CUBA
- 1898—Spanish-American War
- 1902—Independence (Platt Amendment)
- 1900-30—US “penetration” of Cuban economy and politics (military occupation, financial “advisors”)
- 1925-33—Gerardo Machado
- 1926—Fidel Castro born
- 1933—Grau San Martin (“aborted revolution”)
- 1933-44—Fulgencio Batista
- 1944-52—elected civilian presidents (Garu and Prio Socarras)
- 1952-59—Batista (1952 coup cancelled elections with Castro as a candidate for legislature)
- July 26, 1953—Moncada Assault
- 160 with Castro—most captured or killed
- Castro’s “History Will Absolve Me” speech at his trial
- May, 1955—Castro released from jail—Castro goes to Mexico
- Late-1956—Castro and some 80 followers sail to Cuba on the yacht “Granma”—no over attacks, but begin guerrilla warfare
- Dec., 1958-Jan., 1959—Batista resigns and Castro comes to power
- US-Cuban/Castro relations (early ‘60s)
- 1957—US realizes Batista is a liability but opposes Castro
- 1958—classic case of conservative modernization
- Relatively advanced economically (ranked 4th in L.A. in GNPpc)
- Very economically dependent on US
- Severe problems with equity
- Jan., 1959—US recognizes Castro
- Feb., 1960—Soviet-Cuban trade pact
- March, 1960—CIA begins invasion plans
- Feb.-June, 1960—significant deterioration in US-Cuban relations
- June, 1960—US oil refineries expropriated
- July, 1960—US cancels Cuba’s sugar quota—Castro begins to turn to USSR
- Oct., 1960—Eisenhower bans all US exports to Cuba, except medical
- Jan., 1961—US breaks relations
- April, 1961—Bay of Pigs
- Sept., 1961—US prohibits aid to countries trading with Cuba
- Dec., 1961—Castro declares himself a Marxist-leninist
- Jan., 1962—OAS expels Cuba
- Early-1962—US bans importation of any products of Cuban origin (or even partial Cuban origin)
- Nov., 1962—Cuban missile crisis
- April, 1980—Mariel emigration
- Differing Views
- Links
- National Geographic article
- National Geographic pictures
- “Either a ruthless revolutionary took power in 1959, seized American corporate property, forced out his country’s own professional classes, and silenced all opposition by creating a totalitarian police state”
- “Or a brilliant revolutionary led the overthrow of a corrupt dictatorship, shook off the colonialism of foreign companies and the Mafia, brought literacy and health care and egalitarian values to a mobilized people, and created a university-educated bastion of socialism in spite of a half century of U.S. efforts to destroy it by prohibiting Americans from doing business with or spending tourist money in Cuba.”
- OVERVIEW
- Characteristics of the Revolution
- Nationalization, central economic planning, agrarian reform
- Basic needs—education and health
- Foreign policy—“Exporting the Revolution”? Venezuela—Che Guevera and Bolivia (Oct., 1967)—Africa (mid-1970s)
- Political repression (CDRs)
- Importance of Fidel
- Relations with the Soviets (sugar for oil)
- Justification for revolution? Exhaust legal means?
- Socialization process for Castro (growing frustrations—and exhausting legal means?)
- 1933 Grau
- 1944-52
- 1952 coup
- Rationale for US retaliatory actions
- Expropriations of US property
- Anti-US sentiments in Cuba
- Growing contacts with Soviet bloc
- Political repression
- Radicalization of the Cuban Revolution
- Reaction to Batista system
- Base of the Revolution in the lower class (workers and peasants)
- Retaliation of the private sector and of the US
- Why was Socialist Revolution Possible in Cuba?
- Dependency
- Socialization process
- Unique (at the time) guerrilla movement