On Friday October 16, 1981, President Ronald Reagan wrote in his personal diary, "Central America is really the world's next hotspot. Nicaragua is an armed camp supplied by Cuba and threatening a communist takeover of all of Central America." (The Reagan Diaries, 2007) For the next eight years as Commander-in-Chief, this mindset would shape his perspective on the small Third World country about the size of North Carolina. The Administration's policies, actions, and attitudes toward Nicaragua and other perceived hostile nations became known as "Reagan Doctrine." The defeat of the Nicaraguan Revolution became the "cornerstone of the Reagan Central American policy and the test case of Reagan Doctrine." (U.S. Intervention in the Nicaraguan Elections and American Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War Era, 1992)