20.1.15

Relations with Cuba

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Soviet and US Relations With Cuba

Before the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, the USA's relationship with Cuba was strained.

The Cuban Revolution

The Cuban Revolution

  • In 1959 there was a revolution in Cuba and the country became communist.
  • The USA refused to recognise the new leader Castro and his new government.
  • Cuba began to build economic links with the USSR instead of the USA.
    • It began to trade Cuban Sugar for Soviet oil.
Assassination

Assassination

  • The USA did not like having a communist country so close to them.
  • They refused to recognise the government of Fidel Castro (the revolutionary who took power in 1959).
  • The CIA (Central Intelligence Agency) unsuccessfully tried to assassinate him.
    • The CIA convinced American President JF Kennedy, that they needed to invade Cuba for national security.
The Bay of Pigs

The Bay of Pigs

  • At the Bay of Pigs on the 17th April 1961, America invaded Cuba.
  • The CIA told Kennedy that the invasion would look like a Cuban revolt.
    • It would be carried out by trained Cuban exiles and old-style, disguised US planes.
  • The USA believed Castro’s control of the island was weak.
The invasion

The invasion

  • The 1,400 US-backed soldiers were met by an army of 20,000 Cubans.
  • The US-backed Cuban exiles surrendered.
  • Castro had found out about the invasion in advance and the planes were recognised as American from photographs.
Consequences

Consequences

  • The incident ended the chances of a good relationship between Cuba and the USA.
    • Fidel Castro’s communist rule of Cuba was there to stay.
  • The USA was totally discredited because it had supported illegal acts (an armed rebellion against a country’s government).
    • Kennedy was embarrassed and his position was weakened.
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