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Cuban Missile Crisis Research Paper

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History is imperative to John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev during the Cuban missile crisis of 1962.
John F. Kennedy happened to be the 35th and the youngest President to be elected in the history of the United States. After Kennedy took office in 1961, he authorized the “Bay of Pigs” invasion, which was led by the CIA and exiles from Cuba. Even with this, they were still unable to overthrow Fidel Castro. The failure and the tensions the Soviet Union had in 1961 about the Berlin Crisis, set the early events of the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.
Nikita Khrushchev was on the other hand the first Communist Secretary of the Soviet Union in 1953. He later served as the Premier from 1958 to 1964 after the power struggle following Stalin’s death. …show more content…

Missiles were believed to have been constructed on a field near San Christobal in Cuba if the photographs were clearly examined; but they ended up seeing a field for a farm which was seen by all including President Kennedy himself who passed a comment that it looked like a football field days after.
It was a surprise that the Russians would deploy surface-to-surface ballistic missiles in Cuba.
There was also evidence that, the surface-to-air missile (SAM) sites that were being erected, the Russians, under the guise of a fishing village, were constructing a large naval shipyard and a base for submarines. This was observed and monitored by agents in Cuba and through the U-2 flights.
Khrushchev had assured the U.S President that, there would be no ground-to-ground missiles or offensive weapons in Cuba which Khrushchev lied about. John F. Kennedy later found out and decided to take his own initiatives and thus; either they take military action against Cuba or the Blockade …show more content…

Khrushchev eventually made a proposal that stated clearly “no more weapons to Cuba and those within Cuba withdrawn or destroyed, and you reciprocate by withdrawing your blockade and also agree not to invade Cuba.” (Page 68) He also stated that, the U.S. should not interfere with Russian ships. President Kennedy and Khrushchev continued to exchange drafts for the resolution of the crisis and eventually recognised the possibility of a nuclear war, which they later publicly agreed to deal, in which the United States had to make a pledge not to invade Cuba and the Soviets in return dismantle the missile

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