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|conflict="Football War"
|campaign=
|image=
|caption=
|date= July 14 - July 20 , 1969
|place= El Salvador - Honduras border
|casus=
|result=negotiated cease-fire
|combatant1=El Salvador
|combatant2=Honduras
|commander1=
|commander2=
|strength1=
|strength2=
|casualties1=
|casualties2=
}}
The Football War was a 6 day War fought by El Salvador and Honduras in 1969 . It really had little to do about soccer, but about the cultural differences between Hondurans and Salvadorans and the fact that Salvadorans, more aggressive in their business acumen, were illegally immigrating into Honduran territory. Hondurans resented Salvadorans for being better at business and for sneaking into Honduras.

The social situation in both of the countries in the run-up to the war was explosive, and their military governments were looking for a convenient cause towards which to direct their nationals' political concerns. National media in both countries encouraged hatred towards citizens of the other, eventually provoking the expulsion from Honduras of thousands of Salvadoran labourers, including both temporary harvest workers and longer-term settlers.

This general rise in tensions ultimately led to a military conflict that served to direct the attention of the citizenry of both countries outward rather than in on their own internal affairs, leaving both armies rearmed, and destroying the Central American economic integration that had been expressed in the Central American Common Market (''Mercado Común Centroamericano'' or MCE), under whose trade rules the richer Salvadoran economy gained much ground relative to Honduras.

These existing tensions between the two countries were inflamed by rioting during the second qualifying round for the 1970 Football World Cup . On July 14 , 1969 , the Salvadoran army launched an attack against Honduras. The Organization Of American States negotiated a cease-fire which took effect on July 20 , with the Salvadoran troops withdrawn in early August .

The conflict took place against a backdrop of deeper historically significant issues for both Honduras and El Salvador, and was not merely the product of overly zealous fans or nationalist sentiments. The root of the conflict was a geographic and demographic rift that had developed within the society of El Salvador over land use. Rich landowners controlled the majority of farmable land in El Salvador, which over time resulted in the migration of poor Peasant s into a borderland that El Salvador shared with neighboring Honduras.

In 1969, Honduras decided to distribute the land to Honduran peasants thereby evicting the Salvadoran peasants, who had lived on the land for generations.. This triggered a mass return of peasants to El Salvador, and created tension that instigated political and social upheaval. Social conservatives in El Salvador were concerned that the returning peasants would strengthen calls for land reform, and military leaders were concerned that if the peasant demands for reform were not met guerrilla movements would arise. It was against this backdrop that the Salvadoran government fought a six-day war with Honduras.

The war ended with a cease-fire prompted by pressure from the United States and the Organization Of American States .

Eleven years later the two nations signed a Peace Treaty on October 30 , 1980 to put the border dispute before the International Court Of Justice .


Football results



Results of the war

  • Essentially both sides 'lost' the war; neither gained a decisive military victory and the death toll of approximately 2000 was shared approximately equally between the two.

  • The war led to a 12-year suspension of the Central American Common Market , a regional integration project that had been set up by the United States largely as a means of counteracting the effects of the Cuban Revolution .

  • The political power of the military in both countries was reinforced. In the Salvadoran legislative elections that followed, candidates from the governing National Conciliation Party (''Partido de Conciliación Nacional'', PCN), were largely drawn from the ranks of the military. Having apologised for their role in the conflict, they proved very successful in elections both at the national and local levels.

  • The social situation worsened in El Salvador as the government proved unable to satisfy the economic needs of citizens deported from Honduras. The resulting social unrest was one of the causes of the Civil War in El Salvador that followed.



The War in the Air

The war is often cited as the last occasion on which piston engined fighters fought each other - both sides deploying former World War II American types. P-51 Mustang s, F4U Corsair s, T-28 Trojan s and even Douglas DC-3 s converted into bombers saw action. The Salvadoran Air Force was so out of shape that they reverted to dropping bombs by hand from the windows of their planes.


References

  • Skidmore, T., and Smith, P. (2001) Modern Latin America (5th edition). New York: Oxford University Press: pg.343



Further reading

Ryszard Kapuściński , a Polish Journalist , wrote a book called ''Wojna futbolowa'' (published as '''''The Soccer War''''' in the United States) in 1978 on his experiences of this conflict.


External links