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Why The Bay Of Pigs Invasion Failure

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“One of our greatest assets is that all men aspire to be equal and free. This fact haunts the rulers of the Kremlin today for they cannot change the law of nature and they know it.” stated Allen Dulles, the fifth director of the Central Intelligence Agency. The Cold War, Bay of Pigs Invasion began on April 17, 1961 and has had an everlasting effect on the history of the United States and the world. The Bay of Pigs Invasion was an encounter between Cuban exiles, armed and trained by the American Central Intelligence Agency and the military forces of Fidel Castro. The failure of the Bay of Pigs Invasion proceeded to unite the Soviet Union and Cuba to create mass terror in the United States and for its allies. The belief was that if the Soviet …show more content…

One theory behind the Bay of Pigs Invasion failure was that the original plan from the Eisenhower administration was altered. Another of these mistakes was the belief that Cuban nationals shared the same animosity of Fidel Castro that Cuban exiles did. If the Central Intelligence Agency chose to look at all sides of the Cuban argument instead of only seeing the opinions of the Miami Cuban exiles then the design of the invasion strike would have been changed. Consequently, the Cuban exiles were angry with Fidel Castro for the downfall of President Bastia and wanted democracy. Furthermore, the Cuban population living within Cuba was agreeable with Fidel Castro’s plan of isolation. The Central Intelligence Agency did not consider that the Cuban citizens would want to keep Fidel Castro in power as President. “Castro had a sixty to seventy percent approval rating in Cuba,” stated Central Intelligence Agency hemisphere division chief Joseph C. …show more content…

The Invasion was destined to fail from the beginning due to the CIA’s plan being backed on false intelligence. From the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the mass exchange of communist ideas would begin, deepening the Cold War and attributing to the pressure and strain placed upon the United States and Russian foreign relations. Failure and doubt in the United States lead to the exploration of new policy and political ideology, as well as a new era in intelligence, political, and military fields, that continues to affect the domestic and foreign policy of today's

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