Augusto Cesar Sandino was a nicaraguan revolutionary remembered by being the leader of the resistance to the US occupation of Nicaragua in the first half of the 20th century.

He was born in Niquinohomo, department of Masaya, on May 18, 1895. He was the son of Gregorio Sandino, a wealthy coffee farmer, and Margarita Calderón, an indigenous servant who worked on his father's plantation.

In 1921 Sandino was forced to leave the country after shooting Dagoberto Rivas, the son of a prominent conservative from the town. During his stay in Mexico, Sandino was linked with leaders of various unionist, worker, socialist, anarchist and freemason groups.

In 1925, after 13 years of US occupation in Nicaragua, the invading army withdrew its troops. In October of that year, the military coup of General Emiliano Chamorro against President Carlos José Solórzano occurred. North American troops land again at Bluefields. Sandino, upon learning of the beginning of the Constitutionalist War, decided to return to Nicaragua, where he arrived on June 1.

"In view of the abuses of North America in Nicaragua, I left Tampico, Mexico, on May 18, 1926, to join the Constitutionalist Army of Nicaragua, which was fighting against the regime imposed by the Yankee bankers in our Republic."

On October 26, 1926, together with workers from the San Albino mines, he took up arms, joining the constitutional cause. He organized his combatants and leads an attack against the conservative barracks in the town of El Jícaro on November 2, 1926. After this success in combat, Sandino was recognized by the liberal military leaders for which he is appointed General-in-Chief of the Army of Las Segovias, where he establishes his base of operations.

Sandino's war against the US Army

With just 30 men, Sandino begins a national war against the American invaders and the surrendering government of José María Moncada. On September 2, 1927, the Defense Army of the National Sovereignty of Nicaragua was constituted.

"Dynamics of Nicaragua"

After intense fighting and without being able to defeat him, the US government of Herbert C, Hoover, ordered the withdrawal of the troops deployed in Nicaragua. With the election of Franklin D. Roosvelt, peace negotiations began with the US government. Sandino sent the new liberal president, Juan Bautista Sacasa, a peace proposal, which was accepted. On February 2, 1933, the war officially ends.

Sandino's murder

On February 21, 1934, after attending a dinner in La Loma (Presidential Palace), together with the writer Sofonías Salvatierra (Sacasa's Minister of Agriculture) and his lieutenants, Generals Francisco Estrada and Juan Pablo Umanzor, invited by Juan Bautista Sacasa , he is detained by Major Lisandro Delgadillo, who led them to the El Hormiguero prison.

The three generals Sandino, Estrada and Umanzor were assassinated at eleven o'clock at night by troops from the battalion that guarded them. Two years later, Anastasio Somoza took the reins of Nicaragua, overthrowing President Sacasa, who was his in-law uncle. Somoza claimed that he had received orders from US Ambassador Arthur Bliss Lane to kill Sandino.

Legacy

The struggle for Freedom and sovereignty represented by Augusto Sandino has transcended borders, becoming a symbol of and flag of the peoples who fight against oppression and the domination of external forces. Sandino's ideas and thoughts are remembered in Nicaragua and the world:

"My greatest honor is to emerge from the bosom of the oppressed, who are the soul and nerve of the race."

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  • GeorgeZBush [he/him]
    ·
    4 months ago

    Playing with my dnd group last night and somehow the topic of Cuba came up, and one of them mentioned how they visited Cuba a few years back. Her tour guide apparently took her and her family back to his house to show them the "real" Cuba and how they live in squalor. To which another person asked "Why haven't we just taken them over yet?" "Yeah we should, they were all so happy to just see Americans."

    Not gonna act like I know what it's like to live there (beyond knowing that it's been under embargo for decades by the Fourth Reich) but I just love the casual chauvinism of the average American. As if Cuba wasn't a fucking slave colony of the empire before the revolution.

    • ComradeEchidna
      ·
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      "Why haven't we just taken them over yet?"

      Sentiments like this are wild. Like do they remember what happened in Iraq? Many Iraqis hated Saddam or at least most were ambivalent to him, but that invasion/occupation and the resulting insurgency caused such incredible violence and destabilized the whole region for decades.

      Now you take Cuba where many people support their government? A majority? At least a plurality? And the fence-sitters are not going to won over by US bombing, occupation, privatization and shock therapy that removes their secure housing and healthcare. A previously militant Marxist-Leninist state with a history of being experts in guerrilla warfare? On a mountainous island with a supportive population? In the USA's backyard? Where the insurgents might travel to Haiti, Puerto Rico or Jamaca to foment unrest? Where it's a very short boat ride to Miami where they can blend with the Cuban diaspora and then do acts of terrorism and assassination on US soil?

      Of course, the USA doesn't invade Cuba. It's trying to cut it off, starve it, so it doesn't metastasize to the surrounding area.

      • GeorgeZBush [he/him]
        ·
        4 months ago

        No but you see socialism bad and US good guys so we invade and we save them like in my Marvel movies and Netflix cartoons.

        But yeah, it's just wild how moronic people are.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
        ·
        4 months ago

        I honestly think Cuba is more valuable, or at least DC perceives it more valuable, as an object lesson to the world. "Do as we say or we'll do to you what we've done to Cuba".

        The fact that Cuba is resolutely holding on anyway doesn't seem to phase DC.

        I think PR might still have a handful of aging Maoist guerillas.