The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962

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The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was horrifying for people in the Western Hemisphere. Many experts refer to it as being close to a World War III: a fatal nuclear war. On October 22, 1962 a well-known photojournalist Neal Boenzi attended a UN meeting to make a report over the outcomes of the meeting. Boenzi took a few photographs during the meeting, but the one that changed the world was the one in which U.S Ambassador Adlai Stevenson confronts a Soviet Ambassador over nuclear missiles in Cuba. This photograph raised the suspension level even higher; it confused many lives because it portrayed aggression between the U.S and Cuba. Ever since the publication of this photograph, the U.S government and the World have learned how to overcome terror and learned how to cope in a time of crisis.
After World War II, the majority of the Western Hemisphere was in a state of peace. Cuba was under the tyranny of Fulgencia Batista, until the Cuban revolution when Fidel Castro became the new dictator. Once Castro became the new leader, U.S Ambassador Philip W. Bonsal protested Castro’s confiscation of American-owned property and Cuba’s failure “to recognize the legal rights of U.S citizens who have made investments in Cuba” (Brune 4). The American-Cuban tensions became even greater when the Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev supported Castro (4). In less than thirty months, after the Soviet-Cuban relation had begun, Cuba became communist and a base for the Soviets (4).
The crisis would have not happened if Castro had not become the tyrant of Cuba. The crisis started when Castro tried to regulate commerce. Unlike previous Latin leaders, Castro relied on Soviet aid rather than American aid (Brune 5). Many Cubans did not support Castro because he ...

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