Farms and Frontlines
In 1901, the Guatemalan government hired the United Fruit Company to deliver its mail. It seemed like a practical arrangement — a cash-strapped government, a well-organized American company with logistics infrastructure already in place across the Caribbean. Attached to the contract were land grants. Small parcels, at first. By 1950, United Fruit owned 42% of all Guatemalan land. 85% of it sat uncultivated. In this episode, Max and Jess trace how a postal contract became the foundation of an economic empire — and how that empire, when threatened by a democratic land reform law, triggered the CIA's first successful coup d'état. We cover the concession system that built El Pulpo, the October Revolution that briefly interrupted it, Jacobo Árbenz and Decree 900, Edward Bernays and the manufacture of a Cold War emergency, and Operation PB Success — the covert operation that reversed it all in a matter of days. We also follow the thread forward. From Bananagate to a 2024 federal jury finding Chiquita Brands liable for funding a paramilitary death squad in Colombia, the structural logic that organized United Fruit's operations in Central America didn't disappear when the Marines went home. It traveled. The Banana Wars officially ended in 1934. Guatemala shows what that actually meant. Farms and Frontlines is supported by our newsletter at farmsandfrontlines.substack.com [farmsandfrontlines.substack.com] — sources, photos, maps, and more for every episode.
39 episodios
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