The Kennedy Administration Properly Handels the Cuban Missile Crisis

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The Kennedy Administration adverted many catastrophes during its shortened term using its leader's young mind and ability to negotiate with their peers. The Cold War tested the young John F. Kennedy because he had to stay composed to his country yet control the melt down his administration had just been put through with The Bay of Pigs Invasion. Kennedy had always tried to search for ways to avoid any military actions and he found the correct ways to use language rather than weapons to get his point across to Soviet Russia that he would not tolerate any missiles so close to his country. The Cold War challenged the President even further with the Soviets advances into Cuba to plant new missiles. The Cuban Missile Crisis is etched into history books as one of the greatest accomplishments for President Kennedy because he had properly avoided any harsh reactions from both his administration and his enemy, Soviet Russia. During the Cold War, Kennedy's administration handled the Cuban Missile Crisis effectively because it avoided nuclear conflict with the Soviet Union using backdoor negotiations while keeping a strong public view.

The United States showed no interest in getting into a physical war with the Soviet Union but demonstrated their firm stance with a quarantine instead of a military move such as a blockade. "By 'quarantining' Cuba, The United States of America could achieve its goal (of staying away from war), using an extreme measure without the negative consequences attached to it"(Showalter 72). The quarantining of Cuba helped America make a strong statement with weak words because it kept Soviets away from Cuba without using the harsh war term, blockade. The administration under Kennedy did not want to have to put themsel...

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...s with the Soviet Union over The Missile Crisis and The Cold War.

Works Cited

"Cuban Missile Crisis: Did the Kennedy Administration Handle the Cuban Missile Crisis Effectively?" History in Dispute. Ed. Dennis Showalter and Paul de Quenoy. Vol. 6: The Cold War: Second Series. Detroit: St. James Press, 2000.

"The Innocent 1960s: Politics in the Kennedy Years" The Sixities In American Refrencey Library. Ed. Sara Pendergast. Vol. 1. Almanac. Detroit. UXL 2005. p. 7-26

"Cuban Missile crisis." In Thomaa M. Leonard, ed. Encyclopeia of Latin America: The Age of Globalization, vol. 4. New York: Facts on File, Inc. , 2010. Modern World History Online. Facts on File, Inc

Khrushchev Remembers, intro., commentary, and notes by Edward Crankshaw, trans. and ed. by Strobe Talbott (Boston: Little, Brown, 1970; citation from paperback edition, New York: Bantam, 1971), pp. 551-552

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