October 21, 1983 – U.S. Invasion of Grenada: The United States is asked to intervene in Grenada

On October 21, 1983, the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States asked the United States to intervene militarily in Grenada, fearing that the political instability in that island could spread across the Caribbean region.  The United States Armed Forces then revised its plan from an evacuation to include an invasion of Grenada.

Diagram showing location of Grenada in the Caribbean Sea and just north of the South American mainland. Grenada consists of the main island (Grenada) and six very small islands located in its northern and southern ends.

The U.S. military identified three targets for the invasion: Point Salines, Pearls Airport in Grenville, and St. George’s.  Just before dawn on October 25, 1983, a battalion of U.S. Rangers was airdropped at the Point Salines Airport construction site.  The soldiers succeeded in taking control of the facility.  The Rangers originally were planned to be landed by plane; the plan was aborted when U.S. reconnaissance detected that the airport runway was littered with obstacles.  The anti-aircraft gunfire from the Grenadian defenses was silenced by strikes from U.S. helicopter gunships.  The U.S. Rangers soon secured and cleared the Point Salines Airport site, allowing American planes to land more troops, weapons, and supplies.

(Taken from U.S. Invasion of GrenadaWars of the 20th Century – Volume 2)

Background Grenada is a small island country located in the southeastern section of the Caribbean Sea (Map 36).  In 1974, the country gained its independence from the United Kingdom and thereafter experienced a period of political unrest starting with the contentious general elections of 1976.  After the 1976 elections, a government was formed, which imposed repressive policies to curb political opposition and dissent.  Then on March 13, 1979, communist politicians staged a coup that overthrew the government.

A socialist government was formed led by Maurice Bishop, who took the position of prime minister.  The new government opened diplomatic relations with communist countries.  In particular, Grenada became allied with Cuba and the Soviet Union, and supported their foreign policy initiatives.  Prime Minister Bishop dissolved the Grenadian constitution, banned elections and multi-party politics, and suppressed free expression and all forms of dissent.

The government began many social and economic projects, which ultimately proved successful.  For instance, sound financial policies allowed Grenada’s economy to grow and reduce the country’s dependence on imported goods.  The government made major advances in upgrading the educational system, health care, and socialized housing programs.  Public infrastructure projects were implemented.

Despite being officially socialist, the Grenadian government maintained its traditional ties to the West.  Grenada retained its British Commonwealth membership, with Queen Elizabeth II as its symbolic head of state, and the British-inherited position of Governor General being maintained.  Western foreign investments were encouraged, and investors from the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada – among other countries – operated freely in the islands.  Foreign tourists, who brought in substantial revenues to the local economy, were welcomed by the Grenadian government.

However, hardliners in Grenada’s communist party (called the New Jewel Movement) disagreed with Prime Minister Bishop’s double-sided policies.  They demanded that he step down from office or agree to rule jointly with staunch communist party members.  Prime Minister Bishop rejected both suggestions.  On October 12, 1983, the communist hardliners overthrew the government in a coup, and Prime Minister Bishop and other high-ranking government officials were arrested and jailed.  A military council was formed to rule the country.

Widespread street protests and demonstrations broke out as a result of the coup, as Prime Minister Bishop was extremely popular with the people.  The protesters demanded that Bishop be set free.  Bishop’s military captors acquiesced, and released the ex-prime minister.  But in the ensuing chaos, government troops opened fire on the protesters, killing perhaps up to a hundred persons.  Bishop and other top government officials were rounded up and executed by firing squad.

The U.S. administration of President Ronald Reagan, following the events in Grenada with grave concern, believed that Cuba had planned the overthrow of Prime Minister Bishop’s moderately socialist government in order to install a staunchly communist regime.  The United States believed that Cuba would then take full control of Grenada.  Four years earlier in 1979, when the Grenadian communists took over power, U.S. president Jimmy Carter’s government had moved diplomatically to isolate Grenada by stopping U.S. military support and discouraging Americans from travelling there.

But President Reagan took an aggressive approach against Grenada: he ordered joint military exercises and mock amphibious operations in U.S.-allied countries in the Caribbean region.  He also warned of Soviet-Cuban expansionism in the Western Hemisphere.  Of particular concern to President Reagan was the construction of an airport at Point Salines at the southern tip of Grenada, which the U.S. military believed would be a Soviet airbase because its extended runway could land big, long-range Russian bombers.  The U.S. government surmised that the Soviets planned to use Grenada as a forward base to supply communists in Central America, i.e. the Sandinista government in Nicaragua and the communist rebels in El Salvador and Guatemala.  Increasing the Americans’ suspicion was the presence of Cuban construction workers at the Point Salines site – after the war, the U.S. military learned that these were Cuban Army soldiers.

However, the Grenadian government insisted that the Point Salines facility would be used as an international airport for commercial airliners.  As diplomatic relations deteriorated between the United States and Grenada, President Reagan ordered the evacuation of American citizens living in Grenada, the majority of whom were the 800 medical students enrolled at the American-owned St. George’s University.  The U.S. government feared for the safety of the students, as the Grenadian Army had posted soldiers at the school grounds and a nighttime curfew had been imposed on the island, with a shoot-to-kill order imposed against violators.  As commercial flights to Grenada were cancelled already, President Reagan decided that the U.S. Armed Forces should implement the evacuation.

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