Schlagwort: Nicaragua
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Alan Woods: Latin America on the brink
[Militant International Review, No. 24, November 1983, p. 12-26] The ending of the exceptional period of upswing in the world economy from 1950 to 1975, and the beginning of a new period of organic capitalist crisis, has opened up an entirely different situation on a world scale, a fundamental feature of which is the phenomenon…
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Jim Chrystie: Nicaragua: Somoza goes – the struggle continues
[Militant, 27 July 1979] „He may be a son of a bitch, but he’s our son of a bitch.“ President Roosevelt’s words on installing the first Somoza as head of Nicaragua in 1933 came home to roost last week. In the first successful mass uprising in Latin America since Castro came to power twenty years…
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Alejandro Rojas [Tony Saunois]: The Sandinistas’ defeated – A victory for reaction
[Militant International Review, No 43 Spring 1990, p. 29-32] Alejandro Rojas examines the reasons for the defeat of the FSLN and draws out lessons for future struggles. The recent election defeat of the Sandinista FSLN in Nicaragua will be a big disappointment to activists in the labour movement internationally. It has especially shocked and disorientated…
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Alejandro Rojas [Tony Saunois]: Perspectives for the Nicaraguan revolution
[Militant International Review, No 34 Spring 1987, p. 18-28] The American ‘Irangate’ crisis revealed that money raised from the sale of arms to Iran had been used to finance the Nicaraguan ‘Contras’. Once again the future of the Nicaraguan revolution is being raised in the minds of workers and youth throughout the world. July 1979…
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Bob Labi: Marxism and the Nicaraguan Revolution
[Militant International Review, No 27, September 1984, p. 12-20] Arising out of the Autumn 1983 issue of the Militant International Review, which was dedicated exclusively to the revolutionary process in Latin America, we are pleased to see that there has been quite a lot of discussion among our readers. One of the issues which has…
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Jim Chrystie: Nicaragua: Somoza geht – der Kampf geht weiter
[Eigene Übersetzung aus Militant, 27 Juli 1979] „Er mag ein Hurensohn sein, aber er ist unser Hurensohn“. Diese Worte von Präsident Roosevelt bei der Einsetzung des ersten Somoza als Staatschef von Nicaragua im Jahr 1933 rächten sich in der vergangenen Woche. In dem ersten erfolgreichen Massenaufstand in Lateinamerika seit der Machtübernahme durch Castro vor zwanzig…