Saturday, July 20, 2019
Fidel Castro Essay -- History Biographies Papers
Fidel Castro         In 1959, a rebel, Fidel Castro, overthrew the reign of Fulgencia  Batista in Cuba; a small island 90 miles off the Florida coast.  There have  been many coups and changes of government in the world since then.  Few if  any have had the effect on Americans and American foreign policy as this  one.        In 1952, Sergeant Fulgencia Batista staged a successful bloodless coup  in Cuba . Batista never really had any cooperation and rarely garnered much  support. His reign was marked by continual dissension.        After waiting to see if Batista would be seriously opposed, Washington  recognized his government.  Batista had already broken ties with the Soviet  Union and became an ally to the U.S. throughout the cold war.  He was  continually friendly and helpful to American business interest. But he  failed to bring democracy to Cuba or secure the broad popular support that  might have legitimized his rape of the 1940 Constitution.        As the people of Cuba grew increasingly dissatisfied with his gangster  style politics, the tiny rebellions that had sprouted began to grow.  Meanwhile the U.S. government was aware of and shared the distaste for a  regime increasingly nauseating to most public opinion. It became clear that  Batista regime was an odious type of government.  It killed its own  citizens, it stifled dissent. (1)        At this time Fidel Castro appeared as leader of the growing rebellion.  Educated in America he was a proponent of the Marxist-Leninist philosophy.  He conducted a brilliant guerilla campaign from the hills of Cuba against  Batista. On January 1959, he prevailed and overthrew the Batista government.          Castro promised to restore democracy in Cuba, a feat Batista had failed  to ac...              ...ed far  longer; measured American responses might have appeared well deserved to an  increasing number of Cubans, thus strengthening Cuban opposition to the  regime instead of, as was the case, greatly stimulating revolutionary  fervor, leaving the Russians no choice but to give massive support to the  Revolution and fortifying the belief among anti-Castro Cubans that the  United States was rapidly moving to liberate them.  The economic pressures  available to the United States were not apt to bring Castro to his knees,  since the Soviets were capable of meeting Cuban requirements in such  matters as oil and sugar.  I believe the Cuban government would have been  doomed by its own disorganization and incompetence and by the growing  disaffection of an increasing number of the Cuban people.  Left to its own  devices, the Castro regime would have withered on the vine.                        
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