Manuel Noriega (Romanian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Manuel Noriega" in Romanian language version.

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bnf.fr

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dea.gov

  • „1985–1990”. DEA History Book. Drug Enforcement Administration. Arhivat din original la . Accesat în .  Mai multe valori specificate pentru |lucrare= și |work= (ajutor)

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lanacion.com.ar

  • La Nación, , accesat în  

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theguardian.com

  • Tisdall, Simon (). „Why Manuel Noriega became America's most wanted”. The Guardian. London. 
  • Tran, Mark (). „Manuel Noriega: from US friend to foe”. The Guardian. London. Noriega was recruited as a CIA informant while studying at a military academy in Peru. He received intelligence and counterintelligence training at the School of the Americas at Fort Gulick, Panama, in 1967, as well as a course in psychological operations at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He was to remain on the CIA payroll until February 1988 ... Noriega made himself valuable to the US during the Contra wars when he allowed the US to set up listening posts in Panama and by helping the US campaign against the leftist Sandinista regime in Nicaragua. Noriega allowed Panama to be used as a conduit for US money and weapons for the Contras as then US president Ronald Reagan sought to undermine the Sandinistas. But Noriega's increasing brutality turned him into a liability, especially after the assassination of Hugo Spadafora, a political opponent who was found beheaded in 1985. 
  • Tran, Mark (). „Manuel Noriega from US friend to foe”. The Guardian. London. Accesat în .  Mai multe valori specificate pentru |lucrare= și |work= (ajutor)

time.com

time.com

content.time.com

  • Ghosh, Bobby. „Who's Who on the CIA Payroll”. Time. the most infamous CIA asset of them all was the former dictator of Panama ... He had agency connections going back to the 1950s, but the relationship solidified in the 1970s, when he was on the payroll. Upon taking power, he allowed the U.S. to set up listening posts in Panama and is believed to have served as a conduit for U.S. funds to Nicaraguan contra rebels fighting the leftist Sandinista government. The U.S. looked the other way as Noriega established what would be described as a "narco-kleptocracy," but the relationship eventually soured and the U.S. invasion of 1989 ended his rule. 

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