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a U.S Intervention

As early as the 1500's, the idea of constructing a ship canal between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans occurred to navigators and explorers, as the geographical form of the Central American Isthmus was becoming known. Many Isthmus surveys were made over the years. Opinion remained divided between a route through Panama and a longer route through Nicaragua. This divided opinion continued until the building of the Panama Canal was begun by the U.S. in 1904. By the end of the century the U.S. government would find themselves in an unnerving situation; concerned with the Panama Canal and other economic interests would unfortunately demonstrate unequaled force and damage to an innocent people with their focus on something other than what was in the sights of their rifles.Panama was originally created by the US in 1903 so that they could build a canal between the Pacific and the Atlantic Ocean. Noriega, Panama's defacto leader, was in league with the US, the CIA, and the Drug Enforcement Agency until 1986. In June 1987 violent popular demonstrations erupted in the streets, due to reports of election fraud and Noriega's involvement in major human rights abuses. In February 1988, Noriega was charged by the U


who made clumsy threats and shed American blood; a relatively low cost military operation to convince taxpayers that the $300 billion military budgets of recent years actually by something you can use; a military victory for a commander in chief who was still suspected of wimpishness; and a glorious moment in the war against drugs" - Bush finally got his man. refused to recognize the new president and placed massive economic pressure on Panama by cutting off U. George Bush's expressed reasons for invading were to safeguard democracy, save American lives, protect the Panama Canal, and to capture Noriega. , for instance the arrest of Noriega and a continuance of involved control of the Panama Canal, but the intervention did little on the drug trade if any. solders who were simply following orders; for them there was never any democratic system to restore, American citizens residing in Panama were in minimal danger, and the canal was not threatened at any point by the Panamanian military and the act of capturing Noriega broke international law. aid, freezing all Panamanian corporations. The National Assembly replaced the president with a supporter of Noriega. Persuasion, warnings, negotiations, sanctions, and threats all failed to convince Noriega to resign, as well as Saddam to withdraw from Kuwait. government might have to use force to insure the security of the Panama Canal to U.

Common topics in this essay:
Giroldi Noriega's, Panama Canal, Richard Barnet, Roberto Herrera, Defense Force, Enforcement Agency, Kuwait Lengthy, City Mainly, Unfortunately Panamanian, American-Panamanian Canal, panama canal, international law, drug trafficking, defense force, canal economic, drug trade, panama canal economic, february 1988, money laundering,

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Approximate Word count = 1437
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)

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