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Originally Posted by glatt
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Basically, the penalties for a US citizen visiting Cuba without government approval pretty much match the penalties for a Cuban citizen visting the US without approval. Of course, they pretty much don't even want to go back. I can't think of many Americans who would want to trade living in the US for living in Cuba.
It's still strange that it's easier to go to Vietnam, who we were at war with about 30 years ago, than Cuba, who we have not been officially at war with since 1898.
The 1959 revolution was against Batista, a dictator. The U.S. initially supported Castro until he embraced Communism. Europe doesn't seem to have the same problem with Castro that we do. If Castro dies and Cuba becomes a Socialist or Communist democracy, it will be interesting to see what excuses the US can come up with to keep the status quo, especially since we are still allied with Saudi Arabia and numerous non-constitutional monarchies in the Middle East.
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On March 10, 1952, General Fulgencio Batista overthrew the president of Cuba, Carlos Prìo Socarrás, and canceled all elections. This angered the young lawyer Fidel Castro, and for the next seven years he attempted to overthrow Batista’s government. On July 26, 1953, Castro led an attack against the military barracks in Santiago, but he was defeated and arrested. Although Castro was sentenced to 15 years in prison, Batista released him in 1955 in a show of supreme power. Castro did not back down and gathered a new group of rebels in Mexico. On December 2, 1956, he was again defeated by Batista’s army and fled to the Sierra Maestra. He began using guerrilla tactics to fight Batista’s armed forces, and with the aid of other rebellions throughout Cuba, he forced Batista to resign and flee the country on January 1, 1959. Castro became the Prime Minister of Cuba in February and had about 550 of Batista’s associates executed. He soon suspended all elections and named himself "President for Life", jailing or executing all who opposed him. He established a communist government with himself as a dictator and began relations with the Soviet Union.
At the beginning of his rule, the United States supported Castro. However, once he embraced communism, the U.S. attempted to overthrow him. Cuban exiles, armed and trained by Americans, formed an army known as La Brigada and invaded Cuba’s Bay of Pigs on April 17, 1961. The army was crushed by Castro after President Kennedy refused to directly involve the U.S. armed forces, and 1200 of the invaders were captured. The United States was forced to give $53 million worth of food and supplies to Cuba for the release of the captives. Due to Kennedy’s lack of involvement in the Bay of Pigs invasion, Nikita Khrushchev, the leader of the Soviet Union, felt that the U.S. would do little to resist Soviet Expansion. So, in July 1962, Khrushchev began installing missile sites in Cuba. When this was discovered, Kennedy completely blockaded Cuba and threatened to invade. The U.S.S.R. promised to withdraw from Cuba if the U.S. did not invade, and the conflict known as the Cuban Missile Crisis was resolved. After the Crisis, Soviet aid represented 75% of Cuba’s economy. The United States had issued a trade embargo around the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion, so when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, so did Cuba’s economy. Strict rations were imposed on food and supplies and Castro’s regime continues to be on the verge of collapse.
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As far as vacationing there. One thing to consider is that if you walk a few miles from the hotel, the people you encounter are probably better off than the people you would find walking away from a vacation club in Haiti.
I really look forward to a democratic government in Cuba, as well as Saudi Arabia, Burma, and any number of other places. That being said, I still wonder at the special status we have given Cuba considering the sins we forgave Noriega for until we decided to do something about him.
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