of “national pride” was marshaled to provoke and justify a war. However, just focusing
on national differences, in this case, is a shallow and incomplete understanding, as we
shall see. In 1969, El Salvador and Honduras played two games of football (“soccer”)
in the qualifying stages for the 1970 World Cup finals (see Kapuscinski, 1992,
pp. 157–84, for a full narrative of this conflict). The first game, in Honduras, resulted
in a one-nil victory for the home side. Back in El Salvador, eighteen-year-old Amelia
Bolanios committed suicide in light of the national shame. Her funeral was a national
event, the procession led by the president of El Salvador and his ministers. The return
match in El Salvador was played in an extremely hostile atmosphere; El Salvador
won three-nil. The Honduran team retreated to the airport under armed guard,
their fans were left to their own devices and two were killed as they fled to the El
Salvador–Honduras border. The border was closed in a matter of hours. The Honduran
bombing of El Salvador and military invasion followed shortly afterward. The war lasted
100 hours, 6,000 people were killed and 12,000 wounded; the destruction of villages,
homes and fields displaced approximately 50,000 people.
But are nationalist passions sparked by football matches enough to initiate the horrors
of war? Underlying the tension between El Salvador and Honduras, a tension that easily
aroused national hatred as footballs landed in goal nets, was a struggle for land and
human dignity that crossed an international border (Kapuscinski, 1992, pp. 157–84).
The land of tiny El Salvador, with a very high population density, was owned by just
14 families. In a desperate attempt to obtain land, about 300,000 El Salvadorans had
emigrated, illegally, across the border and established villages. The Honduran peasants
also wanted land reform, but, and backed by the US, the Honduran government
avoided redistributing land owned by its own rich families and the dominant United
Fruit Company. To avoid an internal political struggle, the Honduran government pro-
posed to redistribute the land that the El Salvadorans had settled. The prospect of forced
repatriation from Honduras not only unsettled the migrants, but also rattled the govern-
ment of El Salvador who faced the prospect of a peasant revolt.
Landlessness, monopoly, human dignity, fear of popular rebellion: these mutual
“domestic” issues were intertwined across the porous Honduras–El Salvador border. The
government’s decision to go to war was made within a context of class inequality and
the inequities of land ownership. National humiliation on the football field was merely
the fuse that lit the political tinderbox. International war was deemed a more obvious
solution than altering the domestic status quo.
A more recent consideration of the role of material “needs” and ideological hype in
oiling the movement toward war was evident in
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