"...The vast majority of Central Americans today live in perpetual misery alongside tiny elites that enjoy unparalleled prosperity. The average cat in [the U.S.] eats more beef than the average Central American. In Nicaragua, 54 percent of the people have no safe drinking water. In Guatemala, 44 percent are illiterate, and Indians, who constitute half of the country's population, have an average life-span of forty-eight years. Seven out of ten Hondurans live in desperate poverty, only one rural resident in ten has electricity, and less than two in ten have access to safe drinking water. Infant mortality was seventy per 1,000 births in 1990, compared to less than nine per 1,000 in the United States."

- from the chapter "Central Americans: Intervention Comes Home to Roost" in Harvest of Empire: A History of Latinos in America by Juan Gonzalez

 

It would not be far-fetched to think that the seven relatively small countries that compose Central America would be a negligible part of world history. The history and identity of Central America has been virtually invisible and marginalized within U.S. political discourse, but yet the countries of Central America have been a cornerstone of its foreign policy.

There is a marked difference of the interventions in Central America before and after World War II. After World War II, the United States emerged as the world’s main superpower. The U.S. began to intervene in many countries throughout the world trying to stop the spread of communism in the Cold War which had a disparate impact on Central America. The U.S. was in the process of becoming an imperial power following the defeat of Spain in the Spanish-American War in 1898 with the signing of the Treaty of Guadeloupe. The principal method in which the U.S. had been intervening in countries throughout the world was through the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The CIA was created in 1947(1), two years after the end of World War II.

The United States’ interventions in Central America have ranged from creating and arming right-wing death squads to propping up some of history's most bloody dictatorships. The United States has over and over again put its ideals before the lives and well-being of the various peoples living throughout Central America, and because of that, much of the history of Central America has been that of violence, civil wars, and revolts.

Purpose

This website focuses on the significant excursions of the U.S. in each country and compares the marked difference in the interventions before and after World War II. It chronicles the different tactics that the U.S. has employed in countries like Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador to maintain control in order to, nonetheless, achieve a similar agenda. This web project gives this too often over-looked subject and area of the world the exposure that has been lacking in the discourse of Latin American history.

 

Belize | Costa Rica | El Salvador | Guatemala | Honduras | Nicaragua | Panama | Immigration

 

 

Website by Jason Rukavina (jruk@umich.edu) and Cyril Cordor (ccordor@umich.edu)
for American Culture 213: Intro to Latina/o Studies, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

Take a look at other web projects at El Museo Latino

Last updated Monday, December 20, 2004 at 4:49PM
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