List of United States foreign interventions since 1945
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
This is a list of United States interventions since 1945. The list is incomplete. There is only limited historical context. You can help with checking if any of the alleged actions are true, provide historical context, and add events that are not in the list. Whether the additions should be put in the list directly or have articles that discuss the events is left to the contributor.
- Alleged US support to Portugese dictator Salazar, 1930's to 1974.
- Rebuilding of Japan 1946-1952 after World War II
- US provides military aid to right-wing forces battling communist insurgents in Greece in 1947.
- Central Intelligence Agency involvement in Italian elections, involving propaganda and the alleged buying of votes, in order to prevent the Communist Party of Italy coming to power, in 1948.
- Marshall Plan 1948-1951
- Involvement in UN-led Korean War from 1950 until 1953.
- After Mohammed Mossadeq usurped control of Iran CIA and MI-6 reinstated Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in 1953 (Operation Ajax) [1]. The Shah led Iran in a period of strong economic growth. He gave women the vote, and redistributed land to farmers. Eventually the regime became unpopular and autocratic and was overthrown in the 1979 revolution.
- CIA-orchestrated overthrow of Jacobo Arbenz Guzmán in Guatemala (Operation PBSUCCESS) - 1954.
- US support for Ngo Dinh Diem of Vietnam from 1955 - 1963. [2]
- US support for Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista until his overthrow in 1959.
- Alleged US support to the Apartheid in South Africa].
- Alleged US-backed establishment of François Duvalier as dictator of Haiti. [3] [4]
- US-backed abortive Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba in 1961.
- Alleged CIA assassination of Congo's democratically elected leader, Patrice Lumumba. [5]
- Alleged CIA involvement in the 1961 Canadian election.
- US support of Ba'ath Party coup in Iraq in 1963; support for dictator Saddam Hussein until 1990, including during Iran-Iraq war (where chemical weapons were used against Iran). [6]
- Alleged CIA-backed overthrow of Juan Bosch, the democratically elected leader of the Dominican Republic. [7]
- Alleged CIA-backed overthrow of Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra of Ecuador in 1963.
- Alleged CIA-backed overthrow of Joao Goulart in Brazil in 1964, CIA training for its death squads. [8]
- Alleged CIA-backed overthrow of Sukarno in Indonesia in 1965, contributing to estimated deaths of one million suspected Communists. [9]
- Vietnam War - (1964-1975) - contributing to estimated deaths of three million Vietnamese.
- Bombing campaigns against Laos, with more US bombs dropped than during all of World War Two, from 1964 - 1975.
- Alleged CIA-backed military coup brings dictator Mobutu Sese Seko to power in the Congo in 1965.
- Alleged CIA support to military coup against Ghanese leader Kwame Nkrumah in 1966.
- Alleged CIA-backed military coup ushers in Regime of the Colonels in Greece in 1967.
- American support for Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War and the 1982 Lebanon War.
- Alleged CIA-organised military operation ends in execution of Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1968.
- Alleged CIA-supported coup against Prince Sihanouk in Cambodia in 1970.
- Alleged CIA-supported military coup against President Juan Torres of Bolivia in 1971.
- American support for Pakistan in the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War.
- Alleged CIA corruption of the 1972 Australian election.
- CIA support for the military coup led by Augusto Pinochet in Chile - 1973. [10] [11] [12] [13][14]
- CIA support for UNITA rebels in Angola, from 1976 - 1984.
- Alleged corruption of 1976 Portugese Election.
- Alleged corruption of 1976 Jamaican Election.
- Alleged support to ousted Khmer Rouge, from 1979 - 1993
- Following overthrow of the dictator Samosa in Nicaragua by the Sandinistas, the CIA supports the Contras from 1979 - 1989. Nicaragua still has not received the U.S. restitutions for military and paramilitary activities as ruled by the International Court of Justice and as supported by a United Nations General Assembly resolution. [16]
- Alleged American intervention in civil war in Yemen, from 1979 - 1984.
- NAWAPA water project.
- CIA support for death-squads in El Salvador throughout the 1980s. [17]
- Training of Nicaraguan Contras and support to repressive regimes in Honduras during the 1980s.
- Alleged CIA support to Gwangju Massacre in 1980.
- Alleged CIA and South African backing to a coup attempt in the Seychelles in 1981.
- US invasion of Grenada, overthrow of Marxist government (Operation Urgent Fury) - 1983.
- US support to coup against Timoci Bavrada, democratically elected Prime Minister of Fiji in 1987.
- US invasion of Panama, overthrow of Manuel Noriega (Operation Just Cause) - 1989.
- UN-led Gulf War following Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
- US support for UN-led sanctions against Iraq, resulting in the estimated deaths of over one million civilians, from 1990 to 2003.
- The Helms-Burton Law against Cuba.
- US intervention in Somalia to assist UN food aid delivery. 1993
- NATO bombing of Bosnian Serbs. Led to the end of the Bosnian Civil War. 1995
- US-led bombing campaign, called Operation Desert Fox, against Iraq in enforcement of the UN designated No-Fly zones created to protect Kurds and Marsh Arabs. 1998
- US bombing of Afghanistan in 1998.
- US bombing of the Al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory in Sudan - in 1998.
- NATO's bombing of Serbia in the Kosovo Conflict. Officially aimed at preventing ethnic cleansing of Albanians. 1999
- US invasion of Afghanistan, overthrow of Taliban in 2001.
- The Hague Invasion Act, 2002.
- Alleged CIA-backed abortive coup against democratically-elected President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela in 2002. [18]
- US Invasion of Iraq, overthrow of Saddam Hussein - 2003
- American support in the overthrow of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide of Haiti in 2004. (see: 2004 Haiti rebellion)
As well as these military interventions the United States also pursued and gained economic controls over many developing states. Some claim that the International Monetary Fund and World Bank assisted American foreign policy in this area. (If correct, this would also require implicit co-operation of other countries, as the US has only 18% of the IMF's voting rights. [19])
Furthermore, the United States has provided continued military support for repressive regimes, including those of Saudi Arabia, Colombia, Pakistan and Egypt.
See also: Military history of the United States, History of United States imperialism, List of Soviet actions since 1945 that have been considered imperialistic
External links
- A Hemisphere of Our Own: U.S. Foreign Policy in Central America - 2 Hours Talk by Noam Chomsky at UC Berkeley - RealAudio format.
- Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad, 1798-1993 by Ellen C. Collier, Specialist in U.S. Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division
- United States Military Campaigns, Conflicts, Expeditions and Wars Compiled by Larry Van Horn, U.S. Navy Retired
- Basic Statistics for United States Imperialism
- US interventions in Latin America
- When foreign intervention is justified: Women under the Taliban
- What A Wonderful World - Bowling for Columbine source material.