Overall war casualties exceeded 30,000 from 1979 to 1990, with regime forces bearing responsibility for the majority through , repression, and conscription-related deaths, underscoring a state-directed pattern over insurgent opportunism.

International Rulings and Diplomatic Fallout

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) addressed Nicaraguan allegations against the United States in the case Military and Paramilitary Activities in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America), initiated on April 9, 1984. Nicaragua claimed U.S. violations of international law through direct attacks, mining of its harbors in early 1984, and provision of arms, training, and funding to the Contras, constituting unlawful use of force and intervention. On November 26, 1984, the ICJ issued provisional measures ordering the U.S. to refrain from such actions, though the U.S. continued support pending a merits decision. On June 27, 1986, the ICJ ruled by a 12-3 vote that the U.S. had breached customary international law prohibitions on the use of force (Article 2(4) of the UN Charter) and non-intervention, specifically through Contra aid and harbor mining, but declined to attribute alleged Contra human rights violations directly to the U.S. due to insufficient evidence of control. The Court ordered the U.S. to immediately cease all support for the Contras, make reparation for damages, and comply with prior provisional measures; it rejected U.S. claims of collective self-defense against Nicaraguan aid to Salvadoran insurgents as justification for proxy support. The U.S. dismissed the ruling as non-binding, having withdrawn from the ICJ's compulsory jurisdiction on October 7, 1985, and refused reparations, arguing the decision ignored broader regional threats from Sandinista alliances with Cuba and the Soviet Union. United Nations responses amplified the legal critique. The UN Security Council draft resolution S/18136 on July 31, 1986, urged compliance with the ICJ but was vetoed by the U.S.; similarly, a November 1986 resolution (A/RES/41/34) backed , calling for an end to U.S. by a vote of 94-3 with 47 abstentions, though it did not explicitly condemn the U.S. by name. These actions highlighted divisions, with Soviet bloc nations supporting while Western allies like the and abstained or opposed. Diplomatic fallout strained U.S. relations across hemispheres. The Contadora Group—, , , and —initiated in 1983 to mediate Central American conflicts, repeatedly urged halting external , including to Contras, via treaties like the 1986 Contadora Act on Peace and Cooperation, viewing U.S. policy as risking escalation over diplomacy. In the (OAS), a November 1986 foreign ministers' meeting rejected U.S. proposals for Sandinista isolation, with many members expressing aversion to Contra support amid concerns, though several privately criticized Sandinista authoritarianism and regional meddling. European Community nations issued statements condemning the 1984 harbor mining as unlawful, contributing to transatlantic tensions, while U.S. isolation in multilateral forums pressured shifts toward the 1987 II accords emphasizing cease-fires and elections.

Resolution and Aftermath

Path to 1990 Elections

The Esquipulas II Agreement, signed on August 7, , by the presidents of , , , , and , established a regional framework for ceasefires, national reconciliation, and democratization across , including provisions for internal dialogues in to address the civil conflict. This accord pressured the Sandinista government to engage in direct negotiations with the Contras, as it mandated ceasefires and the cessation of external support for insurgencies, while emphasizing verifiable electoral processes. Contra military offensives in , which disrupted Sandinista supply lines and control in northern and eastern regions, contributed causally to this diplomatic momentum by demonstrating the unsustainable costs of prolonged warfare, including over 30,000 Sandinista casualties and economic strain from defense expenditures exceeding 50% of GDP. Direct talks between Sandinista representatives and Contra leaders culminated in the Sapoá Accords on March 23, 1988, which initiated a 60-day nationwide effective April 1, alongside temporary truces in contested zones and the establishment of a National Commission to oversee prisoner releases, ceasefires, and repatriation. Although the formal expired without full implementation due to disputes over demilitarized zones and aid distribution, the accords marked a shift from unilateral Sandinista control toward mediated political solutions, with Contras insisting on guarantees for free expression and multiparty elections as preconditions for . Subsequent negotiations in 1988–1989, facilitated by the Commission, addressed Contra demands for amnesty and safe havens, while Sandinista concessions—such as lifting media censorship and union controls—reflected the leverage gained from Contra disruptions and U.S. non-lethal aid resumption under congressional constraints. By mid-1989, amid reaching 33,000% and war fatigue, the Sandinistas advanced planned elections from 1991 to February 25, 1990, framing them as a mechanism to end external aggression and secure international aid, though critics attributed the decision to the cumulative effects of Contra resistance and regional isolation under Esquipulas. The United Nicaraguan Opposition (UNO), a 14-party coalition incorporating Contra-aligned figures like , unified opposition efforts, with U.S. diplomatic pressure under the Bush administration reinforcing electoral commitments through a March 1989 bipartisan accord supporting Esquipulas goals. Contra ceasefires in select areas during the campaign period, monitored internationally, ensured a relatively peaceful transition to voting, culminating in UNO's victory and Sandinista power transfer. This electoral path underscored how sustained Contra operations, combined with diplomatic isolation, compelled the Sandinistas toward verifiable democratic processes rather than indefinite military dominance.

Contra Demobilization and Political Integration

Following the Sandinista electoral defeat on February 25, 1990, Contra leaders signed the Toncontín Accord on March 27, 1990, with representatives of the incoming National Opposition Union (UNO) government, committing to a ceasefire and phased demobilization supervised by the and . This agreement stipulated the return of approximately 15,000-20,000 Contra fighters from bases in and , with disarmament to commence by April 20, 1990, coinciding with Violeta Chamorro's inauguration on April 25. A subsequent accord on April 20, 1990, formalized the rebels' commitment to disband forces entirely by June 10, 1990, including the handover of weapons to international observers. By the end of June 1990, demobilization efforts had processed 22,373 Contra combatants through the International Commission for Support and Verification (CIAV), an OAS-led program that also facilitated the repatriation of around 18,000 from neighboring countries. The process involved concentrating fighters in designated zones for verification, medical checks, and initial aid distribution, marking the formal end of armed resistance against the Sandinista regime. However, implementation faced logistical hurdles, including incomplete weapon surrenders and delays in camp dismantlement, as many rebels had already crossed into informally before full accords. Reintegration programs emphasized economic and social incorporation, with promises of land grants, , and technical assistance for former fighters to transition to or small enterprises, though only an estimated 3,000 of 20,000 demobilized Contras received allocated land by late 1990, exacerbating and discontent. Politically, the Chamorro administration pursued national reconciliation via laws covering both Contra and Sandinista combatants, enabling ex-rebels to participate in the democratic framework without prosecution for wartime actions. Former Contra commanders, such as those from the (FDN), aligned with UNO factions or formed entities like the Nicaraguan Resistance Party, contesting subsequent elections and securing limited representation in the during the , though full incorporation was constrained by Sandinista influence in state institutions and mutual distrust. Challenges persisted, as incomplete reintegration fueled the emergence of recontra groups—disillusioned ex-fighters who rearmed in , numbering up to 200 in some bands, amid unfulfilled aid and land disputes, underscoring the fragility of post-conflict stabilization. Despite these setbacks, dismantled the Contra structure, paving the way for multipartisan where former rebels contributed to opposition dynamics against lingering Sandinista control over key sectors like the and .

Enduring Legacy in Nicaraguan Politics

The Contras' sustained insurgency from 1981 to 1990 imposed significant military and economic costs on the Sandinista regime, compelling it to accept internationally monitored elections as part of the Esquipulas II peace process and the Tela Accords of 1989, which facilitated Contra demobilization. This pressure contributed directly to the Sandinistas' 54% to 41% defeat in the February 25, 1990, presidential election by Violeta Chamorro's United Nicaraguan Opposition (UNO) coalition, which encompassed 14 parties including former Contra supporters and exiles, marking the first democratic transfer of power in Nicaraguan history. Chamorro's administration formalized Contra reintegration in June 1990, reducing the Sandinista-led army from over 80,000 to under 15,000 troops while promising land, credits, and pensions to approximately 22,000 demobilized fighters, though fulfillment rates remained low amid logistical challenges and corruption allegations. In the and early , former Contras and their sympathizers bolstered Nicaragua's nascent , integrating into liberal and conservative opposition factions that challenged Sandinista influence through electoral competition. This dynamic enabled the Liberal Constitutionalist Party—drawing support from rural anti-Sandinista bases historically aligned with Contra strongholds—to secure victories in the 1996 presidential election ( with 51% of the vote) and 2001 ( with 56.3%), periods marked by economic stabilization, of state assets, and peaceful power transitions that diluted FSLN dominance until a 2006 constitutional amendment allowing Ortega's return with 38% in 2006. Contra veterans often filled roles in local governance, security cooperatives, and agricultural cooperatives in northern and eastern regions, fostering a legacy of decentralized resistance that emphasized property rights and anti-collectivization policies reversing Sandinista reforms. Since Daniel Ortega's consolidation of power post-2007, the Contra legacy has endured as a polarizing ideological fault line, with the FSLN regime invoking "contra" as a pejorative for any opposition to justify crackdowns, including the 2018 protests where over 300 died amid repression and where some rural dissidents echoed Contra-era grievances over land expropriations. By 2021, Ortega's government had imprisoned or exiled key opposition figures, sidelining former Contra-linked groups, while fragmented liberals and independents—lacking unified Contra-style mobilization—failed to counter FSLN electoral manipulations, as seen in the 2021 vote boycotted by major rivals amid 40 arrests. This has perpetuated a cycle of authoritarian resilience, where the Contras' historical role in enforcing electoral accountability contrasts with contemporary opposition disarray, underscoring causal links between unresolved reintegration failures and weakened institutional pluralism.

References

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