The Contra War and the Iran-Contra affair that shook the Reagan
presidency were center stage on the U.S. political scene for nearly
a decade. According to most observers, the main Contra army, or the
Fuerza Democratica Nicaraguense (FDN), was a mercenary force hired
by the CIA to oppose the Sandinista socialist revolution.
The Real Contra War demonstrates that in reality the vast
majority of the FDN's combatants were peasants who had the full
support of a mass popular movement consisting of the tough,
independent inhabitants of Nicaragua's central highlands. The
movement was merely the most recent instance of this peasantry's
one-thousand-year history of resistance to those they saw as
would-be conquerors.
The real Contra War struck root in 1979, even before the
Sandinistas took power and, during the next two years, grew swiftly
as a reaction both to revolutionary expropriations of small farms
and to the physical abuse of all who resisted. Only in 1982 did an
offer of American arms persuade these highlanders to forge an
alliance with former Guardia anti-Sandinista exiles--those the
outside world called Contras.
Relying on original documents, interviews with veterans, and
other primary sources, Brown contradicts conventional wisdom about
the Contras, debunking most of what has been written about the
movement's leaders, origins, aims, and foreign support.
General
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