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The Cold War: The Cuban Missile Crisis

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After the end of World War II, the world entered a state of political, military, and ideological tension never experienced before. This period, which roughly ranges from 1945 to 1991, is contemporarily known as the Cold War. It is the last example of a bipolar distribution of power in modern world history, with the principal actors being those of the Western bloc (under the leadership of the United States supported by its NATO allies) and the Eastern bloc (under the leadership of the now extinguished Soviet Union backed up by its allies under the Warsaw Pact). In the midst of the pressure and unrest that characterized this period, there is a particular event that took place in October 1962 that caught my attention: the Cuban missile crisis.
The conflict was characterized for the absence of large-scale active warfare between the two main antagonistic powers; hence the name Cold War. However, the Cuban missile crisis was the closest the world got to a nuclear exchange, it was the first major showdown of wartime. Humankind was at the brink of …show more content…

While the United States championed a democratic form of government and capitalism, the Soviet Union championed socialism and a planned economy. They both managed to portray the other as the complete opposite of what was “right” and went on to build a negative image about their opponent; hence, leading to the notion of its necessary eradication. In mid-1961, Cuba proclaimed a socialist revolution after having defeated an invasion intended to overthrow the Cuban government that had been equipped, promulgated and financed by the United States. As a result, the Cuban administration stretched ties with the Soviet Union, which, in turn, gave the island increasing economic and military support by acquiring the sugar production that the American government had stopped purchasing, and providing conventional

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