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Bay of Pigs Invasion

The Bay of Pigs Invasion (Spanish: Invasión de Bahía de Cochinos, sometimes called Invasión de Playa Girón or Batalla de Playa Girón after the Playa Girón) was a failed military landing operation on the southwestern coast of Cuba in 1961 by Cuban exiles, covertly financed and directed by the United States. It was aimed at overthrowing Fidel Castro's communist government. The operation took place at the height of the Cold War, and its failure influenced relations between Cuba, the United States, and the Soviet Union.

Bay of Pigs Invasion
Part of the Cold War and the
Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution

Counter-attack by Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces near Playa Girón, 19 April 1961
Date17–20 April 1961
Location
Bay of Pigs, southwestern coast of Cuba
22°03′42″N 81°01′55″W / 22.0616°N 81.0319°W / 22.0616; -81.0319Coordinates: 22°03′42″N 81°01′55″W / 22.0616°N 81.0319°W / 22.0616; -81.0319
Result

Cuban victory

  • Failure to topple Castro's government
  • All surviving rebels captured
  • Increased cooperation between Cuba and the Soviet Union
Belligerents
 Cuba  United States
Cuban DRF
Commanders and leaders
Fidel Castro
José Fernández
Raúl Castro
Juan Almeida
Che Guevara[1][2]
Efigenio Ameijeiras
John F. Kennedy
Robert F. Kennedy
Allen Dulles
Charles Cabell
Arleigh Burke
Pepe San Román
Erneido Oliva
Félix Rodríguez
Units involved
Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces
National Revolutionary Militia
National Revolutionary Police Force

CIA

 U.S. Air Force
 U.S. Navy
Strength
Casualties and losses

Cuban Armed Forces:

  • 176 killed
  • 400–500 wounded[c][6]

National Militia:

  • 2,000 killed and wounded[vague][6]
  • 1 B-26 bomber shot down
  • 1 Hawker Sea Fury shot down
  • Unknown number of T-34 tanks and SU-100 guns destroyed

Brigade 2506:

  • 118 killed
  • 360 wounded[d]
  • 1,202 captured (including wounded)[e]
  • Hundreds executed[7]
  • 5 B-26 bombers shot down

United States:

  • 4 killed
  • 2 B-26 bombers shot down
  • 2 supply ships lost
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Location within Cuba

In December 1958, dictator Fulgencio Batista was deposed by Castro's 26th of July Movement during the Cuban Revolution. Castro nationalized American businesses, including banks, oil refineries, and sugar and coffee plantations. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) began planning the overthrow of Castro, which U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower approved in March 1960, and the U.S. began its embargo of the island. This led Castro to reach out to its Cold War rival, the Soviet Union, after which the US severed diplomatic relations. Cuban exiles who had moved to the U.S. following Castro's takeover had formed the counter-revolutionary military unit, Brigade 2506, which was the armed wing of the Democratic Revolutionary Front (DRF). The CIA funded the brigade, which also included some U.S. military[8] personnel, and trained the unit in Guatemala.

1,500 troops, divided into five infantry battalions and one paratrooper battalion, assembled and launched from Guatemala and Nicaragua by boat on 17 April 1961. Two days earlier, eight CIA-supplied B-26 bombers had attacked Cuban airfields and then returned to the U.S. On the night of 17 April, the main invasion force landed on the beach at Playa Girón in the Bay of Pigs, where it overwhelmed a local revolutionary militia. Initially, José Ramón Fernández led the Cuban Revolutionary Army counter-offensive; later, Castro took personal control. As the invasion force lost the strategic initiative, U.S. President John F. Kennedy decided to withhold further air support after the international community became aware of the operation.[9] The plan, devised during Eisenhower's presidency, had required the involvement of U.S. air and naval forces. Without further air support, the invasion was being conducted with fewer forces than the CIA had deemed necessary. The invading force was defeated within three days by the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces and surrendered on 20 April. Most of the surrendered troops were publicly interrogated and put into Cuban prisons.

The invasion was a U.S. foreign policy failure. The Cuban government's victory solidified Castro's role as a national hero and widened the political division between the two formerly allied countries. It also pushed Cuba closer to the Soviet Union, setting the stage for the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962.

Background

United States interventions in Cuba

Since the middle of the 18th century, Cuba had been part of the Spanish colonial empire. In the late 19th century, Cuban nationalist revolutionaries rebelled against Spanish dominance, resulting in three liberation wars: the Ten Years' War (1868–1878), the Little War (1879–1880) and the Cuban War of Independence (1895–1898). In 1898, the United States government proclaimed war on the Spanish Empire, resulting in the Spanish–American War. The U.S. subsequently invaded the island and forced the Spanish army out. A special operations attempt to land a group of at least 375 Cuban soldiers on the island succeeded in the Battle of Tayacoba.

On 20 May 1902, a new independent government proclaimed the foundation of the Republic of Cuba, with U.S. Military Governor Leonard Wood handing over control to President Tomás Estrada Palma, a Cuban-born U.S. citizen.[10] Subsequently, large numbers of U.S. settlers and businessmen arrived in Cuba, and by 1905, 60% of rural properties were owned by non-Cuban-born North American citizens.[11] Between 1906 and 1909, 5,000 U.S. Marines were stationed across the island, and returned in 1912, 1917 and 1921 to intervene in internal affairs, sometimes at the behest of the Cuban government.[12]

Cuban Revolution

Until Castro, the US was so overwhelmingly influential in Cuba that the American ambassador was the second most important man, sometimes even more important than the Cuban president.

Earl E. T. Smith, former American Ambassador to Cuba, during 1960 testimony to the US Senate[13]

In March 1952, a Cuban general and politician, Fulgencio Batista, seized power on the island, proclaimed himself president, and deposed the discredited president Carlos Prío Socarrás of the Partido Auténtico. Batista canceled the planned presidential elections and described his new system as "disciplined democracy." Although Batista gained some popular support, many Cubans saw it as the establishment of a one-man dictatorship.[14][15][16][17] Many opponents of the Batista regime took to armed rebellion in an attempt to oust the government, sparking the Cuban Revolution. One of these groups was the National Revolutionary Movement (Movimiento Nacional Revolucionario), a militant organization containing largely middle-class members that had been founded by the Professor of Philosophy Rafael García Bárcena.[18][19][20] Another was the Directorio Revolucionario Estudantil, which had been founded by the Federation of University Students President José Antonio Echevarría.[21][22][23] However, the best known of these anti-Batista groups was the "26th of July Movement" (MR-26-7), founded by Fidel Castro. With Castro as the MR-26-7's head, the organization was based upon a clandestine cell system, with each cell containing ten members, none of whom knew the whereabouts or activities of the other cells.[24][25][26]

Between December 1956 and 1959, Castro led a guerrilla army against the forces of Batista from his base camp in the Sierra Maestra mountains. Batista's repression of revolutionaries had earned him widespread unpopularity, and by 1958 his armies were in retreat. On 31 December 1958, Batista resigned and fled into exile, taking with him an amassed fortune of more than US$300,000,000.[27][28][29] The presidency fell to Castro's chosen candidate, the lawyer Manuel Urrutia Lleó, while members of the MR-26-7 took control of most positions in the cabinet.[30][31][32] On 16 February 1959, Castro took on the role of Prime Minister.[33][34] Dismissing the need for elections, Castro said the revolution had created direct democracy, in which the people and the government had a close bond.[35] In contrast, critics condemned the new regime as un-democratic. The U.S. Secretary of State Christian Herter announced that Cuba was adopting the Soviet model of communist rule, with a one-party state, government control of trade unions, suppression of civil liberties and the absence of freedom of speech and press.[36]

Post-revolutionary government

After the success of the revolution a popular uproar across Cuba demanded that those figures who had been complicit in the widespread torture and killing of civilians be brought to justice. Although he remained a moderating force and tried to prevent the mass reprisal killings of Batistanos advocated by many Cubans, Castro helped to set up trials of many figures involved in the old regime across the country, resulting in hundreds of executions. Critics, in particular from the U.S. press, argued that many of these did not meet the standards of a fair trial, and condemned Cuba's new government as being more interested in vengeance than justice. Castro retaliated strongly against such accusations, proclaiming that "revolutionary justice is not based on legal precepts, but on moral conviction." In a show of support for this "revolutionary justice," he organized the first Havana trial to take place before a mass audience of 17,000 at the Sports Palace stadium. When a group of 19 pilots accused of bombing a village was found not guilty, Castro ordered a retrial, in which they were found guilty and each sentenced to 30 years in prison.[37][38][39][40]

In early January 1959, Fidel Castro appointed various economists such as Felipe Pazos, Rufo López-Fresquet, Ernesto Bentacourt, Faustino Pérez, and Manuel Ray Rivero. By June 1959, these appointed economists would begin to express disillusionment with Castro's proposed economic policies.[41]

In early 1959, the Cuban government began agrarian reforms which redistributed the ownership of Cuba's land. Expropriated lands would be put into state ownership and the newly formed Instituto de la Reforma Agraria (INRA) was to oversee the expropriations and be headed by Fidel Castro. In Camagüey Province there was growing opposition to the Cuban government due to the resistance of conservative farmers to the agrarian reforms and distaste for Raul Castro and Che Guevara's promotion of communist ideals in the local government and military. The anti-communist opposition within the Cuban government assumed that Fidel Castro was unaware of growing communist influence because of Fidel Castro's frequent public disavowals of communism.[41]

On July 17, 1959, Conrado Bécquer, the sugar workers' leader demanded Cuban President Urrutia's resignation. Castro himself resigned as Prime Minister of Cuba in protest, but later that day appeared on television to deliver a lengthy denouncement of Urrutia, claiming that Urrutia "complicated" government, and that his "fevered anti-Communism" was having a detrimental effect. Castro's sentiments received widespread support as organized crowds surrounded the presidential palace demanding Urrutia's resignation, which was duly received. On July 23, Castro resumed his position as premier and appointed loyalist Osvaldo Dorticós as the new president.[42]

Prelude

Huber Matos affair

 
Cuban Army officer Huber Matos after his arrest, being transported to La Cabaña.

On October 20, 1959, Cuban army commander and veteran of the Cuban Revolution: Huber Matos, resigned and accused Fidel Castro of "burying the revolution". Fifteen of Matos' officers resigned with him. Immediately after the resignation, Castro accused Matos of disloyalty and sent Camilo Cienfuegos to arrest Matos and his accompanying officers. Matos and the officers were taken to Havana and imprisoned in La Cabaña.[43] Cuban communists later claimed Matos was helping plan a counter-revolution organized by the American Central Intelligence Agency and other Castro opponents, an operation that became the Bay of Pigs Invasion.[44][page needed]

The scandal is noted for its occurrence alongside a greater trend of removals of Castro's former collaborators in the revolution. It marked a turning point where Castro was beginning to exert more personal control over the new government in Cuba. Matos' arresting officer and former collaborator of Castro, Camilo Cienfuegos, would soon die in a mysterious plane crash shortly after the incident..[45]

Shortly after Matos' arrest, the prime minister and Che Guevara made a speech to members of the INRA that Cuba would continue to turn in a socialist direction. Manuel Artime viewed the arrest of Matos and affirmation of socialism in Cuba as precedent for him to resign. On 7 November 1959 his resignation letter from INRA and the revolutionary army was published on the front page of Avance newspaper, one of the last newspapers not controlled by the government. Artime then entered an underground organization run by Jesuits in Cuba to hide fugitives; it is unclear what exactly made Artime immediately turn to hiding and later defect. While in a Havana safehouse Artime would form the Movement for Revolutionary Recovery with other dissidents. Artime then contacted the American embassy in Havana, and on 14 December 1959, the CIA arranged for him to travel to the US on a Honduran freighter ship. He became closely involved with Gerry Droller (alias Frank Bender, alias "Mr B") of the CIA in recruiting and organizing Cuban exiles in Miami for future actions against the Cuban government. Artime's organization MRR thus grew to become the principal counter-revolutionary movement inside Cuba, with supporting members in Miami, Mexico, Venezuela etc. Involved were Tony Varona, José Miró Cardona, Rafael Quintero, Aureliano Arango. Infiltration into Cuba, arms drops, etc. were arranged by the CIA.[46][47][45]

Manuel Artime became the future leader of Brigade 2506 in the Bay of Pigs Invasion. He gained this position from the notoriety he gained after defecting and engaging in a tour of Latin America denouncing the new government in Cuba. This notoriety as a Cuban dissident gave him credit to be picked as the leader for the invasion when it was first conceived by the CIA.[45]

Sanctions and assassination attempts

 
The ship La Coubre after exploding in the Havana harbor, 1960. Shortly after Castro would deem the explosion a result of American sabotage, worsening US-Cuba relations.

Castro's Cuban government ordered the country's oil refineries – then controlled by U.S. corporations Esso, Standard Oil, and Shell – to process crude oil purchased from the Soviet Union, but under pressure from the U.S. government, these companies refused. Castro responded by expropriating the refineries and nationalizing them under state control. In retaliation, the U.S. canceled its import of Cuban sugar, provoking Castro to nationalize most U.S.-owned assets, including banks and sugar mills.[48][49][50] Relations between Cuba and the U.S. were further strained following the explosion and sinking of a French vessel, the Le Coubre, in Havana Harbor in March 1960. The cause of the explosion was never determined, but Castro publicly mentioned that the U.S. government was guilty of sabotage.[51][52][53] On 13 October 1960, the U.S. government then prohibited the majority of exports to Cuba – the exceptions being medicines and certain foodstuffs – marking the start of an economic embargo. In retaliation, the Cuban National Institute for Agrarian Reform took control of 383 private-run businesses on 14 October, and on 25 October a further 166 U.S. companies operating in Cuba had their premises seized and nationalized, including Coca-Cola and Sears Roebuck.[54][55] On 16 December, the U.S. ended its import quota of Cuban sugar.[56]

The U.S. government was becoming increasingly critical of Castro's revolutionary government. At an August 1960 meeting of the Organization of American States (OAS) held in Costa Rica, U.S. Secretary of State Christian Herter publicly proclaimed that Castro's administration was "following faithfully the Bolshevik pattern" by instituting a single-party political system, taking governmental control of trade unions, suppressing civil liberties, and removing both the freedom of speech and freedom of the press. He furthermore asserted that international communism was using Cuba as an "operational base" for spreading revolution in the western hemisphere, and called on other OAS members to condemn the Cuban government for its breach of human rights.[57] In turn, Castro lambasted the treatment of black people and the working classes he had witnessed in New York City, which he ridiculed as that "superfree, superdemocratic, superhumane, and supercivilized city." Proclaiming that the U.S. poor were living "in the bowels of the imperialist monster," he attacked the mainstream U.S. media and accused it of being controlled by big business.[58] Superficially the U.S. was trying to improve its relationship with Cuba. Several negotiations between representatives from Cuba and the U.S. took place around this time. Repairing international financial relations was the focal point of these discussions. Political relations were another hot topic of these conferences. The U.S. stated that they would not interfere with Cuba's domestic affairs but that the island should limit its ties with the Soviet Union.[59]

Tensions percolated when the CIA began to act on its desires to snuff out Castro. Efforts to assassinate Castro officially commenced in 1960,[60] though the U.S. public did not become aware of them until 1975, when the Senate Church Committee, set up to investigate CIA abuses, released a report entitled "Alleged Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders".[60] Some methods that the CIA undertook to assassinate Castro were creative, for example: "poison pills, an exploding seashell, and a planned gift of a diving suit contaminated with toxins."[60] More traditional ways of assassinating Castro were also planned, such as elimination via high-powered rifles with telescopic sights.[60]

In August 1960, the CIA contacted the Cosa Nostra in Chicago with the intention to draft simultaneous assassinations of Fidel Castro, Raúl Castro, and Che Guevara. In exchange, if the operation were a success and a pro-U.S. government were restored in Cuba, the CIA agreed that the Mafia would get their "monopoly on gaming, prostitution and drugs".[61][62] In 1963, at the same time the Kennedy administration initiated secret peace overtures to Castro, Cuban revolutionary and undercover CIA agent Rolando Cubela was tasked with killing Castro by CIA official Desmond Fitzgerald, who portrayed himself as a personal representative of Robert F. Kennedy.[60]

United States foreign policy debate

 
Nixon and Kennedy debating during the 1960 US Presidential election.

The U.S. initially recognized Castro's government after the Cuban Revolution ousted Batista,[63] but the relationship quickly soured as Castro repeatedly condemned the U.S. in his speeches for its misdeeds in Cuba over the previous 60 years.[64] Many U.S. officials began to view Castro as a threat to national security as he legalized the Communist Party,[63] nationalized property owned by U.S. citizens totaling $1.5 billion,[64] and strengthened ties with the Soviet Union.[64]

By early 1960, President Eisenhower had begun contemplating ways to remove Castro, in the hopes that he might be replaced by a Cuban government-in-exile, though none existed at the time.[65] In accordance with this goal, he approved Richard Bissell's plan which included training the paramilitary force that would later be used in the Bay of Pigs Invasion.[66]

Cuba became a focal point in the 1960 U.S. presidential election, with both candidates promising to "get tough with the Communists".[67] Kennedy in particular attacked Nixon and the Eisenhower administration for allowing communism to flourish so close to the U.S. In response, Nixon revealed plans for an embargo against Cuba, but the Democrats criticized it as ineffective.[68] Ultimately, Nixon lost the election, convinced that Cuba had brought him down,[69] and Kennedy inherited the thorny issue near the height of its prominence.

Despite the focus on Cuba in the elections and deteriorating relations between Cuba and the U.S. – exacerbated when Castro accused most of the U.S. State Department personnel in Havana of being spies and subsequently ordering them to leave the country, to which Eisenhower responded by withdrawing recognition of Castro's government[70] – Kennedy hesitated to commit to the CIA's plans. Under Dulles and Bissell's insistence of the increasingly urgent need to do something with the troops being trained in Guatemala, Kennedy eventually agreed, although to avoid the appearance of American involvement, he requested the operation be moved from the city of Trinidad, Cuba to a less conspicuous location.[71] Thus, the final plan was for an invasion at the Bay of Pigs.

Internal opposition to Fidel Castro

 
Student protest against the Fidel Castro government in Havana's central park. January 8, 1960.

Soon after the success of the Cuban Revolution, militant counter-revolutionary groups developed in an attempt to overthrow the new regime. Undertaking armed attacks against government forces, some set up guerrilla bases in Cuba's mountainous regions, leading to the six-year Escambray Rebellion. These dissidents were funded and armed by various foreign sources, including the exiled Cuban community, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), and Rafael Trujillo's regime in the Dominican Republic.[72][73][74]

No quarter was given during the suppression of the resistance in the Escambray Mountains, where former rebels from the war against Batista took different sides.[75] On 3 April 1961, a bomb attack on militia barracks in Bayamo killed four militia and wounded eight more. On 6 April, the Hershey Sugar factory in Matanzas was destroyed by sabotage.[76] On 14 April 1961, guerrillas led by Agapito Rivera fought Cuban government forces in Villa Clara Province, where several government troops were killed and others wounded.[76] Also on 14 April 1961, a Cubana airliner was hijacked and flown to Jacksonville, Florida; resultant confusion then helped the staged 'defection' of a B-26 military aircraft and pilot at Miami on 15 April.[5][page needed][77]

Castro's government began a crackdown on this opposition movement, arresting hundreds of dissidents.[78][79] Though it rejected the physical torture Batista's regime had used, Castro's government sanctioned psychological torture, subjecting some prisoners to solitary confinement, rough treatment, hunger, and threatening behavior.[80] After conservative editors and journalists began expressing hostility towards the government following its leftward turn, the pro-Castro printers' trade union began to harass and disrupt editorial staff actions. In January 1960, the government proclaimed that each newspaper was obliged to publish a "clarification" by the printers' union at the end of every article that criticized the government. These "clarifications" signaled the start of press censorship in Castro's Cuba.[81][82]

On 11 March 1961, Jesús Carreras Zayas and American William Alexander Morgan (a former Castro ally) were executed after a trial.[42][page needed][83]

Preparation

Early plans

The idea of overthrowing Castro's government emerged within the CIA in early 1960. Founded in 1947 by the National Security Act, the CIA was "a product of the Cold War", having been designed to counter the espionage activities of the Soviet Union's own national security agency, the KGB. As the perceived threat of international communism grew larger, the CIA expanded its activities to undertake covert economic, political, and military activities that would advance causes favourable to U.S. interests, often resulting in brutal dictatorships that favored U.S. interests.[84] CIA Director Allen Dulles was responsible for overseeing covert operations across the world, and although widely considered an ineffectual administrator, he was popular among his employees, whom he had protected from the accusations of McCarthyism.[85] Recognizing that Castro and his government were becoming increasingly hostile and openly opposed to the United States, Eisenhower directed the CIA to begin preparations of invading Cuba and overthrow the Castro regime.[86] Richard M. Bissell Jr. was charged with overseeing plans for the Bay of Pigs Invasion. He assembled agents to aid him in the plot, many of whom had worked on the 1954 Guatemalan coup six years before; these included David Philips, Gerry Droller and E. Howard Hunt.[87]

Bissell placed Droller in charge of liaising with anti-Castro segments of the Cuban American community living in the United States, and asked Hunt to fashion a government in exile, which the CIA would effectively control.[88] Hunt proceeded to travel to Havana, where he spoke with Cubans from various backgrounds and discovered a brothel through the Mercedes-Benz agency.[89] Returning to the U.S., he informed the Cuban Americans with whom he was liaising that they would have to move their base of operations from Florida to Mexico City, because the State Department refused to permit the training of a militia on U.S. soil. Although unhappy with the news, they conceded to the order.[89]

President Eisenhower had meetings with President-elect Kennedy at the White House on 6 December 1960 and 19 January 1961.[90] In one conversation, Eisenhower stated that since March 1960, the U.S. government had trained "in small units – but we had done nothing else – [...] some hundreds of refugees" in Guatemala, "a few in Panama, and some in Florida."[90] However, Eisenhower also expressed disapproval of the idea of Batista returning to power and was waiting for the exiles to agree on a leader who was opposed to both Castro and Batista.[90]

Eisenhower's planning

On 17 March 1960, the CIA put forward their plan for the overthrow of Castro's administration to the U.S. National Security Council, where President Eisenhower lent his support,[84] approving a CIA budget of $13,000,000 to explore options to remove Castro from power.[90] The first stated objective of the plan was to "bring about the replacement of the Castro regime with one more devoted to the true interests of the Cuban people and more acceptable to the U.S. in such a manner to avoid any appearance of U.S. intervention."[91] Four major forms of action were to be taken to aid anti-communist opposition in Cuba at the time. These included providing a powerful propaganda offensive against the regime, perfecting a covert intelligence network within Cuba, developing paramilitary forces outside of Cuba, and acquiring the necessary logistical support for covert military operations on the island. At this stage, however, it was still not clear that an invasion would take place.[92] Contrary to popular belief, however, documents obtained from the Eisenhower Library revealed that Eisenhower had not ordered or approved plans for an amphibious assault on Cuba.[90]

By 31 October 1960, most guerrilla infiltrations and supply drops directed by the CIA into Cuba had failed, and developments of further guerrilla strategies were replaced by plans to mount an initial amphibious assault, with a minimum of 1,500 men. The election of John Kennedy as U.S. president sped up preparations for the invasion;[90] Kennedy had specifically denied any support for Batista supporters: "Batista murdered 20,000 Cubans in seven years – a greater proportion of the Cuban population than the proportion of Americans who died in both World Wars, and he turned Democratic Cuba into a complete police state – destroying every individual liberty."[93] On 18 November 1960, Dulles and Bissell first briefed President-elect Kennedy on the outline plans. Having experience in actions such as the 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, Dulles was confident that the CIA was capable of overthrowing the Cuban government. On 29 November 1960, President Eisenhower met with the chiefs of the CIA, Defense, State, and Treasury departments to discuss the new concept. None expressed any objections, and Eisenhower approved the plans with the intention of persuading John Kennedy of their merit. On 8 December 1960, Bissell presented outline plans to the "Special Group" while declining to commit details to written records. Further development of the plans continued, and on 4 January 1961 they consisted of an intention to establish a "lodgement" by 750 men at an undisclosed site in Cuba, supported by considerable air power.[94]

Meanwhile, in the 1960 presidential election, both main candidates, Richard Nixon of the Republican Party and John F. Kennedy of the Democratic Party, campaigned on the issue of Cuba, with both candidates taking a hardline stance on Castro.[95] Nixon – who was vice president – insisted that Kennedy should not be informed of the military plans, to which Dulles conceded.[96] To Nixon's chagrin, the Kennedy campaign released a scathing statement on the Eisenhower administration's Cuba policy on 20 October 1960 which said that "we must attempt to strengthen the non-Batista democratic anti-Castro forces [...] who offer eventual hope of overthrowing Castro", claiming that "Thus far these fighters for freedom have had virtually no support from our Government."[97] At the last election debate the next day, Nixon called Kennedy's proposed course of action "dangerously irresponsible" and even lectured Kennedy on international law,[98] in effect denigrating the policy Kennedy favored.[99]

Kennedy's operational approval

John F. Kennedy answered difficult questions on Cuba on 12 April, only five days before the invasion.

On 28 January 1961, President Kennedy was briefed, together with all the major departments, on the latest plan (code-named Operation Pluto), which involved 1,000 men landed in a ship-borne invasion at Trinidad, Cuba, about 270 km (170 mi) south-east of Havana, at the foothills of the Escambray Mountains in Sancti Spiritus province. Kennedy authorized the active departments to continue and to report progress.[100] Trinidad had good port facilities, it was closer to many existing counter-revolutionary activities, and it offered an escape route into the Escambray Mountains. That scheme was subsequently rejected by the State Department because the airfield there was not large enough for B-26 bombers and, since B-26s were to play a prominent role in the invasion, this would destroy the façade that the invasion was just an uprising with no American involvement. Secretary of State Dean Rusk raised some eyebrows by contemplating airdropping a bulldozer to extend the airfield.[101] Kennedy rejected Trinidad, preferring a more low-key locale.[102] On 4 April 1961, President Kennedy approved the Bay of Pigs plan (also known as Operation Zapata), because it had a sufficiently long airfield, it was farther away from large groups of civilians than the Trinidad plan, and it was less "noisy" militarily, which would make denial of direct U.S. involvement more plausible.[103] The invasion landing area was changed to beaches bordering the Bahía de Cochinos (Bay of Pigs) in Las Villas Province, 150 km southeast of Havana, and east of the Zapata Peninsula. The landings were to take place at Playa Girón (code-named Blue Beach), Playa Larga (code-named Red Beach), and Caleta Buena Inlet (code-named Green Beach).[104][page needed][105][page needed][106][107][page needed]

Top aides to Kennedy, such as Dean Rusk and both joint chiefs of staff, later said that they had hesitations about the plans but muted their thoughts. Some leaders blamed these problems on the "Cold War mindset" or the determination of the Kennedy brothers to oust Castro and fulfill campaign promises.[104][page needed] Military advisers were skeptical of its potential for success as well.[90] Despite these hesitations, Kennedy still ordered the attack to take place.[90] In March 1961, the CIA helped Cuban exiles in Miami to create the Cuban Revolutionary Council, chaired by José Miró Cardona, former Prime Minister of Cuba. Miró became the de facto leader-in-waiting of the intended post-invasion Cuban government.[108][page needed]

Training

 
Douglas A-26 Invader "B-26" bomber aircraft disguised as a Cuban model

In April 1960, the CIA began to recruit anti-Castro Cuban exiles in the Miami area. Until July 1960, assessment and training was carried out on Useppa Island and at various other facilities in South Florida, such as Homestead Air Force Base. Specialist guerrilla training took place at Fort Gulick and Fort Clayton in Panama.[5][page needed][109] The force that became Brigade 2506 started with 28 men, who initially were told that their training was being paid for by an anonymous Cuban millionaire émigré, but the recruits soon guessed who was paying the bills, calling their supposed anonymous benefactor "Uncle Sam", and the pretense was dropped.[110] The overall leader was Dr. Manuel Artime while the military leader was José "Pepe" Peréz San Román, a former Cuban Army officer imprisoned under both Batista and Castro.[110]

 
Cuban defectors practicing parachute drops

For the increasing number of recruits, infantry training was carried out at a CIA-run base code-named JMTrax. The base was on the Pacific coast of Guatemala between Quetzaltenango and Retalhuleu, in the Helvetia coffee plantation.[111] The exiled group named themselves Brigade 2506 (Brigada Asalto 2506).[47][page needed] In summer 1960, an airfield (code-named JMadd, aka Rayo Base) was constructed near Retalhuleu, Guatemala.[111] Gunnery and flight training of Brigade 2506 aircrews was carried out by personnel from Alabama Air National Guard under General Reid Doster, using at least six Douglas B-26 Invaders in the markings of the Guatemalan Air Force.[112] An additional 26 B-26s were obtained from U.S. military stocks, 'sanitized' at 'Field Three' to obscure their origins, and about 20 of them were converted for offensive operations by removal of defensive armament, standardization of the 'eight-gun nose', addition of underwing drop tanks and rocket racks.[113][114][page needed] Paratroop training was at a base nicknamed Garrapatenango, near Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. Training for boat handling and amphibious landings took place at Vieques Island, Puerto Rico. Tank training for the Brigade 2506 M41 Walker Bulldog tanks,[citation needed] took place at Fort Knox, Kentucky and Fort Benning, Georgia. Underwater demolition and infiltration training took place at Belle Chasse near New Orleans.[107][page needed] To create a navy, the CIA purchased five cargo ships from the Cuban-owned, Miami-based Garcia Line, thereby giving "plausible deniability" as the State Department had insisted no U.S. ships could be involved in the invasion.[115] The first four of the five ships, namely the Atlantico, the Caribe, the Houston and Río Escondido were to carry enough supplies and weapons to last thirty days while the Lake Charles had 15 days of supplies and was intended to land the provisional government of Cuba.[115] The ships were loaded with supplies at New Orleans and sailed to Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua.[115] Additionally, the invasion force had two old Landing Craft Infantry (LCI) ships, the Blagar and Barbara J from World War II that were part of the CIA's "ghost ship" fleet and served as command ships for the invasion.[115] The crews of the supply ships were Cuban while the crews of the LCIs were Americans, borrowed by the CIA from the Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS).[115] One CIA officer wrote that MSTS sailors were all professional and experienced but not trained for combat.[115] In November 1960, the Retalhuleu recruits took part in quelling an officers' rebellion in Guatemala, in addition to the intervention of the U.S. Navy.[116] The CIA transported people, supplies, and arms from Florida to all the bases at night, using Douglas C-54 transports.

On 9 April 1961, Brigade 2506 personnel, ships, and aircraft started transferring from Guatemala to Puerto Cabezas.[83] Curtiss C-46s were also used for transport between Retalhuleu and a CIA base (code-named JMTide, aka Happy Valley) at Puerto Cabezas. Facilities and limited logistical assistance were provided by the governments of General Miguel Ydígoras Fuentes in Guatemala, and General Luis Somoza Debayle in Nicaragua, but no military personnel or equipment of those nations was directly employed in the conflict.[114][page needed][117][page needed] Both governments later received military training and equipment, including some of the CIA's remaining B-26s.

In early 1961, Cuba's army possessed Soviet-designed T-34 medium tanks, IS-2 heavy tanks, SU-100 tank destroyers, 122mm howitzers, other artillery and small arms plus Italian 105mm howitzers. The Cuban air force armed inventory included B-26 Invader light bombers, Hawker Sea Fury fighters and Lockheed T-33 jets, all remaining from the Fuerza Aérea del Ejército de Cuba, the Cuban air force of the Batista government.[47][page needed] Anticipating an invasion, Che Guevara stressed the importance of an armed civilian populace, stating: "all of the Cuban people must become a guerrilla army; each and every Cuban must learn to handle and if necessary use firearms in defense of the nation".[118]

Participants

U.S. Government personnel

In April 1960, FRD (Frente Revolucionario Democratico – Democratic Revolutionary Front) rebels were taken to Useppa Island, Florida, which was covertly leased by the CIA at the time. Once the rebels had arrived, they were greeted by instructors from U.S. Army special forces groups, members from the U.S. Air Force and Air National Guard, and members of the CIA. The rebels were trained in amphibious assault tactics, guerrilla warfare, infantry and weapons training, unit tactics and land navigation.[119] At the head of the operation was Joaquin Sanjenis Perdomo, former police chief in Cuba, and intelligence officer Rafael De Jesus Gutierrez. The group included David Atlee Philips, Howard Hunt and David Sánchez Morales.[120] The recruiting of Cuban exiles in Miami was organized by CIA staff officers E. Howard Hunt and Gerry Droller. Detailed planning, training and military operations were conducted by Jacob Esterline, Colonel Jack Hawkins, Félix Rodríguez, Rafael De Jesus Gutierrez and Colonel Stanley W. Beerli under the direction of Richard Bissell and his deputy Tracy Barnes.[107][page needed]

Cuban government personnel

Already, Fidel Castro was known as, and addressed as, the commander-in-chief of Cuban armed forces, with a nominal base at "Point One" in Havana. In early April 1961, his brother Raúl Castro was assigned command of forces in the east, based in Santiago de Cuba. Che Guevara commanded western forces, based in Pinar del Río. Major Juan Almeida Bosque commanded forces in the central provinces, based in Santa Clara. Raúl Curbelo Morales was head of the Cuban Air Force. Sergio del Valle Jiménez was Director of Headquarters Operations at Point One. Efigenio Ameijeiras was the Head of the Revolutionary National Police. Ramiro Valdés Menéndez was Minister of the Interior and head of G-2 (Seguridad del Estado, or state security). His deputy was Comandante Manuel Piñeiro Losada, also known as 'Barba Roja'. Captain José Ramón Fernández was head of the School of Militia Leaders (Cadets) at Matanzas.[3][page needed][121][122][page needed][123][124]

Other commanders of units during the conflict included Major Raúl Menéndez Tomassevich, Major Filiberto Olivera Moya, Major René de los Santos, Major Augusto Martínez Sánchez, Major Félix Duque, Major Pedro Miret, Major Flavio Bravo, Major Antonio Lussón, Captain Orlando Pupo Peña, Captain Victor Dreke, Captain Emilio Aragonés, Captain Ángel Fernández Vila, Arnaldo Ochoa, and Orlando Rodríguez Puerta.[5][page needed][125][page needed] Soviet-trained Spanish advisors were brought to Cuba from Eastern Bloc countries. These advisors had held high staff positions in the Soviet armies during World War II and became known as "Hispano-Soviets," having long resided in the Soviet Union. The most senior of these was the Spanish communist veterans of the Spanish Civil War, Francisco Ciutat de Miguel, Enrique Líster and Cuban-born Alberto Bayo.[126] Ciutat de Miguel (Cuban alias: Ángel Martínez Riosola, commonly referred to as "Angelito"), was an advisor to forces in the central provinces. The role of other Soviet agents at the time is uncertain, but some of them acquired greater fame later. For example, two KGB colonels, Vadim Kochergin and Victor Simanov were first sighted in Cuba in about September 1959.[127][128]

Prior warnings of invasion

The Cuban security apparatus knew the invasion was coming, in part due to indiscreet talk by members of the brigade, some of which was heard in Miami and repeated in U.S. and foreign newspaper reports. Nevertheless, days before the invasion, multiple acts of sabotage were carried out, such as the El Encanto fire, an arson attack in a department store in Havana on 13 April that killed one shop worker.[5][page needed][129] The Cuban government also had been warned by senior KGB agents Osvaldo Sánchez Cabrera and 'Aragon', who died violently before and after the invasion, respectively.[130] The general Cuban population was not well informed of intelligence matters, which the US sought to exploit with propaganda through CIA-funded Radio Swan.[131] As of May 1960, almost all means of public communication were under public ownership.[132][133]

On 29 April 2000, a Washington Post article, "Soviets Knew Date of Cuba Attack", reported that the CIA had information indicating that the Soviet Union knew the invasion was going to take place and did not inform Kennedy. On 13 April 1961, Radio Moscow broadcast an English-language newscast, predicting the invasion "in a plot hatched by the CIA" using paid "criminals" within a week. The invasion took place four days later.[134]

David Ormsby-Gore, the British ambassador to the U.S., stated that British intelligence analysis made available to the CIA indicated that the Cuban people were overwhelmingly behind Castro and that there was no likelihood of mass defections or insurrections.[135]

Prelude to invasion

Acquisition of aircraft

From June to September 1960, the most time-consuming task was the acquisition of the aircraft to be used in the invasion. The anti-Castro effort depended on the success of these aircraft. Although models such as the Curtiss C-46 Commando and Douglas C-54 Skymaster were to be used for airdrops and bomb drops as well as for infiltration and exfiltration, they were looking for an aircraft that could perform tactical strikes. The two models that were going to be decided on were the Navy's Douglas AD-5 Skyraider or the Air Force's light bomber, the Douglas B-26 Invader. The AD-5 was readily available and ready for the Navy to train pilots, and in a meeting among a special group in the office of the Deputy Director of the CIA, the AD-5 was approved and decided upon. After a cost-benefit analysis, word was sent that the AD-5 plan would be abandoned and the B-26 would take its place.[136]

Fleet sets sail

Under cover of darkness, the invasion fleet set sail from Puerto Cabezas, Nicaragua and headed towards the Bay of Pigs on the night of 14 April.[137] After on-loading the attack planes in Norfolk Naval Base and taking on prodigious quantities of food and supplies sufficient for the seven weeks at-sea to come, the crew knew from the hasty camouflage of the ship's and aircraft identifying numbers that a secret mission was on hand. Combatants were supplied with forged Cuban local currency, in the form of 20 Peso bills, identifiable by the serial numbers F69 and F70. The aircraft carrier group of the USS Essex had been at sea for nearly a month before the invasion; its crew was well aware of the impending battle. En route, Essex had made a night time stop at a Navy arms depot in Charleston, South Carolina, to load tactical nuclear weapons to be held ready during the cruise. The afternoon of the invasion, one accompanying destroyer rendezvoused with Essex to have a gun mount repaired and put back into action; the ship displayed numerous shell casings on deck from its shore bombardment actions. On 16 April Essex was at general quarters for most of a day; Soviet MiG-15s made feints and close range fly overs that night.[138][citation needed]

Air attacks on airfields

During the night of 14/15 April, a diversionary landing was planned near Baracoa, Oriente Province, by about 164 Cuban exiles commanded by Higinio 'Nino' Diaz. Their mother ship, named La Playa or Santa Ana, had sailed from Key West under a Costa Rican ensign. Several U.S. Navy destroyers were stationed offshore near Guantánamo Bay to give the appearance of an impending invasion fleet.[139] The reconnaissance boats turned back to the ship after their crews detected activities by Cuban militia forces along the coastline.[3][page needed][47][page needed][122][page needed][140][7][141] As a result of those activities, at daybreak, a reconnaissance sortie over the Baracoa area was launched from Santiago de Cuba by an FAR Lockheed T-33, piloted by Lt. Orestes Acosta and it crashed fatally into the sea. On 17 April, his name was falsely quoted as a defector among the disinformation circulating in Miami.[142][page needed]

The CIA, with the backing of the Pentagon, had originally requested permission to produce sonic booms over Havana on 14 April to create confusion. The request was a form of psychological warfare that had proven successful in the overthrow of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala in 1954. The point was to create confusion in Havana and have it be a distraction to Castro if they could "break all the windows in town."[143] The request was denied, however, since officials thought such would be too obvious a sign of involvement by the United States.[143]

On 15 April 1961, at about 06:00 hours, Cuban local time, eight B-26B Invader bombers in three groups simultaneously attacked three Cuban airfields at San Antonio de los Baños and at Ciudad Libertad (formerly named Campo Columbia), both near Havana, plus the Antonio Maceo International Airport at Santiago de Cuba. The B-26s had been prepared by the CIA on behalf of Brigade 2506 and had been painted with the false flag markings of the FAR. Each came armed with bombs, rockets, and machine guns. They had flown from Puerto Cabezas in Nicaragua and were crewed by exiled Cuban pilots and navigators of the self-styled Fuerza Aérea de Liberación (FAL). The purpose of the action (code-named Operation Puma) was reportedly to destroy most or all of the armed aircraft of the FAR in preparation for the main invasion. At Santiago, the two attackers destroyed a C-47 transport, a PBY Catalina flying boat, two B-26s and a civilian Douglas DC-3 plus various other civilian aircraft. At San Antonio, the three attackers destroyed three FAR B-26s, one Hawker Sea Fury and one T-33, and one attacker diverted to Grand Cayman because of low fuel. Aircraft that diverted to the Caymans were seized by the United Kingdom since they were suspicious that the Cayman Islands might be perceived as a launch site for the invasion.[143] At Ciudad Libertad, the three attackers destroyed only non-operational aircraft such as two Republic P-47 Thunderbolts. One of those attackers was damaged by anti-aircraft fire and ditched about 50 km (31 mi) north of Cuba,[144] with the loss of its crew Daniel Fernández Mon and Gaston Pérez. Its companion B-26, also damaged, continued north and landed at Boca Chica Field, Florida. The crew, José Crespo and Lorenzo Pérez-Lorenzo, were granted political asylum, and made their way back to Nicaragua the next day via Miami and the daily CIA C-54 flight from Opa-Iocka Airport to Puerto Cabezas Airport. Their B-26, purposely numbered 933, the same as at least two other B-26s that day for disinformation reasons, was held until late on 17 April.[142][page needed][145]

Deception flight

About 90 minutes after the eight B-26s had taken off from Puerto Cabezas to attack Cuban airfields, another B-26 departed on a deception flight that took it close to Cuba but headed north towards Florida. Like the bomber groups, it carried false FAR markings and the same number 933 as painted on at least two of the others. Before departure, the cowling from one of the aircraft's two engines was removed by CIA personnel, fired upon, then re-installed to give the false appearance that the aircraft had taken ground fire at some point during its flight. At a safe distance north of Cuba, the pilot feathered the engine with the pre-installed bullet holes in the cowling, radioed a mayday call, and requested immediate permission to land at Miami International airport. He landed and taxied to the military area of the airport near an Air Force C-47 and was met by several government cars. The pilot was Mario Zúñiga, formerly of the FAEC (Cuban Air Force under Batista), and after landing, he masqueraded as 'Juan Garcia' and publicly claimed that three colleagues had also defected from the FAR. The next day he was granted political asylum, and that night he returned to Puerto Cabezas via Opa-Locka.[114][page needed][142][page needed][146] This deception operation was successful at the time in convincing much of the world media that the attacks on the FAR bases were the work of an internal anti-Communist faction and did not involve outside actors.[147]

Reactions

At 10:30 on 15 April at the United Nations, Cuban Foreign Minister Raúl Roa accused the U.S. of aggressive air attacks against Cuba and that afternoon formally tabled a motion to the Political (First) Committee of the UN General Assembly. Only days earlier, the CIA had unsuccessfully attempted to entice Raúl Roa into defecting.[143] In response to Roa's accusations before the UN, United States Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai Stevenson stated that U.S. armed forces would not "under any conditions" intervene in Cuba and that the U.S. would do everything in its power to ensure that no U.S. citizens would participate in actions against Cuba. He also stated that Cuban defectors had carried out the attacks that day, and he presented a UPI wire photo of Zúñiga's B-26 in Cuban markings at Miami airport.[83] Stevenson was later embarrassed to realize that the CIA had lied to him.[106]

President Kennedy supported the statement made by Stevenson: "I have emphasized before that this was a struggle of Cuban patriots against a Cuban dictator. While we could not be expected to hide our sympathies, we made it repeatedly clear that the armed forces of this country would not intervene in any way".[148]

On 15 April, the Cuban national police, led by Efigenio Ameijeiras, started the process of arresting thousands of suspected anti-revolutionary individuals and detaining them in provisional locations such as the Karl Marx Theatre, the moat of Fortaleza de la Cabana, and the Principe Castle, all in Havana, and the baseball park in Matanzas.[42][page needed] In total, between 20,000 and 100,000 people would be arrested.[149]

Phony war

On the night of 15/16 April, the Nino Diaz group failed in a second attempted diversionary landing at a different location near Baracoa.[122][page needed] On 16 April, Merardo Leon, Jose Leon, and 14 others staged an armed uprising at Las Delicias Estate in Las Villas, with only four surviving.[76]

Following the airstrikes on the Cuban airfields on 15 April, the FAR prepared for action with its surviving aircraft which numbered at least four T-33 jet trainers, four Sea Fury fighters and five or six B-26 medium bombers. The T-33s and B-26s were armed with machine guns and the Sea Furies with 20mm cannon for air-to-air combat and strafing ships and ground targets. CIA planners had failed to discover that the U.S.-supplied T-33 trainer jets had long been armed with M-3 machine guns. The three types could also carry bombs and rocket pods for attacks against ships and tanks.[150]

No additional airstrikes against Cuban airfields and aircraft were specifically planned before 17 April, because B-26 pilots' exaggerated claims gave the CIA false confidence in the success of 15 April attacks, until U-2 reconnaissance photos taken on 16 April showed otherwise. Late on 16 April, President Kennedy ordered the cancellation of further airfield strikes planned for dawn on 17 April, to attempt plausible deniability of direct U.S. involvement.[107][page needed]

Late on 16 April, the CIA/Brigade 2506 invasion fleet converged on 'Rendezvous Point Zulu', about 65 kilometres (40 mi) south of Cuba, having sailed from Puerto Cabezas in Nicaragua where they had been loaded with troops and other materiel, after loading arms and supplies at New Orleans. The U.S. Navy operation was code-named Bumpy Road, having been changed from Crosspatch.[107][page needed] The fleet, labeled the 'Cuban Expeditionary Force' (CEF), included five 2,400-ton (empty weight) freighter ships chartered by the CIA from the Garcia Line, and subsequently outfitted with anti-aircraft guns. Four of the freighters, Houston (code name Aguja), Río Escondido (code name Ballena), Caribe (code name Sardina), and Atlántico (code-name Tiburón), were planned to transport about 1,400 troops in seven battalions of troops and armaments near to the invasion beaches. The fifth freighter, Lake Charles, was loaded with follow-up supplies and some Operation 40 infiltration personnel. The freighters sailed under Liberian ensigns. Accompanying them were two LCIs outfitted with heavy armament at Key West. The LCIs were Blagar (code-name Marsopa) and Barbara J (code-name Barracuda), sailing under Nicaraguan ensigns. After exercises and training at Vieques Island, the CEF ships were individually escorted (outside visual range) to Point Zulu by US Navy destroyers USS Bache, USS Beale, USS Conway, USS Cony, USS Eaton, USS Murray, and USS Waller. US Navy Task Group 81.8 had already assembled off the Cayman Islands, commanded by Rear Admiral John E. Clark onboard aircraft carrier USS Essex, plus helicopter assault carrier USS Boxer, destroyers USS Hank, USS John W. Weeks, USS Purdy, USS Wren, and submarines USS Cobbler and USS Threadfin. Command and control ship USS Northampton and carrier USS Shangri-La were also reportedly active in the Caribbean at the time. USS San Marcos was a Landing Ship Dock that carried three Landing Craft Utility (LCUs) which could accommodate the Brigades M41 Walker Bulldog tanks and four Landing Craft, Vehicles, Personnel (LCVPs). San Marcos had sailed from Vieques Island. At Point Zulu, the seven CEF ships sailed north without the USN escorts, except for San Marcos that continued until the seven landing craft were unloaded when just outside the 5 kilometres (3 mi) Cuban territorial limit.[5][page needed][83][151]

Invasion

Invasion day (17 April)

During the night of 16/17 April, a mock diversionary landing was organized by CIA operatives near Bahía Honda, Pinar del Río Province. A flotilla containing equipment that broadcast sounds and other effects of a shipborne invasion landing provided the source of Cuban reports that briefly lured Fidel Castro away from the Bay of Pigs battlefront area.[5][page needed][122][page needed][152]

At midnight on 17 April 1961, the two LCIs Blagar and Barbara J, each with a CIA 'operations officer' and an Underwater Demolition Team of five frogmen, entered the Bay of Pigs (Bahía de Cochinos) on the southern coast of Cuba. They headed a force of four transport ships (Houston, Río Escondido, Caribe and Atlántico) carrying about 1,400 Cuban exile ground troops of Brigade 2506, plus the brigade's M41 tanks and other vehicles in the landing craft.[153] At about 01:00, Blagar, as the battlefield command ship, directed the principal landing at Playa Girón (code-named Blue Beach), led by the frogmen in rubber boats followed by troops from Caribe in small aluminum boats, then the LCVPs and LCUs with the M41 tanks.[154] Barbara J, leading Houston, similarly landed troops 35 km further northwest at Playa Larga (code-named Red Beach), using small fiberglass boats.[154] The unloading of troops at night was delayed, because of engine failures and boats damaged by unseen coral reefs; the CIA had originally believed that the coral reef was seaweed. As the frogmen came in, they were shocked to discover that the Red Beach was lit with floodlights, which led to the location of the landing being hastily changed.[154] As the frogmen landed, a firefight broke out when a jeep carrying Cuban militia happened by.[154] The few militias in the area succeeded in warning Cuban armed forces via radio soon after the first landing, before the invaders overcame their token resistance.[122][page needed][155] Castro was awakened at about 03:15 to be informed of the landings, which led him to put all militia units in the area on the highest state of alert and to order airstrikes.[154] The Cuban regime planned to strike the brigadistas at Playa Larga first as they were inland before turning on the brigadistas at Girón at sea.[154] El Comandante departed personally to lead his forces into battle against the brigadistas.[154]

At daybreak around 06:30, three FAR Sea Furies, one B-26 bomber and two T-33s started attacking those CEF ships still unloading troops. At about 06:50, south of Playa Larga, Houston was damaged by several bombs and rockets from a Sea Fury and a T-33, and about two hours later Captain Luis Morse intentionally beached it on the western side of the bay.[154] About 270 troops had been unloaded, but about 180 survivors who struggled ashore were incapable of taking part in further action because of the loss of most of their weapons and equipment. The loss of Houston was a great blow to the brigadistas as that ship was carrying much of the medical supplies, which meant that wounded brigadistas had to make do with inadequate medical care.[154] At about 07:00, two FAL B-26s attacked and sank the Cuban Navy Patrol Escort ship El Baire at Nueva Gerona on the Isle of Pines.[122][page needed][142][page needed] They then proceeded to Girón to join two other B-26s to attack Cuban ground troops and provide distraction air cover for the paratroop C-46s and the CEF ships under air attack. The M41 tanks had all landed by 07:30 at Blue Beach and all of the troops by 08:30.[156] Neither San Román at Blue Beach nor Erneido Oliva at Red Beach could communicate as all of the radios had been soaked in the water during the landings.[156]

 
The SU-100 from which Fidel Castro reportedly shelled the freighter Houston during the morning of 17 April

At about 07:30, five C-46 and one C-54 transport aircraft dropped 177 paratroops from the parachute battalion in an action code-named Operation Falcon.[157] About 30 men, plus heavy equipment, were dropped south of the Central Australia sugar mill on the road to Palpite and Playa Larga, but the equipment was lost in the swamps, and the troops failed to block the road.[156] Other troops were dropped at San Blas, at Jocuma between Covadonga and San Blas, and at Horquitas between Yaguaramas and San Blas. Those positions to block the roads were maintained for two days, reinforced by ground troops from Playa Girón and tanks.[158] The paratroopers had landed amid a collection of militia, but their training allowed them to hold their own against the ill-trained militiamen.[156] However, the dispersal of the paratroopers as they landed meant they were unable to take the road from the sugar mill down to Playa Larga, which allowed the government to continue to send troops down to resist the invasion.[156]

At about 08:30, a FAR Sea Fury piloted by Carlos Ulloa Arauz crashed in the bay after encountering a FAL C-46 returning south after dropping paratroops. By 09:00, Cuban troops and militia from outside the area had started arriving at the sugar mill, Covadonga and Yaguaramas. Throughout the day they were reinforced by more troops, heavy armour and T-34 tanks typically carried on flat-bed trucks.[159] At about 09:30, FAR Sea Furies and T-33s fired rockets at Rio Escondido, which then 'blew up' and sank about 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) south of Girón.[47][page needed][122][page needed] Rio Escondido was loaded with aviation fuel, and as the ship started to burn, the captain gave the order to abandon ship with the ship being destroyed in three explosions shortly afterward .[160] Rio Escondido carried fuel along with enough ammunition, food, and medical supplies to last ten days and the radio that allowed the brigade to communicate with the FAL.[160] The loss of the communications ship Rio Escondido meant that San Román was only able to issue orders to the forces at Blue Beach, and he had no idea of what was happening at Red Beach or with the paratroopers.[160] A messenger from Red Beach arrived at about 10:00 hours asking San Román to send tank and infantry to block the road from the sugar mill, a request that he agreed to.[160] It was not expected that government forces would be counter-attacking from this direction.[161]

At about 11:00, Castro issued a statement over Cuba's nationwide network saying that the invaders, members of the exiled Cuban revolutionary front, have come to destroy the revolution and take away the dignity and rights of men.[162] At about 11:00, a FAR T-33 attacked and shot down a FAL B-26 (serial number 935) piloted by Matias Farias, who then survived a crash landing on the Girón airfield, his navigator Eduardo González already killed by gunfire. His companion B-26 suffered damage and diverted to Grand Cayman Island; pilot Mario Zúñiga (the 'defector') and navigator Oscar Vega returned to Puerto Cabezas via CIA C-54 on 18 April. By about 11:00, the two remaining freighters Caribe and Atlántico, and the LCIs and LCUs, started retreating south to international waters, but still pursued by FAR aircraft. At about noon, a FAR B-26 exploded from heavy anti-aircraft fire from Blagar, and pilot Luis Silva Tablada (on his second sortie) and his crew of three were lost.[114][page needed][122][page needed]

By noon, hundreds of Cuban militia cadets from Matanzas had secured Palpite and cautiously advanced on foot south towards Playa Larga, suffering many casualties during attacks by FAL B-26s. By dusk, other Cuban ground forces gradually advanced southward from Covadonga, southwest from Yaguaramas toward San Blas, and westward along coastal tracks from Cienfuegos towards Girón all without heavy weapons or armour.[122][page needed] At 14:30 a group of militiamen from the 339th Battalion set up a position, which came under attack from the brigadista M41 tanks, which inflicted heavy losses on the defenders.[163] This action is remembered in Cuba as the "Slaughter of the Lost Battalion" as most of the militiamen perished.[163]

Three FAL B-26s were shot down by FAR T-33s, with the loss of pilots Raúl Vianello, José Crespo, Osvaldo Piedra and navigators Lorenzo Pérez-Lorenzo and José Fernández. Vianello's navigator Demetrio Pérez bailed out and was picked up by USS Murray. Pilot Crispín García Fernández and navigator Juan González Romero, in B-26 serial 940, diverted to Boca Chica, but late that night they attempted to fly back to Puerto Cabezas in B-26 serial 933 that Crespo had flown to Boca Chica on 15 April. In October 1961, the remains of the B-26 and its two crew were found in the dense jungle in Nicaragua.[142][page needed][164] One FAL B-26 diverted to Grand Cayman with engine failure. By 04:00,[clarification needed] Castro had arrived at the Central Australia sugar mill, joining José Ramón Fernández whom he had appointed as battlefield commander before dawn that day.[165]

At about 05:00, a night air strike by three FAL B-26s on San Antonio de Los Baños airfield failed, reportedly because of incompetence and bad weather. Two other B-26s had aborted the mission after take-off.[114][page needed][150] Other sources allege that heavy anti-aircraft fire scared the aircrews.[166] As night fell, Atlantico and Caribe pulled away from Cuba to be followed by Blagar and Barbara J.[167] The ships were to return to the Bay of Pigs the following day to unload more ammunition, however the captains of the Atlantico and Caribe decided to abandon the invasion and head out to open sea fearing further air attacks by the FAR.[167] Destroyers from the U.S. Navy intercepted Atlantico about 110 miles (180 km) south of Cuba and persuaded the captain to return, but Caribe was not intercepted until she was 218 miles (351 km) away from Cuba, and she was not to return until it was too late.[167]

Invasion day plus one (D+1) 18 April

During the night of 17–18 April, the force at Red Beach came under repeated counter-attacks from the Cuban Army and militia.[168] As casualties mounted and ammunition was used up, the brigadistas steadily gave way.[168] Airdrops from four C-54s and 2 C-46s had only limited success in landing more ammunition.[167] Both the Blagar and Barbara J returned at midnight to land more ammunition, which proved insufficient for the brigadistas.[167] Following desperate appeals for help from Oliva, San Román ordered all of his M41 tanks to assist in the defense.[169] During the night fighting, a tank battle broke out when the brigadista M41 tanks clashed with the T-34 tanks of the Cuban Army. This sharp action forced back the brigadistas.[169] At 22:00, the Cuban Army opened fire with its 76.2-mm and 122-mm artillery guns on the brigadista forces at Playa Larga, which was followed by an attack by T-34 tanks at about midnight.[169] The 2,000 artillery rounds fired by the Cuban Army had mostly missed the brigadista defense positions, and the T-34 tanks rode into an ambush when they came under fire from the brigadista M41 tanks and mortar fire, and a number of T-34 tanks were destroyed or knocked out.[169] At 01:00, Cuban Army infantrymen and militiamen started an offensive.[169] Despite heavy losses on the part of the Cuban forces, the shortage of ammunition forced the brigadistas back and the T-34 tanks continued to force their way past the wreckage of the battlefield to press on the assault.[169] The Cuban forces in the assault numbered about 2,100 men, consisting of about 300 FAR soldiers, 1,600 militiamen and 200 local policemen supported by at least 20 T-34 tanks who were faced by 370 brigadistas.[169] By 05:00, Oliva started to order his men to retreat as he had almost no ammunition or mortar rounds left.[170] By about 10:30, Cuban troops and militia, supported by the T-34 tanks and 122mm artillery, took Playa Larga after Brigade forces had fled towards Girón in the early hours. During the day, Brigade forces retreated to San Blas along the two roads from Covadonga and Yaguaramas. By then, both Castro and Fernández had relocated to that battlefront area.[171]

As the men from Red Beach arrived at Girón, San Román and Oliva met to discuss the situation.[172] With ammunition running low, Oliva suggested that the brigade retreat into the Escambray Mountains to wage guerilla warfare, but San Román decided to hold the beachhead.[173] At about 11:00, the Cuban Army began an offensive to take San Blas.[174] San Román ordered all of the paratroopers back in order to hold San Blas, and they halted the offensive.[174] During the afternoon, Castro kept the brigadistas under steady air attack and artillery fire but did not order any new major attacks.[174]

At 14:00, President Kennedy received a telegram from Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow, stating the Russians would not allow the U.S. to enter Cuba and implied swift nuclear retribution to the United States heartland if their warnings were not heeded.[175]

At about 17:00, FAL B-26s attacked a Cuban column of 12 private buses leading trucks carrying tanks and other armor, moving southeast between Playa Larga and Punta Perdiz. The vehicles, loaded with civilians, militia, police, and soldiers, were attacked with bombs, napalm, and rockets, suffering heavy casualties. The six attacking FAL B-26s were piloted by two CIA contract pilots plus four pilots and six navigators from the FAL.[122][page needed][142][page needed] The column later re-formed and advanced to Punta Perdiz, about 11 km northwest of Girón.[176]

Invasion day plus two (D+2) 19 April

 
Douglas A-4 Skyhawks from the USS Essex purportedly flying sorties over combat areas during the invasion – these aircraft show nationality markings, which sources say were removed for such sorties.

During the night of 18 April, a FAL C-46 delivered arms and equipment to the Girón airstrip occupied by brigade ground forces and took off before daybreak on 19 April.[177][non-primary source needed] The C-46 also evacuated Matias Farias, the pilot of B-26 serial '935' (code-named Chico Two) that had been shot down and crash-landed at Girón on 17 April.[157] The crews of the Barbara J and Blagar had done their best to land what ammunition they had left onto the beachhead, but without air support the captains of both ships reported that it was too dangerous to be operating off the Cuban coast by day.[178]

The final air attack mission (code-named Mad Dog Flight) comprised five B-26s, four of which were manned by American CIA contract aircrews and volunteer pilots from the Alabama Air Guard. One FAR Sea Fury (piloted by Douglas Rudd) and two FAR T-33s (piloted by Rafael del Pino and Alvaro Prendes) shot down two of these B-26s, killing four American airmen.[83] Combat air patrols were flown by Douglas A4D-2N Skyhawk jets of VA-34 squadron operating from USS Essex, with nationality and other markings removed. Sorties were flown to reassure brigade soldiers and pilots and to intimidate Cuban government forces without directly engaging in combat.[142][page needed] At 10:00, a tank battle broke out, with the brigadista holding their line until about 14:00, which led Oliva to order a retreat into Girón.[179] After the last air attacks, San Román ordered his paratroopers and the men of the 3rd Battalion to launch a surprise attack, which was initially successful but soon failed.[179] With the brigadistas in disorganized retreat, the Cuban Army and militiamen started to advance rapidly, taking San Blas only to be stopped outside of Girón at about 11:00.[179] Later that afternoon, San Román heard the rumbling of the advancing T-34s and reported that with no more mortar rounds and bazooka rounds, he could not stop the tanks and ordered his men to fall back to the beach.[6] Oliva arrived afterward to find that the brigadistas were all heading out to the beach or retreating into the jungle or swamps.[6] Without direct air support, and short of ammunition, Brigade 2506 ground forces retreated to the beaches in the face of the onslaught from Cuban government artillery, tanks, and infantry.[47][page needed][180][181][page needed]

Late on 19 April, destroyers USS Eaton (code-named Santiago) and USS Murray (code-named Tampico) moved into Cochinos Bay to evacuate retreating Brigade soldiers from beaches, before fire from Cuban army tanks caused Commodore Crutchfield to order a withdrawal.[122][page needed]

Invasion day plus three (D+3) 20 April

From 19 April until about 22 April, sorties were flown by A4D-2Ns to obtain visual intelligence over combat areas. Reconnaissance flights are also reported of AD-5Ws of VFP-62 and/or VAW-12 squadron from USS Essex or another carrier, such as USS Shangri-La that was part of the task force assembled off the Cayman Islands.[122][page needed][142][page needed]

On 21 April, Eaton and Murray, joined on 22 April by destroyers USS Conway and USS Cony, plus submarine USS Threadfin and a CIA PBY-5A Catalina flying boat, continued to search the coastline, reefs, and islands for scattered Brigade survivors, about 24–30 being rescued.[177]

Aftermath

Casualties

67 Cuban exiles from Brigade 2506 were killed in action, additionally, 10 more were executed by firing squad, 10 lost their lives on the boat Celia trying to escape, 9 captured exiles in the sealed truck container on the way to Havana, 4 by accident, 2 in prison, and 4 American aviators, for a total of 106 deaths.[d] Aircrews killed in action totaled 6 from the Cuban air force, 10 Cuban exiles and 4 American airmen.[114][page needed] Paratrooper Eugene Herman Koch was killed in action,[182] and the American airmen shot down were Thomas W. Ray, Leo F. Baker, Riley W. Shamburger, and Wade C. Gray.[122][page needed] In 1979, the body of Thomas "Pete" Ray was repatriated from Cuba. In the 1990s, the CIA admitted he was linked to the agency and awarded him the Intelligence Star.[183]

The final toll for Cuban armed forces during the conflict was 176 killed in action.[f] This figure includes only the Cuban Army and it is estimated that about 2,000 militiamen were killed or wounded during the fighting.[6] Other Cuban forces casualties were between 500 and 4,000 (killed, wounded or missing).[c] The airfield attacks on 15 April left 7 Cubans dead and 53 wounded.[5][page needed]

In 2011, the National Security Archive, under the Freedom of Information Act, released over 1,200 pages of documents. Included within these documents were descriptions of incidents of friendly fire. The CIA had outfitted some B-26 bombers to appear as Cuban aircraft, having ordered them to remain inland to avoid being fired upon by American-backed forces. Some of the planes, not heeding the warning, came under fire. According to CIA operative Grayston Lynch, "we couldn't tell them from the Castro planes. We ended up shooting at two or three of them. We hit some of them there because when they came at us... it was a silhouette, that was all you could see."[143]

Prisoners

Havana gleefully noted the wealth of the captured invaders: 100 plantation owners, 67 landlords of apartment houses, 35 factory owners, 112 businessmen, 179 lived off unearned income, and 194 ex-soldiers of Batista.

Life magazine[184]

On 19 April, at least seven Cubans plus two CIA-hired U.S. citizens (Angus K. McNair and Howard F. Anderson) were executed in Pinar del Rio province, after a two-day trial. On 20 April, Humberto Sorí Marin was executed at La Cabaña, having been arrested on 18 March following infiltration into Cuba with 14 tons of explosives. His fellow conspirators Rogelio González Corzo (alias "Francisco Gutierrez"), Rafael Diaz Hanscom, Eufemio Fernandez, Arturo Hernandez Tellaheche and Manuel Lorenzo Puig Miyar were also executed.[76][42][page needed][7][185][186]

Between April and October 1961, hundreds of executions took place in response to the invasion. They took place at various prisons, including the Fortaleza de la Cabaña and Morro Castle.[7] Infiltration team leaders Antonio Diaz Pou and Raimundo E. Lopez, as well as underground students Virgilio Campaneria, Alberto Tapia Ruano, and more than one hundred other insurgents were executed.[106]

About 1,202 members of Brigade 2506 were captured, of whom nine died from asphyxiation during their transfer to Havana in an airtight truck container. In May 1961, Castro proposed to exchange the surviving brigade prisoners for 500 large farm tractors, later changed to US$28,000,000.[187] On 8 September 1961, 14 Brigade prisoners were convicted of torture, murder and other major crimes committed in Cuba before the invasion. Five were executed and nine others imprisoned for 30 years.[188] Three confirmed as executed were Ramon Calvino, Emilio Soler Puig ("El Muerte") and Jorge King Yun ("El Chino").[42][page needed][47][page needed] On 29 March 1962, 1,179 men were put on trial for treason. On 7 April 1962, all were convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison. On 14 April 1962, 60 wounded and sick prisoners were freed and transported to the U.S.[3][page needed] In 2021 was discovered that Brazil’s government, then led by President João Goulart, intervened on behalf of the United States to avoid the death penalty for prisoners.[189]

On 21 December 1962, Castro and James B. Donovan, a U.S. lawyer aided by Milan C. Miskovsky, a CIA legal officer,[190] signed an agreement to exchange 1,113 prisoners for US$53 million in food and medicine, sourced from private donations and from companies expecting tax concessions. On 24 December 1962, some prisoners were flown to Miami, others following on the ship African Pilot, plus about 1,000 family members also allowed to leave Cuba. On 29 December 1962, President Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline attended a "welcome back" ceremony for Brigade 2506 veterans at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida.[47][page needed][191]

Political reaction

 
Robert F. Kennedy's Statement on Cuba and Neutrality Laws, 20 April 1961

The failed invasion severely embarrassed the Kennedy administration and made Castro wary of future U.S. intervention in Cuba. On 21 April, in a State Department press conference, Kennedy said: "There's an old saying that victory has a hundred fathers and defeat is an orphan... Further statements, detailed discussions, are not to conceal responsibility because I'm the responsible officer of the Government..."[192]

Later, Kennedy told Khrushchev that the Bay of Pigs invasions was a mistake.[193]

The initial U.S. response concerning the first air attacks was of a dismissive quality. Adlai Stevenson denied any involvement in the first wave of airstrikes, stating before the United Nations, "These charges are totally false and I deny them categorically." Stevenson continued to promote a story of two Cuban planes that had reportedly defected to the United States, apparently unaware that they were in fact U.S. planes piloted by U.S.-backed Cuban pilots to promote a false story of defection.[194]

In August 1961, during an economic conference of the OAS in Punta del Este, Uruguay, Che Guevara sent a note to Kennedy via Richard N. Goodwin, a secretary of the White House. It read: "Thanks for Playa Girón. Before the invasion, the revolution was weak. Now it's stronger than ever".[195] Additionally, Guevara answered a set of questions from Leo Huberman of Monthly Review following the invasion. In one reply, Guevara was asked to explain the growing number of Cuban counter-revolutionaries and defectors from the regime, to which he replied that the repelled invasion was the climax of counter-revolution and that afterward such actions "fell drastically to zero." Regarding the defections of some prominent figures within the Cuban government, Guevara remarked that this was because "the socialist revolution left the opportunists, the ambitious, and the fearful far behind and now advances toward a new regime free of this class of vermin."[196]

As Allen Dulles later stated, CIA planners believed that once the troops were on the ground, Kennedy would authorize any action required to prevent failure – as Eisenhower had done in Guatemala in 1954 after that invasion looked as if it would collapse.[197] Kennedy was deeply depressed and angered with the failure. Several years after his death, The New York Times reported that he told an unspecified high administration official of wanting "to splinter the CIA in a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds." However, following a "rigorous inquiry into the agency's affairs, methods, and problems... [Kennedy] did not 'splinter' it after all and did not recommend Congressional supervision."[198] Kennedy commented to his journalist friend Ben Bradlee, "The first advice I'm going to give my successor is to watch the generals and to avoid feeling that because they were military men their opinions on military matters were worth a damn."[199]

 
Aerial view of missile launch site at San Cristobal, Cuba[200]

The aftermath of the Bay of Pigs invasion and events involving Cuba that followed caused the U.S. to feel threatened by its neighbor. Prior to the events at Playa Girón, the U.S. government imposed sanctions that limited trade with Cuba. An article appearing in The New York Times dated 6 January 1960 called trade with Cuba "too risky."[201] About six months later in July 1960, the U.S. reduced the import quota of Cuban sugar, leaving the U.S. no choice but to maintain its sugar needs from other sources.[202] Immediately following the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Kennedy Administration considered a complete embargo.[203] Five months later, the president was authorized to do so.

According to author Jim Rasenberger, the Kennedy administration became very aggressive in regards to overthrowing Castro following the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion, reportedly doubling its efforts. Rasenberger elaborated on the fact that almost every decision that was made by Kennedy following the Bay of Pigs had some correlation with the destruction of the Castro administration. Shortly after the invasion ended, Kennedy ordered the Pentagon to design secret operations to overthrow the Castro regime. Also, President Kennedy persuaded his brother Robert to set up a covert action against Castro which was known as "Operation Mongoose." This clandestine operation included sabotage and assassination plots.[citation needed]

Legacy

Maxwell Taylor survey

On 22 April 1961, President Kennedy asked General Maxwell D. Taylor, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, Admiral Arleigh Burke and CIA Director Allen Dulles to form the Cuba Study Group, to report on lessons to learn from the failed operation. General Taylor submitted the Board of Inquiry's report to President Kennedy on 13 June. It attributed the defeat to lack of early realization of the impossibility of success by covert means, to inadequate aircraft, to limitations on armaments, pilots, and air attacks set to attempt plausible deniability – and, ultimately, to loss of important ships and lack of ammunition.[204] The Taylor Commission was criticized, and bias implied. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, the President's brother, was included in the group, and the commission collectively was seen to be more preoccupied with deflecting blame from the White House than concerned with realizing the real depth of mistakes that promoted the failure in Cuba. Jack Pfeiffer, who worked as a historian for the CIA until the mid-1980s, simplified his own view of the failed Bay of Pigs effort by quoting a statement which Raúl Castro, Fidel's brother, had made to a Mexican journalist in 1975: "Kennedy vacillated," Raúl Castro said. "If at that moment he had decided to invade us, he could have suffocated the island in a sea of blood, but he could have destroyed the revolution. Lucky for us, he vacillated."[205]

CIA report

 
CIA report on the Bay of Pigs Invasion

In November 1961, CIA Inspector-General Lyman Kirkpatrick authored a report, "Survey of the Cuban Operation", that remained classified until 1998. Conclusions were:[206]

  1. The CIA exceeded its capabilities in developing the project from guerrilla support to overt armed action without any plausible deniability.
  2. Failure to realistically assess risks and to adequately communicate information and decisions internally and with other government principals.
  3. Insufficient involvement of leaders of the exiles.
  4. Failure to sufficiently organize internal resistance in Cuba.
  5. Failure to competently collect and analyze intelligence about Cuban forces.
  6. Poor internal management of communications and staff.
  7. Insufficient employment of high-quality staff.
  8. Insufficient Spanish-speakers, training facilities, and material resources.
  9. Lack of stable policies and/or contingency plans.

In spite of vigorous objections by CIA management to the findings, CIA Director Allen Dulles, CIA Deputy Director Charles Cabell, and deputy director for Plans Richard M. Bissell Jr. were all forced to resign by early 1962.[105][page needed] In later years, the CIA's behavior in the event became the prime example cited for the psychology paradigm known as groupthink syndrome.[122][page needed] Further study shows that among various components of groupthink analyzed by Irving Janis, the Bay of Pigs Invasion followed the structural characteristics that led to irrational decision making in foreign policy pushed by deficiency in impartial leadership.[207] An account on the process of invasion decision reads,[208]

At each meeting, instead of opening up the agenda to permit a full airing of the opposing considerations, [President Kennedy] allowed the CIA representatives to dominate the entire discussion. The president permitted them to refute each tentative doubt immediately that one of the others might express, instead of asking whether anyone else had the same doubt or wanted to pursue the implications of the new worrisome issue that had been raised.

Looking at both the Survey of the Cuban Operation and Groupthink: Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes by Irving Janis, it identifies the lack of communication and the mere assumption of concurrence to be the main causes behind the CIA and the president's collective failure to efficiently evaluate the facts before them. A considerable amount of information presented before President Kennedy proved to be false in reality, such as the support of the Cuban people for Fidel Castro, making it difficult to assess the actual situation and the future of the operation. The absence of the initiative to explore other options of the debate led the participants to remain optimistic and rigid in their belief that the mission would succeed, being unknowingly biased in the group psychology of wishful thinking as well.[citation needed]

In mid-1960, CIA operative E. Howard Hunt had interviewed Cubans in Havana; in a 1997 interview with CNN, he said, "...all I could find was a lot of enthusiasm for Fidel Castro."[209]

Invasion legacy in Cuba

 
A Sea Fury F 50 preserved at the Museo Giron, Cuba in 2006

For many Latin Americans, the invasion reinforced the belief that the U.S. could not be trusted. It also showed that the U.S. could be defeated, and thus encouraged political groups in Latin America to undermine U.S. influence.[210] Victory made Castro even more popular, fuelling nationalistic support for his economic policies. After the air attacks on Cuban airfields on 15 April, he declared the revolution "Marxist-Leninist".[123] Wary of further U.S. interference, he pursued closer relations with the Soviet Union and became willing to host nuclear weapons. This led to the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.[citation needed]

In March 2001, shortly before the 40th anniversary of the invasion, a conference took place in Havana, attended by about 60 American delegates. The conference was titled Bay of Pigs: 40 Years After. The conference was co-sponsored by the University of Havana, Centro de Estudios Sobre Estados Unidos, Instituto de Historia de Cuba, Centro de Investigaciones Históricas de la Seguridad del Estado; Centro de Estudios Sobre America, and the U.S.-based National Security Archive. It commenced on Thursday 22 March 2001 at the Hotel Palco, Palacio de las Convenciones [es], La Habana.[211][212][213] On 24 March, after the conference, many of the delegates and observers travelled by road to Australia sugar mill, Playa Larga, and Playa Girón, the site of the initial landing in the invasion. A documentary film was made of that trip, titled Cuba: The 40 Years War, released on DVD in 2002.[214] A Cuban FAR combatant at the Bay of Pigs, José Ramón Fernández, attended the conference, as did four members of Brigade 2506, Roberto Carballo, Mario Cabello, Alfredo Duran, and Luis Tornes.

There are still yearly nationwide drills in Cuba during the 'Dia de la Defensa' (Defense Day), to prepare the population for an invasion.

Invasion legacy for Cuban exiles

 
The Bay of Pigs Memorial in Little Havana, Miami

Many who fought for the CIA in the conflict remained loyal after the event; some Bay of Pigs veterans became officers in the U.S. Army in the Vietnam War, including 6 colonels, 19 lieutenant colonels, 9 majors, and 29 captains.[215] By March 2007, about half of the brigade had died.[216] In April 2010, the Cuban Pilot's Association unveiled a monument at the Kendall-Tamiami Executive Airport in memory of the 16 aviators for the exile side killed during the battle.[217] The memorial consists of an obelisk and a restored B-26 replica aircraft atop a large Cuban flag.[218]

American public reaction

 
President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy greeting 2506 Brigade members, 1962

Only 3 percent of Americans supported military action in 1960.[219] According to Gallup, 72% of people had a negative view of Fidel Castro in 1960.[219] After the conflict, 61% of Americans approved of the action, while 15% disapproved and 24% were unsure. This poll was taken by Gallup in late April 1966.[220] A week after the invasion of Cuba, Gallup took another series of polls to sample three possible ways of opposing Castro.[221] The policy that most resembled the Bay of Pigs (if the US "should aid the anti-Castro forces with money and war materials") was still favored by a narrow margin, 44% approval to 41% rejecting this policy.[222]

Kennedy's general approval rating increased in the first survey after the invasion, rising from 78 percent in mid-April to 83 percent in late April and early May.[223] Dr. Gallup's headline for this poll read, "Public Rallies Behind Kennedy in Aftermath of Cuban Crisis." In 1963 a public opinion poll showed 60 percent of Americans believed that Cuba is "a serious threat to world peace," yet 63 percent of Americans did not want the U.S. to remove Castro.[219]

Vienna summit meeting

After the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the construction of the Berlin Wall, and the Cuban Missile Crisis, President Kennedy believed that another failure on the part of the United States to gain control and stop communist expansion would fatally damage U.S. credibility with its allies and his own reputation. Kennedy was thus determined to "draw a line in the sand" and prevent a communist victory in the Vietnam War. He told James Reston of The New York Times immediately after his Vienna meeting with Khrushchev, "Now we have a problem making our power credible and Vietnam looks like the place."[224][225][page needed]

Notable surviving veterans

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Across the country
  2. ^ 1,500 ground forces (including 177 paratroops) – c. 1,300 landed. Also Cuban exile and American aircrews, as well as CIA operatives[5]
  3. ^ a b 176 Cuban government forces killed[5][7]
  4. ^ a b 118 invaders killed (114 Cuban exiles plus 4 American aircrew)[122]
  5. ^ 1,202 Brigade members captured (1,179 tried; 14 tried previously for pre-invasion crimes; 9 died in transit)[5]
  6. ^ 1,500 ground forces (including 177 paratroops) – c. 1,300 landed. Also Cuban exile and American aircrews, as well as CIA operatives[5]

References

  1. ^ Kellner 1989, pp. 69–70. "Historians give Guevara, who was director of instruction for Cuba's armed forces, a share of credit for the victory".
  2. ^ Szulc (1986), p. 450. "The revolutionaries won because Castro's strategy was vastly superior to the Central Intelligence Agency's because the revolutionary morale was high and because Che Guevara as the head of the militia training program and Fernández as commander of the militia officers' school, had done so well in preparing 200,000 men and women for war."
  3. ^ a b c d e f Szulc (1986)
  4. ^ a b FRUS X, documents 19, 24, 35, 245, 271.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Fernandez (2001)
  6. ^ a b c d e Quesada 2009, p. 46.
  7. ^ a b c d e Triay (2001), pp. 83–113
  8. ^ "Bay of Pigs Invasion and the Alabama Air National Guard | Encyclopedia of Alabama". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
  9. ^ Voss, Michael (14 April 2011). "The 'perfect failure' of Cuba invasion". BBC News. from the original on 13 February 2016. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  10. ^ Gott 2004. p. 113.
  11. ^ Gott 2004. p. 115.
  12. ^ Gott 2004. pp. 115–116.
  13. ^ Ernesto "Che" Guevara (World Leaders Past & Present), by Douglas Kellner, 1989, Chelsea House Publishers, ISBN 1555468357, p. 66.
  14. ^ Bourne 1986. pp. 64–65.
  15. ^ Quirk 1993. pp. 37–39.
  16. ^ Coltman 2003. pp. 57–62.
  17. ^ Gott 2004. p. 146.
  18. ^ Bourne 1986. pp. 71–72.
  19. ^ Quirk 1993. p. 45.
  20. ^ Coltman 2003. p. 72.
  21. ^ Bourne 1986. pp. 122, 129–130.
  22. ^ Quirk 1993. pp. 102–104, 114, 116.
  23. ^ Coltman 2003. p. 109.
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  49. ^ Quirk 1993. pp. 316–319.
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  51. ^ Bourne 1986. pp. 201–202.
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  54. ^ Bourne 1986. p. 214.
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  70. ^ Ambrose 2007. pp. 533–534.
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  82. ^ Coltman 2003. pp. 166–166.
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  91. ^ FRUS VI, document 481.
  92. ^ "Official History of the Bay of Pigs Operation" (PDF). Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  93. ^ "Remarks of Senator John F. Kennedy at Democratic Dinner Columbus Ohi". www.jfklibrary.org/. 6 October 1960.
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Sources

External links

  • – slideshow by Life magazine
  • A film clip "Cuba Invaded. Foes of Castro Open Offensive, 1961/04/19 (1961)" is available at the Internet Archive

pigs, invasion, invasion, cuba, redirects, here, jenkins, battles, invasion, cuba, 1741, united, states, intervention, cuba, 1898, spanish, american, this, article, cites, sources, does, provide, page, references, help, improve, introducing, citations, that, m. Invasion of Cuba redirects here For the War of Jenkins Ear battles see Invasion of Cuba 1741 For the United States intervention in Cuba in 1898 see Spanish American War This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help to improve it by introducing citations that are more precise and providing page numbers for existing citations April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Bay of Pigs Invasion Spanish Invasion de Bahia de Cochinos sometimes called Invasion de Playa Giron or Batalla de Playa Giron after the Playa Giron was a failed military landing operation on the southwestern coast of Cuba in 1961 by Cuban exiles covertly financed and directed by the United States It was aimed at overthrowing Fidel Castro s communist government The operation took place at the height of the Cold War and its failure influenced relations between Cuba the United States and the Soviet Union Bay of Pigs InvasionPart of the Cold War and theConsolidation of the Cuban RevolutionCounter attack by Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces near Playa Giron 19 April 1961Date17 20 April 1961LocationBay of Pigs southwestern coast of Cuba22 03 42 N 81 01 55 W 22 0616 N 81 0319 W 22 0616 81 0319 Coordinates 22 03 42 N 81 01 55 W 22 0616 N 81 0319 W 22 0616 81 0319ResultCuban victory Failure to topple Castro s government All surviving rebels captured Increased cooperation between Cuba and the Soviet UnionBelligerents Cuba United States Cuban DRFCommanders and leadersFidel CastroJose Fernandez Raul CastroJuan Almeida Che Guevara 1 2 Efigenio AmeijeirasJohn F Kennedy Robert F Kennedy Allen Dulles Charles Cabell Arleigh BurkePepe San Roman Erneido Oliva Felix RodriguezUnits involvedCuban Revolutionary Armed ForcesNational Revolutionary MilitiaNational Revolutionary Police ForceCIA Brigade 2506 U S Air Force U S NavyStrength25 000 Cuban Army 3 200 000 Militia 3 4 9 000 armed police 3 4 a 4 Lockheed T 33 jets 4 Hawker Sea Fury fighters 7 B 26 bombers 100 T 34 medium tanks IS 2 heavy tanks SU 100 self propelled guns plus several 76 2 mm and 122 mm artillery pieces1 500 ground forces b 16 B 26 bombers 8 C 46 and 6 C 54 transport planes 5 M41 tanks plus artillery mortars jeeps and trucks 5 supply shipsCasualties and lossesCuban Armed Forces 176 killed 400 500 wounded c 6 National Militia 2 000 killed and wounded vague 6 1 B 26 bomber shot down 1 Hawker Sea Fury shot down Unknown number of T 34 tanks and SU 100 guns destroyedBrigade 2506 118 killed 360 wounded d 1 202 captured including wounded e Hundreds executed 7 5 B 26 bombers shot downUnited States 4 killed 2 B 26 bombers shot down 2 supply ships lostclass notpageimage Location within CubaIn December 1958 dictator Fulgencio Batista was deposed by Castro s 26th of July Movement during the Cuban Revolution Castro nationalized American businesses including banks oil refineries and sugar and coffee plantations The Central Intelligence Agency CIA began planning the overthrow of Castro which U S President Dwight D Eisenhower approved in March 1960 and the U S began its embargo of the island This led Castro to reach out to its Cold War rival the Soviet Union after which the US severed diplomatic relations Cuban exiles who had moved to the U S following Castro s takeover had formed the counter revolutionary military unit Brigade 2506 which was the armed wing of the Democratic Revolutionary Front DRF The CIA funded the brigade which also included some U S military 8 personnel and trained the unit in Guatemala 1 500 troops divided into five infantry battalions and one paratrooper battalion assembled and launched from Guatemala and Nicaragua by boat on 17 April 1961 Two days earlier eight CIA supplied B 26 bombers had attacked Cuban airfields and then returned to the U S On the night of 17 April the main invasion force landed on the beach at Playa Giron in the Bay of Pigs where it overwhelmed a local revolutionary militia Initially Jose Ramon Fernandez led the Cuban Revolutionary Army counter offensive later Castro took personal control As the invasion force lost the strategic initiative U S President John F Kennedy decided to withhold further air support after the international community became aware of the operation 9 The plan devised during Eisenhower s presidency had required the involvement of U S air and naval forces Without further air support the invasion was being conducted with fewer forces than the CIA had deemed necessary The invading force was defeated within three days by the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces and surrendered on 20 April Most of the surrendered troops were publicly interrogated and put into Cuban prisons The invasion was a U S foreign policy failure The Cuban government s victory solidified Castro s role as a national hero and widened the political division between the two formerly allied countries It also pushed Cuba closer to the Soviet Union setting the stage for the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 Contents 1 Background 1 1 United States interventions in Cuba 1 2 Cuban Revolution 1 3 Post revolutionary government 2 Prelude 2 1 Huber Matos affair 2 2 Sanctions and assassination attempts 2 3 United States foreign policy debate 2 4 Internal opposition to Fidel Castro 3 Preparation 3 1 Early plans 3 2 Eisenhower s planning 3 3 Kennedy s operational approval 3 4 Training 4 Participants 4 1 U S Government personnel 4 2 Cuban government personnel 5 Prior warnings of invasion 6 Prelude to invasion 6 1 Acquisition of aircraft 6 2 Fleet sets sail 6 3 Air attacks on airfields 6 4 Deception flight 6 5 Reactions 6 6 Phony war 7 Invasion 7 1 Invasion day 17 April 7 2 Invasion day plus one D 1 18 April 7 3 Invasion day plus two D 2 19 April 7 4 Invasion day plus three D 3 20 April 8 Aftermath 8 1 Casualties 8 2 Prisoners 8 3 Political reaction 9 Legacy 9 1 Maxwell Taylor survey 9 2 CIA report 9 3 Invasion legacy in Cuba 9 4 Invasion legacy for Cuban exiles 9 5 American public reaction 10 Vienna summit meeting 11 Notable surviving veterans 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 External linksBackground EditUnited States interventions in Cuba Edit Further information Platt Amendment Since the middle of the 18th century Cuba had been part of the Spanish colonial empire In the late 19th century Cuban nationalist revolutionaries rebelled against Spanish dominance resulting in three liberation wars the Ten Years War 1868 1878 the Little War 1879 1880 and the Cuban War of Independence 1895 1898 In 1898 the United States government proclaimed war on the Spanish Empire resulting in the Spanish American War The U S subsequently invaded the island and forced the Spanish army out A special operations attempt to land a group of at least 375 Cuban soldiers on the island succeeded in the Battle of Tayacoba On 20 May 1902 a new independent government proclaimed the foundation of the Republic of Cuba with U S Military Governor Leonard Wood handing over control to President Tomas Estrada Palma a Cuban born U S citizen 10 Subsequently large numbers of U S settlers and businessmen arrived in Cuba and by 1905 60 of rural properties were owned by non Cuban born North American citizens 11 Between 1906 and 1909 5 000 U S Marines were stationed across the island and returned in 1912 1917 and 1921 to intervene in internal affairs sometimes at the behest of the Cuban government 12 Cuban Revolution Edit Main article Cuban Revolution Until Castro the US was so overwhelmingly influential in Cuba that the American ambassador was the second most important man sometimes even more important than the Cuban president Earl E T Smith former American Ambassador to Cuba during 1960 testimony to the US Senate 13 In March 1952 a Cuban general and politician Fulgencio Batista seized power on the island proclaimed himself president and deposed the discredited president Carlos Prio Socarras of the Partido Autentico Batista canceled the planned presidential elections and described his new system as disciplined democracy Although Batista gained some popular support many Cubans saw it as the establishment of a one man dictatorship 14 15 16 17 Many opponents of the Batista regime took to armed rebellion in an attempt to oust the government sparking the Cuban Revolution One of these groups was the National Revolutionary Movement Movimiento Nacional Revolucionario a militant organization containing largely middle class members that had been founded by the Professor of Philosophy Rafael Garcia Barcena 18 19 20 Another was the Directorio Revolucionario Estudantil which had been founded by the Federation of University Students President Jose Antonio Echevarria 21 22 23 However the best known of these anti Batista groups was the 26th of July Movement MR 26 7 founded by Fidel Castro With Castro as the MR 26 7 s head the organization was based upon a clandestine cell system with each cell containing ten members none of whom knew the whereabouts or activities of the other cells 24 25 26 Between December 1956 and 1959 Castro led a guerrilla army against the forces of Batista from his base camp in the Sierra Maestra mountains Batista s repression of revolutionaries had earned him widespread unpopularity and by 1958 his armies were in retreat On 31 December 1958 Batista resigned and fled into exile taking with him an amassed fortune of more than US 300 000 000 27 28 29 The presidency fell to Castro s chosen candidate the lawyer Manuel Urrutia Lleo while members of the MR 26 7 took control of most positions in the cabinet 30 31 32 On 16 February 1959 Castro took on the role of Prime Minister 33 34 Dismissing the need for elections Castro said the revolution had created direct democracy in which the people and the government had a close bond 35 In contrast critics condemned the new regime as un democratic The U S Secretary of State Christian Herter announced that Cuba was adopting the Soviet model of communist rule with a one party state government control of trade unions suppression of civil liberties and the absence of freedom of speech and press 36 Post revolutionary government Edit Main article Agrarian reforms in Cuba See also Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution After the success of the revolution a popular uproar across Cuba demanded that those figures who had been complicit in the widespread torture and killing of civilians be brought to justice Although he remained a moderating force and tried to prevent the mass reprisal killings of Batistanos advocated by many Cubans Castro helped to set up trials of many figures involved in the old regime across the country resulting in hundreds of executions Critics in particular from the U S press argued that many of these did not meet the standards of a fair trial and condemned Cuba s new government as being more interested in vengeance than justice Castro retaliated strongly against such accusations proclaiming that revolutionary justice is not based on legal precepts but on moral conviction In a show of support for this revolutionary justice he organized the first Havana trial to take place before a mass audience of 17 000 at the Sports Palace stadium When a group of 19 pilots accused of bombing a village was found not guilty Castro ordered a retrial in which they were found guilty and each sentenced to 30 years in prison 37 38 39 40 In early January 1959 Fidel Castro appointed various economists such as Felipe Pazos Rufo Lopez Fresquet Ernesto Bentacourt Faustino Perez and Manuel Ray Rivero By June 1959 these appointed economists would begin to express disillusionment with Castro s proposed economic policies 41 In early 1959 the Cuban government began agrarian reforms which redistributed the ownership of Cuba s land Expropriated lands would be put into state ownership and the newly formed Instituto de la Reforma Agraria INRA was to oversee the expropriations and be headed by Fidel Castro In Camaguey Province there was growing opposition to the Cuban government due to the resistance of conservative farmers to the agrarian reforms and distaste for Raul Castro and Che Guevara s promotion of communist ideals in the local government and military The anti communist opposition within the Cuban government assumed that Fidel Castro was unaware of growing communist influence because of Fidel Castro s frequent public disavowals of communism 41 On July 17 1959 Conrado Becquer the sugar workers leader demanded Cuban President Urrutia s resignation Castro himself resigned as Prime Minister of Cuba in protest but later that day appeared on television to deliver a lengthy denouncement of Urrutia claiming that Urrutia complicated government and that his fevered anti Communism was having a detrimental effect Castro s sentiments received widespread support as organized crowds surrounded the presidential palace demanding Urrutia s resignation which was duly received On July 23 Castro resumed his position as premier and appointed loyalist Osvaldo Dorticos as the new president 42 Prelude EditHuber Matos affair Edit Main article Huber Matos affair Cuban Army officer Huber Matos after his arrest being transported to La Cabana On October 20 1959 Cuban army commander and veteran of the Cuban Revolution Huber Matos resigned and accused Fidel Castro of burying the revolution Fifteen of Matos officers resigned with him Immediately after the resignation Castro accused Matos of disloyalty and sent Camilo Cienfuegos to arrest Matos and his accompanying officers Matos and the officers were taken to Havana and imprisoned in La Cabana 43 Cuban communists later claimed Matos was helping plan a counter revolution organized by the American Central Intelligence Agency and other Castro opponents an operation that became the Bay of Pigs Invasion 44 page needed The scandal is noted for its occurrence alongside a greater trend of removals of Castro s former collaborators in the revolution It marked a turning point where Castro was beginning to exert more personal control over the new government in Cuba Matos arresting officer and former collaborator of Castro Camilo Cienfuegos would soon die in a mysterious plane crash shortly after the incident 45 Shortly after Matos arrest the prime minister and Che Guevara made a speech to members of the INRA that Cuba would continue to turn in a socialist direction Manuel Artime viewed the arrest of Matos and affirmation of socialism in Cuba as precedent for him to resign On 7 November 1959 his resignation letter from INRA and the revolutionary army was published on the front page of Avance newspaper one of the last newspapers not controlled by the government Artime then entered an underground organization run by Jesuits in Cuba to hide fugitives it is unclear what exactly made Artime immediately turn to hiding and later defect While in a Havana safehouse Artime would form the Movement for Revolutionary Recovery with other dissidents Artime then contacted the American embassy in Havana and on 14 December 1959 the CIA arranged for him to travel to the US on a Honduran freighter ship He became closely involved with Gerry Droller alias Frank Bender alias Mr B of the CIA in recruiting and organizing Cuban exiles in Miami for future actions against the Cuban government Artime s organization MRR thus grew to become the principal counter revolutionary movement inside Cuba with supporting members in Miami Mexico Venezuela etc Involved were Tony Varona Jose Miro Cardona Rafael Quintero Aureliano Arango Infiltration into Cuba arms drops etc were arranged by the CIA 46 47 45 Manuel Artime became the future leader of Brigade 2506 in the Bay of Pigs Invasion He gained this position from the notoriety he gained after defecting and engaging in a tour of Latin America denouncing the new government in Cuba This notoriety as a Cuban dissident gave him credit to be picked as the leader for the invasion when it was first conceived by the CIA 45 Sanctions and assassination attempts Edit Further information United States embargo against Cuba and La Coubre explosion The ship La Coubre after exploding in the Havana harbor 1960 Shortly after Castro would deem the explosion a result of American sabotage worsening US Cuba relations Castro s Cuban government ordered the country s oil refineries then controlled by U S corporations Esso Standard Oil and Shell to process crude oil purchased from the Soviet Union but under pressure from the U S government these companies refused Castro responded by expropriating the refineries and nationalizing them under state control In retaliation the U S canceled its import of Cuban sugar provoking Castro to nationalize most U S owned assets including banks and sugar mills 48 49 50 Relations between Cuba and the U S were further strained following the explosion and sinking of a French vessel the Le Coubre in Havana Harbor in March 1960 The cause of the explosion was never determined but Castro publicly mentioned that the U S government was guilty of sabotage 51 52 53 On 13 October 1960 the U S government then prohibited the majority of exports to Cuba the exceptions being medicines and certain foodstuffs marking the start of an economic embargo In retaliation the Cuban National Institute for Agrarian Reform took control of 383 private run businesses on 14 October and on 25 October a further 166 U S companies operating in Cuba had their premises seized and nationalized including Coca Cola and Sears Roebuck 54 55 On 16 December the U S ended its import quota of Cuban sugar 56 The U S government was becoming increasingly critical of Castro s revolutionary government At an August 1960 meeting of the Organization of American States OAS held in Costa Rica U S Secretary of State Christian Herter publicly proclaimed that Castro s administration was following faithfully the Bolshevik pattern by instituting a single party political system taking governmental control of trade unions suppressing civil liberties and removing both the freedom of speech and freedom of the press He furthermore asserted that international communism was using Cuba as an operational base for spreading revolution in the western hemisphere and called on other OAS members to condemn the Cuban government for its breach of human rights 57 In turn Castro lambasted the treatment of black people and the working classes he had witnessed in New York City which he ridiculed as that superfree superdemocratic superhumane and supercivilized city Proclaiming that the U S poor were living in the bowels of the imperialist monster he attacked the mainstream U S media and accused it of being controlled by big business 58 Superficially the U S was trying to improve its relationship with Cuba Several negotiations between representatives from Cuba and the U S took place around this time Repairing international financial relations was the focal point of these discussions Political relations were another hot topic of these conferences The U S stated that they would not interfere with Cuba s domestic affairs but that the island should limit its ties with the Soviet Union 59 Tensions percolated when the CIA began to act on its desires to snuff out Castro Efforts to assassinate Castro officially commenced in 1960 60 though the U S public did not become aware of them until 1975 when the Senate Church Committee set up to investigate CIA abuses released a report entitled Alleged Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders 60 Some methods that the CIA undertook to assassinate Castro were creative for example poison pills an exploding seashell and a planned gift of a diving suit contaminated with toxins 60 More traditional ways of assassinating Castro were also planned such as elimination via high powered rifles with telescopic sights 60 In August 1960 the CIA contacted the Cosa Nostra in Chicago with the intention to draft simultaneous assassinations of Fidel Castro Raul Castro and Che Guevara In exchange if the operation were a success and a pro U S government were restored in Cuba the CIA agreed that the Mafia would get their monopoly on gaming prostitution and drugs 61 62 In 1963 at the same time the Kennedy administration initiated secret peace overtures to Castro Cuban revolutionary and undercover CIA agent Rolando Cubela was tasked with killing Castro by CIA official Desmond Fitzgerald who portrayed himself as a personal representative of Robert F Kennedy 60 United States foreign policy debate Edit Further information 1960 United States presidential election Nixon and Kennedy debating during the 1960 US Presidential election The U S initially recognized Castro s government after the Cuban Revolution ousted Batista 63 but the relationship quickly soured as Castro repeatedly condemned the U S in his speeches for its misdeeds in Cuba over the previous 60 years 64 Many U S officials began to view Castro as a threat to national security as he legalized the Communist Party 63 nationalized property owned by U S citizens totaling 1 5 billion 64 and strengthened ties with the Soviet Union 64 By early 1960 President Eisenhower had begun contemplating ways to remove Castro in the hopes that he might be replaced by a Cuban government in exile though none existed at the time 65 In accordance with this goal he approved Richard Bissell s plan which included training the paramilitary force that would later be used in the Bay of Pigs Invasion 66 Cuba became a focal point in the 1960 U S presidential election with both candidates promising to get tough with the Communists 67 Kennedy in particular attacked Nixon and the Eisenhower administration for allowing communism to flourish so close to the U S In response Nixon revealed plans for an embargo against Cuba but the Democrats criticized it as ineffective 68 Ultimately Nixon lost the election convinced that Cuba had brought him down 69 and Kennedy inherited the thorny issue near the height of its prominence Despite the focus on Cuba in the elections and deteriorating relations between Cuba and the U S exacerbated when Castro accused most of the U S State Department personnel in Havana of being spies and subsequently ordering them to leave the country to which Eisenhower responded by withdrawing recognition of Castro s government 70 Kennedy hesitated to commit to the CIA s plans Under Dulles and Bissell s insistence of the increasingly urgent need to do something with the troops being trained in Guatemala Kennedy eventually agreed although to avoid the appearance of American involvement he requested the operation be moved from the city of Trinidad Cuba to a less conspicuous location 71 Thus the final plan was for an invasion at the Bay of Pigs Internal opposition to Fidel Castro Edit Further information Escambray rebellion Student protest against the Fidel Castro government in Havana s central park January 8 1960 Soon after the success of the Cuban Revolution militant counter revolutionary groups developed in an attempt to overthrow the new regime Undertaking armed attacks against government forces some set up guerrilla bases in Cuba s mountainous regions leading to the six year Escambray Rebellion These dissidents were funded and armed by various foreign sources including the exiled Cuban community the U S Central Intelligence Agency CIA and Rafael Trujillo s regime in the Dominican Republic 72 73 74 No quarter was given during the suppression of the resistance in the Escambray Mountains where former rebels from the war against Batista took different sides 75 On 3 April 1961 a bomb attack on militia barracks in Bayamo killed four militia and wounded eight more On 6 April the Hershey Sugar factory in Matanzas was destroyed by sabotage 76 On 14 April 1961 guerrillas led by Agapito Rivera fought Cuban government forces in Villa Clara Province where several government troops were killed and others wounded 76 Also on 14 April 1961 a Cubana airliner was hijacked and flown to Jacksonville Florida resultant confusion then helped the staged defection of a B 26 military aircraft and pilot at Miami on 15 April 5 page needed 77 Castro s government began a crackdown on this opposition movement arresting hundreds of dissidents 78 79 Though it rejected the physical torture Batista s regime had used Castro s government sanctioned psychological torture subjecting some prisoners to solitary confinement rough treatment hunger and threatening behavior 80 After conservative editors and journalists began expressing hostility towards the government following its leftward turn the pro Castro printers trade union began to harass and disrupt editorial staff actions In January 1960 the government proclaimed that each newspaper was obliged to publish a clarification by the printers union at the end of every article that criticized the government These clarifications signaled the start of press censorship in Castro s Cuba 81 82 On 11 March 1961 Jesus Carreras Zayas and American William Alexander Morgan a former Castro ally were executed after a trial 42 page needed 83 Preparation EditEarly plans Edit The idea of overthrowing Castro s government emerged within the CIA in early 1960 Founded in 1947 by the National Security Act the CIA was a product of the Cold War having been designed to counter the espionage activities of the Soviet Union s own national security agency the KGB As the perceived threat of international communism grew larger the CIA expanded its activities to undertake covert economic political and military activities that would advance causes favourable to U S interests often resulting in brutal dictatorships that favored U S interests 84 CIA Director Allen Dulles was responsible for overseeing covert operations across the world and although widely considered an ineffectual administrator he was popular among his employees whom he had protected from the accusations of McCarthyism 85 Recognizing that Castro and his government were becoming increasingly hostile and openly opposed to the United States Eisenhower directed the CIA to begin preparations of invading Cuba and overthrow the Castro regime 86 Richard M Bissell Jr was charged with overseeing plans for the Bay of Pigs Invasion He assembled agents to aid him in the plot many of whom had worked on the 1954 Guatemalan coup six years before these included David Philips Gerry Droller and E Howard Hunt 87 Bissell placed Droller in charge of liaising with anti Castro segments of the Cuban American community living in the United States and asked Hunt to fashion a government in exile which the CIA would effectively control 88 Hunt proceeded to travel to Havana where he spoke with Cubans from various backgrounds and discovered a brothel through the Mercedes Benz agency 89 Returning to the U S he informed the Cuban Americans with whom he was liaising that they would have to move their base of operations from Florida to Mexico City because the State Department refused to permit the training of a militia on U S soil Although unhappy with the news they conceded to the order 89 President Eisenhower had meetings with President elect Kennedy at the White House on 6 December 1960 and 19 January 1961 90 In one conversation Eisenhower stated that since March 1960 the U S government had trained in small units but we had done nothing else some hundreds of refugees in Guatemala a few in Panama and some in Florida 90 However Eisenhower also expressed disapproval of the idea of Batista returning to power and was waiting for the exiles to agree on a leader who was opposed to both Castro and Batista 90 Eisenhower s planning Edit On 17 March 1960 the CIA put forward their plan for the overthrow of Castro s administration to the U S National Security Council where President Eisenhower lent his support 84 approving a CIA budget of 13 000 000 to explore options to remove Castro from power 90 The first stated objective of the plan was to bring about the replacement of the Castro regime with one more devoted to the true interests of the Cuban people and more acceptable to the U S in such a manner to avoid any appearance of U S intervention 91 Four major forms of action were to be taken to aid anti communist opposition in Cuba at the time These included providing a powerful propaganda offensive against the regime perfecting a covert intelligence network within Cuba developing paramilitary forces outside of Cuba and acquiring the necessary logistical support for covert military operations on the island At this stage however it was still not clear that an invasion would take place 92 Contrary to popular belief however documents obtained from the Eisenhower Library revealed that Eisenhower had not ordered or approved plans for an amphibious assault on Cuba 90 By 31 October 1960 most guerrilla infiltrations and supply drops directed by the CIA into Cuba had failed and developments of further guerrilla strategies were replaced by plans to mount an initial amphibious assault with a minimum of 1 500 men The election of John Kennedy as U S president sped up preparations for the invasion 90 Kennedy had specifically denied any support for Batista supporters Batista murdered 20 000 Cubans in seven years a greater proportion of the Cuban population than the proportion of Americans who died in both World Wars and he turned Democratic Cuba into a complete police state destroying every individual liberty 93 On 18 November 1960 Dulles and Bissell first briefed President elect Kennedy on the outline plans Having experience in actions such as the 1954 Guatemalan coup d etat Dulles was confident that the CIA was capable of overthrowing the Cuban government On 29 November 1960 President Eisenhower met with the chiefs of the CIA Defense State and Treasury departments to discuss the new concept None expressed any objections and Eisenhower approved the plans with the intention of persuading John Kennedy of their merit On 8 December 1960 Bissell presented outline plans to the Special Group while declining to commit details to written records Further development of the plans continued and on 4 January 1961 they consisted of an intention to establish a lodgement by 750 men at an undisclosed site in Cuba supported by considerable air power 94 Meanwhile in the 1960 presidential election both main candidates Richard Nixon of the Republican Party and John F Kennedy of the Democratic Party campaigned on the issue of Cuba with both candidates taking a hardline stance on Castro 95 Nixon who was vice president insisted that Kennedy should not be informed of the military plans to which Dulles conceded 96 To Nixon s chagrin the Kennedy campaign released a scathing statement on the Eisenhower administration s Cuba policy on 20 October 1960 which said that we must attempt to strengthen the non Batista democratic anti Castro forces who offer eventual hope of overthrowing Castro claiming that Thus far these fighters for freedom have had virtually no support from our Government 97 At the last election debate the next day Nixon called Kennedy s proposed course of action dangerously irresponsible and even lectured Kennedy on international law 98 in effect denigrating the policy Kennedy favored 99 Kennedy s operational approval Edit source source John F Kennedy answered difficult questions on Cuba on 12 April only five days before the invasion On 28 January 1961 President Kennedy was briefed together with all the major departments on the latest plan code named Operation Pluto which involved 1 000 men landed in a ship borne invasion at Trinidad Cuba about 270 km 170 mi south east of Havana at the foothills of the Escambray Mountains in Sancti Spiritus province Kennedy authorized the active departments to continue and to report progress 100 Trinidad had good port facilities it was closer to many existing counter revolutionary activities and it offered an escape route into the Escambray Mountains That scheme was subsequently rejected by the State Department because the airfield there was not large enough for B 26 bombers and since B 26s were to play a prominent role in the invasion this would destroy the facade that the invasion was just an uprising with no American involvement Secretary of State Dean Rusk raised some eyebrows by contemplating airdropping a bulldozer to extend the airfield 101 Kennedy rejected Trinidad preferring a more low key locale 102 On 4 April 1961 President Kennedy approved the Bay of Pigs plan also known as Operation Zapata because it had a sufficiently long airfield it was farther away from large groups of civilians than the Trinidad plan and it was less noisy militarily which would make denial of direct U S involvement more plausible 103 The invasion landing area was changed to beaches bordering the Bahia de Cochinos Bay of Pigs in Las Villas Province 150 km southeast of Havana and east of the Zapata Peninsula The landings were to take place at Playa Giron code named Blue Beach Playa Larga code named Red Beach and Caleta Buena Inlet code named Green Beach 104 page needed 105 page needed 106 107 page needed Top aides to Kennedy such as Dean Rusk and both joint chiefs of staff later said that they had hesitations about the plans but muted their thoughts Some leaders blamed these problems on the Cold War mindset or the determination of the Kennedy brothers to oust Castro and fulfill campaign promises 104 page needed Military advisers were skeptical of its potential for success as well 90 Despite these hesitations Kennedy still ordered the attack to take place 90 In March 1961 the CIA helped Cuban exiles in Miami to create the Cuban Revolutionary Council chaired by Jose Miro Cardona former Prime Minister of Cuba Miro became the de facto leader in waiting of the intended post invasion Cuban government 108 page needed Training Edit Douglas A 26 Invader B 26 bomber aircraft disguised as a Cuban model In April 1960 the CIA began to recruit anti Castro Cuban exiles in the Miami area Until July 1960 assessment and training was carried out on Useppa Island and at various other facilities in South Florida such as Homestead Air Force Base Specialist guerrilla training took place at Fort Gulick and Fort Clayton in Panama 5 page needed 109 The force that became Brigade 2506 started with 28 men who initially were told that their training was being paid for by an anonymous Cuban millionaire emigre but the recruits soon guessed who was paying the bills calling their supposed anonymous benefactor Uncle Sam and the pretense was dropped 110 The overall leader was Dr Manuel Artime while the military leader was Jose Pepe Perez San Roman a former Cuban Army officer imprisoned under both Batista and Castro 110 Cuban defectors practicing parachute drops For the increasing number of recruits infantry training was carried out at a CIA run base code named JMTrax The base was on the Pacific coast of Guatemala between Quetzaltenango and Retalhuleu in the Helvetia coffee plantation 111 The exiled group named themselves Brigade 2506 Brigada Asalto 2506 47 page needed In summer 1960 an airfield code named JMadd aka Rayo Base was constructed near Retalhuleu Guatemala 111 Gunnery and flight training of Brigade 2506 aircrews was carried out by personnel from Alabama Air National Guard under General Reid Doster using at least six Douglas B 26 Invaders in the markings of the Guatemalan Air Force 112 An additional 26 B 26s were obtained from U S military stocks sanitized at Field Three to obscure their origins and about 20 of them were converted for offensive operations by removal of defensive armament standardization of the eight gun nose addition of underwing drop tanks and rocket racks 113 114 page needed Paratroop training was at a base nicknamed Garrapatenango near Quetzaltenango Guatemala Training for boat handling and amphibious landings took place at Vieques Island Puerto Rico Tank training for the Brigade 2506 M41 Walker Bulldog tanks citation needed took place at Fort Knox Kentucky and Fort Benning Georgia Underwater demolition and infiltration training took place at Belle Chasse near New Orleans 107 page needed To create a navy the CIA purchased five cargo ships from the Cuban owned Miami based Garcia Line thereby giving plausible deniability as the State Department had insisted no U S ships could be involved in the invasion 115 The first four of the five ships namely the Atlantico the Caribe the Houston and Rio Escondido were to carry enough supplies and weapons to last thirty days while the Lake Charles had 15 days of supplies and was intended to land the provisional government of Cuba 115 The ships were loaded with supplies at New Orleans and sailed to Puerto Cabezas Nicaragua 115 Additionally the invasion force had two old Landing Craft Infantry LCI ships the Blagar and Barbara J from World War II that were part of the CIA s ghost ship fleet and served as command ships for the invasion 115 The crews of the supply ships were Cuban while the crews of the LCIs were Americans borrowed by the CIA from the Military Sea Transportation Service MSTS 115 One CIA officer wrote that MSTS sailors were all professional and experienced but not trained for combat 115 In November 1960 the Retalhuleu recruits took part in quelling an officers rebellion in Guatemala in addition to the intervention of the U S Navy 116 The CIA transported people supplies and arms from Florida to all the bases at night using Douglas C 54 transports On 9 April 1961 Brigade 2506 personnel ships and aircraft started transferring from Guatemala to Puerto Cabezas 83 Curtiss C 46s were also used for transport between Retalhuleu and a CIA base code named JMTide aka Happy Valley at Puerto Cabezas Facilities and limited logistical assistance were provided by the governments of General Miguel Ydigoras Fuentes in Guatemala and General Luis Somoza Debayle in Nicaragua but no military personnel or equipment of those nations was directly employed in the conflict 114 page needed 117 page needed Both governments later received military training and equipment including some of the CIA s remaining B 26s In early 1961 Cuba s army possessed Soviet designed T 34 medium tanks IS 2 heavy tanks SU 100 tank destroyers 122mm howitzers other artillery and small arms plus Italian 105mm howitzers The Cuban air force armed inventory included B 26 Invader light bombers Hawker Sea Fury fighters and Lockheed T 33 jets all remaining from the Fuerza Aerea del Ejercito de Cuba the Cuban air force of the Batista government 47 page needed Anticipating an invasion Che Guevara stressed the importance of an armed civilian populace stating all of the Cuban people must become a guerrilla army each and every Cuban must learn to handle and if necessary use firearms in defense of the nation 118 Participants EditU S Government personnel Edit In April 1960 FRD Frente Revolucionario Democratico Democratic Revolutionary Front rebels were taken to Useppa Island Florida which was covertly leased by the CIA at the time Once the rebels had arrived they were greeted by instructors from U S Army special forces groups members from the U S Air Force and Air National Guard and members of the CIA The rebels were trained in amphibious assault tactics guerrilla warfare infantry and weapons training unit tactics and land navigation 119 At the head of the operation was Joaquin Sanjenis Perdomo former police chief in Cuba and intelligence officer Rafael De Jesus Gutierrez The group included David Atlee Philips Howard Hunt and David Sanchez Morales 120 The recruiting of Cuban exiles in Miami was organized by CIA staff officers E Howard Hunt and Gerry Droller Detailed planning training and military operations were conducted by Jacob Esterline Colonel Jack Hawkins Felix Rodriguez Rafael De Jesus Gutierrez and Colonel Stanley W Beerli under the direction of Richard Bissell and his deputy Tracy Barnes 107 page needed Cuban government personnel Edit Already Fidel Castro was known as and addressed as the commander in chief of Cuban armed forces with a nominal base at Point One in Havana In early April 1961 his brother Raul Castro was assigned command of forces in the east based in Santiago de Cuba Che Guevara commanded western forces based in Pinar del Rio Major Juan Almeida Bosque commanded forces in the central provinces based in Santa Clara Raul Curbelo Morales was head of the Cuban Air Force Sergio del Valle Jimenez was Director of Headquarters Operations at Point One Efigenio Ameijeiras was the Head of the Revolutionary National Police Ramiro Valdes Menendez was Minister of the Interior and head of G 2 Seguridad del Estado or state security His deputy was Comandante Manuel Pineiro Losada also known as Barba Roja Captain Jose Ramon Fernandez was head of the School of Militia Leaders Cadets at Matanzas 3 page needed 121 122 page needed 123 124 Other commanders of units during the conflict included Major Raul Menendez Tomassevich Major Filiberto Olivera Moya Major Rene de los Santos Major Augusto Martinez Sanchez Major Felix Duque Major Pedro Miret Major Flavio Bravo Major Antonio Lusson Captain Orlando Pupo Pena Captain Victor Dreke Captain Emilio Aragones Captain Angel Fernandez Vila Arnaldo Ochoa and Orlando Rodriguez Puerta 5 page needed 125 page needed Soviet trained Spanish advisors were brought to Cuba from Eastern Bloc countries These advisors had held high staff positions in the Soviet armies during World War II and became known as Hispano Soviets having long resided in the Soviet Union The most senior of these was the Spanish communist veterans of the Spanish Civil War Francisco Ciutat de Miguel Enrique Lister and Cuban born Alberto Bayo 126 Ciutat de Miguel Cuban alias Angel Martinez Riosola commonly referred to as Angelito was an advisor to forces in the central provinces The role of other Soviet agents at the time is uncertain but some of them acquired greater fame later For example two KGB colonels Vadim Kochergin and Victor Simanov were first sighted in Cuba in about September 1959 127 128 Prior warnings of invasion EditThe Cuban security apparatus knew the invasion was coming in part due to indiscreet talk by members of the brigade some of which was heard in Miami and repeated in U S and foreign newspaper reports Nevertheless days before the invasion multiple acts of sabotage were carried out such as the El Encanto fire an arson attack in a department store in Havana on 13 April that killed one shop worker 5 page needed 129 The Cuban government also had been warned by senior KGB agents Osvaldo Sanchez Cabrera and Aragon who died violently before and after the invasion respectively 130 The general Cuban population was not well informed of intelligence matters which the US sought to exploit with propaganda through CIA funded Radio Swan 131 As of May 1960 almost all means of public communication were under public ownership 132 133 On 29 April 2000 a Washington Post article Soviets Knew Date of Cuba Attack reported that the CIA had information indicating that the Soviet Union knew the invasion was going to take place and did not inform Kennedy On 13 April 1961 Radio Moscow broadcast an English language newscast predicting the invasion in a plot hatched by the CIA using paid criminals within a week The invasion took place four days later 134 David Ormsby Gore the British ambassador to the U S stated that British intelligence analysis made available to the CIA indicated that the Cuban people were overwhelmingly behind Castro and that there was no likelihood of mass defections or insurrections 135 Prelude to invasion EditAcquisition of aircraft Edit From June to September 1960 the most time consuming task was the acquisition of the aircraft to be used in the invasion The anti Castro effort depended on the success of these aircraft Although models such as the Curtiss C 46 Commando and Douglas C 54 Skymaster were to be used for airdrops and bomb drops as well as for infiltration and exfiltration they were looking for an aircraft that could perform tactical strikes The two models that were going to be decided on were the Navy s Douglas AD 5 Skyraider or the Air Force s light bomber the Douglas B 26 Invader The AD 5 was readily available and ready for the Navy to train pilots and in a meeting among a special group in the office of the Deputy Director of the CIA the AD 5 was approved and decided upon After a cost benefit analysis word was sent that the AD 5 plan would be abandoned and the B 26 would take its place 136 Fleet sets sail Edit Under cover of darkness the invasion fleet set sail from Puerto Cabezas Nicaragua and headed towards the Bay of Pigs on the night of 14 April 137 After on loading the attack planes in Norfolk Naval Base and taking on prodigious quantities of food and supplies sufficient for the seven weeks at sea to come the crew knew from the hasty camouflage of the ship s and aircraft identifying numbers that a secret mission was on hand Combatants were supplied with forged Cuban local currency in the form of 20 Peso bills identifiable by the serial numbers F69 and F70 The aircraft carrier group of the USS Essex had been at sea for nearly a month before the invasion its crew was well aware of the impending battle En route Essex had made a night time stop at a Navy arms depot in Charleston South Carolina to load tactical nuclear weapons to be held ready during the cruise The afternoon of the invasion one accompanying destroyer rendezvoused with Essex to have a gun mount repaired and put back into action the ship displayed numerous shell casings on deck from its shore bombardment actions On 16 April Essex was at general quarters for most of a day Soviet MiG 15s made feints and close range fly overs that night 138 citation needed Air attacks on airfields Edit During the night of 14 15 April a diversionary landing was planned near Baracoa Oriente Province by about 164 Cuban exiles commanded by Higinio Nino Diaz Their mother ship named La Playa or Santa Ana had sailed from Key West under a Costa Rican ensign Several U S Navy destroyers were stationed offshore near Guantanamo Bay to give the appearance of an impending invasion fleet 139 The reconnaissance boats turned back to the ship after their crews detected activities by Cuban militia forces along the coastline 3 page needed 47 page needed 122 page needed 140 7 141 As a result of those activities at daybreak a reconnaissance sortie over the Baracoa area was launched from Santiago de Cuba by an FAR Lockheed T 33 piloted by Lt Orestes Acosta and it crashed fatally into the sea On 17 April his name was falsely quoted as a defector among the disinformation circulating in Miami 142 page needed The CIA with the backing of the Pentagon had originally requested permission to produce sonic booms over Havana on 14 April to create confusion The request was a form of psychological warfare that had proven successful in the overthrow of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala in 1954 The point was to create confusion in Havana and have it be a distraction to Castro if they could break all the windows in town 143 The request was denied however since officials thought such would be too obvious a sign of involvement by the United States 143 On 15 April 1961 at about 06 00 hours Cuban local time eight B 26B Invader bombers in three groups simultaneously attacked three Cuban airfields at San Antonio de los Banos and at Ciudad Libertad formerly named Campo Columbia both near Havana plus the Antonio Maceo International Airport at Santiago de Cuba The B 26s had been prepared by the CIA on behalf of Brigade 2506 and had been painted with the false flag markings of the FAR Each came armed with bombs rockets and machine guns They had flown from Puerto Cabezas in Nicaragua and were crewed by exiled Cuban pilots and navigators of the self styled Fuerza Aerea de Liberacion FAL The purpose of the action code named Operation Puma was reportedly to destroy most or all of the armed aircraft of the FAR in preparation for the main invasion At Santiago the two attackers destroyed a C 47 transport a PBY Catalina flying boat two B 26s and a civilian Douglas DC 3 plus various other civilian aircraft At San Antonio the three attackers destroyed three FAR B 26s one Hawker Sea Fury and one T 33 and one attacker diverted to Grand Cayman because of low fuel Aircraft that diverted to the Caymans were seized by the United Kingdom since they were suspicious that the Cayman Islands might be perceived as a launch site for the invasion 143 At Ciudad Libertad the three attackers destroyed only non operational aircraft such as two Republic P 47 Thunderbolts One of those attackers was damaged by anti aircraft fire and ditched about 50 km 31 mi north of Cuba 144 with the loss of its crew Daniel Fernandez Mon and Gaston Perez Its companion B 26 also damaged continued north and landed at Boca Chica Field Florida The crew Jose Crespo and Lorenzo Perez Lorenzo were granted political asylum and made their way back to Nicaragua the next day via Miami and the daily CIA C 54 flight from Opa Iocka Airport to Puerto Cabezas Airport Their B 26 purposely numbered 933 the same as at least two other B 26s that day for disinformation reasons was held until late on 17 April 142 page needed 145 Deception flight Edit About 90 minutes after the eight B 26s had taken off from Puerto Cabezas to attack Cuban airfields another B 26 departed on a deception flight that took it close to Cuba but headed north towards Florida Like the bomber groups it carried false FAR markings and the same number 933 as painted on at least two of the others Before departure the cowling from one of the aircraft s two engines was removed by CIA personnel fired upon then re installed to give the false appearance that the aircraft had taken ground fire at some point during its flight At a safe distance north of Cuba the pilot feathered the engine with the pre installed bullet holes in the cowling radioed a mayday call and requested immediate permission to land at Miami International airport He landed and taxied to the military area of the airport near an Air Force C 47 and was met by several government cars The pilot was Mario Zuniga formerly of the FAEC Cuban Air Force under Batista and after landing he masqueraded as Juan Garcia and publicly claimed that three colleagues had also defected from the FAR The next day he was granted political asylum and that night he returned to Puerto Cabezas via Opa Locka 114 page needed 142 page needed 146 This deception operation was successful at the time in convincing much of the world media that the attacks on the FAR bases were the work of an internal anti Communist faction and did not involve outside actors 147 Reactions Edit At 10 30 on 15 April at the United Nations Cuban Foreign Minister Raul Roa accused the U S of aggressive air attacks against Cuba and that afternoon formally tabled a motion to the Political First Committee of the UN General Assembly Only days earlier the CIA had unsuccessfully attempted to entice Raul Roa into defecting 143 In response to Roa s accusations before the UN United States Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai Stevenson stated that U S armed forces would not under any conditions intervene in Cuba and that the U S would do everything in its power to ensure that no U S citizens would participate in actions against Cuba He also stated that Cuban defectors had carried out the attacks that day and he presented a UPI wire photo of Zuniga s B 26 in Cuban markings at Miami airport 83 Stevenson was later embarrassed to realize that the CIA had lied to him 106 President Kennedy supported the statement made by Stevenson I have emphasized before that this was a struggle of Cuban patriots against a Cuban dictator While we could not be expected to hide our sympathies we made it repeatedly clear that the armed forces of this country would not intervene in any way 148 On 15 April the Cuban national police led by Efigenio Ameijeiras started the process of arresting thousands of suspected anti revolutionary individuals and detaining them in provisional locations such as the Karl Marx Theatre the moat of Fortaleza de la Cabana and the Principe Castle all in Havana and the baseball park in Matanzas 42 page needed In total between 20 000 and 100 000 people would be arrested 149 Phony war Edit On the night of 15 16 April the Nino Diaz group failed in a second attempted diversionary landing at a different location near Baracoa 122 page needed On 16 April Merardo Leon Jose Leon and 14 others staged an armed uprising at Las Delicias Estate in Las Villas with only four surviving 76 Following the airstrikes on the Cuban airfields on 15 April the FAR prepared for action with its surviving aircraft which numbered at least four T 33 jet trainers four Sea Fury fighters and five or six B 26 medium bombers The T 33s and B 26s were armed with machine guns and the Sea Furies with 20mm cannon for air to air combat and strafing ships and ground targets CIA planners had failed to discover that the U S supplied T 33 trainer jets had long been armed with M 3 machine guns The three types could also carry bombs and rocket pods for attacks against ships and tanks 150 No additional airstrikes against Cuban airfields and aircraft were specifically planned before 17 April because B 26 pilots exaggerated claims gave the CIA false confidence in the success of 15 April attacks until U 2 reconnaissance photos taken on 16 April showed otherwise Late on 16 April President Kennedy ordered the cancellation of further airfield strikes planned for dawn on 17 April to attempt plausible deniability of direct U S involvement 107 page needed Late on 16 April the CIA Brigade 2506 invasion fleet converged on Rendezvous Point Zulu about 65 kilometres 40 mi south of Cuba having sailed from Puerto Cabezas in Nicaragua where they had been loaded with troops and other materiel after loading arms and supplies at New Orleans The U S Navy operation was code named Bumpy Road having been changed from Crosspatch 107 page needed The fleet labeled the Cuban Expeditionary Force CEF included five 2 400 ton empty weight freighter ships chartered by the CIA from the Garcia Line and subsequently outfitted with anti aircraft guns Four of the freighters Houston code name Aguja Rio Escondido code name Ballena Caribe code name Sardina and Atlantico code name Tiburon were planned to transport about 1 400 troops in seven battalions of troops and armaments near to the invasion beaches The fifth freighter Lake Charles was loaded with follow up supplies and some Operation 40 infiltration personnel The freighters sailed under Liberian ensigns Accompanying them were two LCIs outfitted with heavy armament at Key West The LCIs were Blagar code name Marsopa and Barbara J code name Barracuda sailing under Nicaraguan ensigns After exercises and training at Vieques Island the CEF ships were individually escorted outside visual range to Point Zulu by US Navy destroyers USS Bache USS Beale USS Conway USS Cony USS Eaton USS Murray and USS Waller US Navy Task Group 81 8 had already assembled off the Cayman Islands commanded by Rear Admiral John E Clark onboard aircraft carrier USS Essex plus helicopter assault carrier USS Boxer destroyers USS Hank USS John W Weeks USS Purdy USS Wren and submarines USS Cobbler and USS Threadfin Command and control ship USS Northampton and carrier USS Shangri La were also reportedly active in the Caribbean at the time USS San Marcos was a Landing Ship Dock that carried three Landing Craft Utility LCUs which could accommodate the Brigades M41 Walker Bulldog tanks and four Landing Craft Vehicles Personnel LCVPs San Marcos had sailed from Vieques Island At Point Zulu the seven CEF ships sailed north without the USN escorts except for San Marcos that continued until the seven landing craft were unloaded when just outside the 5 kilometres 3 mi Cuban territorial limit 5 page needed 83 151 Invasion EditInvasion day 17 April Edit Bahia de Cochinos 1961 During the night of 16 17 April a mock diversionary landing was organized by CIA operatives near Bahia Honda Pinar del Rio Province A flotilla containing equipment that broadcast sounds and other effects of a shipborne invasion landing provided the source of Cuban reports that briefly lured Fidel Castro away from the Bay of Pigs battlefront area 5 page needed 122 page needed 152 At midnight on 17 April 1961 the two LCIs Blagar and Barbara J each with a CIA operations officer and an Underwater Demolition Team of five frogmen entered the Bay of Pigs Bahia de Cochinos on the southern coast of Cuba They headed a force of four transport ships Houston Rio Escondido Caribe and Atlantico carrying about 1 400 Cuban exile ground troops of Brigade 2506 plus the brigade s M41 tanks and other vehicles in the landing craft 153 At about 01 00 Blagar as the battlefield command ship directed the principal landing at Playa Giron code named Blue Beach led by the frogmen in rubber boats followed by troops from Caribe in small aluminum boats then the LCVPs and LCUs with the M41 tanks 154 Barbara J leading Houston similarly landed troops 35 km further northwest at Playa Larga code named Red Beach using small fiberglass boats 154 The unloading of troops at night was delayed because of engine failures and boats damaged by unseen coral reefs the CIA had originally believed that the coral reef was seaweed As the frogmen came in they were shocked to discover that the Red Beach was lit with floodlights which led to the location of the landing being hastily changed 154 As the frogmen landed a firefight broke out when a jeep carrying Cuban militia happened by 154 The few militias in the area succeeded in warning Cuban armed forces via radio soon after the first landing before the invaders overcame their token resistance 122 page needed 155 Castro was awakened at about 03 15 to be informed of the landings which led him to put all militia units in the area on the highest state of alert and to order airstrikes 154 The Cuban regime planned to strike the brigadistas at Playa Larga first as they were inland before turning on the brigadistas at Giron at sea 154 El Comandante departed personally to lead his forces into battle against the brigadistas 154 At daybreak around 06 30 three FAR Sea Furies one B 26 bomber and two T 33s started attacking those CEF ships still unloading troops At about 06 50 south of Playa Larga Houston was damaged by several bombs and rockets from a Sea Fury and a T 33 and about two hours later Captain Luis Morse intentionally beached it on the western side of the bay 154 About 270 troops had been unloaded but about 180 survivors who struggled ashore were incapable of taking part in further action because of the loss of most of their weapons and equipment The loss of Houston was a great blow to the brigadistas as that ship was carrying much of the medical supplies which meant that wounded brigadistas had to make do with inadequate medical care 154 At about 07 00 two FAL B 26s attacked and sank the Cuban Navy Patrol Escort ship El Baire at Nueva Gerona on the Isle of Pines 122 page needed 142 page needed They then proceeded to Giron to join two other B 26s to attack Cuban ground troops and provide distraction air cover for the paratroop C 46s and the CEF ships under air attack The M41 tanks had all landed by 07 30 at Blue Beach and all of the troops by 08 30 156 Neither San Roman at Blue Beach nor Erneido Oliva at Red Beach could communicate as all of the radios had been soaked in the water during the landings 156 The SU 100 from which Fidel Castro reportedly shelled the freighter Houston during the morning of 17 April At about 07 30 five C 46 and one C 54 transport aircraft dropped 177 paratroops from the parachute battalion in an action code named Operation Falcon 157 About 30 men plus heavy equipment were dropped south of the Central Australia sugar mill on the road to Palpite and Playa Larga but the equipment was lost in the swamps and the troops failed to block the road 156 Other troops were dropped at San Blas at Jocuma between Covadonga and San Blas and at Horquitas between Yaguaramas and San Blas Those positions to block the roads were maintained for two days reinforced by ground troops from Playa Giron and tanks 158 The paratroopers had landed amid a collection of militia but their training allowed them to hold their own against the ill trained militiamen 156 However the dispersal of the paratroopers as they landed meant they were unable to take the road from the sugar mill down to Playa Larga which allowed the government to continue to send troops down to resist the invasion 156 At about 08 30 a FAR Sea Fury piloted by Carlos Ulloa Arauz crashed in the bay after encountering a FAL C 46 returning south after dropping paratroops By 09 00 Cuban troops and militia from outside the area had started arriving at the sugar mill Covadonga and Yaguaramas Throughout the day they were reinforced by more troops heavy armour and T 34 tanks typically carried on flat bed trucks 159 At about 09 30 FAR Sea Furies and T 33s fired rockets at Rio Escondido which then blew up and sank about 3 kilometres 1 9 mi south of Giron 47 page needed 122 page needed Rio Escondido was loaded with aviation fuel and as the ship started to burn the captain gave the order to abandon ship with the ship being destroyed in three explosions shortly afterward 160 Rio Escondido carried fuel along with enough ammunition food and medical supplies to last ten days and the radio that allowed the brigade to communicate with the FAL 160 The loss of the communications ship Rio Escondido meant that San Roman was only able to issue orders to the forces at Blue Beach and he had no idea of what was happening at Red Beach or with the paratroopers 160 A messenger from Red Beach arrived at about 10 00 hours asking San Roman to send tank and infantry to block the road from the sugar mill a request that he agreed to 160 It was not expected that government forces would be counter attacking from this direction 161 At about 11 00 Castro issued a statement over Cuba s nationwide network saying that the invaders members of the exiled Cuban revolutionary front have come to destroy the revolution and take away the dignity and rights of men 162 At about 11 00 a FAR T 33 attacked and shot down a FAL B 26 serial number 935 piloted by Matias Farias who then survived a crash landing on the Giron airfield his navigator Eduardo Gonzalez already killed by gunfire His companion B 26 suffered damage and diverted to Grand Cayman Island pilot Mario Zuniga the defector and navigator Oscar Vega returned to Puerto Cabezas via CIA C 54 on 18 April By about 11 00 the two remaining freighters Caribe and Atlantico and the LCIs and LCUs started retreating south to international waters but still pursued by FAR aircraft At about noon a FAR B 26 exploded from heavy anti aircraft fire from Blagar and pilot Luis Silva Tablada on his second sortie and his crew of three were lost 114 page needed 122 page needed By noon hundreds of Cuban militia cadets from Matanzas had secured Palpite and cautiously advanced on foot south towards Playa Larga suffering many casualties during attacks by FAL B 26s By dusk other Cuban ground forces gradually advanced southward from Covadonga southwest from Yaguaramas toward San Blas and westward along coastal tracks from Cienfuegos towards Giron all without heavy weapons or armour 122 page needed At 14 30 a group of militiamen from the 339th Battalion set up a position which came under attack from the brigadista M41 tanks which inflicted heavy losses on the defenders 163 This action is remembered in Cuba as the Slaughter of the Lost Battalion as most of the militiamen perished 163 Three FAL B 26s were shot down by FAR T 33s with the loss of pilots Raul Vianello Jose Crespo Osvaldo Piedra and navigators Lorenzo Perez Lorenzo and Jose Fernandez Vianello s navigator Demetrio Perez bailed out and was picked up by USS Murray Pilot Crispin Garcia Fernandez and navigator Juan Gonzalez Romero in B 26 serial 940 diverted to Boca Chica but late that night they attempted to fly back to Puerto Cabezas in B 26 serial 933 that Crespo had flown to Boca Chica on 15 April In October 1961 the remains of the B 26 and its two crew were found in the dense jungle in Nicaragua 142 page needed 164 One FAL B 26 diverted to Grand Cayman with engine failure By 04 00 clarification needed Castro had arrived at the Central Australia sugar mill joining Jose Ramon Fernandez whom he had appointed as battlefield commander before dawn that day 165 At about 05 00 a night air strike by three FAL B 26s on San Antonio de Los Banos airfield failed reportedly because of incompetence and bad weather Two other B 26s had aborted the mission after take off 114 page needed 150 Other sources allege that heavy anti aircraft fire scared the aircrews 166 As night fell Atlantico and Caribe pulled away from Cuba to be followed by Blagar and Barbara J 167 The ships were to return to the Bay of Pigs the following day to unload more ammunition however the captains of the Atlantico and Caribe decided to abandon the invasion and head out to open sea fearing further air attacks by the FAR 167 Destroyers from the U S Navy intercepted Atlantico about 110 miles 180 km south of Cuba and persuaded the captain to return but Caribe was not intercepted until she was 218 miles 351 km away from Cuba and she was not to return until it was too late 167 Invasion day plus one D 1 18 April Edit During the night of 17 18 April the force at Red Beach came under repeated counter attacks from the Cuban Army and militia 168 As casualties mounted and ammunition was used up the brigadistas steadily gave way 168 Airdrops from four C 54s and 2 C 46s had only limited success in landing more ammunition 167 Both the Blagar and Barbara J returned at midnight to land more ammunition which proved insufficient for the brigadistas 167 Following desperate appeals for help from Oliva San Roman ordered all of his M41 tanks to assist in the defense 169 During the night fighting a tank battle broke out when the brigadista M41 tanks clashed with the T 34 tanks of the Cuban Army This sharp action forced back the brigadistas 169 At 22 00 the Cuban Army opened fire with its 76 2 mm and 122 mm artillery guns on the brigadista forces at Playa Larga which was followed by an attack by T 34 tanks at about midnight 169 The 2 000 artillery rounds fired by the Cuban Army had mostly missed the brigadista defense positions and the T 34 tanks rode into an ambush when they came under fire from the brigadista M41 tanks and mortar fire and a number of T 34 tanks were destroyed or knocked out 169 At 01 00 Cuban Army infantrymen and militiamen started an offensive 169 Despite heavy losses on the part of the Cuban forces the shortage of ammunition forced the brigadistas back and the T 34 tanks continued to force their way past the wreckage of the battlefield to press on the assault 169 The Cuban forces in the assault numbered about 2 100 men consisting of about 300 FAR soldiers 1 600 militiamen and 200 local policemen supported by at least 20 T 34 tanks who were faced by 370 brigadistas 169 By 05 00 Oliva started to order his men to retreat as he had almost no ammunition or mortar rounds left 170 By about 10 30 Cuban troops and militia supported by the T 34 tanks and 122mm artillery took Playa Larga after Brigade forces had fled towards Giron in the early hours During the day Brigade forces retreated to San Blas along the two roads from Covadonga and Yaguaramas By then both Castro and Fernandez had relocated to that battlefront area 171 As the men from Red Beach arrived at Giron San Roman and Oliva met to discuss the situation 172 With ammunition running low Oliva suggested that the brigade retreat into the Escambray Mountains to wage guerilla warfare but San Roman decided to hold the beachhead 173 At about 11 00 the Cuban Army began an offensive to take San Blas 174 San Roman ordered all of the paratroopers back in order to hold San Blas and they halted the offensive 174 During the afternoon Castro kept the brigadistas under steady air attack and artillery fire but did not order any new major attacks 174 At 14 00 President Kennedy received a telegram from Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow stating the Russians would not allow the U S to enter Cuba and implied swift nuclear retribution to the United States heartland if their warnings were not heeded 175 At about 17 00 FAL B 26s attacked a Cuban column of 12 private buses leading trucks carrying tanks and other armor moving southeast between Playa Larga and Punta Perdiz The vehicles loaded with civilians militia police and soldiers were attacked with bombs napalm and rockets suffering heavy casualties The six attacking FAL B 26s were piloted by two CIA contract pilots plus four pilots and six navigators from the FAL 122 page needed 142 page needed The column later re formed and advanced to Punta Perdiz about 11 km northwest of Giron 176 Invasion day plus two D 2 19 April Edit Douglas A 4 Skyhawks from the USS Essex purportedly flying sorties over combat areas during the invasion these aircraft show nationality markings which sources say were removed for such sorties During the night of 18 April a FAL C 46 delivered arms and equipment to the Giron airstrip occupied by brigade ground forces and took off before daybreak on 19 April 177 non primary source needed The C 46 also evacuated Matias Farias the pilot of B 26 serial 935 code named Chico Two that had been shot down and crash landed at Giron on 17 April 157 The crews of the Barbara J and Blagar had done their best to land what ammunition they had left onto the beachhead but without air support the captains of both ships reported that it was too dangerous to be operating off the Cuban coast by day 178 The final air attack mission code named Mad Dog Flight comprised five B 26s four of which were manned by American CIA contract aircrews and volunteer pilots from the Alabama Air Guard One FAR Sea Fury piloted by Douglas Rudd and two FAR T 33s piloted by Rafael del Pino and Alvaro Prendes shot down two of these B 26s killing four American airmen 83 Combat air patrols were flown by Douglas A4D 2N Skyhawk jets of VA 34 squadron operating from USS Essex with nationality and other markings removed Sorties were flown to reassure brigade soldiers and pilots and to intimidate Cuban government forces without directly engaging in combat 142 page needed At 10 00 a tank battle broke out with the brigadista holding their line until about 14 00 which led Oliva to order a retreat into Giron 179 After the last air attacks San Roman ordered his paratroopers and the men of the 3rd Battalion to launch a surprise attack which was initially successful but soon failed 179 With the brigadistas in disorganized retreat the Cuban Army and militiamen started to advance rapidly taking San Blas only to be stopped outside of Giron at about 11 00 179 Later that afternoon San Roman heard the rumbling of the advancing T 34s and reported that with no more mortar rounds and bazooka rounds he could not stop the tanks and ordered his men to fall back to the beach 6 Oliva arrived afterward to find that the brigadistas were all heading out to the beach or retreating into the jungle or swamps 6 Without direct air support and short of ammunition Brigade 2506 ground forces retreated to the beaches in the face of the onslaught from Cuban government artillery tanks and infantry 47 page needed 180 181 page needed Late on 19 April destroyers USS Eaton code named Santiago and USS Murray code named Tampico moved into Cochinos Bay to evacuate retreating Brigade soldiers from beaches before fire from Cuban army tanks caused Commodore Crutchfield to order a withdrawal 122 page needed Invasion day plus three D 3 20 April Edit From 19 April until about 22 April sorties were flown by A4D 2Ns to obtain visual intelligence over combat areas Reconnaissance flights are also reported of AD 5Ws of VFP 62 and or VAW 12 squadron from USS Essex or another carrier such as USS Shangri La that was part of the task force assembled off the Cayman Islands 122 page needed 142 page needed On 21 April Eaton and Murray joined on 22 April by destroyers USS Conway and USS Cony plus submarine USS Threadfin and a CIA PBY 5A Catalina flying boat continued to search the coastline reefs and islands for scattered Brigade survivors about 24 30 being rescued 177 Aftermath EditCasualties Edit 67 Cuban exiles from Brigade 2506 were killed in action additionally 10 more were executed by firing squad 10 lost their lives on the boat Celia trying to escape 9 captured exiles in the sealed truck container on the way to Havana 4 by accident 2 in prison and 4 American aviators for a total of 106 deaths d Aircrews killed in action totaled 6 from the Cuban air force 10 Cuban exiles and 4 American airmen 114 page needed Paratrooper Eugene Herman Koch was killed in action 182 and the American airmen shot down were Thomas W Ray Leo F Baker Riley W Shamburger and Wade C Gray 122 page needed In 1979 the body of Thomas Pete Ray was repatriated from Cuba In the 1990s the CIA admitted he was linked to the agency and awarded him the Intelligence Star 183 The final toll for Cuban armed forces during the conflict was 176 killed in action f This figure includes only the Cuban Army and it is estimated that about 2 000 militiamen were killed or wounded during the fighting 6 Other Cuban forces casualties were between 500 and 4 000 killed wounded or missing c The airfield attacks on 15 April left 7 Cubans dead and 53 wounded 5 page needed In 2011 the National Security Archive under the Freedom of Information Act released over 1 200 pages of documents Included within these documents were descriptions of incidents of friendly fire The CIA had outfitted some B 26 bombers to appear as Cuban aircraft having ordered them to remain inland to avoid being fired upon by American backed forces Some of the planes not heeding the warning came under fire According to CIA operative Grayston Lynch we couldn t tell them from the Castro planes We ended up shooting at two or three of them We hit some of them there because when they came at us it was a silhouette that was all you could see 143 Prisoners Edit Havana gleefully noted the wealth of the captured invaders 100 plantation owners 67 landlords of apartment houses 35 factory owners 112 businessmen 179 lived off unearned income and 194 ex soldiers of Batista Life magazine 184 On 19 April at least seven Cubans plus two CIA hired U S citizens Angus K McNair and Howard F Anderson were executed in Pinar del Rio province after a two day trial On 20 April Humberto Sori Marin was executed at La Cabana having been arrested on 18 March following infiltration into Cuba with 14 tons of explosives His fellow conspirators Rogelio Gonzalez Corzo alias Francisco Gutierrez Rafael Diaz Hanscom Eufemio Fernandez Arturo Hernandez Tellaheche and Manuel Lorenzo Puig Miyar were also executed 76 42 page needed 7 185 186 Between April and October 1961 hundreds of executions took place in response to the invasion They took place at various prisons including the Fortaleza de la Cabana and Morro Castle 7 Infiltration team leaders Antonio Diaz Pou and Raimundo E Lopez as well as underground students Virgilio Campaneria Alberto Tapia Ruano and more than one hundred other insurgents were executed 106 About 1 202 members of Brigade 2506 were captured of whom nine died from asphyxiation during their transfer to Havana in an airtight truck container In May 1961 Castro proposed to exchange the surviving brigade prisoners for 500 large farm tractors later changed to US 28 000 000 187 On 8 September 1961 14 Brigade prisoners were convicted of torture murder and other major crimes committed in Cuba before the invasion Five were executed and nine others imprisoned for 30 years 188 Three confirmed as executed were Ramon Calvino Emilio Soler Puig El Muerte and Jorge King Yun El Chino 42 page needed 47 page needed On 29 March 1962 1 179 men were put on trial for treason On 7 April 1962 all were convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison On 14 April 1962 60 wounded and sick prisoners were freed and transported to the U S 3 page needed In 2021 was discovered that Brazil s government then led by President Joao Goulart intervened on behalf of the United States to avoid the death penalty for prisoners 189 On 21 December 1962 Castro and James B Donovan a U S lawyer aided by Milan C Miskovsky a CIA legal officer 190 signed an agreement to exchange 1 113 prisoners for US 53 million in food and medicine sourced from private donations and from companies expecting tax concessions On 24 December 1962 some prisoners were flown to Miami others following on the ship African Pilot plus about 1 000 family members also allowed to leave Cuba On 29 December 1962 President Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline attended a welcome back ceremony for Brigade 2506 veterans at the Orange Bowl in Miami Florida 47 page needed 191 Political reaction Edit Robert F Kennedy s Statement on Cuba and Neutrality Laws 20 April 1961 The failed invasion severely embarrassed the Kennedy administration and made Castro wary of future U S intervention in Cuba On 21 April in a State Department press conference Kennedy said There s an old saying that victory has a hundred fathers and defeat is an orphan Further statements detailed discussions are not to conceal responsibility because I m the responsible officer of the Government 192 Later Kennedy told Khrushchev that the Bay of Pigs invasions was a mistake 193 The initial U S response concerning the first air attacks was of a dismissive quality Adlai Stevenson denied any involvement in the first wave of airstrikes stating before the United Nations These charges are totally false and I deny them categorically Stevenson continued to promote a story of two Cuban planes that had reportedly defected to the United States apparently unaware that they were in fact U S planes piloted by U S backed Cuban pilots to promote a false story of defection 194 In August 1961 during an economic conference of the OAS in Punta del Este Uruguay Che Guevara sent a note to Kennedy via Richard N Goodwin a secretary of the White House It read Thanks for Playa Giron Before the invasion the revolution was weak Now it s stronger than ever 195 Additionally Guevara answered a set of questions from Leo Huberman of Monthly Review following the invasion In one reply Guevara was asked to explain the growing number of Cuban counter revolutionaries and defectors from the regime to which he replied that the repelled invasion was the climax of counter revolution and that afterward such actions fell drastically to zero Regarding the defections of some prominent figures within the Cuban government Guevara remarked that this was because the socialist revolution left the opportunists the ambitious and the fearful far behind and now advances toward a new regime free of this class of vermin 196 As Allen Dulles later stated CIA planners believed that once the troops were on the ground Kennedy would authorize any action required to prevent failure as Eisenhower had done in Guatemala in 1954 after that invasion looked as if it would collapse 197 Kennedy was deeply depressed and angered with the failure Several years after his death The New York Times reported that he told an unspecified high administration official of wanting to splinter the CIA in a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds However following a rigorous inquiry into the agency s affairs methods and problems Kennedy did not splinter it after all and did not recommend Congressional supervision 198 Kennedy commented to his journalist friend Ben Bradlee The first advice I m going to give my successor is to watch the generals and to avoid feeling that because they were military men their opinions on military matters were worth a damn 199 Aerial view of missile launch site at San Cristobal Cuba 200 The aftermath of the Bay of Pigs invasion and events involving Cuba that followed caused the U S to feel threatened by its neighbor Prior to the events at Playa Giron the U S government imposed sanctions that limited trade with Cuba An article appearing in The New York Times dated 6 January 1960 called trade with Cuba too risky 201 About six months later in July 1960 the U S reduced the import quota of Cuban sugar leaving the U S no choice but to maintain its sugar needs from other sources 202 Immediately following the Bay of Pigs invasion the Kennedy Administration considered a complete embargo 203 Five months later the president was authorized to do so According to author Jim Rasenberger the Kennedy administration became very aggressive in regards to overthrowing Castro following the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion reportedly doubling its efforts Rasenberger elaborated on the fact that almost every decision that was made by Kennedy following the Bay of Pigs had some correlation with the destruction of the Castro administration Shortly after the invasion ended Kennedy ordered the Pentagon to design secret operations to overthrow the Castro regime Also President Kennedy persuaded his brother Robert to set up a covert action against Castro which was known as Operation Mongoose This clandestine operation included sabotage and assassination plots citation needed Legacy EditMaxwell Taylor survey Edit On 22 April 1961 President Kennedy asked General Maxwell D Taylor Attorney General Robert F Kennedy Admiral Arleigh Burke and CIA Director Allen Dulles to form the Cuba Study Group to report on lessons to learn from the failed operation General Taylor submitted the Board of Inquiry s report to President Kennedy on 13 June It attributed the defeat to lack of early realization of the impossibility of success by covert means to inadequate aircraft to limitations on armaments pilots and air attacks set to attempt plausible deniability and ultimately to loss of important ships and lack of ammunition 204 The Taylor Commission was criticized and bias implied Attorney General Robert F Kennedy the President s brother was included in the group and the commission collectively was seen to be more preoccupied with deflecting blame from the White House than concerned with realizing the real depth of mistakes that promoted the failure in Cuba Jack Pfeiffer who worked as a historian for the CIA until the mid 1980s simplified his own view of the failed Bay of Pigs effort by quoting a statement which Raul Castro Fidel s brother had made to a Mexican journalist in 1975 Kennedy vacillated Raul Castro said If at that moment he had decided to invade us he could have suffocated the island in a sea of blood but he could have destroyed the revolution Lucky for us he vacillated 205 CIA report Edit CIA report on the Bay of Pigs Invasion In November 1961 CIA Inspector General Lyman Kirkpatrick authored a report Survey of the Cuban Operation that remained classified until 1998 Conclusions were 206 The CIA exceeded its capabilities in developing the project from guerrilla support to overt armed action without any plausible deniability Failure to realistically assess risks and to adequately communicate information and decisions internally and with other government principals Insufficient involvement of leaders of the exiles Failure to sufficiently organize internal resistance in Cuba Failure to competently collect and analyze intelligence about Cuban forces Poor internal management of communications and staff Insufficient employment of high quality staff Insufficient Spanish speakers training facilities and material resources Lack of stable policies and or contingency plans In spite of vigorous objections by CIA management to the findings CIA Director Allen Dulles CIA Deputy Director Charles Cabell and deputy director for Plans Richard M Bissell Jr were all forced to resign by early 1962 105 page needed In later years the CIA s behavior in the event became the prime example cited for the psychology paradigm known as groupthink syndrome 122 page needed Further study shows that among various components of groupthink analyzed by Irving Janis the Bay of Pigs Invasion followed the structural characteristics that led to irrational decision making in foreign policy pushed by deficiency in impartial leadership 207 An account on the process of invasion decision reads 208 At each meeting instead of opening up the agenda to permit a full airing of the opposing considerations President Kennedy allowed the CIA representatives to dominate the entire discussion The president permitted them to refute each tentative doubt immediately that one of the others might express instead of asking whether anyone else had the same doubt or wanted to pursue the implications of the new worrisome issue that had been raised Looking at both the Survey of the Cuban Operation and Groupthink Psychological Studies of Policy Decisions and Fiascoes by Irving Janis it identifies the lack of communication and the mere assumption of concurrence to be the main causes behind the CIA and the president s collective failure to efficiently evaluate the facts before them A considerable amount of information presented before President Kennedy proved to be false in reality such as the support of the Cuban people for Fidel Castro making it difficult to assess the actual situation and the future of the operation The absence of the initiative to explore other options of the debate led the participants to remain optimistic and rigid in their belief that the mission would succeed being unknowingly biased in the group psychology of wishful thinking as well citation needed In mid 1960 CIA operative E Howard Hunt had interviewed Cubans in Havana in a 1997 interview with CNN he said all I could find was a lot of enthusiasm for Fidel Castro 209 Invasion legacy in Cuba Edit A Sea Fury F 50 preserved at the Museo Giron Cuba in 2006 For many Latin Americans the invasion reinforced the belief that the U S could not be trusted It also showed that the U S could be defeated and thus encouraged political groups in Latin America to undermine U S influence 210 Victory made Castro even more popular fuelling nationalistic support for his economic policies After the air attacks on Cuban airfields on 15 April he declared the revolution Marxist Leninist 123 Wary of further U S interference he pursued closer relations with the Soviet Union and became willing to host nuclear weapons This led to the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis citation needed In March 2001 shortly before the 40th anniversary of the invasion a conference took place in Havana attended by about 60 American delegates The conference was titled Bay of Pigs 40 Years After The conference was co sponsored by the University of Havana Centro de Estudios Sobre Estados Unidos Instituto de Historia de Cuba Centro de Investigaciones Historicas de la Seguridad del Estado Centro de Estudios Sobre America and the U S based National Security Archive It commenced on Thursday 22 March 2001 at the Hotel Palco Palacio de las Convenciones es La Habana 211 212 213 On 24 March after the conference many of the delegates and observers travelled by road to Australia sugar mill Playa Larga and Playa Giron the site of the initial landing in the invasion A documentary film was made of that trip titled Cuba The 40 Years War released on DVD in 2002 214 A Cuban FAR combatant at the Bay of Pigs Jose Ramon Fernandez attended the conference as did four members of Brigade 2506 Roberto Carballo Mario Cabello Alfredo Duran and Luis Tornes There are still yearly nationwide drills in Cuba during the Dia de la Defensa Defense Day to prepare the population for an invasion Invasion legacy for Cuban exiles Edit The Bay of Pigs Memorial in Little Havana Miami Many who fought for the CIA in the conflict remained loyal after the event some Bay of Pigs veterans became officers in the U S Army in the Vietnam War including 6 colonels 19 lieutenant colonels 9 majors and 29 captains 215 By March 2007 about half of the brigade had died 216 In April 2010 the Cuban Pilot s Association unveiled a monument at the Kendall Tamiami Executive Airport in memory of the 16 aviators for the exile side killed during the battle 217 The memorial consists of an obelisk and a restored B 26 replica aircraft atop a large Cuban flag 218 American public reaction Edit President John F Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy greeting 2506 Brigade members 1962 Only 3 percent of Americans supported military action in 1960 219 According to Gallup 72 of people had a negative view of Fidel Castro in 1960 219 After the conflict 61 of Americans approved of the action while 15 disapproved and 24 were unsure This poll was taken by Gallup in late April 1966 220 A week after the invasion of Cuba Gallup took another series of polls to sample three possible ways of opposing Castro 221 The policy that most resembled the Bay of Pigs if the US should aid the anti Castro forces with money and war materials was still favored by a narrow margin 44 approval to 41 rejecting this policy 222 Kennedy s general approval rating increased in the first survey after the invasion rising from 78 percent in mid April to 83 percent in late April and early May 223 Dr Gallup s headline for this poll read Public Rallies Behind Kennedy in Aftermath of Cuban Crisis In 1963 a public opinion poll showed 60 percent of Americans believed that Cuba is a serious threat to world peace yet 63 percent of Americans did not want the U S to remove Castro 219 Vienna summit meeting EditSee also Vienna summit After the failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion the construction of the Berlin Wall and the Cuban Missile Crisis President Kennedy believed that another failure on the part of the United States to gain control and stop communist expansion would fatally damage U S credibility with its allies and his own reputation Kennedy was thus determined to draw a line in the sand and prevent a communist victory in the Vietnam War He told James Reston of The New York Times immediately after his Vienna meeting with Khrushchev Now we have a problem making our power credible and Vietnam looks like the place 224 225 page needed Notable surviving veterans EditJose Basulto Ricardo Montero Duque Alfredo Duran Francisco Jose Hernandez Jose Antonio Llama Felix RodriguezSee also Edit Cuba portal United States portalCuba United States relations Operation Northwoods 1962 Operation Ortsac 1962 Special Activities Division Swan Islands Honduras Escambray Rebellion 1959 1965 Jose Miguel Battle Sr Latin America United States relations United States involvement in regime change Foreign interventions by the United States Harlot s Ghost A Novel of the CIA 1991 by Norman Mailer which deals with the Bay of Pigs CIA operation The Good Shepherd film a 2006 movie directed by Robert De Niro about the CIA that has the Bay of Pigs invasion as a key part of the storylineNotes Edit Across the country 1 500 ground forces including 177 paratroops c 1 300 landed Also Cuban exile and American aircrews as well as CIA operatives 5 a b 176 Cuban government forces killed 5 7 a b 118 invaders killed 114 Cuban exiles plus 4 American aircrew 122 1 202 Brigade members captured 1 179 tried 14 tried previously for pre invasion crimes 9 died in transit 5 1 500 ground forces including 177 paratroops c 1 300 landed Also Cuban exile and American aircrews as well as CIA operatives 5 References Edit Kellner 1989 pp 69 70 Historians give Guevara who was director of instruction for Cuba s armed forces a share of credit for the victory Szulc 1986 p 450 The revolutionaries won because Castro s strategy was vastly superior to the Central Intelligence Agency s because the revolutionary morale was high and because Che Guevara as the head of the militia training program and Fernandez as commander of the militia officers school had done so well in preparing 200 000 men and women for war a b c d e f Szulc 1986 a b FRUS X documents 19 24 35 245 271 a b c d e f g h i j k Fernandez 2001 a b c d e Quesada 2009 p 46 a b c d e Triay 2001 pp 83 113 Bay of Pigs Invasion and the Alabama Air National Guard Encyclopedia of Alabama Encyclopedia of Alabama Retrieved 20 November 2017 Voss Michael 14 April 2011 The perfect failure of Cuba invasion BBC News Archived from the original on 13 February 2016 Retrieved 17 May 2016 Gott 2004 p 113 Gott 2004 p 115 Gott 2004 pp 115 116 Ernesto Che Guevara World Leaders Past amp Present by Douglas Kellner 1989 Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 1555468357 p 66 Bourne 1986 pp 64 65 Quirk 1993 pp 37 39 Coltman 2003 pp 57 62 Gott 2004 p 146 Bourne 1986 pp 71 72 Quirk 1993 p 45 Coltman 2003 p 72 Bourne 1986 pp 122 129 130 Quirk 1993 pp 102 104 114 116 Coltman 2003 p 109 Bourne 1986 pp 68 69 Quirk 1993 pp 50 52 Coltman 2003 p 65 Bourne 1986 pp 158 159 Quirk 1993 pp 203 207 208 Coltman 2003 p 137 Bourne 1986 pp 153 161 Quirk 1993 p 216 Coltman 2003 pp 126 141 142 Bourne 1986 pp 173 Quirk 1993 p 228 Quirk 1993 p 313 Quirk 1993 p 330 Bourne 1986 pp 163 167 169 Quirk 1993 pp 224 225 228 330 Coltman 2003 pp 147 249 Cuba One Man Court Time 16 March 1959 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 8 March 2023 a b Leonard Thomas 2004 Fidel Castro A Biography Greenwood Press pp 49 51 ISBN 0313323011 a b c d e Thomas 1971 Anderson John Lee 2010 Che Guevara A Revolutionary Life Revised ed Harvard University Press p 427 ISBN 978 0802197252 Fabian Escalante The Secret War CIA Covert Operations Against Cuba 1959 62 1995 a b c Beyond the Eagle s Shadow New Histories of Latin America s Cold War University of New Mexico Press 2013 pp 115 116 ISBN 978 0826353696 Rodriguez 1999 page needed a b c d e f g h Johnson 1964 page needed Bourne 1986 pp 205 206 Quirk 1993 pp 316 319 Coltman 2003 p 173 Bourne 1986 pp 201 202 Quirk 1993 pp 302 302 Coltman 2003 p 172 Bourne 1986 p 214 Coltman 2003 p 177 Bourne 1986 p 215 Quirk 1993 p 329 Quirk 1993 p 344 Eagleburger Lawrence S 11 January 1975 Memorandum of Meeting with Cuban Representatives PDF National Security Archive United States Department of State Retrieved 20 February 2020 a b c d e Castro Assassination Plots maryferrel org Mary Ferrell Foundation Retrieved 2 March 2017 Tisdall Simon 27 June 2007 CIA conspired with mafia to kill Castro The Guardian Archived from the original on 21 September 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2016 Church Committee 20 November 1975 Alleged assassination plots involving foreign leaders PDF a b Ambrose 2007 p 475 a b c Perez Louis A 2002 Fear and Loathing of Fidel Castro Sources of US Policy toward Cuba Journal of Latin American Studies 34 2 227 254 doi 10 1017 S0022216X02006387 ISSN 0022 216X JSTOR 3875788 S2CID 145715732 via JSTOR Ambrose 2007 p 499 Ambrose 2007 pp 499 500 Ambrose 2007 p 497 Quirk 1993 p 349 Quirk 1993 p 350 Ambrose 2007 pp 533 534 Quirk 1993 p 363 Coltman 2003 p 167 Ros 2006 pp 159 201 Jones 2008 p 64 Dreke 2002 pp 40 117 a b c d Corzo 2003 pp 79 90 Schlesinger 1965 p 245 Bourne 1986 pp 181 197 Coltman 2003 p 168 Coltman 2003 pp 176 177 Bourne 1986 p 197 Coltman 2003 pp 166 166 a b c d e Bay of Pigs 40 Years After Chronology Archived 5 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine The National Security Archive The George Washington University a b Quirk 1993 p 303 Quirk 1993 p 304 State Department Office of the Historian US State Department Office of the Historian Milestones 1961 1968 Quirk 1993 p 307 Quirk 1993 pp 307 308 a b Quirk 1993 p 308 a b c d e f g h Gellman Irwin F 5 December 2015 It s Time to Stop Saying that JFK Inherited the Bay of Pigs Operation from Ike History News Network Columbian College of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved 20 February 2020 FRUS VI document 481 Official History of the Bay of Pigs Operation PDF Retrieved 3 March 2017 Remarks of Senator John F Kennedy at Democratic Dinner Columbus Ohi www jfklibrary org 6 October 1960 Gleijeses 1995 pp 9 19 Quirk 1993 pp 346 347 Quirk 1993 p 347 Statement on Cuba by Senator John F Kennedy www presidency ucsb edu 20 October 1960 Fourth Nixon Kennedy presidential debate C SPAN 21 October 1960 19 minutes in Prados John 2006 Safe for Democracy The Secret Wars of the CIA Ivan R Dee p 240 For Nixon s support of the Cuba project see p 238 ISBN 978 1615780112 Gleijeses 1995 p 20 Prados John 2006 Safe for Democracy The Secret Wars of the CIA Ivan R Dee p 246 ISBN 978 1615780112 Quesada 2009 p 16 Quesada 2009 p 17 a b Jones 2008 a b Higgins 2008 a b c Faria 2002 pp 93 98 a b c d e Kornbluh 1998 Bethell 1993 Rodriguez 1999 p 78 a b Quesada 2009 p 10 a b Quesada Alejandro de 2011 The Bay of Pigs Cuba 1961 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1846038198 Quesada 2009 pp 11 12 1 dead link a b c d e f Hagedorn 2006 a b c d e f Quesada 2009 p 13 Castro Daniel 1999 Revolution and revolutionaries Guerrilla movements in Latin America pp 97 99 ISBN 978 0842026260 Hagedorn 1993 Kellner 1989 pp 54 55 The Bay of Pigs Invasion Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 21 June 2016 Operation 40 Playa Giron the links with current terrorism Sipor Cuba Cuba informs Rodriguez 1999 p 169 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Wyden 1979 a b Kellner 1989 p 69 Alfonso Pablo 2001 Los Ultimos Castristas Centro de Documentacion y Formacion Caracas ISBN 978 9800756577 pp 125 126 Dreke 2002 Paz Sanchez 2001 pp 189 199 British Foreign Office Chancery American Department Foreign Office London 2 September 1959 2181 59 to British Embassy Havana classified as restricted Released 2000 by among British Foreign Office papers Foreign Offices Files for Cuba Part 1 Revolution in Cuba in our letter 1011 59 May 6 we mentioned that a Russian workers delegation had been invited to participate in the May Day celebrations here but had been delayed The interpreter with the party which arrived later and stayed in Cuba a few days was called Vadim Kotchergin although he was at the time using what he subsequently claimed was his mother s name of Liston He remained in the background and did not attract any attention These two agents went on to train overseas personnel including Carlos the Jackal Ilich Ramirez Sanchez and subcomandante Marcos Rafael Sebastian Guillen El campo de entrenamiento Punto Cero donde el Partido Comunista de Cuba PCC adiestra a terroristas nacionales e internacionales in Spanish Cuban American Foundation 7 November 2005 Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 25 January 2009 Rodriguez 1999 pp 123 125 Welch and Blight 1998 p 113 Montaner Carlos Alberto 1999 Viaje al Corazon de Cuba PDF in Spanish Plaza amp Janes Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2009 Retrieved 18 February 2007 The New York Times 26 May 1960 p 5 Inter American Commission on Human Rights 4 October 1983 The Situation of Human Rights in Cuba Seventh Report Chapter V Organization of American States Retrieved 24 December 2004 Galbraith James K 2000 A Crime 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Give Us This Day Arlington House ISBN 978 0870002281 Johnson Haynes 1964 1974 The Bay of Pigs The Leaders Story of Brigade 2506 W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0393042634 Jones Howard 2008 Bay of Pigs Pivotal Moments in American History OUP US ISBN 978 0195173833 Kellner Douglas 1989 Ernesto Che Guevara World Leaders Past amp Present Chelsea House Publishers p 112 ISBN 978 1555468354 Kornbluh Peter 1998 Bay of Pigs Declassified The Secret CIA Report on the Invasion of Cuba The New Press ISBN 978 1565844940 Lagas Jacques 1964 Memorias de un Capitan rebelde Editorial del Pacifico Santiago Chile OCLC 253857152 Lazo Mario 1968 1970 Dagger in the Heart American Policy Failures in Cuba Twin Circle New York 1968 edition LCCN 68 31632 Lynch Grayston L 1998 Decision for Disaster Betrayal at the Bay of Pigs Brassey s ISBN 1574881485 de Paz Sanchez Manuel 2001 Zona de Guerra Espana y la revolucion Cubana 1960 1962 Taller de Historia Tenerife Gran Canaria ISBN 8479263644 Priestland Jane editor 2003 British Archives on Cuba Cuba Under Castro 1959 1962 Archival Publications International ISBN 1903008204 Pfeiffer Jack B September 1979 Official History of the Bay of Pigs Operation Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 18 September 2016 Quirk Robert E 1993 Fidel Castro New York and London W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393034851 Quesada Alejandro de 2009 The Bay of Pigs Cuba 1961 Elite series 166 Illustrated by Stephen Walsh Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1846033230 Rasenberger Jim 2011 The Brilliant Disaster JFK Castro and America s Doomed Invasion of Cuba s Bay of Pigs Scribner ISBN 978 1416596509 Reeves Richard 1993 President Kennedy Profile of Power Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0671892894 Rodriguez Juan Carlos 1999 Bay of Pigs and the CIA Ocean Press ISBN 978 1875284986 Ros Enrique 1994 1998 Giron la verdadera historia Ediciones Universales Coleccion Cuba y sus jueces third edition ISBN 0897297385 Schlesinger Arthur M Jr 1965 2002 A Thousand Days John F Kennedy in the White House Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 1579124496 Shono L D Jr 2012 He Died for Peace The Assassination of John F Kennedy iUniverse ISBN 978 1475905243 Jean Edward Smith Apr 13 1964 Bay of Pigs The Unanswered Questions The Nation pp 360 363 Somoza Debayle Anastasio and Jack Cox 1980 Nicaragua Betrayed Western Islands pp 169 180 ISBN 978 0882792354 Szulc Tad and Karl E Meyer 1962 The Cuban Invasion The Chronicle of a Disaster Praegar OCLC 252787691 Szulc Tad 1986 Fidel A Critical Portrait Hutchinson ISBN 0091726026 Thomas Hugh 1971 1986 The Cuban Revolution Weidenfeld and Nicolson Shortened version of Cuba The Pursuit of Freedom includes all history 1952 1970 ISBN 0297789546 Thomas Hugh 1998 Cuba The Pursuit of Freedom Da Capo Press ISBN 0306808277 Thompson Scott 2002 Douglas A 26 and B 26 Invader Crowood Press ISBN 1861265034 Trest Warren A and Donald B Dodd 2001 Wings of Denial The Alabama Air National Guard s Covert Role at the Bay of Pigs NewSouth Books ISBN 978 1588380210 Triay Victor Andres 2001 Bay of Pigs An Oral History of Brigade 2506 University Press of Florida ISBN 978 0813020907 Vives Juan Pseudonym of a former veteran and Castro Intelligence Official Translated to Spanish from 1981 Les Maitres de Cuba Opera Mundi Paris by Zoraida Valcarcel 1982 Los Amos de Cuba EMCE Editores Buenos Aires ISBN 9500400758 Von Tunzelmann Alex 2011 Red Heat Conspiracy Murder and the Cold War in the Caribbean New York City Henry Holt and Company ISBN 978 0805090673 Wyden Peter 1979 Bay of Pigs The Untold Story Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0671240066 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bay of Pigs Invasion Bay of Pigs Invasion and Aftermath slideshow by Life magazine A film clip Cuba Invaded Foes of Castro Open Offensive 1961 04 19 1961 is available at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bay of Pigs Invasion amp oldid 1153014509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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