The Significance of the Cuban Missile Crisis

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When speaking about the Cuban Missile Crisis, President Kennedy said, "It is insane that two men, sitting on opposite sides of the world, should be able to decide to bring an end to civilization” (“Nuclear Test Ban Treaty” 1). the Cuban Missile Crisis was a time where these two men, Kennedy and Khrushchev, had the power in their hands to end civilization. In order to understand the importance of the Cuban Missile Crisis one must understand, the Cold war drama; the dangerous crisis; and its importance today.
In order to understand the importance of the Cuban Missile Crisis in American history one must first understand the Cold War drama, Castro’s rise to power, and the American operations that set up the crisis. “The term Cold War refers to the post-World war II global geostrategic, economic, and ideological competition between the East, led by the Soviet Union, and the west, led by the United States”, the east was communist, and the west was ruled by democracy. The war began when stalin refused democracy and continued his dictatorship after World war 2. The Cold War quickly turned from a war on communism into a race for the greatest nuclear weapons; it turned dangerous because the theory of mass destruction showed that if one side fired a missile at the other, then the other would retaliate, and so on, and in the end, the world would be destroyed. This war started in 1947, and would last until 1991 (“Cold War”1). Soon a new soviet dictator would arise to join the war, Fidel Castro grew up in a middle-class home while Fulgencio Batista y Zaldivar was the dictator of Cuba. In 1953, Castro attempted to take down Batista and was arrested. When, in 1955, Castro was released, he went to Mexico, and gathered a group to help him take do...

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