On Negotiating with CubaAmerican Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1975 - 99 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 5
... remained under foreign control with an American military governor until May 1902. For the next twenty years , the new Cuban republic was torn apart by periodic civil wars conducted by factions disguised as politi- cal parties . To add ...
... remained under foreign control with an American military governor until May 1902. For the next twenty years , the new Cuban republic was torn apart by periodic civil wars conducted by factions disguised as politi- cal parties . To add ...
Page 19
... remained on the sideline , as they would during the 1962 missile crisis . ( See ibid . , p . 381 for this insight . ) In the meantime , small incidents completely forgotten by Americans , like General Calixto García's nonparticipation ...
... remained on the sideline , as they would during the 1962 missile crisis . ( See ibid . , p . 381 for this insight . ) In the meantime , small incidents completely forgotten by Americans , like General Calixto García's nonparticipation ...
Page 78
... remained an ally of the Soviet Union until Khrushchev ended his country's cold war with Yugoslavia , Albania's mortal enemy . After six years of bickering , Moscow broke relations with Albania on 3 December 1961. Nicholas Pano ...
... remained an ally of the Soviet Union until Khrushchev ended his country's cold war with Yugoslavia , Albania's mortal enemy . After six years of bickering , Moscow broke relations with Albania on 3 December 1961. Nicholas Pano ...
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26 July agreement alliance ally ambassador American policy anti-American argued Batista Bonsal Caribbean Castro regime Castroism Castroism and Communism Communist Congress course Cuba's Cuban government Cuban history Cuban leader Cuban nationalism Cuban policy Cuban premier Cuban regime Cuban revolution Cuban-American relations December despite détente diplomatic embargo especially exports fact favor FBIS Daily Report Fidel Castro foreign policy George Ball Granma Granma Weekly Review Guantánamo guerrilla warfare Havana Hurwitch Ibid important independence investment island issues January Kremlin Latin America Martí ment military Moreover Moscow nationalist never Nixon North Vietnam November nuclear October officials peace percent Plank Platt Amendment policy makers President problem Quoted Radio Havana relations with Cuba remained reported in FBIS resumed relations revolution revolutionary Russians Secretary Senate small power socialist Soviet leaders Soviet Union Spain Spanish strategy Suárez subversion sugar talks Theodore Draper Thomas tion trade U.S. Congress United Vietnam Washington Post York