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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page overview of the tumultuous relationship that these countries have shared for the past few decades. The author notes
that while the situation is improving somewhat, the U.S. continues to impose antiquated policy against Cuban relations. Bibliography lists 6 source.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPcubaUS.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
been some improvements in recent months, those improvements have been minor (Gibbons and Jones, 2004). The U.S. continues to exert what many consider an antiquated and ineffective policy toward
Cuba (Gibbons and Jones, 2004). Critics contend that that policy is based on history rather than on any regard for the contemporary state of world affairs (Gibbons and Jones,
2004). Our current policy in Cuba reflects a long history of ideological conflict. The most climatic moment in this relationship, of course,
was the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Cuban Missile Crisis dates back to 1962 and the USSRs intent to install ballistic missile in Cuba. These missiles were not only capable
of hitting U.S. targets, they were fully capable of hitting Canadian targets as well. Then President John F. Kennedy would later write his book "Thirteen Days: A Memoir of
the Cuban Missile Crisis" that this crisis required us to prove ourselves not only on military and political levels but also on an influential level:
"We saw as never before the meaning and responsibility in the power of the United States, the power of the
President, the responsibility we had to people around the globe who had never heard of us, who had never heard of our country or of the men sitting in that
room determining their fate, making a decision which would influence whether they would live or die."
In the 1960s we took our newly recognized role in world politics quite seriously. We took even more seriously, however, our responsibility to protect our own borders.
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