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Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution

The consolidation of the Cuban Revolution is a period in Cuban history typically defined as starting in the aftermath of the revolution in 1959 and ending in the first congress of the Communist Party of Cuba 1975, which signified the final political solidification of the Cuban revolutionaries' new government. The period encompasses early domestic reforms, human rights violations continuing under the new regime, growing international tensions, and politically climaxed with the failure of the 1970 sugar harvest.[1][2][3]

Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution
Part of the Cold War
Che Guevara (left) and Fidel Castro (right) in 1961
Date1959–1975
LocationCuba
OutcomeSeries of events including...

The political consolidation of Fidel Castro in the new Cuban government began in early 1959. It began with the appointment of communist officials to office and a wave of removals of other revolutionaries that criticized the appointment of communists. This trend came to a head with the Huber Matos affair and would continue that by mid-1960 little opposition remained to Castro within the government and few independent institutions existed in Cuba.[4][5]

In 1959, in the immediate aftermath of the revolution, Castro would visit the United States to ask for aid and boast of land reform plans, which he believed the U.S. government would appreciate. Throughout 1960 tensions slowly escalated between Cuba and the United States due to the nationalizations of various American companies, retaliatory economic sanctions, and counterrevolutionary bombing raids. In January 1961, the U.S. cut off diplomatic relations with Cuba, and the Soviet Union started to solidify relations with Cuba. The U.S. feared growing Soviet influence in Cuba and backed the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion of April 1961. By December 1961, Castro for the first time openly expressed his communist sympathies. Castro's fears of another invasion and his new Soviet allies influenced his decision to put nuclear missiles in Cuba, triggering the Cuban Missile Crisis.[6] In the aftermath of the crisis, the United States promised not to invade Cuba in the future; in compliance with this agreement, the U.S. withdrew all support from the Alzados, effectively crippling the resource-starved resistance.[7] The counterrevolutionary conflict, known abroad as the Escambray rebellion, lasted until about 1965, and has since been branded as the "Struggle Against Bandits" by the Cuban government.[7]

The consolidation of power between 1959 and 1970 has also been labeled the militarization of Cuba which is argued to have begun quickly after the Cuban Revolution but climaxed in the Revolutionary Offensive that was organized by the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces.[8][9] A chief proponent of the "militarization" periodization is historian Irving Louis Horowitz, who argues the militant origins of the revolution, the popularity of militarism in Latin America, Cuba's single-crop economy, desires to resist U.S. hostility, military support of regimes abroad, and Cuba's role as the USSR's lone ally in the Americas caused the militarization of Cuba.[10]

Background edit

Ideology of the Cuban Revolution edit

The Cuba Revolution (Spanish: Revolución Cubana) was an armed revolt conducted by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries of the 26th of July Movement and its allies against the military dictatorship of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista. The revolution began in July 1953,[11] and continued sporadically until the rebels finally ousted Batista on 31 December 1958, replacing his government.[12]

The beliefs of Fidel Castro during the revolution have been the subject of much historical debate. Fidel Castro was openly ambiguous about his beliefs at the time. Some orthodox historians argue Castro was a communist from the beginning with a long-term plan; however, others have argued he had no strong ideological loyalties. Leslie Dewart has stated that there is no evidence to suggest Castro was ever a communist agent. Levine and Papasotiriou believe Castro believed in little outside of a distaste for American imperialism. While Ana Serra believed it was the publication of El socialismo y el hombre en Cuba.[13] As evidence for his lack of communist leanings they note his friendly relations with the United States shortly after the revolution and him not joining the Cuban Communist Party during the beginning of his land reforms.[14]

At the time of the revolution the 26th of July Movement involved people of various political persuasions, but most were in agreement and desired the reinstatement of the 1940 Constitution of Cuba and supported the ideals of Jose Marti. Che Guevara commented to Jorge Masetti in an interview during the revolution that "Fidel isn't a communist" also stating "politically you can define Fidel and his movement as 'revolutionary nationalist'. Of course he is anti-American, in the sense that Americans are anti-revolutionaries".[15]

Flight of Batista edit

 
Habana entrance Fidel Castro and Huber Matos. 8 January 1959.

On 31 December 1958, the Battle of Santa Clara took place in a scene of great confusion. The city of Santa Clara fell to the combined forces of Che Guevara, Cienfuegos, and Revolutionary Directorate (RD) rebels led by Comandantes Rolando Cubela, Juan ("El Mejicano") Abrahantes, and William Alexander Morgan. News of these defeats caused Batista to panic. He fled Cuba by air for the Dominican Republic just hours later on 1 January 1959. Comandante William Alexander Morgan, leading RD rebel forces, continued fighting as Batista departed and had captured the city of Cienfuegos by 2 January.[16]

Cuban General Eulogio Cantillo entered Havana's Presidential Palace, proclaimed the Supreme Court judge Carlos Piedra as the new president, and began appointing new members to Batista's old government.[17]

Castro learned of Batista's flight in the morning and immediately started negotiations to take over Santiago de Cuba. On 2 January, the military commander in the city, Colonel Rubido, ordered his soldiers not to fight, and Castro's forces took over the city. The forces of Guevara and Cienfuegos entered Havana at about the same time. They had met no opposition on their journey from Santa Clara to Cuba's capital. Castro himself arrived in Havana on 8 January after a long victory march. His initial choice of president, Manuel Urrutia Lleó, took office on 3 January.[18]

1959: "Year of Liberation" edit

Rebel victory edit

 
Che Guevara with Manuel Urrutia in 1959, who was president at the beginning of the revolution, after being appointed by the rebels

Castro learned of Batista's flight in the morning[when?] and immediately started negotiations to take over Santiago de Cuba. On 2 January, the military commander in the city, Colonel Rubido, ordered his soldiers not to fight, and Castro's forces took over the city. The forces of Guevara and Cienfuegos entered Havana at about the same time. They had met no opposition on their journey from Santa Clara to Cuba's capital. Castro himself arrived in Havana on 8 January after a long victory march. His initial choice of president, Manuel Urrutia Lleó, would later take office on 3 January.[19]

The new revolutionary government would name 1959 the "year of liberation", because of the year's efforts to deconstruct the old Batista government structures.[20]

Castro had made his opinion clear that lawyer Manuel Urrutia Lleó should become president, leading a provisional civilian government following Batista's fall. Politically moderate, Urrutia had defended MR-26-7 revolutionaries in court, arguing that the Moncada Barracks attack was legal according to the Cuban constitution. Castro believed Urrutia would make a good leader, being both established yet sympathetic to the revolution. With the leaders of the junta under arrest, Urrutia was proclaimed provisional president on 2 January 1959, Urrutia had been chosen because of his prestige and acceptability to both the moderate middle-class backers of the revolution and to the guerrilla forces who took part in the alliance formed in Caracas in 1958.[21] with Castro erroneously announcing he had been selected by "popular election"; most of Urrutia's cabinet were MR-26-7 members.[22] On January 8, 1959, Castro's army entered Havana. Proclaiming himself Representative of the Rebel Armed Forces of the Presidency, Castro – along with close aides and family members – set up home and office in the penthouse of the Havana Hilton Hotel, there meeting with journalists, foreign visitors and government ministers.[23]

On 11 January 1959 Ed Sullivan would interview Fidel Castro in Matanzas and broadcast it on The Ed Sullivan Show. In the interview Ed Sullivan refers to Castro and other rebels as "a wonderful group of revolutionary youngsters" and point out their admiration for Catholicism. Fidel Castro would deny the rebels affiliation with communism. Hours after the interview Fidel Castro would ride on captured tanks into the capital in Havana.[24]

Officially having no role in the provisional government, Castro exercised a great deal of influence, largely because of his popularity and control of the rebel army. Ensuring the government implemented policies to cut corruption and fight illiteracy, he did not initially force through any radical proposals. Attempting to rid Cuba's government of Batistanos, the Congress elected under Batista was abolished, and all those elected in the rigged elections of 1954 and 1958 were banned from politics. The government now ruling by decree, Castro pushed the president to issue a temporary ban on all political parties, but repeatedly stated that they would get around to organizing multiparty elections; this never occurred.[25] He began meeting members of the Popular Socialist Party, believing they had the intellectual capacity to form a socialist government, but repeatedly denied being a communist himself.[26]

Once in power, President Urrutia swiftly began a program of closing all brothels, gambling outlets and the national lottery, arguing that these had long been a corrupting influence on the state. The measures drew immediate resistance from the large associated workforce. The disapproving Castro, then commander of Cuba's new armed forces, intervened to request a stay of execution until alternative employment could be found.[27]

Tribunals and first reforms edit

 
Trial of Jesús Sosa Blanco in the Ciudad Deportiva stadium, 1959

The first major political crisis arose over what to do with the captured Batista officials who had perpetrated the worst of the repression.[28] During the rebellion against Batista's dictatorship, the general command of the rebel army, led by Fidel Castro, introduced into the territories under its control the 19th-century penal law commonly known as the Ley de la Sierra (Law of the Sierra).[29] This law included the death penalty for serious crimes, whether perpetrated by the Batista regime or by supporters of the revolution. In 1959 the revolutionary government extended its application to the whole of the republic and to those it considered war criminals, captured and tried after the revolution. According to the Cuban Ministry of Justice, this latter extension was supported by the majority of the population, and followed the same procedure as those in the Nuremberg trials held by the Allies after World War II.[30]

To implement a portion of this plan, Castro named Guevara commander of the La Cabaña Fortress prison, for a five-month tenure (2 January through 12 June 1959).[31] Guevara was charged by the new government with purging the Batista army and consolidating victory by exacting "revolutionary justice" against those regarded as traitors, chivatos (informants) or war criminals.[32] As commander of La Cabaña, Guevara reviewed the appeals of those convicted during the revolutionary tribunal process.[33] The tribunals were conducted by 2–3 army officers, an assessor, and a respected local citizen.[34] On some occasions the penalty delivered by the tribunal was death by firing-squad.[35] Raúl Gómez Treto, senior legal advisor to the Cuban Ministry of Justice, has argued that the death penalty was justified in order to prevent citizens themselves from taking justice into their own hands, as had happened twenty years earlier in the anti-Machado rebellion.[36] Biographers note that in January 1959 the Cuban public was in a "lynching mood",[37] and point to a survey at the time showing 93% public approval for the tribunal process.[33] Moreover, a 22 January 1959, Universal Newsreel broadcast in the United States and narrated by Ed Herlihy featured Fidel Castro asking an estimated one million Cubans whether they approved of the executions, and being met with a roaring "¡Si!" (yes).[38]

Between 1,000[39] and 20,000 Cubans estimated to have been killed at the hands of Batista's collaborators,[40][41][42][43] and many of the accused war criminals sentenced to death accused of torture and physical atrocities,[33] the newly empowered government carried out executions, punctuated by cries from the crowds of "¡al paredón!" ([to the] wall!)[28] It is widely believed that those executed were guilty of the crimes of which they were accused, but that the trials did not follow due process.[44][45]

Disagreements also arose in the new government concerning pay cuts, which were imposed on all public officials on Castro's demand. The disputed cuts included a reduction of the $100,000 a year presidential salary Urrutia had inherited from Batista.[46] By February, following the surprise resignation of Miró, Castro had assumed the role of prime minister; this strengthened his power and rendered Urrutia increasingly a figurehead president.[47] As Urrutia's participation in the legislative process declined, other unresolved disputes between the two leaders continued to fester. His belief in the restoration of elections was rejected by Castro, who felt that they would usher in a return to the old discredited system of corrupt parties and fraudulent balloting that had marked the Batista era.[48]

Urrutia was then accused by the Avance newspaper of buying a luxury villa, which was portrayed as a frivolous betrayal of the revolution and led to an outcry from the general public. He denied the allegation issuing a writ against the newspaper in response. The story further increased tensions between the various factions in the government, though Urrutia asserted publicly that he had "absolutely no disagreements" with Fidel Castro. Urrutia attempted to distance the Cuban government (including Castro) from the growing influence of the Communists within the administration, making a series of critical public comments against the latter group. Whilst Castro had not openly declared any affiliation with the Cuban communists, Urrutia had been a declared anti-Communist since they had refused to support the insurrection against Batista,[49] stating in an interview, "If the Cuban people had heeded those words, we would still have Batista with us ... and all those other war criminals who are now running away".[48]

Starting in March 1959 Fidel Castro announced in a speech he would attempt to end racial discrimination in Cuban society. He detailed a plan to bring black and white Cubans together in shared schools and other institutions, via equal opportunity. In a later televised discussion Castro claimed his plans were mostly to improve economic conditions for black Cubans and that he is not encouraging total social integration. Social clubs were to be totally integrated, private beaches opened, and schools totally nationalized.

Private schools that once had majority white student bodies were now nationalized and faced an influx of new black and mulatto students. Social clubs were told to integrate as early as January 1959. White and black social clubs began to dissolve. Racism became branded as counterrevolutionary and critics of the government were often branded as racists.[50] Some white Cubans were fearful of integration, while some black Cubans were fearful of the closing of black social clubs and its effects on Afro-Cuban cultural life.[50]

In March 1959, Castro had already ordered rents for those who paid less than $100 a month to be halved. Productivity in the country would later decrease, and the country's financial reserves were drained within only two years.[51][additional citation(s) needed]

Agrarian reform edit

 
Fidel Castro during a 1959 visit to Washington, D.C. to promote his land reform plans

On 15 April 1959, Castro began an 11-day visit to the United States, at the invitation of the American Society of Newspaper Editors.[52] Fidel Castro made the visit in hopes of securing U.S. aid for Cuba. While there he openly spoke of plans to nationalize Cuban lands and at the United Nations he declared Cuba was neutral in the Cold War.[6] He said during his visit: "I know the world thinks of us, we are Communists, and of course I have said very clear that we are not Communists; very clear."[53]

In the summer of 1959, Fidel began nationalizing plantation lands owned by American investors as well as confiscating the property of foreign landowners. He also seized property previously held by wealthy Cubans who had fled.[54][55][56] He nationalized sugar production and oil refinement, over the objection of foreign investors who owned stakes in these commodities.[57][58]

On July 17, 1959, Conrado Bécquer, the sugar workers' leader demanded 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 Osvaldo Dorticós as the new president.[49]

In July 1959, army commando Huber Matos grew suspicious of the new government after the deposition of President Manuel Urrutia Lleó, and attempted to soon resign. On 26 July, Castro and Matos met at the Hilton Hotel in Havana, where, according to Matos, Castro told him: "Your resignation is not acceptable at this point. We still have too much work to do. I admit that Raúl [Castro] and Che [Guevara] are flirting with Marxism ... but you have the situation under control ... Forget about resigning ... But if in a while you believe the situation is not changing, you have the right to resign."[59] On October 20, 1959, a political scandal occurred when army commander Huber Matos resigned and accused Fidel Castro of "burying the revolution". Fifteen of Matos' officers resigned with him. Immediately after the resignation Fidel Castro critiqued Matos and accused him of disloyalty, then sent Camilo Cienfuegos to arrest Matos and his accompanying officers. Matos and the officers were taken to Havana and imprisoned in La Cabaña.[60] The scandal is noted for its occurrence alongside a greater trend of removals of Fidel Castro's former collaborators in the revolution. It marked a turning point where Fidel Castro was beginning to exert more personal control over the new government in Cuba. Matos' arresting officer and former collaborator of Fidel Castro: Camilo Cienfuegos, would soon die in a mysterious plane crash shortly after the incident.[4] Huber Matos, military chief of Camagüey province, had complained to Fidel Castro that communists were being allowed to occupy leadership positions in the revolutionary government and the army. Finding Castro unwilling to discuss his concerns, Matos sent a letter to Castro resigning his command. Castro denounced Matos and sent troops to occupy key positions in Camagüey, expecting incorrectly that Matos would lead a revolt, and named Cienfuegos to take command and to arrest Matos. Matos pleaded with Cienfuegos who was a close friend, to listen to his concerns, but Cienfuegos assured him it could be worked out and arrested Matos. Shortly after Hubert Matos' detention various other disillusioned economists would send in their resignations. Felipe Pazos would resign as head of the National Bank and be replaced within a month by Che Guevara. Cabinet members Manuel Ray and Faustino Perez also resigned.[61]

The United States was already suspicious of Fidel Castro after he enacted the Agrarian Reform Law banning foreigners from owning land and his appointment of communist Nuñez Jimenez as head of the reform program. U.S. President Eisenhower refused any aggressive action against Cuba knowing it would push Cuba towards an alliance with the Soviet Union in the Cold War.[6]

1960: International tension edit

La Coubre explosion and US sanctions edit

 
Fidel Castro (far left), Che Guevara (centre) and William Alexander Morgan (second from the right) lead a memorial march in Havana on 5 March 1960 for the victims of La Coubre freight ship explosion.

Journalists and editors began to criticize Castro's left-ward turn, the pro-Castro printers' trade union began to harass and disrupt press actions. In January 1960, the government proclaimed that each newspaper need 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.[62]

As the United States began to grow colder in relations with Cuba, the Soviet Union began much warmer relations. In February Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan visited Havana which resulted in a major Cuban-Soviet trade agreement which gave Cuba Soviet oil in exchange for sugar.[63]

Cuba-United States relations were heavily strained after the explosion of a French vessel, the La Coubre, in Havana harbor in March 1960. The ship carried weapons purchased from Belgium, and the cause of the explosion was never determined, but Castro publicly insinuated that the U.S. government was guilty of sabotage, and wanted to use the explosion as the first stage of an invasion. He ended this speech with "¡Patria o Muerte!" ("Fatherland or Death"), a proclamation that he made much use of in ensuing years.[64][65]

There had already existed for months a popular desire for some form of urban-based civil defense against sabotage but the actual formation of such an institution came after the La Coubre explosion. The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution were formed.[66] Local CDR groups were tasked with keeping "vigilance against counter-revolutionary activity", keeping a detailed record of each neighborhood's inhabitants' spending habits, level of contact with foreigners, work and education history, and any "suspicious" behavior. Among the increasingly persecuted groups were homosexual men.[67]

In April the first shipment of 300,000 tons of Soviet oil arrived in Cuba. Oil refineries owned by United States companies refused to refine the oil so the Cuban government nationalized the refineries in June. In July the United States suspended the purchase of 700,000 tons of sugar from Cuba, four days later the Soviet Union announced they would buy one million tons of Cuban sugar. In August the United States announced a total economic embargo on Cuba and threatened other Latin American and European nations with reprisals if they did not do the same.[20]

Fidel Castro's visit to New York City edit

 
Fidel Castro at the 1960 United Nations General Assembly in New York City

Fidel Castro made a trip to New York City starting September 18 to attend the United Nations General Assembly. While there, international tensions were much higher than during his 1959 trip and he was restricted to only staying on Manhattan island. Castro checked in to the Shelbourne Hotel then checking out a few hours later, complaining that the Shelbourne had asked for a $10,000 cash advance. Castro would then threaten the United Nations that he would camp in Central Park if he couldn't find lodging, eventually checking into the Hotel Theresa in Harlem. While there Castro would meet with various interviewers with African-American newspapers, and other notable people such as Malcolm X, Langston Hughes, Nikita Khrushchev, and Allen Ginsberg. During his stay various Castro supporters and opponents would crowd the outside of the hotel, often fighting. Various sensationalist stories came out about Castro at the time, rumors claimed his entourage were harboring prostitutes in the hotel and that Castro was originally kicked out of the Shelbourne for keeping live chickens in the room. By September 26 Castro would finally speak at the U.N. and would speak for over four hours in denouncing United States foreign policy. Two days later Castro would return to Cuba in a Soviet jet, after his jets were repossessed at the airport.[68]

 
Castro giving press statement next to Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser before their meeting on the sidelines of United Nations General Assembly in 1960

On 13 October 1960, the US 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 US companies operating in Cuba had their premises seized and nationalized, including Coca-Cola and Sears Roebuck.[69] On 16 December, the US then ended its import quota of Cuban sugar.[70]

1961: Invasion and literacy campaign edit

Bay of Pigs Invasion edit

 
John F. Kennedy meeting members of Brigade 2506 after the Bay of Pigs Invasion

In January 1961, Castro ordered Havana's U.S. Embassy to reduce its 300 staff, suspecting many to be spies. The U.S. responded by ending diplomatic relations, and increasing CIA funding for exiled dissidents; these militants began attacking ships trading with Cuba, and bombed factories, shops, and sugar mills.[71] Both Eisenhower and his successor John F. Kennedy supported a CIA plan to aid a dissident militia, the Democratic Revolutionary Front, to invade Cuba and overthrow Castro; the plan resulted in the Bay of Pigs Invasion in April 1961. On 15 April, CIA-supplied B-26's bombed three Cuban military airfields; the U.S. announced that the perpetrators were defecting Cuban air force pilots, but Castro exposed these claims as false flag misinformation.[72] Fearing invasion, he ordered the arrest of between 20,000 and 100,000 suspected counter-revolutionaries,[73] publicly proclaiming that "What the imperialists cannot forgive us, is that we have made a Socialist revolution under their noses". This was his first announcement that the government was socialist.[73]

The CIA and Democratic Revolutionary Front had based a 1,400-strong army, Brigade 2506, in Nicaragua. At night, Brigade 2506 landed along Cuba's Bay of Pigs, and engaged in a firefight with a local revolutionary militia. Castro ordered Captain José Ramón Fernández to launch the counter-offensive, before taking personal control himself. After bombing the invader's ships and bringing in reinforcements, Castro forced the Brigade's surrender on 20 April.[74] He ordered the 1189 captured rebels to be interrogated by a panel of journalists on live television, personally taking over questioning on 25 April. 14 were put on trial for crimes allegedly committed before the revolution, while the others were returned to the U.S. in exchange for medicine and food valued at U.S. $25 million.[75]

The CIA contemplated the idea of staging the second coming of Christ to destabilize Cuba. However, they did not go through with the plan.[76]

The Cuban government also began to expropriate from mafia leaders and taking millions in cash. Before Meyer Lansky fled Cuba, he was said to be worth an estimated $20M ($163,685,121 in 2016, accounting for inflation). When he died in 1983, his family was shocked to find out that his estate was worth about $57,000. Before he died, Lansky said that Cuba "ruined" him.[77]

In August 1961, during an economic conference of the Organization of American States in Punta del Este, Uruguay, Che Guevara sent a note of "gratitude" to United States President John F. Kennedy through Richard N. Goodwin, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs. It read "Thanks for Playa Girón (Bay of Pigs). Before the invasion, the revolution was shaky. Now it's stronger than ever."[78] In response to United States Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon presenting the Alliance for Progress for ratification by the meeting, Guevara antagonistically attacked the United States' claim of being a "democracy", stating that such a system was not compatible with "financial oligarchy, discrimination against blacks, and outrages by the Ku Klux Klan".[79]

Literacy campaign edit

In April the country began a massive eight-month long effort to abolish illiteracy in Cuba.[80][81] It began in April 1961 and ended on December 22, 1961, successfully raising Cuba's literacy rate to nearly one-hundred percent.[82][81]

Although the USSR was hesitant regarding Castro's embrace of socialism,[83] relations with the Soviets deepened. Castro sent Fidelito for a Moscow schooling and while the first Soviet technicians arrived in June[84] Castro was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize.[85] In December 1961, Castro proclaimed himself a Marxist-Leninist, and in his Second Declaration of Havana he called on Latin America to rise up in revolution.[86] In response, the U.S. successfully pushed the Organization of American States to expel Cuba; the Soviets privately reprimanded Castro for recklessness, although he received praise from China.[87] Despite their ideological affinity with China, in the Sino-Soviet split, Cuba allied with the wealthier Soviets, who offered economic and military aid.[88]

Night of the Three Ps edit

The Night of the Three Ps (Spanish: La Noche de las Tres Pes) occurred on October 11, 1961, in Havana which was a massive police raid targeting prostitutes, pimps, and "pájaros" (term coined in Cuba to refer to homosexuals).[89] Cuban poet Virgilio Piñera was arrested the morning after the raid but quickly released to avoid international scandal. The raid was the first moralist round up of the new Castro government and would be the beginning of various round-ups in Cuba of people considered undesirables. The raid took place at a time of heightened moral campaigns in Cuba demonizing homosexuality and other qualities considered uncompatible with the Cuban revolutionary "new man".[90][91] The raid of the Night of the Three Ps officially targeted prostitutes (Spanish: prostitutas), "pájaros", and pimps (Spanish: proxenetas). Scholars and observers have noted that the police raid making the Night of the Three Ps could be better understood as having taken place for longer than that one night. Carlos Franqui noted in his memoir that the real targets of the raid included homosexuals, intellectuals, artists, vagrants, voodoo practitioners, and anyone deemed suspicious.[92]

1962: Missile Crisis and slowing economy edit

 
Reported range of nuclear missiles in Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis

Our revolution is endangering all American possessions in Latin America. We are telling these countries to make their own revolution.

— Che Guevara, October 1962[93]

By 1962, Cuba's economy was in steep decline, a result of poor economic management and low productivity coupled with the U.S. trade embargo. Food shortages led to rationing, resulting in protests in Cárdenas.[94] Security reports indicated that many Cubans associated austerity with the "Old Communists" of the PSP, while Castro considered a number of them – namely Aníbal Escalante and Blas Roca – unduly loyal to Moscow. In March 1962 Castro removed the most prominent "Old Communists" from office, labelling them "sectarian".[95] On a personal level, Castro was increasingly lonely, and his relations with Che Guevara became strained as the latter became increasingly anti-Soviet and pro-Chinese.[96]

On 26 March 1962, the IRO became the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution (PURSC) which, in turn, became the modern Communist Party of Cuba on 3 October 1965, with Castro as First Secretary. Castro remained the ruler of Cuba, first as Prime Minister and, from 1976, as President, until his retirement on February 20, 2008.[97] His brother Raúl officially replaced him as president later that same month.[98]

Militarily weaker than NATO, Khrushchev wanted to install Soviet R-12 MRBM nuclear missiles on Cuba to even the power balance.[99] Although conflicted, Castro agreed, believing it would guarantee Cuba's safety and enhance the cause of socialism.[100] Undertaken in secrecy, only the Castro brothers, Guevara, Dorticós and security chief Ramiro Valdés knew the full plan.[101] Upon discovering it through aerial reconnaissance, in October the U.S. implemented an island-wide quarantine to search vessels headed to Cuba, sparking the Cuban Missile Crisis. The U.S. saw the missiles as offensive, though Castro insisted they were defensive.[102] Castro urged Khrushchev to threaten a nuclear strike on the U.S. should Cuba be attacked, but Khrushchev was desperate to avoid nuclear war.[103] Castro was left out of the negotiations, in which Khrushchev agreed to remove the missiles in exchange for a U.S. commitment not to invade Cuba and an understanding that the U.S. would remove their MRBMs from Turkey and Italy.[104] Feeling betrayed by Khrushchev, Castro was furious and soon fell ill.[105] Proposing a five-point plan, Castro demanded that the U.S. end its embargo, cease supporting dissidents, stop violating Cuban air space and territorial waters and withdraw from Guantanamo Bay Naval Base. Presenting these demands to U Thant, visiting Secretary-General of the United Nations, the U.S. ignored them, and in turn Castro refused to allow the U.N.'s inspection team into Cuba.[106]

1963–1968: Internationalizing revolution edit

 
Poster encouraging Cubans to work in harvesting sugar cane

In February 1963, Castro received a personal letter from Khrushchev, inviting him to visit the USSR. Deeply touched, Castro arrived in April and stayed for five weeks. He visited 14 cities, addressed a Red Square rally and watched the May Day parade from the Kremlin, was awarded an honorary doctorate from Moscow State University and became the first foreigner to receive the Order of Lenin.[107][108] Castro returned to Cuba with new ideas; inspired by Soviet newspaper Pravda, he amalgamated Hoy and Revolución into a new daily, Granma,[109] and oversaw large investment into Cuban sport that resulted in an increased international sporting reputation.[110] The government agreed to temporarily permit emigration for anyone other than males aged between 15 and 26, thereby ridding the government of thousands of opponents.[111] In 1963, his mother died. This was the last time his private life was reported in Cuba's press.[112] In 1964, Castro returned to Moscow, officially to sign a new five-year sugar trade agreement, but also to discuss the ramifications of the assassination of John F. Kennedy.[113] In October 1965, the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations was officially renamed the "Cuban Communist Party" and published the membership of its Central Committee.[111]

"The greatest threat presented by Castro's Cuba is as an example to other Latin American states which are beset by poverty, corruption, feudalism, and plutocratic exploitation ... his influence in Latin America might be overwhelming and irresistible if, with Soviet help, he could establish in Cuba a Communist utopia."

Walter Lippmann, Newsweek, April 27, 1964[114]

By 1965, Cuba was officially a one-party state after a long period of political solidification by Fidel Castro after the Cuban Revolution. In September 1966, Fidel Castro gave a speech to representatives of the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution. In the speech, he gave his ruling that workers would no longer receive material bonuses for extra labor and instead be encouraged by "moral enthusiasm" alone, which distanced Cuba from the Soviet model of using material incentives. This independent approach to economic policy fell into a global trend during the Cold War in which Third World countries adopted independent economic strategies in relation to the industrialized dominant power blocs.[115]

Cuba had begun what was referred to as the "radical experiment", where the country was to be reorganized to promote revolutionary consciousness and an independent economy. Rural to urban migration was regulated, excess urban workers were sent to the countryside, and agricultural labor became common for students, soldiers, and convicts. The Military Units to Aid Production were established and used "anti-social" prisoners as penal laborers in agriculture.[116]

Despite Soviet misgivings, Castro continued calling for global revolution and the funding militant leftists. He supported Che Guevara's "Andean project", an unsuccessful plan to set up a guerrilla movement in the highlands of Bolivia, Peru and Argentina, and allowed revolutionary groups from across the world, from the Viet Cong to the Black Panthers, to train in Cuba.[117][118] He considered western-dominated Africa ripe for revolution, and sent troops and medics to aid Ahmed Ben Bella's socialist regime in Algeria during the Sand War. He also allied with Alphonse Massemba-Débat's socialist government in Congo-Brazzaville. In 1965, Castro authorized Guevara to travel to Congo-Kinshasa to train revolutionaries against the western-backed government.[119][120] Castro was personally devastated when Guevara was subsequently killed by CIA-backed troops in Bolivia in October 1967 and publicly attributed it to Che's disregard for his own safety.[121][122] In 1966, Castro staged a Tri-Continental Conference of Africa, Asia and Latin America in Havana, further establishing himself as a significant player on the world stage.[123][124] From this conference, Castro created the Latin American Solidarity Organization (OLAS), which adopted the slogan of "The duty of a revolution is to make revolution", signifying that Havana's leadership of the Latin American revolutionary movement.[125]

Castro's increasing role on the world stage strained his relationship with the Soviets, now under the leadership of Leonid Brezhnev. Asserting Cuba's independence, Castro refused to sign the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, declaring it a Soviet-U.S. attempt to dominate the Third World.[126] In turn, Soviet-loyalist Aníbal Escalante began organizing a government network of opposition to Castro, though in January 1968, he and his supporters were arrested for passing state secrets to Moscow.[127] Castro ultimately relented to Brezhnev's pressure to be obedient, and in August 1968 denounced the Prague Spring as led by a "fascist reactionary rabble" and praised the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia.[128][129][130]

In February 1968, a group in the Communist Party of Cuba and other official organizations known as the "microfaction" was completely purged from the government. The group numbered almost forty officials who endorsed Soviet-style material incentives over moral enthusiasm to encourage workers. They were accused of conspiring against the state, and made to serve prison sentences.[131] Influenced by China's Great Leap Forward, in 1968 Castro proclaimed a Great Revolutionary Offensive, closed all remaining privately owned shops and businesses and denounced their owners as capitalist counter-revolutionaries.[132]

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Cited sources edit

consolidation, cuban, revolution, further, history, cuba, after, cuban, revolution, cuba, under, fidel, castro, consolidation, cuban, revolution, period, cuban, history, typically, defined, starting, aftermath, revolution, 1959, ending, first, congress, commun. For further history of Cuba after the Cuban Revolution see Cuba under Fidel Castro The consolidation of the Cuban Revolution is a period in Cuban history typically defined as starting in the aftermath of the revolution in 1959 and ending in the first congress of the Communist Party of Cuba 1975 which signified the final political solidification of the Cuban revolutionaries new government The period encompasses early domestic reforms human rights violations continuing under the new regime growing international tensions and politically climaxed with the failure of the 1970 sugar harvest 1 2 3 Consolidation of the Cuban RevolutionPart of the Cold WarChe Guevara left and Fidel Castro right in 1961Date1959 1975LocationCubaOutcomeSeries of events including United States embargo against Cuba 1958 today Escambray rebellion 1959 1965 Cuban exodus 1959 today Agrarian reforms in Cuba 1959 1962 Cuban literacy campaign 1960 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion 1961 The political consolidation of Fidel Castro in the new Cuban government began in early 1959 It began with the appointment of communist officials to office and a wave of removals of other revolutionaries that criticized the appointment of communists This trend came to a head with the Huber Matos affair and would continue that by mid 1960 little opposition remained to Castro within the government and few independent institutions existed in Cuba 4 5 In 1959 in the immediate aftermath of the revolution Castro would visit the United States to ask for aid and boast of land reform plans which he believed the U S government would appreciate Throughout 1960 tensions slowly escalated between Cuba and the United States due to the nationalizations of various American companies retaliatory economic sanctions and counterrevolutionary bombing raids In January 1961 the U S cut off diplomatic relations with Cuba and the Soviet Union started to solidify relations with Cuba The U S feared growing Soviet influence in Cuba and backed the failed Bay of Pigs Invasion of April 1961 By December 1961 Castro for the first time openly expressed his communist sympathies Castro s fears of another invasion and his new Soviet allies influenced his decision to put nuclear missiles in Cuba triggering the Cuban Missile Crisis 6 In the aftermath of the crisis the United States promised not to invade Cuba in the future in compliance with this agreement the U S withdrew all support from the Alzados effectively crippling the resource starved resistance 7 The counterrevolutionary conflict known abroad as the Escambray rebellion lasted until about 1965 and has since been branded as the Struggle Against Bandits by the Cuban government 7 The consolidation of power between 1959 and 1970 has also been labeled the militarization of Cuba which is argued to have begun quickly after the Cuban Revolution but climaxed in the Revolutionary Offensive that was organized by the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces 8 9 A chief proponent of the militarization periodization is historian Irving Louis Horowitz who argues the militant origins of the revolution the popularity of militarism in Latin America Cuba s single crop economy desires to resist U S hostility military support of regimes abroad and Cuba s role as the USSR s lone ally in the Americas caused the militarization of Cuba 10 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Ideology of the Cuban Revolution 1 2 Flight of Batista 2 1959 Year of Liberation 2 1 Rebel victory 2 2 Tribunals and first reforms 2 3 Agrarian reform 3 1960 International tension 3 1 La Coubre explosion and US sanctions 3 2 Fidel Castro s visit to New York City 4 1961 Invasion and literacy campaign 4 1 Bay of Pigs Invasion 4 2 Literacy campaign 4 3 Night of the Three Ps 5 1962 Missile Crisis and slowing economy 6 1963 1968 Internationalizing revolution 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Cited sourcesBackground editMain article Cuban Revolution Ideology of the Cuban Revolution edit The Cuba Revolution Spanish Revolucion Cubana was an armed revolt conducted by Fidel Castro and his fellow revolutionaries of the 26th of July Movement and its allies against the military dictatorship of Cuban President Fulgencio Batista The revolution began in July 1953 11 and continued sporadically until the rebels finally ousted Batista on 31 December 1958 replacing his government 12 The beliefs of Fidel Castro during the revolution have been the subject of much historical debate Fidel Castro was openly ambiguous about his beliefs at the time Some orthodox historians argue Castro was a communist from the beginning with a long term plan however others have argued he had no strong ideological loyalties Leslie Dewart has stated that there is no evidence to suggest Castro was ever a communist agent Levine and Papasotiriou believe Castro believed in little outside of a distaste for American imperialism While Ana Serra believed it was the publication of El socialismo y el hombre en Cuba 13 As evidence for his lack of communist leanings they note his friendly relations with the United States shortly after the revolution and him not joining the Cuban Communist Party during the beginning of his land reforms 14 At the time of the revolution the 26th of July Movement involved people of various political persuasions but most were in agreement and desired the reinstatement of the 1940 Constitution of Cuba and supported the ideals of Jose Marti Che Guevara commented to Jorge Masetti in an interview during the revolution that Fidel isn t a communist also stating politically you can define Fidel and his movement as revolutionary nationalist Of course he is anti American in the sense that Americans are anti revolutionaries 15 Flight of Batista edit nbsp Habana entrance Fidel Castro and Huber Matos 8 January 1959 On 31 December 1958 the Battle of Santa Clara took place in a scene of great confusion The city of Santa Clara fell to the combined forces of Che Guevara Cienfuegos and Revolutionary Directorate RD rebels led by Comandantes Rolando Cubela Juan El Mejicano Abrahantes and William Alexander Morgan News of these defeats caused Batista to panic He fled Cuba by air for the Dominican Republic just hours later on 1 January 1959 Comandante William Alexander Morgan leading RD rebel forces continued fighting as Batista departed and had captured the city of Cienfuegos by 2 January 16 Cuban General Eulogio Cantillo entered Havana s Presidential Palace proclaimed the Supreme Court judge Carlos Piedra as the new president and began appointing new members to Batista s old government 17 Castro learned of Batista s flight in the morning and immediately started negotiations to take over Santiago de Cuba On 2 January the military commander in the city Colonel Rubido ordered his soldiers not to fight and Castro s forces took over the city The forces of Guevara and Cienfuegos entered Havana at about the same time They had met no opposition on their journey from Santa Clara to Cuba s capital Castro himself arrived in Havana on 8 January after a long victory march His initial choice of president Manuel Urrutia Lleo took office on 3 January 18 1959 Year of Liberation editRebel victory edit nbsp Che Guevara with Manuel Urrutia in 1959 who was president at the beginning of the revolution after being appointed by the rebels Castro learned of Batista s flight in the morning when and immediately started negotiations to take over Santiago de Cuba On 2 January the military commander in the city Colonel Rubido ordered his soldiers not to fight and Castro s forces took over the city The forces of Guevara and Cienfuegos entered Havana at about the same time They had met no opposition on their journey from Santa Clara to Cuba s capital Castro himself arrived in Havana on 8 January after a long victory march His initial choice of president Manuel Urrutia Lleo would later take office on 3 January 19 The new revolutionary government would name 1959 the year of liberation because of the year s efforts to deconstruct the old Batista government structures 20 Castro had made his opinion clear that lawyer Manuel Urrutia Lleo should become president leading a provisional civilian government following Batista s fall Politically moderate Urrutia had defended MR 26 7 revolutionaries in court arguing that the Moncada Barracks attack was legal according to the Cuban constitution Castro believed Urrutia would make a good leader being both established yet sympathetic to the revolution With the leaders of the junta under arrest Urrutia was proclaimed provisional president on 2 January 1959 Urrutia had been chosen because of his prestige and acceptability to both the moderate middle class backers of the revolution and to the guerrilla forces who took part in the alliance formed in Caracas in 1958 21 with Castro erroneously announcing he had been selected by popular election most of Urrutia s cabinet were MR 26 7 members 22 On January 8 1959 Castro s army entered Havana Proclaiming himself Representative of the Rebel Armed Forces of the Presidency Castro along with close aides and family members set up home and office in the penthouse of the Havana Hilton Hotel there meeting with journalists foreign visitors and government ministers 23 On 11 January 1959 Ed Sullivan would interview Fidel Castro in Matanzas and broadcast it on The Ed Sullivan Show In the interview Ed Sullivan refers to Castro and other rebels as a wonderful group of revolutionary youngsters and point out their admiration for Catholicism Fidel Castro would deny the rebels affiliation with communism Hours after the interview Fidel Castro would ride on captured tanks into the capital in Havana 24 Officially having no role in the provisional government Castro exercised a great deal of influence largely because of his popularity and control of the rebel army Ensuring the government implemented policies to cut corruption and fight illiteracy he did not initially force through any radical proposals Attempting to rid Cuba s government of Batistanos the Congress elected under Batista was abolished and all those elected in the rigged elections of 1954 and 1958 were banned from politics The government now ruling by decree Castro pushed the president to issue a temporary ban on all political parties but repeatedly stated that they would get around to organizing multiparty elections this never occurred 25 He began meeting members of the Popular Socialist Party believing they had the intellectual capacity to form a socialist government but repeatedly denied being a communist himself 26 Once in power President Urrutia swiftly began a program of closing all brothels gambling outlets and the national lottery arguing that these had long been a corrupting influence on the state The measures drew immediate resistance from the large associated workforce The disapproving Castro then commander of Cuba s new armed forces intervened to request a stay of execution until alternative employment could be found 27 Tribunals and first reforms edit nbsp Trial of Jesus Sosa Blanco in the Ciudad Deportiva stadium 1959 The first major political crisis arose over what to do with the captured Batista officials who had perpetrated the worst of the repression 28 During the rebellion against Batista s dictatorship the general command of the rebel army led by Fidel Castro introduced into the territories under its control the 19th century penal law commonly known as the Ley de la Sierra Law of the Sierra 29 This law included the death penalty for serious crimes whether perpetrated by the Batista regime or by supporters of the revolution In 1959 the revolutionary government extended its application to the whole of the republic and to those it considered war criminals captured and tried after the revolution According to the Cuban Ministry of Justice this latter extension was supported by the majority of the population and followed the same procedure as those in the Nuremberg trials held by the Allies after World War II 30 To implement a portion of this plan Castro named Guevara commander of the La Cabana Fortress prison for a five month tenure 2 January through 12 June 1959 31 Guevara was charged by the new government with purging the Batista army and consolidating victory by exacting revolutionary justice against those regarded as traitors chivatos informants or war criminals 32 As commander of La Cabana Guevara reviewed the appeals of those convicted during the revolutionary tribunal process 33 The tribunals were conducted by 2 3 army officers an assessor and a respected local citizen 34 On some occasions the penalty delivered by the tribunal was death by firing squad 35 Raul Gomez Treto senior legal advisor to the Cuban Ministry of Justice has argued that the death penalty was justified in order to prevent citizens themselves from taking justice into their own hands as had happened twenty years earlier in the anti Machado rebellion 36 Biographers note that in January 1959 the Cuban public was in a lynching mood 37 and point to a survey at the time showing 93 public approval for the tribunal process 33 Moreover a 22 January 1959 Universal Newsreel broadcast in the United States and narrated by Ed Herlihy featured Fidel Castro asking an estimated one million Cubans whether they approved of the executions and being met with a roaring Si yes 38 Between 1 000 39 and 20 000 Cubans estimated to have been killed at the hands of Batista s collaborators 40 41 42 43 and many of the accused war criminals sentenced to death accused of torture and physical atrocities 33 the newly empowered government carried out executions punctuated by cries from the crowds of al paredon to the wall 28 It is widely believed that those executed were guilty of the crimes of which they were accused but that the trials did not follow due process 44 45 Disagreements also arose in the new government concerning pay cuts which were imposed on all public officials on Castro s demand The disputed cuts included a reduction of the 100 000 a year presidential salary Urrutia had inherited from Batista 46 By February following the surprise resignation of Miro Castro had assumed the role of prime minister this strengthened his power and rendered Urrutia increasingly a figurehead president 47 As Urrutia s participation in the legislative process declined other unresolved disputes between the two leaders continued to fester His belief in the restoration of elections was rejected by Castro who felt that they would usher in a return to the old discredited system of corrupt parties and fraudulent balloting that had marked the Batista era 48 Urrutia was then accused by the Avance newspaper of buying a luxury villa which was portrayed as a frivolous betrayal of the revolution and led to an outcry from the general public He denied the allegation issuing a writ against the newspaper in response The story further increased tensions between the various factions in the government though Urrutia asserted publicly that he had absolutely no disagreements with Fidel Castro Urrutia attempted to distance the Cuban government including Castro from the growing influence of the Communists within the administration making a series of critical public comments against the latter group Whilst Castro had not openly declared any affiliation with the Cuban communists Urrutia had been a declared anti Communist since they had refused to support the insurrection against Batista 49 stating in an interview If the Cuban people had heeded those words we would still have Batista with us and all those other war criminals who are now running away 48 Starting in March 1959 Fidel Castro announced in a speech he would attempt to end racial discrimination in Cuban society He detailed a plan to bring black and white Cubans together in shared schools and other institutions via equal opportunity In a later televised discussion Castro claimed his plans were mostly to improve economic conditions for black Cubans and that he is not encouraging total social integration Social clubs were to be totally integrated private beaches opened and schools totally nationalized Private schools that once had majority white student bodies were now nationalized and faced an influx of new black and mulatto students Social clubs were told to integrate as early as January 1959 White and black social clubs began to dissolve Racism became branded as counterrevolutionary and critics of the government were often branded as racists 50 Some white Cubans were fearful of integration while some black Cubans were fearful of the closing of black social clubs and its effects on Afro Cuban cultural life 50 In March 1959 Castro had already ordered rents for those who paid less than 100 a month to be halved Productivity in the country would later decrease and the country s financial reserves were drained within only two years 51 additional citation s needed Agrarian reform edit Main articles Agrarian reforms in Cuba and Huber Matos affair nbsp Fidel Castro during a 1959 visit to Washington D C to promote his land reform plans On 15 April 1959 Castro began an 11 day visit to the United States at the invitation of the American Society of Newspaper Editors 52 Fidel Castro made the visit in hopes of securing U S aid for Cuba While there he openly spoke of plans to nationalize Cuban lands and at the United Nations he declared Cuba was neutral in the Cold War 6 He said during his visit I know the world thinks of us we are Communists and of course I have said very clear that we are not Communists very clear 53 In the summer of 1959 Fidel began nationalizing plantation lands owned by American investors as well as confiscating the property of foreign landowners He also seized property previously held by wealthy Cubans who had fled 54 55 56 He nationalized sugar production and oil refinement over the objection of foreign investors who owned stakes in these commodities 57 58 On July 17 1959 Conrado Becquer the sugar workers leader demanded 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 Osvaldo Dorticos as the new president 49 In July 1959 army commando Huber Matos grew suspicious of the new government after the deposition of President Manuel Urrutia Lleo and attempted to soon resign On 26 July Castro and Matos met at the Hilton Hotel in Havana where according to Matos Castro told him Your resignation is not acceptable at this point We still have too much work to do I admit that Raul Castro and Che Guevara are flirting with Marxism but you have the situation under control Forget about resigning But if in a while you believe the situation is not changing you have the right to resign 59 On October 20 1959 a political scandal occurred when army commander Huber Matos resigned and accused Fidel Castro of burying the revolution Fifteen of Matos officers resigned with him Immediately after the resignation Fidel Castro critiqued Matos and accused him of disloyalty then sent Camilo Cienfuegos to arrest Matos and his accompanying officers Matos and the officers were taken to Havana and imprisoned in La Cabana 60 The scandal is noted for its occurrence alongside a greater trend of removals of Fidel Castro s former collaborators in the revolution It marked a turning point where Fidel Castro was beginning to exert more personal control over the new government in Cuba Matos arresting officer and former collaborator of Fidel Castro Camilo Cienfuegos would soon die in a mysterious plane crash shortly after the incident 4 Huber Matos military chief of Camaguey province had complained to Fidel Castro that communists were being allowed to occupy leadership positions in the revolutionary government and the army Finding Castro unwilling to discuss his concerns Matos sent a letter to Castro resigning his command Castro denounced Matos and sent troops to occupy key positions in Camaguey expecting incorrectly that Matos would lead a revolt and named Cienfuegos to take command and to arrest Matos Matos pleaded with Cienfuegos who was a close friend to listen to his concerns but Cienfuegos assured him it could be worked out and arrested Matos Shortly after Hubert Matos detention various other disillusioned economists would send in their resignations Felipe Pazos would resign as head of the National Bank and be replaced within a month by Che Guevara Cabinet members Manuel Ray and Faustino Perez also resigned 61 The United States was already suspicious of Fidel Castro after he enacted the Agrarian Reform Law banning foreigners from owning land and his appointment of communist Nunez Jimenez as head of the reform program U S President Eisenhower refused any aggressive action against Cuba knowing it would push Cuba towards an alliance with the Soviet Union in the Cold War 6 1960 International tension editLa Coubre explosion and US sanctions edit Main articles La Coubre explosion and United States embargo against Cuba See also Committees for the Defense of the Revolution nbsp Fidel Castro far left Che Guevara centre and William Alexander Morgan second from the right lead a memorial march in Havana on 5 March 1960 for the victims of La Coubre freight ship explosion Journalists and editors began to criticize Castro s left ward turn the pro Castro printers trade union began to harass and disrupt press actions In January 1960 the government proclaimed that each newspaper need 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 62 As the United States began to grow colder in relations with Cuba the Soviet Union began much warmer relations In February Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan visited Havana which resulted in a major Cuban Soviet trade agreement which gave Cuba Soviet oil in exchange for sugar 63 Cuba United States relations were heavily strained after the explosion of a French vessel the La Coubre in Havana harbor in March 1960 The ship carried weapons purchased from Belgium and the cause of the explosion was never determined but Castro publicly insinuated that the U S government was guilty of sabotage and wanted to use the explosion as the first stage of an invasion He ended this speech with Patria o Muerte Fatherland or Death a proclamation that he made much use of in ensuing years 64 65 There had already existed for months a popular desire for some form of urban based civil defense against sabotage but the actual formation of such an institution came after the La Coubre explosion The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution were formed 66 Local CDR groups were tasked with keeping vigilance against counter revolutionary activity keeping a detailed record of each neighborhood s inhabitants spending habits level of contact with foreigners work and education history and any suspicious behavior Among the increasingly persecuted groups were homosexual men 67 In April the first shipment of 300 000 tons of Soviet oil arrived in Cuba Oil refineries owned by United States companies refused to refine the oil so the Cuban government nationalized the refineries in June In July the United States suspended the purchase of 700 000 tons of sugar from Cuba four days later the Soviet Union announced they would buy one million tons of Cuban sugar In August the United States announced a total economic embargo on Cuba and threatened other Latin American and European nations with reprisals if they did not do the same 20 Fidel Castro s visit to New York City edit nbsp Fidel Castro at the 1960 United Nations General Assembly in New York City Fidel Castro made a trip to New York City starting September 18 to attend the United Nations General Assembly While there international tensions were much higher than during his 1959 trip and he was restricted to only staying on Manhattan island Castro checked in to the Shelbourne Hotel then checking out a few hours later complaining that the Shelbourne had asked for a 10 000 cash advance Castro would then threaten the United Nations that he would camp in Central Park if he couldn t find lodging eventually checking into the Hotel Theresa in Harlem While there Castro would meet with various interviewers with African American newspapers and other notable people such as Malcolm X Langston Hughes Nikita Khrushchev and Allen Ginsberg During his stay various Castro supporters and opponents would crowd the outside of the hotel often fighting Various sensationalist stories came out about Castro at the time rumors claimed his entourage were harboring prostitutes in the hotel and that Castro was originally kicked out of the Shelbourne for keeping live chickens in the room By September 26 Castro would finally speak at the U N and would speak for over four hours in denouncing United States foreign policy Two days later Castro would return to Cuba in a Soviet jet after his jets were repossessed at the airport 68 nbsp Castro giving press statement next to Egypt s President Gamal Abdel Nasser before their meeting on the sidelines of United Nations General Assembly in 1960 On 13 October 1960 the US 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 US companies operating in Cuba had their premises seized and nationalized including Coca Cola and Sears Roebuck 69 On 16 December the US then ended its import quota of Cuban sugar 70 1961 Invasion and literacy campaign editBay of Pigs Invasion edit Further information Bay of Pigs Invasion nbsp John F Kennedy meeting members of Brigade 2506 after the Bay of Pigs Invasion In January 1961 Castro ordered Havana s U S Embassy to reduce its 300 staff suspecting many to be spies The U S responded by ending diplomatic relations and increasing CIA funding for exiled dissidents these militants began attacking ships trading with Cuba and bombed factories shops and sugar mills 71 Both Eisenhower and his successor John F Kennedy supported a CIA plan to aid a dissident militia the Democratic Revolutionary Front to invade Cuba and overthrow Castro the plan resulted in the Bay of Pigs Invasion in April 1961 On 15 April CIA supplied B 26 s bombed three Cuban military airfields the U S announced that the perpetrators were defecting Cuban air force pilots but Castro exposed these claims as false flag misinformation 72 Fearing invasion he ordered the arrest of between 20 000 and 100 000 suspected counter revolutionaries 73 publicly proclaiming that What the imperialists cannot forgive us is that we have made a Socialist revolution under their noses This was his first announcement that the government was socialist 73 The CIA and Democratic Revolutionary Front had based a 1 400 strong army Brigade 2506 in Nicaragua At night Brigade 2506 landed along Cuba s Bay of Pigs and engaged in a firefight with a local revolutionary militia Castro ordered Captain Jose Ramon Fernandez to launch the counter offensive before taking personal control himself After bombing the invader s ships and bringing in reinforcements Castro forced the Brigade s surrender on 20 April 74 He ordered the 1189 captured rebels to be interrogated by a panel of journalists on live television personally taking over questioning on 25 April 14 were put on trial for crimes allegedly committed before the revolution while the others were returned to the U S in exchange for medicine and food valued at U S 25 million 75 The CIA contemplated the idea of staging the second coming of Christ to destabilize Cuba However they did not go through with the plan 76 The Cuban government also began to expropriate from mafia leaders and taking millions in cash Before Meyer Lansky fled Cuba he was said to be worth an estimated 20M 163 685 121 in 2016 accounting for inflation When he died in 1983 his family was shocked to find out that his estate was worth about 57 000 Before he died Lansky said that Cuba ruined him 77 In August 1961 during an economic conference of the Organization of American States in Punta del Este Uruguay Che Guevara sent a note of gratitude to United States President John F Kennedy through Richard N Goodwin Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter American Affairs It read Thanks for Playa Giron Bay of Pigs Before the invasion the revolution was shaky Now it s stronger than ever 78 In response to United States Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon presenting the Alliance for Progress for ratification by the meeting Guevara antagonistically attacked the United States claim of being a democracy stating that such a system was not compatible with financial oligarchy discrimination against blacks and outrages by the Ku Klux Klan 79 Literacy campaign edit Main article Cuban literacy campaign In April the country began a massive eight month long effort to abolish illiteracy in Cuba 80 81 It began in April 1961 and ended on December 22 1961 successfully raising Cuba s literacy rate to nearly one hundred percent 82 81 Although the USSR was hesitant regarding Castro s embrace of socialism 83 relations with the Soviets deepened Castro sent Fidelito for a Moscow schooling and while the first Soviet technicians arrived in June 84 Castro was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize 85 In December 1961 Castro proclaimed himself a Marxist Leninist and in his Second Declaration of Havana he called on Latin America to rise up in revolution 86 In response the U S successfully pushed the Organization of American States to expel Cuba the Soviets privately reprimanded Castro for recklessness although he received praise from China 87 Despite their ideological affinity with China in the Sino Soviet split Cuba allied with the wealthier Soviets who offered economic and military aid 88 Night of the Three Ps edit Main article Night of the Three Ps The Night of the Three Ps Spanish La Noche de las Tres Pes occurred on October 11 1961 in Havana which was a massive police raid targeting prostitutes pimps and pajaros term coined in Cuba to refer to homosexuals 89 Cuban poet Virgilio Pinera was arrested the morning after the raid but quickly released to avoid international scandal The raid was the first moralist round up of the new Castro government and would be the beginning of various round ups in Cuba of people considered undesirables The raid took place at a time of heightened moral campaigns in Cuba demonizing homosexuality and other qualities considered uncompatible with the Cuban revolutionary new man 90 91 The raid of the Night of the Three Ps officially targeted prostitutes Spanish prostitutas pajaros and pimps Spanish proxenetas Scholars and observers have noted that the police raid making the Night of the Three Ps could be better understood as having taken place for longer than that one night Carlos Franqui noted in his memoir that the real targets of the raid included homosexuals intellectuals artists vagrants voodoo practitioners and anyone deemed suspicious 92 1962 Missile Crisis and slowing economy editFurther information Escalante affair and Cuban Missile Crisis nbsp Reported range of nuclear missiles in Cuba during the Cuban Missile Crisis Our revolution is endangering all American possessions in Latin America We are telling these countries to make their own revolution Che Guevara October 1962 93 By 1962 Cuba s economy was in steep decline a result of poor economic management and low productivity coupled with the U S trade embargo Food shortages led to rationing resulting in protests in Cardenas 94 Security reports indicated that many Cubans associated austerity with the Old Communists of the PSP while Castro considered a number of them namely Anibal Escalante and Blas Roca unduly loyal to Moscow In March 1962 Castro removed the most prominent Old Communists from office labelling them sectarian 95 On a personal level Castro was increasingly lonely and his relations with Che Guevara became strained as the latter became increasingly anti Soviet and pro Chinese 96 On 26 March 1962 the IRO became the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution PURSC which in turn became the modern Communist Party of Cuba on 3 October 1965 with Castro as First Secretary Castro remained the ruler of Cuba first as Prime Minister and from 1976 as President until his retirement on February 20 2008 97 His brother Raul officially replaced him as president later that same month 98 Militarily weaker than NATO Khrushchev wanted to install Soviet R 12 MRBM nuclear missiles on Cuba to even the power balance 99 Although conflicted Castro agreed believing it would guarantee Cuba s safety and enhance the cause of socialism 100 Undertaken in secrecy only the Castro brothers Guevara Dorticos and security chief Ramiro Valdes knew the full plan 101 Upon discovering it through aerial reconnaissance in October the U S implemented an island wide quarantine to search vessels headed to Cuba sparking the Cuban Missile Crisis The U S saw the missiles as offensive though Castro insisted they were defensive 102 Castro urged Khrushchev to threaten a nuclear strike on the U S should Cuba be attacked but Khrushchev was desperate to avoid nuclear war 103 Castro was left out of the negotiations in which Khrushchev agreed to remove the missiles in exchange for a U S commitment not to invade Cuba and an understanding that the U S would remove their MRBMs from Turkey and Italy 104 Feeling betrayed by Khrushchev Castro was furious and soon fell ill 105 Proposing a five point plan Castro demanded that the U S end its embargo cease supporting dissidents stop violating Cuban air space and territorial waters and withdraw from Guantanamo Bay Naval Base Presenting these demands to U Thant visiting Secretary General of the United Nations the U S ignored them and in turn Castro refused to allow the U N s inspection team into Cuba 106 1963 1968 Internationalizing revolution editFurther information Cuban military internationalism and Revolutionary Offensive See also Military Units to Aid Production nbsp Poster encouraging Cubans to work in harvesting sugar cane In February 1963 Castro received a personal letter from Khrushchev inviting him to visit the USSR Deeply touched Castro arrived in April and stayed for five weeks He visited 14 cities addressed a Red Square rally and watched the May Day parade from the Kremlin was awarded an honorary doctorate from Moscow State University and became the first foreigner to receive the Order of Lenin 107 108 Castro returned to Cuba with new ideas inspired by Soviet newspaper Pravda he amalgamated Hoy and Revolucion into a new daily Granma 109 and oversaw large investment into Cuban sport that resulted in an increased international sporting reputation 110 The government agreed to temporarily permit emigration for anyone other than males aged between 15 and 26 thereby ridding the government of thousands of opponents 111 In 1963 his mother died This was the last time his private life was reported in Cuba s press 112 In 1964 Castro returned to Moscow officially to sign a new five year sugar trade agreement but also to discuss the ramifications of the assassination of John F Kennedy 113 In October 1965 the Integrated Revolutionary Organizations was officially renamed the Cuban Communist Party and published the membership of its Central Committee 111 The greatest threat presented by Castro s Cuba is as an example to other Latin American states which are beset by poverty corruption feudalism and plutocratic exploitation his influence in Latin America might be overwhelming and irresistible if with Soviet help he could establish in Cuba a Communist utopia Walter Lippmann Newsweek April 27 1964 114 By 1965 Cuba was officially a one party state after a long period of political solidification by Fidel Castro after the Cuban Revolution In September 1966 Fidel Castro gave a speech to representatives of the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution In the speech he gave his ruling that workers would no longer receive material bonuses for extra labor and instead be encouraged by moral enthusiasm alone which distanced Cuba from the Soviet model of using material incentives This independent approach to economic policy fell into a global trend during the Cold War in which Third World countries adopted independent economic strategies in relation to the industrialized dominant power blocs 115 Cuba had begun what was referred to as the radical experiment where the country was to be reorganized to promote revolutionary consciousness and an independent economy Rural to urban migration was regulated excess urban workers were sent to the countryside and agricultural labor became common for students soldiers and convicts The Military Units to Aid Production were established and used anti social prisoners as penal laborers in agriculture 116 Despite Soviet misgivings Castro continued calling for global revolution and the funding militant leftists He supported Che Guevara s Andean project an unsuccessful plan to set up a guerrilla movement in the highlands of Bolivia Peru and Argentina and allowed revolutionary groups from across the world from the Viet Cong to the Black Panthers to train in Cuba 117 118 He considered western dominated Africa ripe for revolution and sent troops and medics to aid Ahmed Ben Bella s socialist regime in Algeria during the Sand War He also allied with Alphonse Massemba Debat s socialist government in Congo Brazzaville In 1965 Castro authorized Guevara to travel to Congo Kinshasa to train revolutionaries against the western backed government 119 120 Castro was personally devastated when Guevara was subsequently killed by CIA backed troops in Bolivia in October 1967 and publicly attributed it to Che s disregard for his own safety 121 122 In 1966 Castro staged a Tri Continental Conference of Africa Asia and Latin America in Havana further establishing himself as a significant player on the world stage 123 124 From this conference Castro created the Latin American Solidarity Organization OLAS which adopted the slogan of The duty of a revolution is to make revolution signifying that Havana s leadership of the Latin American revolutionary movement 125 Castro s increasing role on the world stage strained his relationship with the Soviets now under the leadership of Leonid Brezhnev Asserting Cuba s independence Castro refused to sign the Treaty on the Non Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons declaring it a Soviet U S attempt to dominate the Third World 126 In turn Soviet loyalist Anibal Escalante began organizing a government network of opposition to Castro though in January 1968 he and his supporters were arrested for passing state secrets to Moscow 127 Castro ultimately relented to Brezhnev s pressure to be obedient and in August 1968 denounced the Prague Spring as led by a fascist reactionary rabble and praised the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia 128 129 130 In February 1968 a group in the Communist Party of Cuba and other official organizations known as the microfaction was completely purged from the government The group numbered almost forty officials who endorsed Soviet style material incentives over moral enthusiasm to encourage workers They were accused of conspiring against the state and made to serve prison sentences 131 Influenced by China s Great Leap Forward in 1968 Castro proclaimed a Great Revolutionary Offensive closed all remaining privately owned shops and businesses and denounced their owners as capitalist counter revolutionaries 132 References editCitations edit Hellinger Daniel 2014 Comparative Politics of Latin America Democracy at Last Taylor and Francis p 289 ISBN 9781134070077 Staten Clifford 2005 The History of Cuba St Martin s Press pp 69 105 ISBN 9781403962591 Whalen Charles 1975 Cuba Study Mission A Fact finding Survey June 26 July 2 1975 U S Government Printing Office p 3 a b 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 Moore Robin 2006 Music and Revolution Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba University of California Press pp 66 67 ISBN 0520247116 a b c Stanley John What impact did the Cuban Revolution have on the Cold War PDF a b Cuba Intelligence and the Bay of Pigs Stanford University 26 September 2002 Archived from the original on 12 January 2014 Retrieved 18 July 2013 Cuba s Forgotten Decade How the 1970s Shaped the Revolution Lexington Books 2018 pp 72 73 ISBN 9781498568746 Horowitz Irving Louis January 1995 Cuban Communism 8th Editi Transaction Publisher p 585 ISBN 9781412820899 The Democratic Imagination Dialogues on the Work of Irving Louis Horowitz Transaction Publishers 2015 ISBN 9781412856263 Faria Jr Miguel A 27 July 2004 Fidel Castro and the 26th of July Movement Newsmax Media Archived from the original on 22 August 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2015 Cuba Marks 50 Years Since Triumphant Revolution Archived 27 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Jason Beaubien NPR 1 January 2009 Retrieved 9 July 2013 Serra Ana Ideology and the novel in the Cuban revolution the making of a revolutionary identity in the first decade OCLC 42657417 Cuba receives first US shipment in 50 years PDF Cambridge University Press Retrieved 18 November 2019 Brown Jonathan 24 April 2017 Cuba s Revolutionary World Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674978324 Faria 2002 p 69 Quirk 1993 p 212 Coltman 2003 p 137 Thomas 1998 pp 691 93 Thomas 1998 pp 691 693 a b Nieto Clara 2011 Masters of War Latin America and U S Agression From the Cuban Revolution Through the Clinton Years Seven Stories Press pp 55 56 ISBN 978 1609800499 Debra Evenson June 4 2019 Revolution In The Balance Law And Society In Contemporary Cuba Taylor amp Francis p 29 ISBN 9781000310054 Retrieved 30 April 2022 Bourne 1986 pp 153 161 Quirk 1993 p 216 Coltman 2003 pp 126 141 142 Bourne 1986 p 164 Coltman 2003 p 144 When Fidel Castro Charmed the United States Smithsonian com Bourne 1986 pp 171 172 Quirk 1993 pp 217 222 Coltman 2003 pp 150 154 Bourne 1986 pp 166 170 Quirk 1993 p 251 Coltman 2003 p 145 Robert E Quirk Fidel Castro p229 a b Skidmore 2008 pp 273 Gomez Treto 1991 p 115 The Penal Law of the War of Independence July 28 1896 was reinforced by Rule 1 of the Penal Regulations of the Rebel Army approved in the Sierra Maestra February 21 1958 and published in the army s official bulletin Ley penal de Cuba en armas 1959 Gomez Treto 1991 p 123 Gomez Treto 1991 pp 115 116 Anderson 1997 pp 372 425 Anderson 1997 p 376 a b c Taibo 1999 p 267 Kellner 1989 p 52 Niess 2007 p 60 Gomez Treto 1991 p 116 Anderson 1997 p 388 Rally For Castro One Million Roar Si To Cuba Executions Video Clip by Universal International News narrated by Ed Herlihy from 22 January 1959 Wickham Crowley Timothy P 1990 Exploring Revolution Essays on Latin American Insurgency and Revolutionary Theory Armonk and London M E Sharpe p 63 ISBN 978 0 87332 705 3 Conflict Order and Peace in the Americas by the Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs 1978 p 121 The US supported Batista regime killed 20 000 Cubans The World Guide 1997 98 A View from the South by University of Texas 1997 ISBN 1 869847 43 1 pg 209 Batista engineered yet another coup establishing a dictatorial regime which was responsible for the death of 20 000 Cubans Fidel The Untold Story 2001 Directed by Estela Bravo First Run Features 91 min Viewable clip An estimated 20 000 people were murdered by government forces during the Batista dictatorship Niess 2007 p 61 Chase Michelle 2010 The Trials In Greg Grandin Joseph Gilbert eds A Century of Revolution Durham NC Duke University Press pp 163 98 ISBN 978 0822347378 Archived from the original on 7 January 2016 Retrieved 17 September 2015 Castaneda 1998 pp 143 144 Richard Gott Cuba A new history p170 Anderson John Lee 1997 Che Guevara A revolutionary life Random House pp 376 405 a b Quirk Robert E 1993 The Political End of President Urrutia Fidel Castro Retrieved 8 October 2006 a b Thomas Hugh 1998 Cuba The pursuit for freedom pp 830 832 a b Benson Devyn 2012 Owning the Revolution Race Revolution and Politics from Havana to Miami 1959 1963 PDF Bourne 1986 p 186 Glass Andrew 15 April 2013 Fidel Castro visits the U S April 15 1959 Politico Archived from the original on 4 May 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2015 Cuban Revolution 1959 Year in Review United Press International 1959 Archived from the 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Cuba The International Dimension Transaction Publishers pp 42 45 ISBN 1412820820 George Alice 2013 The Cuban Missile Crisis The Threshold of Nuclear War Taylor and Francis p 17 ISBN 978 1136174049 Bourne 1986 pp 201 202 Fagen Richard 1969 The Transformation of Political Culture in Cuba Stanford University Stanford University Press pp 70 ISBN 9780804707022 Young Allen 1982 Gays under the Cuban revolution Grey Fox Press ISBN 0 912516 61 5 Andrews Evan August 31 2018 Fidel Castro s Wild New York Visit History com Bourne 1986 p 214 Bourne 1986 p 215 Bourne 1986 pp 215 216 Bourne 1986 pp 217 220 a b Bourne 1986 pp 221 222 Bourne 1986 pp 222 225 Bourne 1986 pp 226 227 Bevins Vincent 2020 The Jakarta Method Washington s Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1541742406 Fidel Castro a mixed legacy that includes fighting the mafia 26 November 2016 Archived from the original on 27 February 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Anderson 1997 p 509 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in Spanish Madrid Retrieved 7 June 2022 The Whole Island Six Decades of Cuban Poetry University of California Press 2009 p 566 ISBN 9780520258945 Anderson Thomas 2006 Everything in Its Place The Life and Works of Virgilio Pinera Bucknell University Press p 105 ISBN 9780838756355 Hynson Rachel 2020 Laboring for the State Women Family and Work in Revolutionary Cuba 1959 1971 Cambridge University Press pp 201 202 ISBN 9781107188679 Attack us at your Peril Cocky Cuba Warns US Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Henry Brandon The Sunday Times 28 October 1962 Retrieved 4 December 2012 Bourne 1986 p 233 Quirk 1993 pp 203 204 410 412 Coltman 2003 p 189 Bourne 1986 pp 234 236 Quirk 1993 pp 403 406 Coltman 2003 p 192 Bourne 1986 pp 258 259 Coltman 2003 pp 191 192 Fidel Castro Resigns as Cuba s President New York Times 20 February 2008 Archived from the original on 31 July 2013 Retrieved 10 July 2013 Raul Castro becomes Cuban president New York Times 24 February 2008 Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 10 July 2013 Coltman 2003 pp 192 194 Coltman 2003 p 194 Coltman 2003 p 195 Bourne 1986 pp 238 239 Quirk 1993 p 425 Coltman 2003 pp 196 197 Coltman 2003 p 197 Coltman 2003 pp 198 199 Bourne 1986 p 239 Quirk 1993 pp 443 434 Coltman 2003 pp 199 200 203 Bourne 1986 pp 241 242 Quirk 1993 pp 444 445 Bourne 1986 pp 245 248 Coltman 2003 pp 204 205 Bourne 1986 p 249 Bourne 1986 pp 249 250 a b Coltman 2003 p 213 Bourne 1986 pp 250 251 Bourne 1986 p 263 Cuba Once More by Walter Lippmann Newsweek April 27 1964 p 23 Mesa Lago Carmelo 1972 Revolutionary Change in Cuba University of Pittsburgh Press pp 37 39 ISBN 9780822974130 Henken Ted 2008 Cuba A Global Studies Handbook ABC CLIO p 139 ISBN 9781851099849 Bourne 1986 p 255 Coltman 2003 p 211 Bourne 1986 pp 255 256 260 Coltman 2003 pp 211 212 Bourne 1986 pp 267 268 Coltman 2003 p 216 Bourne 1986 p 265 Coltman 2003 p 214 Bourne 1986 p 267 Bourne 1986 p 269 Bourne 1986 pp 269 270 Bourne 1986 pp 270 271 Coltman 2003 pp 216 217 Castro Fidel August 1968 Castro comments on Czechoslovakia crisis FBIS Mesa Lago Carmelo 1972 Ideological Political and Economic Factors in the Cuban Controversy on Material Versus Moral Incentives Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 14 1 71 doi 10 2307 174981 JSTOR 174981 Coltman 2003 p 227 Cited sources edit Bourne Peter G 1986 Fidel A Biography of Fidel Castro New York City Dodd Mead amp Company ISBN 978 0 396 08518 8 Castaneda Jorge G 1998 Companero the life and death of Che Guevara 1st Vintage Books ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 75940 9 Coltman Leycester 2003 The Real Fidel Castro New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10760 9 Faria Miguel A Jr 2002 Cuba in Revolution Escape from a Lost Paradise Milledgeville GA Hacienda Pub Inc ISBN 0 9641077 3 2 Gomez Treto Raul 1991 Thirty Years of Cuban Revolutionary Penal Law Latin American Perspectives 18 2 114 125 doi 10 1177 0094582X9101800211 ISSN 0094 582X JSTOR 2633612 S2CID 144092152 Kellner Douglas 1989 Ernesto Che Guevara World Leaders Past amp Present Chelsea House Publishers Library Binding edition ISBN 1 55546 835 7 Lazo Mario 1970 American Policy Failures in Cuba Dagger in the Heart New York Twin Circle Publishing Co pp 198 200 204 LCCN 68 31632 Niess Frank 2007 Guevara London Haus ISBN 978 1 904341 99 4 Taibo II Paco Ignacio 1999 Guevara Also Known as Che St Martin s Griffin 2nd edition ISBN 0 312 20652 6 Skidmore Thomas E Smith Peter H 2008 Modern Latin America Oxford University Press p 436 ISBN 978 0 19 505533 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Consolidation of the Cuban Revolution amp oldid 1216488547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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