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With the support of the army and several left-wing political parties, liberal
colonel Jacobo Arbenz Guzman (1913-1971) was elected president of Guatemala in
1950. He later signed a communist-backed agrarian reform law (1952),
expropriating the property of big private land-owners, including the United
Fruit Company. In March 1954, the United States and several Latin American
nations met at an inter-American conference and condemned the increasing
communist movement in the Western Hemisphere. soon a Polish ship landed
communist-made arms in Guatemala, while the United States sent arms to Honduras
and Nicaragua for their defense. On June 18, 1954, a 2,000-man anti-communist
army under Lieutenant Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas (1914-57) invaded Guatemala
from Honduras and quickly penetrated the country, encountering little resistance
from Arbenz's army. The Guatemalan government sought help from the United
Nations Security Council and from the Soviets, and the Organization of American
States began an investigation into the conflict. But before the international
bodies made any decisions, Arbenz was ousted (June 28, 1954) and fled to Mexico;
the capital, Guatemala City, was occupied by Castillo Armas, who became head of
a ruling junta and later was elected president.
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