HOla Luciano,como siempre aportando algo bueno fui al sitio y lei algo de el esta macanúdo,gracias é aqui parte de el:
In 1893, the Liberals brought about a successful revolution which placed their leader Jose Santos Zelaya in power. Zelaya remained president for the next 16 years, ruling as a dictator. He was forced out in 1909, after Adolfo Diaz was elected provisional president. Diaz requested United States military to maintain order after a revolt in 1912, and US marines landed a few years later. According to the Bryan-Chamorro Treaty of 1916, the US paid $3 million dollars to Nicaragua for the right to build a canal across the country from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, to lease the Great and Little Corn Islands, and to establish a naval base in the Gulf of Fonseca. The agreement was extremely unpopular with many elements and it aroused anti-American guerrilla warfare in Nicaragua as well as protests from other Central American countries. When the American marines left in 1925, rebellions began and the marine force returned to quell the disturbances just a year after its departure. Under American supervision, an election was held in 1928, and General Jose Moncada, a Liberal, was chosen. One Liberal leader, however, Augusto Cesar Sandino, engaged the US forces in guerrilla warfare for many years.. The U.S. Government withdrew the marines in 1933, leaving Anastasio Somoza commander of the National Guard. Somoza purportedly had Sandino assassinated and was elected president in 1937. Thus began the Somoza dynasty which ruled Nicaragua as a dictatorship for the next 43 years.
Danny!
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