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Manuel Noriega | The Dictator's Playbook

As a young man, Manuel Noriega faced discrimination that prevented him from achieving his dreams. But he persevered, rising through the military to become the country’s chief of intelligence—and then, its military dictator. He spied for the United States, which saw him as a valuable contributor in its battle against communism—but in the end, his money laundering, drug trafficking, and political crimes brought a sudden end to his dictatorship.

The Road to Dictatorship

  • As a young army colonel, Noriega found a mentor in General Omar Torrijos, who later seized power in a military coup—with Noriega’s help.
  • Noriega took power for himself after Torrijos died in a mysterious plane crash in 1981. He assumed the top position in the military, effectively ruling the country alongside a series of puppet presidents.
  • Noriega used his position to eliminate his enemies, attack the press and enrich himself through blatant criminal activities.
  • When he no longer served the interests of the United States, the US captured him in an invasion—its largest since the Vietnam War.

Dig Deeper: After the Fall

Noriega’s overthrow in 1989 ended the decades-long stranglehold that Panama’s military had on the country. In order to ensure a peaceful, stable transition to democracy, Panama took a number of bold steps. The new government declared publicly that it would follow the rules of international law. Panama began regular, free elections. And after his election in 1994, President Ernesto Pérez Balladares vowed to fight drug trafficking and corruption, hallmarks of Noriega’s regime. The country also abolished its military—helping to end the violence that had long plagued Panamanian citizens and creating a safeguard against another military coup. Today, 25 years after these changes, Panama remains a stable democracy.

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Fernande Dalal

Update: 2024-08-09