Missiles in Cuba Build Tensions Between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R.
It was almost the start of a nuclear war, or what would be World War III. The Cuban Missile Crisis was a major event during the Cold War. It brought the citizens of the U.S. to the edge of their seats because, like the flip of a switch, their world could be turned upside down. John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev were fighting for their beliefs and the safety of their own country. It was once said that this event is when, “the Cold War got hot”. The Cuban Missile Crisis was the most significant in causing the most tensions because it was the closest to home the Cold War had gotten and it deeply impacted the citizens.
The Soviet Union placed missiles in Cuba which is only ninety
While it may be true that Fidel Castro had a strong impact on the uprising of the crisis, it is crucial to consider John F. Kennedy as the person most at fault for the Cuban Missile Crisis. Kennedy, America's president at the time, is often been called the most to blame because he overreacted to the missiles in Cuba. The question is if it was an overreaction or just a precaution for the safety and security of the American people. After the CIA spotted the missiles in Cuba, they informed Kennedy and he immediately called for a “quarantine” on Cuba’s eastern coast, setting up a blockade of ships along the coastline. Although many perceive this as an act of safety and protection, it is also easy to say that it was in fact “an act of aggression”
“The thirteen days marking the most dangerous period of the Cuban missile crisis begin.”(Missile Crisis). People believe that The Cuban Missile Crisis was a big tragedy. People were trying to save their lives. “The crisis peaked on October 27, when an American U-2 surveillance plane was shot down over Cuba by a surface-to-air missile.”( Cuban Missile Crisis). JFK had to think of a way to fix everything. If he didn’t think of a way to make sure everything goes okay, something really bad could happen. During the Cuban Missile Crisis, JFK was Able to effectively respond to the threat of nuclear war through diplomacy and action despite the contradictory advice from his advisors.
You could ask Cuba, you could ask the Soviet Union, or you could ask the United States. Each country will tell you a different story, based on their points of view. Cuba would tell you that they were getting protection from the Soviet Union, but it turned out that they were part of a bigger scheme. The Soviet Union would tell you that they were getting even with America because of the missiles in Turkey that were pointed at them. They would tell you that, or that they were only anti-air missiles that proved no danger. America could tell you a number of different speculated reasons as to why they may have sent missiles to Cuba, but none of them will leave out how close we all came to a nuclear war. Because of these different viewpoints, were are able to fully understand nearly every action taken during the Cuban Missile Crisis, be it the strict secrecy of things, or each vital
Each vessel that was going from the Soviet Union to Cuba was soon photographed by planes and ships, which belonged to the United States (Compston, 227). This was the start of an immense deal of troubles between the two nations and a realization that there was an immense lack of communication amid them that would be fixed in the next couple of years. The Cuban Missile Crisis does not need to be looked at like a crisis or devastating point in history at all. In fact it could very easily be seen as a good thing that connected the nations and caused new things to develop (“The Cuban Missile Crisis begins”).
The Cuban missile crisis was a scary time during the war because missiles that could’ve struck the U.S in a multitude of places. If it wasn’t for the president Kennedy ordering a naval blockade when he did the US would be in worse condition than it is now. The Cuban missile crisis was an event during the cold war that made the United States government feels scared about the lives of the nation.
The Cuban Missile Crisis occurred in 1963 in a setting that was the high point of tension in the Cold War. The most significant background cause of the Cuban Missile Crisis was the underlying cold war ideology of capitalism vs communism. This was dramatically increased by the second key cause, a series of events that quickly built tensions between the super powers from 1959 such as the U2 incident, JFK’s response to the Berlin Wall, and the Bay of Pigs incident. The third cause was the relationship between the leaders Khrushchev and Kennedy. It can be argued that the short-term consequences of the Crisis were concentrated geographically on the people of the United States, the Soviet Union, and Cuba during and immediately after the event. Historians have suggested that the long-term consequences of the Crisis were more global in nature and the impact was felt up until the end of the Cold War in 1990 including the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban treaty and the new relaxed relationship between the superpowers US and USSR.
There were many parts and events going on during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Cold War was a war between the United States and Russia. This conflict lasted for the better part of the 1900s. During The Cold War, the United States and Russia never fired a shot at each other (Brubaker, 2001). To avoid conflict the two nations wanted to bring as many other nations to their side. The United States and Russia wanted as many allies as they could have on each of their sides so if war broke out countries would know who their enemies are. Also there was an event called the arms race going on at the same time.
The tensions that developed between Cuba and the USA almost led to a nuclear disaster during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Tensions between these two countries brought about the perfect conditions for a nuclear confrontation between the USA and Soviet Union; occurring as a result of poor US-Cuban attitudes. This escalated tensions to the point where Cuba became the middle-man in a nuclear stand-off between the superpowers during the Cuban Missile crisis in 1962.
The Cuban Missile Crisis bought the world closer to extinction than ever before. It was through the decisive actions of newly elected president John F Kennedy and then premier of the USSR Nikita Khrushchev that the confrontation did not escalate into all out nuclear war. The Cuban Missile Crisis lasted for 13 days, it was predicated on the fact that the Soviet Union was placing intercontinental ballistic missiles on the island country of Cuba which is just off the coast of the United States near the state of Florida. It can be assumed that the USSR was placing these missiles in Cuba as a response to the United States placing missile system in Europe encircling the Warsaw pact countries.
The Cuban Missile Crisis had a huge impact on society even years after it was resolved because the incident had brought our nation and the world so close to the brink of nuclear war. Before the Cuban Missile Crisis had occurred, many other factors had been piling up and building undesirable tensions between many countries. Along the way new allies and enemies were made causing more stress to the Cold War. The new bonds that formed after Cuba was taken over by Fidel Castro pushed nuclear war to the very edge.
Throughout, the crisis each side struggle to see the other’s motives. As an effect, of the Cuban missile crisis a direct line between the White House and Kremlin was created called the “Hotline”. Additionally, Cuba and the U.S. had a different mindset on the nuclear arms race and started taking steps towards Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. If the Cuban missile crisis didn’t happen then maybe the U.S. would have conquered Cuba. Then, Cuba would have been apart of the U.S. and there would be more land and power available for the U.S. However, if the Cuban missile crisis wasn’t stopped then a nuclear war would have happened. Most likely, it would have been a world nuclear war between the Soviet Union and
The Cuban Missile Crisis was an essential time in the Cold War. The Crisis was a deciding part, whether or not a war would occur. It was when the United States and Soviet Union ‘had a conflict over missiles in Cuba.
The Cuban Missile Crisis was a thirteen day crisis that occurred between the United States and the Soviet Union. This crisis occurred on October 14, 1962 and ended on October 28, 1962. The crisis involved the placement of nuclear missiles in Cuba by the Soviet Union and the caused concern for the United States due to the closeness of Cuba. This placement of nuclear missiles in Cuba was due to the failed Bay of Pigs fiasco and Cuba’s need for protection against the United States invading in the future. The Bay of Pigs was a failed mission of the United States that happened in April of 1961. The United States wanted to overthrow the communist leader Fidel Castro, but was ultimately defeated within just three days. Due to this failure, Cuba contacted the Soviet Union to get them to place nuclear missiles so that Cuba could defend their country from the United States. With this failure under John F. Kennedy’s presidency, he had to figure out a different way of forcing the dictatorship of Fidel Castro without strengthening him even more. Before they could plan another invasion into Cuba, a U-2 plane had flown close range to the Cuban border and had captured photographic evidence of nuclear missile facilities being built. According to Marfleet (2000), “Kennedy was privately belligerent—a condition sparked largely by anger at what he perceived to be Soviet attempts to deceive him” (p 547). While it was a small part of a bigger problem, it was the key defining event of the Cold War
The Cuban Missile Crisis was a frightening moment for the entire world. It started October 14th, 1962 after the Soviet Union planted nuclear missiles inn Cuba. The U.S. found out that these missiles were being planted without their knowledge, but the Soviet Union continued the construction of these nuclear missile sites, even after President Kennedy, the president of the U.S., sent out a warning against these weapons in Cuba. Even after this warning, Kennedy once again found out that the construction was still happening. Following the discovery of the ongoing construction, Kennedy wanted to meet with people at the White House to solve the problem that they were encountering. There were multiple sides during their talk about the missiles. Some of the people at the meeting wanted to take a more aggressive approach and destroy these missiles and then follow up with an attack. Kennedy eventually decided to quarantine Cuba. After Kennedy quarantined Cuba, there were many messages sent between the White House and the Kremlin to try and solve the problem. The Cuban Missile Crisis lasted for thirteen extremely tense days. At the end of these thirteen days, the Cuban Missile Crisis ended with an agreement between the United States and Soviet Union. The Cuban Missile Crisis greatly impacted history. It strengthened the bond between the United States and Soviet Union, showed people how to come to a
To most people, the Cuban missile crisis seemed like the start of an inevitable worldwide nuclear war. 1962 seemed like it was the end of the world for some, but somehow the United States was able to avoid a crisis evade an all out nuclear war with the U.S.S.R. The Cuban missile crisis can not be however, look at just in that timeframe. There are events including the Cuban Revolution that lead up to the United States losing their ties with Cuba. The Bay of Pigs invasion was an unsuccessful attempt to remove Fidel Castro from power in Cuba that ultimately hurt the United States more than it helped. After the failed Bay of Pigs invasion, Castro’s relation with the Russians was strengthened because it was then that Castro announced that Cuba would become a Socialist Republic. President John F. Kennedy was successfully able to avoid a nuclear war by his use of appeasement and his policy of Flexible Response rather than running in with guns blazing with a full scale invasion. In the end, Kennedy would come out of the crisis on top and more successfully than Khrushchev.