Army leaders attacked Mexico, so Mexico fought back.
Army leaders attacked Mexico, so Mexico fought back.
The world situation was the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Soviets had started to build an arsenal of missiles on the island. The US feared medium and long-range missiles could be launched against North and South America, meaning US, Canada, Mexico, and as far as Peru.
The time between the Fall of Tenochtitlan (1521) and the end of the Mexican War of Independence (1821) when Mexico became an overseas colony of Spain in the New World.
It first started in the 1986 World cup in Mexico. Hence the Mexican wave
It first started in the 1986 World cup in Mexico. Hence the Mexican wave
It is sometimes called the word's greatest political editorial because it started and encouraged the independence movement all around the world. It helped gain a wide based support for independence from all sections of society.
The U.S. deciding to drop 4 billion atomic bombs on Mexico and blowing up the world to stop the mexicans from immigrating illegally.
You mean military allies? It depends on the specific situation, but it is very unlikely. The only time when Mexico and the US had such kind of alliance was during World War Two.
It didn't; at least not directly. Haiti was a French colony in the Caribbean, while Mexico was considered a territory of the Spanish Crown. What Haiti's independence did for the rest of the colonies in the Americas is that everyone else figured that if a slave revolt resulted in a successful independence war against a world power like France, it would be much easier to fight an already failing power like Spain (it didn't).
It started world war 69
Yes. Chocolate Abuelita originally started in Mexico since 1940 by Chocolates La Azteca. It was bought by Nestle and imported around the world in 1995.