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Military history of Mexico - Recent developments |  | Military history of Mexico - Recent developments: Encyclopedia II - Military history of Mexico - Recent developments |  | see Military of Mexico
Military history of Mexico - 1994 Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas.
One recent event in the military history of Mexico is that of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation, which is an armed rebel group that claims to work to promote the rights of the country's indigenous peoples. The Zapatistas had the initial goal of overthrowing the federal government. Short armed clashes in Chiapas ended two weeks after the uprising and there have been no full-scale confrontations ever since ...
See also:Military history of Mexico, Military history of Mexico - Pre–Colonial Era, Military history of Mexico - Spanish Conquest, Military history of Mexico - 19th century, Military history of Mexico - Background to the War of Independence, Military history of Mexico - The War of Independence, Military history of Mexico - Conflicts after independence, Military history of Mexico - Early 20th Century, Military history of Mexico - Mexican Revolution, Military history of Mexico - The Revolution, Military history of Mexico - World War I Era, Military history of Mexico - Mid 20th Century, Military history of Mexico - Cristero War, Military history of Mexico - World War II, Military history of Mexico - Recent developments, Military history of Mexico - 1994 Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas, Military history of Mexico - Hurricane Katrina, Military history of Mexico - Timeline |  | | Military history of Mexico, Military history of Mexico - 1994 Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas, Military history of Mexico - 19th century, Military history of Mexico - Background to the War of Independence, Military history of Mexico - Conflicts after independence, Military history of Mexico - Cristero War, Military history of Mexico - Early 20th Century, Military history of Mexico - Hurricane Katrina, Military history of Mexico - Mexican Revolution, Military history of Mexico - Mid 20th Century, Military history of Mexico - Pre–Colonial Era, Military history of Mexico - Recent developments, Military history of Mexico - Spanish Conquest, Military history of Mexico - The Revolution, Military history of Mexico - The War of Independence, Military history of Mexico - Timeline, Military history of Mexico - World War I Era, Military history of Mexico - World War II, History of Mexico, Hernán Cortés, Miguel Hidalgo, Benito Juárez, José María Morelos, Antonio López de Santa Anna, Emiliano Zapata, Ignacio Zaragoza, Rurales |  | |
|  |  | Military history of Mexico: Encyclopedia II - Military history of Mexico - Recent developments
Military history of Mexico - Recent developments
see Military of Mexico
Military history of Mexico - 1994 Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas
One recent event in the military history of Mexico is that of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation, which is an armed rebel group that claims to work to promote the rights of the country's indigenous peoples. The Zapatistas had the initial goal of overthrowing the federal government. Short armed clashes in Chiapas ended two weeks after the uprising and there have been no full-scale confrontations ever since. The federal government instead pursued a policy of low-intensity warfare with para-military groups in an attempt to control the rebellion, while the Zapatistas developed a media campaign through numerous newspaper comunicados and over time a set of six "Declarations of the Lacandonian Jungle", with no further military or terrorist actions on their part. A strong international Internet presence has prompted the adherence to the movement of numerous leftist international groups.
President Ernesto Zedillo (1994-2000) refused most of the demands of the rebels.
Military history of Mexico - Hurricane Katrina
Main article: Mexican response to Hurricane Katrina
In September 2005 Mexican army convoys traveled to the U.S. to help in the Hurricane Katrina relief effort. Mexican army convoys and a navy ship laden with food, supplies and specialists traveled to the United States including military specialists, doctors, nurses and engineers carrying water treatment plants, mobile kitchens, food and blankets. The convoy represents the first Mexican military unit to operate on U.S. soil since 1846, when Mexican troops briefly marched into Texas, which had separated from Mexico and joined the United States. All of the convoy's participants were unarmed.
Recently, controversy has also sparked due to Mexico's involvement of sending troops to United Nations forces.
Other related archives11 January, 17 August, 1810, 1823, 1847, 1848, 1862, 1884, 18th, 1910, 1914, 1917, 1927, 1942, 19th centuries, Agustín de Iturbide, Allied Powers, Allies, Allies of World War II, Anahuac Valley, Anastasio Bustamante, Antonio José de Sucre, Antonio López de Santa Anna, April 28, April 9, Arizona, August 24, Austria, Axis Powers, Azcapotzalco, Aztec, Aztec Empire, Aztec gods, Aztecs, Battle of Chapultepec, Battle of Gonzales, Battle of Monterrey, Battle of Puebla, Battle of San Jacinto, Belize City, Benito Juarez, Benito Juárez, Bourbon, Brazil, Britain, British Honduras, Buena Vista, California, California Republic, Campeche, Cannibalism, Carlota of Habsburg, Caste War, Caste War of Yucatán, Cerro Gordo, Chan Santa Cruz, Chapultepec, Charles Baudin, Charles IV, Chiapas, Chichimeca, Christ, Cinco de Mayo, Coahuila y Tejas, Colorado, Columbus, New Mexico, Conquistadores, Constituent Congress, Constitution of 1857, Constitution of 1917, Creoles, Cristero War, Cristeros, Córdoba, Veracruz, Dwight Whitney Morrow, El Escuadron 201, Emiliano Zapata, Emperor, Ernesto Zedillo, February 1, February 2, February 22, February 5, First World War, France, Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, Francisco I. Madero, French during their intervention in Mexico, French intervention in Mexico, Gadsden Purchase, Germany, Gonzales, Great Britain, Guadalupe Victoria, Gulf, Habsburg, Hernán Cortés, History of Mexico, Houston, Hurricane Katrina, Ignacio Comonfort, Ignacio Zaragoza, January 1, January 13, John D. Sloat, John Pershing, José María Morelos, José Sánchez del Río, José de San Martín, Juan Bautista de Pomar, Juan de Grijalva, La Adelita, La Bahía, Lake Texcoco, Latin America, Latin American, Los Angeles, Louis-Philippe, Maximilian I of Mexico, Maximilian of Habsburg, May 22, May 5, Maya, Mexican Empire, Mexican Revolution, Mexican War of Independence, Mexican military, Mexican response to Hurricane Katrina, Mexican-American War, Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico's struggle for independence, Miguel Barbachano, Miguel Hidalgo, Miguel Pro, Military of Mexico, Monroe Doctrine, Mérida, Nahuas, Napoleon, Napoleon I, Napoleon III, Napoleonic Wars, New Mexico, New Orleans, Louisiana, November 20, Old World, Orizaba, Our Lady of Guadalupe, Pancho Villa, Pancho Villa Expedition, Pascual Orozco, Pastry War, Plan de Casa Mata, Plan de Iguala, Plan de San Luis Potosí, Plan of San Luis Potosí, Plutarco Elías Calles, Porfirio Díaz, Pre-Columbian, President, Puebla, Querétaro, Reform War, Republic of Texas, Revolution of Ayutla, Rio Grande, Robert F. Stockton, Roman Catholic Church, Rurales, Sam Houston, San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas, San Diego, San Juan de Ulúa, Santa Anna, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Second World War, September 13, September 16, Siege of Veracruz, Simón Bolívar, Soldaderas, Spain, Spanish, Spanish conquest of Mexico, Stephen W. Kearny, Tampico Affair, Tampico, Tamaulipas, Tenochtitlan, Tenochtitlán, Texas, Texas Revolution, Texcoco, Tlacopan, Treaty of Cahuenga, Treaty of Córdoba, Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, U.S., U.S. invasion, U.S. state, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, United States of America, Valley of Mexico, Venustiano Carranza, Veracruz, Vicente Guerrero, Victoriano Huerta, War of Independence, War of Reform, War of the Reform, William Lamport, Winfield Scott, World War II, Wyoming, Yucatán, Zapatista Army of National Liberation, Zimmermann Telegram, armed conflicts, civil war, constitutional convention, corridos, coup d'état, diseases, during its French occupation, excommunicated, flower war, flower wars, founding father, heroes, independence, internal conflict of early rulers, martyrdom, mercenaries, mestizo, military history, monarchy, nomadic, pandemic, pastry, prime minister, relief effort, republic, sacrificed, several millenia, smallpox, soldiers, the Alamo, women, young Military College cadets, Álvaro Obregón
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Recent developments", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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