The Cuban Revolution for its use of Guerilla Warfare throughout the movement, and its aim was to use small forces to attack big ones repetitively, eventually making the bigger enemy withdraw. December 1956- the July 26 movement sails back to Cuba and makes their way to Sierra Maestra mountains, where they spent 3 years carrying out guerrilla attacks against Batista’s government forces. 1960- The Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces are founded, which consisted of ground forces, naval forces, air and air defence forces, and other paramilitary bodies.…
1. What is International Darwinism? the purchase, sale, or exchange of goods and services across national borders. 2. Why did Cubans revolt against Spain?…
The US government and Castro regime have undeniably been waging economic war against one another since the Cuban Embargo was enacted in 1962. This embargo commenced under President John. F Kennedy during the height of the Cold War Era. Cuba became a threat to US democratic ideals when the Castro brothers led a revolt against the dictator Fulgencio Batista overthrowing his government. After Castro came to power in 1959, his government established diplomatic ties with the communist Soviet Union and then set up his own regime rooted in the Communist Manifesto.…
In January 1959, Fidel Castro overthrew the dictator Fulgencio Batista and came into power as the leader of Cuba. With Castro in power, there were many social reforms in Cuban society, including gender reforms for women. Different people took different stances on the subject of female equality within Cuba; there was a group of people that supported gender reforms in Cuba and thought these reforms to be successful, a group consisting of people that supported gender reforms in Cuba but thought them to be unsuccessful, ands group of people that completely opposed the idea of gender reforms in Cuba. During the Cuban Revolution, many people thought that the results of the gender reforms that took place during the Revolution were both successful and effective (Documents One, Two, Four,…
On December 31st, 1958, the small island nation of Cuba was ablaze with battling between the U.S installed government forces of Fulgencio Batista and the revolutionary forces of the July 26th movement, their namesake coming from a previous attack against the Batista regime that had failed. The very next day saw an end to fighting, and a young Cuban lawyer emerged victorious. (NSA, Bay of Pigs C hronology) Though relatively unknown prior to the Cuban Revolution, both world superpowers of the cold war soon took notice of this young lawyer by the name of Fidel Castro. A young senator from Massachusetts soon began talking about Castro’s removal and how it could be done.…
“In the 1960s, Colombia’s problems worsened with the appearance of Marxist guerrilla groups inspired by the Cuban Revolution, and further deteriorated in the 1970s and 1980s…
June of 1967 was a chaotic month in Bolivian history that marked the beginning of over a decade of political disaster as a strike broke out at a mining complex during the festival of San Juan. The Bolivian army surrounded and captured the mining camps, killing eighty-seven citizens including men, women, and children. The San Juan Massacre represents the constant struggle Bolivian peasants faced throughout the 1970s to survive during a time when the political and economic environment acted against them. (Hylton and Thomson, 84) General Barrientos decided to send military forces to repress the protest out of fear as revolutionary insurgency had already been taking place in the form of Che Guevara’s ELN guerilla armies fighting for the rural…
Castro formally declared Cuba a socialist state on May of 1961. In his historic 2014 trip to Cuba Obama, to the surprise of many, justified the revolution of 1959 arguing that like the US’s 1776 revolution, it had taken unavoidable measures against terrible injustices. Why the Cuban revolution took a Communist turn has much to do with the island’s cruel history, specifically, the long line of leaders who were ready to sell Cuba to the highest bidder. The island saw much political unrest after the inclusion of the Platt Amendment in its constitution, guaranteeing the United States’ rights to intervene freely in the island under any pretext.…
The Peruvian revolutionary terror organization followed Maoism and utilized guerrilla warfare tactics and violent acts of terrorism. The leader of the group was Abimael Guzman, sometimes referred to as Comrade Gonzalo. The organizations mission was to implement a “New Democracy.” They wanted to create a world of pure communism. Doing so by dictatorship.…
What the Cuban revolution did in other countries was also very big. Just like with Egypt and the Arab Spring movement, the Cuban Revolution led to many Latin American rebellions. Uruguay, Chile, and Nicaragua all…
Millions of people recognize Ernesto “Che” Guevara as an icon of rebellion through his involvement with the Cuban Revolution, along with the other facets he facilitated in the opposition oppression. Aside from the political impact Che Guevara made during the Cuban Revolution, not many people know the accuracy behind the revolutionary’s commitment to unity, equity and freedom of Latin American citizens. Che Guevara was extremely dedicated to fighting injustice and oppression, but was often misrepresented because the methods in which he executed his tactics, specifically his involvement in communism. The argument I am conveying speaks to the belief that Che was in fact a great leader, which is evident regarding his viewpoint of gender equity as well by practice. The dedication and fearlessness in which Che served the people of Latin America not…
Cuban American Sunny bright clear beaches with white soft sand, that is what comes to my head when I remember about Cuba Placentas, and when I think about Miami in the United States. I was born in Cuba but I move to Miami when I was 8 years old. I can’t tell you there has been some major changes in my life but I still keep my background. This experience for me has may me see how different is Cuba from America, yet at the same time I have seen similarities.…
“Cuba Libre!” screamed the Cuban-Americans that gathered in the streets of Hialeah the night the man who altered the course of many lives, including mine, died. My grandmother, a Cuban widow, who’d live over 50 years in American and speaks close to no English, experienced the pain of Castro’s regime first-hand. That night, at a fatigue-filled 85 years old, she would take out the Guiro, a Cuban instrument used usually for celebrations like fiestas and Noche Buena, and frantically strum while yelling “¡Fidel está muerto!” Castro became Prime Minster of Cuba in 1959, the year after my father’s birth in San Antonio de los Baños, Cuba.…
Revolutions are often thought to bring about radical changes that result in the upheaval of the previous social order and replace it with a new, bold political, economic, and social apparatus prepared to move that society towards progress. However, does revolution truly mean progress? How does one define progress? How does one assess the success or failure of a revolution? The Mexican Revolution of 1910 and the Cuban Revolution demonstrate how intricate and fluid the tentacles of revolution move in the face of sociopolitical, economic, and cultural patterns.…
The Cuba revolution happened in 1953 July 26th, to 1959 January 1st, the Cuba revolution occurred from deep unhappiness with the regime of Fulgencio Batista (Batista) elected president of Cuba in 1940 to 1944 then turned dictator from 1952 to 1959. Batista allowed Cuba to be controlled and exploited by the USA. By March 1952 the protagonist for launching an armed revolution was Fidel Castro (Castro) a young lawyer and activists petitioned who aimed to overthrow Batista. Castro accused Batista of corruption and tyranny, however the Cuban courts due to the power of Batista. The Cuban courts rejected Castro’s constitutional arguments as Batista security to silence any political opposition was to great to overpower.…