In the 1980s, only six weeks after the Berlin Wall collapse, the tension between the United States and Panama had risen to the highest ever. The United States has a history of intervention in this region to help ensure stability from long before the Panama Canal was founded. Not only did the Panama leaders threaten the United States, but also achieved the survival of the area through the peaceful operation of the canal, the United States intervened in intervening again.
In 1989, the United States invaded Panama and started a strategy called "justice action". The intrusion took place during the George Bush regime which approved the Tenerhos-Carter treaty ten years after Panama's approval to completely manage the canal by the year 2000. During the invasion, the de facto dictator Manuel Noriega has been abolished and invasion came after a long history of military intervention in Panama in the United States. The United States has a large military base in Panama and is there to protect the canal. President Jimmy Carter in the United States of America and de facto Panama leader Omar Torrijos signed a treaty allowing Panama to fully dominate the canal by 2000 and allow the United States to be opened to American ships.
In December 1989, the United States invaded Panama during the military operation code Operation Operation Cause Cause. Following the ratification of the Torrijos-Carter treaty, President George HW Bush started the war in 2000 after transferring the control of the Panama Canal from the United States to Panama. America abolished Manuel Noriega, the de facto Panama leader, general and dictator, took him to the US, Guillermo D'Addara, who was elected president, sworn, the Panama's defense army broke up.
The invasion of Panama involved more than 27,000 American forces, the largest US military strategy since the Vietnam War. The purpose of the intervention known as "justice action" is to protect the lives of 35,000 Americans in the Panama Canal and Panama, and to promote democracy and terminate drug trafficking. In a powerful and sudden attack, the Panamanian defense force was destroyed soon and its leader Manuel Noriega was arrested. In order to force Iraq to leave Kuwait, George Bush formed a large and diverse United Nations and dispatched over 500,000 Americans to the Persian Gulf region as part of the Allied Forces. The success of the Desert Storm operation highlighted the principle of creating a new high water mark in the army and achieving clear and achievable goals with overwhelming power. Alliances and public support are basically maintained throughout the event