Podcast - The Football War of 1969
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In June 1969, El Salvador and Honduras played three World Cup qualifying matches that spiraled into riots, a national martyr, and ultimately a real shooting war. The underlying causes were decades of tension over immigration, land reform, and poverty, but the soccer matches lit the fuse. After fans on both sides attacked visiting teams, burned flags, and killed spectators, El Salvador invaded Honduras on July 14th with World War II-era planes and tanks. The “100 Hour War” killed thousands, displaced up to 300,000 people, and featured the last propeller-plane dogfights in military history. The Football War proved that sports rivalries can mask deeper conflicts, and that when politicians use nationalism as a weapon, everyone loses.
This is an episode of “Wait, That Actually Happened?” a podcast exploring history’s most unbelievable true stories.
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