Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 was a major cold war confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev decided to install ballistic missiles in Cuba although they had made a promise to the U.S. that they would not (Chayes). When the U.S. discovered the construction of missile launching sites, President John F. Kennedy publicly denounced the Soviet actions, demanding that they remove the nuclear missiles from Cuba.
When this did not work, Kennedy imposed a naval blockade on Cuba, threatening that the U.S. Days would meet any missile launched from Cuba with a full-scale retaliatory attack later, Soviet ships carrying missiles to Cuba went home. Khrushchev soon agreed to dismantle the missile sites. The U.S. ended its blockade within a month, and shortly after, all missiles and bombers were removed from Cuba.
Introduction
In 1962, the United States, the Soviet Union and the rest of the world came dangerously close to nuclear confrontation when the Soviets in an unprecedented secret move had started to establish a major offensive military presence in Cuba (Mills). This potentially lethal incident brought policy makers on both sides to debate their use of diplomacy and military force.
Had it not been for the decisions of the two antagonistic countries, the U.S. And the Soviet Union, the world may have entered the third World War -- a nuclear war.
Basically, the Cuban Missile Crisis began when the U.S. discovered that the Soviet Union was building missile sites in Cuba in an effort to close the missile gap. The Soviets had promised the U.S. that they would not put nuclear weapons in Cuba. However, they decided to take a chance, hoping that the U.S. would not find out until it was too late. Their plot almost worked.
When a U.S. U-2 spy plane discovered the missile sites, the nuclear weapons were nearing completion (Schlesinger). The whole world watched in anticipation as President John F. Kennedy decided on which action the U.S. would take, knowing that his decisions could lead to the third World War.
Kennedy's decision was a tentative one, as the Bay of Pigs invasion of the previous year had been a huge failure. The Bay of Pigs invasion had been the U.S.' attempt to remove Fidel Castro from the Cuban presidency.
The U.S. armed and trained thousands of Cuban exiles to take part in this plan. U.S. officials hoped that the Bay of Pigs invasion would lead to Castro's removal from office by his own people, rather than the U.S. However, the U.S. did not provide adequate air cover for the troops. Out of about 2000 troops, 300 were killed and the rest were imprisoned. Kennedy did not want to attempt something like this again, so he decided to initiate a naval blockade (Mills).
The U.S. Point-of-View
If the U.S. had not discovered the missile sites before the weapons were complete, the U.S.S.R. would have had the advantage of a first strike capability, meaning that it would have had the opportunity to strike first and disarm its opponent (the U.S.).
If the Soviets had active nuclear missile bases in Cuba, they could have attacked the U.S.' air bases before the U.S. could retaliate. Since Cuba is so close to the U.S. coast, the Soviets could conduct strikes against B-52 bases virtually undetected by U.S. radar, eliminating the U.S.' ability to retaliate.
As a result, by the time the U.S. realized it was being attacked, it would have been too late to do anything about it. Its ability to counter-attack would be gone and the U.S. would be forced to surrender to Soviet terms.
A country that has first strike capability can start a war at any given time. However, a country that lacks first strike capability is most often unwilling to start a war. This was the root of the Cuban Missile Crisis. The U.S. believed that placing Soviet missiles in Cuba would give the Soviets first strike ability. This would critically endanger U.S. national security. Therefore, Kennedy decided that the threat must either be eliminated or all nuclear material must be withdrawn from Cuba (Smoke, p. 36-37).
According to writer Richard Smoke, the Soviets would try anything to gain power. Their leader, Nikita Khrushchev, viewed the placement of nuclear weapons in Cuba as the best way to breach the missile gap with America. The Soviets felt it was worth the risk of a World War to attempt to gain first strike capability.
According to Smoke, the Soviets' plan was close to success. However, a U.S. U2 spy plane located the top-secret missile sites in Cuba right before they were complete (Smoke, p. 44). Kennedy's initial decision was to use conventional weapons to...
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