Central America Travel

Rodrigo De Bastidas is said to have discovered the isthmus area and the San Blas area belonging to the Kuna indians.

He was sailing with Columbus on his second voyage in 1501 from the eastern region of Columbia to the west towards Panama.

The goal was to further explore the Caribbean coastline along the Caribbean Basin.  Due to the poor condition of Columbus’ ships he was forced to return to Santo Domingo for repairs.

Bastidas wanted to reach La Punta de Manzanillo on Panama’s upper Caribbean coast and after this he had to abandon his discovery as well. For this reason, he is accepted to be the first to have discovered the isthmus area including the San Blas area.

Before the Europeans came to settle in the area there were the Chocoan, Chibchan, and Cueva tribes and among them the last tribe was the largest in terms of population.

It was a year after this when Christopher Columbus sailed North of the isthmus to the modern day Central American states of Costa Rica and the Honduras.

It was Columbus who mapped the entire area unlike Bastidas and he also further explored the western areas of Panama. Columbus landed at a place that is today known as the Almirante.

He traveled further towards the territory that he named Veragua and this word means to “see water”.

He further traveled up to the Chagres River and took shelter in a natural bay that would in future be a very important port for Spain in 1597.

Columbus ended his series of explorations at del Retrete that was just a little distance away from Pamama.

Vasco Núñez de Balboa,traveled a greater more tortuous route from the Atlantic to the Pacific in the year 1513 and he named it the South Sea that would later be renamed as the Pacific Ocean.

Panama History – A Brief Overview

The history of Panama has been formed by its location between the Caribbean Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

The indigenous tribes of the Cocole and the Cuevas perished soon after the arrival of the Spaniards in the 16th century with their modern weapons and also the diseases that they carried.

Moreover they ruthlessly looted and plundered the region and there were caravans that were loaded with huge amounts of gold and transported to the galleons to be taken to Spain.

This vast amount of wealth attracted a number of pirate groups and these gangs were found in abundance in Panama’s Caribbean shore and were rampant on the 1700s.

Sailors were so fearful of this strip of land that they preferred to go around the Cape Horn to Peru.

With the passage of time the importance of Panama declined to a great extent and Spain did not contest the country being included as a province that would belong to Colombia, soon after Panama became independent in 1821.

The Modern Day History of Panama

Omar Torrijos Herrera was the commander of the Panamanian National Guard and in 1968 he gained control over the existing government.

He ruled in a dictatorial manner but in spite of his dictatorship he was much respected because it was he who negotiated with the United States the treaty regarding the canal and the Canal Zone to be returned back to Panama.

Omar Torrijos was killed in an airplane crash in western Panama on July 31, 1981. His death deprived Central America of a potential moderating influence when that region was facing increased destabilization, including revolutions in Nicaragua and El Salvador.

His death also created a power vacuum in his own country and ended a twelve-year “dictatorship with a heart,” as Torrijos liked to call his rule.

He was succeeded immediately as Guard commander by the chief of staff, Colonel Florencio Florez Aguilar, a Torrijos loyalist. Although Florez adopted a low profile and allowed President Royo to exercise more of his constitutional authority, Royo soon alienated the Torrijos clique, the private sector, and the Guard’s general staff, all of whom rejected his leadership style and his strongly nationalistic, anti-United States rhetoric.

Royo had become the leader of leftist elements within the government, and he used his position to accuse the United States of hundreds of technical violations in the implementation of the canal treaties.

The general staff considered the Guard to be the country’s principal guarantor of national stability and began to challenge the president’s political authority. Royo attempted to use the PRD as his power base, but the fighting between leftists and conservatives within the party became too intense to control.

Meanwhile, the country’s many and diverse political parties, although discontented with the regime, were unable to form a viable and solid opposition.

Torrijos had been the unifying influence in Panama’s political system. He had kept Royo in the presidency, the PRD functioning, and the Guard united. The groups were loyal to him but distrustful of each other.

Florez completed twenty-six years of military service in March 1982 and was forced to retire. He was replaced by his own chief of staff, General Rubén Darío Paredes, who considered himself to be Torrijos’s rightful successor and the embodiment of change and unity (Torrijos had been grooming Paredes for political office since 1975).

In a press interview, Paredes stated that he had become “what some people sometimes call a strong man.” Without delay the new Guard commander asserted himself in Panamanian politics and formulated plans to run for the presidency in 1984.

Many suspected that Paredes had struck a deal with Colonel Manuel Antonio Noriega Moreno, who had been the assistant chief of staff for intelligence since 1970, whereby Noriega would assume command of the Guard and Paredes would become president in 1984.

Paredes publicly blamed Royo for the rapidly deteriorating economy and the pocketing of millions of dollars from the nation’s social security system by government officials.

In July 1982, growing labor unrest led to an outbreak of strikes and public demonstrations against the Royo administration. Paredes, claiming that “the people wanted change,” intervened to remove Royo from the presidency.

With National Guard backing, Paredes forced Royo and most of his cabinet to resign on July 30, 1982, almost one year to the day after the death of Torrijos. Royo was succeeded by Vice President Ricardo de la Espriella, a United States-educated former banking official.

De la Espriella wasted no time in referring to the National Guard as a “partner in power.”

In August 1982, President de la Espriella formed a new cabinet that included independents and members of the Liberal Party and the PRD; Jorge Illueca Sibauste, Royo’s foreign minister, became the new vice president. Meanwhile, Colonel Armando Contreras became chief of staff of the National Guard.

Colonel Noriega continued to hold the powerful position of assistant chief of staff for intelligence–the Panamanian government’s only intelligence arm.

In December 1982, Noriega became chief of staff of the National Guard.

Continue Reading… History and Discovery of Panama Part 2

Noriega Takes Control…