ISBN-13: 9783565203956 / Angielski / Miękka / 144 str.
"The Soccer War - The 100-hour conflict started by a World Cup match" recounts the events of July 1969, when El Salvador and Honduras went to war after a series of riots during the 1970 FIFA World Cup qualifiers. It is often cited as the ultimate proof of sports fanaticism gone wrong.Historian Manuel Cortez digs deeper, revealing that soccer was merely the spark, not the fuel. The real causes were decades of tension over land reform, immigration, and trade. However, the violence in the stadiums provided the emotional flashpoint that allowed politicians to mobilize armies. The four-day war left thousands dead and displaced."The Soccer War" is a lesson in how sports can become a proxy for nationalism. It deconstructs the myth of the "war over a game" while acknowledging how the passion of the fans was weaponized to launch airstrikes and tank invasions.
The tragic true story of 1969, when a soccer match between El Salvador and Honduras escalated into a full-scale military invasion.