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America's Cuban Obsession: A Case Study in Diplomacy and Psycho-History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2015

Edward Cuddy*
Affiliation:
Daemen College, Amherst, New York

Extract

No more Cubas!” For a quarter of a century, that slogan has propelled American intervention into Latin America. President Kennedy's Alliance for Progress was designed to head off more Castro-type revolutions in the region. In 1965, President Johnson crushed a revolution in the Dominican Republic, declaring that “another Cuba in this hemisphere would be unacceptable.” And the Nixon plan for subverting the Chilean government in the early 1970s was motivated, in Henry Kissinger's words, by fear of Allende's “patent intention to create another Cuba.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1986

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References

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31 A Gallup poll taken during the Summer, 1983, indicated that 72 per cent of the American people believed that American intervention could change El Salvador into another Vietnam. Americans opposed military aid to Central America, 55 per cent to 35 per cent.