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On June 17, 1954 - 50 years ago this Thursday - about 150 insurgents crossed the border into Guatemala from Honduras.
Within days, CIA bombers were strafing the capital, Guatemala City, and agency propagandists were broadcasting fake reports about rebel battlefield triumphs.
On June 27, the elected president fled the country, never to return. Arbenz's three-year rule was best known for its ambitious land-reform program. With his departure, Washington no longer had to worry that his social-reform ideas could inspire a peasant rebellion in neighboring countries.
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For Guatemala, it was a prelude to a tragic civil war that was to last 30 years. About 200,000 Guatemalans died, largely because of the excesses of the Guatemalan military. A postwar independent commission concluded that the military had committed "acts of genocide," mostly against the country's indigenous population.
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http://www.journalnow.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WSJ%2FMGArticle%2FWSJ_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1031776024129&path=!nationworld&s=1037645509161The time has really come for us to assimilate the lessons of this history. If we want a peaceful world, the US cannot toy with other people's lives in this way.