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Jose "Pepe" Figueres Ferrer (1906-90), a moderate socialist, was
elected president of Costa Rica in 1953. Dictatorial president Anastasio Somoza
(1896-1956) of Nicaragua claimed that members of the Caribbean Legion, a group
of political exiles from Caribbean nations, participated in a plot to
assassinate him with Figueres's help (the legion had backed Figueres in his
election); Somoza apparently made plans to retaliate and supported Rafael
Calderon Guardia (1900-70), a disgruntled former president of Costa Rica, who
led a band of rebels south from Nicaragua and seized the northern Costa Rican
border town of villa Quesada on the Pan American Highway (January 11, 1955).
Figueres immediately appealed to the Organization of American States to
investigate; its commission discovered that the rebels' supplies and war
material were coming from Nicaragua. As soon as this was publicly announced,
Nicaragua ceased supporting the rebels, who were mostly Costa Ricans. Meanwhile,
the United States had sold four fighter planes to Costa Rica. Some heavy
fighting occurred in several towns, but the rebels were no match for the
popularly backed government forces and were driven north over the border into
Nicaragua. In early 1956, Costa Rica and Nicaragua agreed to cooperate in a
surveillance of their border.
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