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The Leftist Model Of The Cuban Revolution

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Fidel Castro, a lawyer in his twenties was an Ortodoxo, was active and organized cells and published work against the Batista government. From the start of his government Batista faced opposition. This opposition came from two major groups - the leftist Ortodoxos and the moderate Autenticos, and attempted to rid Cuba of Batista. Castro came to the forefront after his attacks on the Moncada Barracks on July 26, 1953. Due to a number of mistakes the attack failed but it became an event that was central to the stories of the Cuban Revolution. Even though it began with major mistakes and bungles, the Sierra Maestra event was the turning point that truly empowered Fidel’s revolution. Wright expresses, “the goals of this phase were to cause increasing …show more content…

Wright speaks about governments of the time blaming Castro for the political revolts in their countries and for the large part they were correct, “Castro mounted invasions, trained guerrillas, sent propaganda and money to fidelista groups, and occasionally dispatched arms and even personnel to support guerrilla activities” (Wright, p.40). The model of the Cuban Revolution, interpreted into fidelismo, was the motivating force of political destabilization throughout Latin America. The revolution in Cuba also had immediate affects to the political and economic relations it had with the U.S. There was also serious blow to the economic and strategic interests the U.S. had in Latin America. One factor that terminally severed the U.S. – Cuba relations was Castro’s embracing communism and aligning with Soviet Union. Wright states that, “the U.S. believed that communism was incompatible with the institutions and way of life the Western Hemisphere” (p.57). In conclusion, by establishing a socialist economy and an alliance with the Soviet Union, Castro cut a breach in the U.S. supremacy over the Western Hemisphere. (Wright. …show more content…

Wright points out, “Efforts to replicate the Cuban Revolution through rural guerrilla warfare had failed, most of them dismally; the urban variant of guerilla warfare, while meeting with initial success in Uruguay and Argentina, ultimately succumbed to counterinsurgency measures and to its own limitations” (p. 165). There were also the revolutions from above, for example, the actions of the Peruvian military and the elected government of Salvador Allende. These revolutions held out new hope for a few years until both came to abrupt ends. The most visible results, by the end of 1979, of two decades of tried revolution and reform were the antirevolutionary regimes that ruled nearly half of Latin America’s population and its most developed countries. (Wright, p. 165) Wright concludes the book with a mention of series of developments in the early 1990’s that signaled the end of the era of the Cuban Revolution. The fall of the communist regimes, between 1989 and 1991, in Eastern Europe and then the collapse of the Soviet Union deprived Cuba of its primary allies and critical economic support. (Wright,

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