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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper examines the Cuban Revolution along with the problems in Central America. U.S. foreign policy is highlighted.
Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA618LA.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
than that. Some see it as a failure of U.S. policy to intervene in what had culminated as revolution. In any event, the Cuban Revolution involved Fulgencio Batista, the leader
of the "sergeants revolt" of 1933, which had ruled Cuba de facto for about twenty years previously (Hickson, 1996). He exploited the people (Hickson, 1996). It was under
Batistas rule that the people had become poorer while Cuba had been advantageous for American businessmen (Hickson, 1996). Traditional politicians cowered before the coup and so Fidel Castro gathered a
group of young men and women who would participate in actions to restore democracy to the nation (Hickson, 1996). One can see that perhaps there is some credibility to the
claim that U.S. policy was weak. After all, Cuba was good for the American pocketbook. This is politics as usual. After all, it seems as if policy is dictated by
what are called "American interests" and if it does not interest the United States-or America cannot make money from it-an isolationist tone is taken. Since the coup, Fidel Castro is
still in charge, and there is a less friendly tone. Why did the U.S. not prevent this from happening? To some extent, there is evidence that the U.S. actually supported
the revolution. Supposedly, President Kennedy uttered words which would be aligned with support for Castros revolution (LaFeber, 1993). Interestingly, the U.S. promised revolution for the Cuban people but created armies
to prevent revolution (LaFeber, 1993). Many look at Cuba now and see it as something detrimental because of the embrace of communism, but when Castro was fighting, he was fighting
to overthrow a corrupt regime. But later, he would implement a system of communism and after that, he would lose a great deal of his popularity. Yet, while democracy is
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