The following statement was initiated by the US-based Nicaragua Advocacy Network and has been signed by our party.
On 10 November 2022, an online White House statement announced that President Biden had invoked emergency powers on 24 October, declaring Nicaragua a continuing “unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States”.
This renews for yet another year the executive order unjustly issued by Donald Trump in November 2018. It accompanies the biggest escalation of hostility toward Nicaragua – by the United States, but also by its allied nations and the media – since the Reagan administration made similar declarations in the 1980s.
Ronald Reagan applied US sanctions and illegally funded terrorists to overthrow the Sandinista government, using money from sales of cocaine to US citizens and weapons to Iran. Nicaragua’s economy was destroyed, and its people eventually voted the Sandinistas out of power in 1990 to stop the war and the economic embargo. Conditions for most Nicaraguans, however, only got worse during the three successive US-backed governments.
So the Nicaraguan people voted the Sandinistas back into office. On President Ortega’s first day in office in January 2007, he signed an executive order restoring the people’s constitutional rights to free and universal healthcare and education, rights that had been systematically denied during the previous 17 years of neoliberal governments. Since then, Nicaragua has made tremendous social progress, and the economy has grown across social demographics.
But now the United States has returned to the hostility of the 1980s, pressuring its allies to follow suit, illegally escalating sanctions and funding violence to destabilise Nicaragua. Many news media promote the same falsehoods about Nicaragua that they used in the 1980s.
It’s time to set the record straight – to ask all our governments and media, wherever we live, to portray Nicaragua with greater accuracy and to stop interfering with its sovereignty. Nicaragua has been called “the threat of a good example”. This small country, with one of the world’s tiniest military budgets, may threaten some – but it is an inspiration to many!
More such examples of Nicaragua’s recent achievements and sources of information can be found here.
Nicaragua is not a threat to the United States. It deserves our recognition and support in affirming its national sovereignty.
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This statement remains open for signatures. Please email the Nicaragua Advocacy Network to add your organisation’s name.