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As head of one of the more moderate factions of the national directorate of the FSLN, Ortega played a leading role in the military campaign of the Nicaraguan Revolution, which succeeded in overthrowing Somoza in 1979. Ortega became a member of the Junta of National Reconstruction, and its effective head in 1981. The FSLN won the free 1984 elections to the National Assembly and Ortega became president, with 60% of the vote. He inherited an economy in tatters and a hostile external environment when the Republican anti-communist hawk, Ronald Reagan, succeeded the Democrat Jimmy Carter as US president in 1981. Fearing that Nicaragua was becoming a pro-Soviet state, the USA gave backing to counter-revolutionary Contras, who launched attacks on Sandinista forces from land and sea, combined with a trade embargo. This weakened further the economy and polarized politics, and in 1990 Ortega was defeated in the presidential elections by US-backed Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, a former member of the 1979 junta. Ortega became secretary general of the FSLN in 1991, but despite repackaging himself as a more moderate democratic socialist, he was defeated in the 1996 and 2001 presidential elections, by the conservatives Arnoldo Alemán and Enrique Bolanos respectively.
Red and blue were taken from the arms of Paris. White was the colour of the Bourbon dynasty. Effective date: 5 March 1848.
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