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Politics of illusion the bay of pigs invasion reexamined

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Boulder Lynne Rienner Pub. 1998Description: xix,284p. maps 24 cmISBN:
  • 9781555878221
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 972.91064 22 PO-
LOC classification:
  • F1788 .P575 1997
Contents:
Prologue: "John Wayne's" Betrayals -- 1. The Anti-Castro Resistance Meets the CIA -- 2. The CIA Calls the Shots -- 3. Kennedy's Attempts to Topple Castro -- 4. Assassination and the Use of U.S. Military Force at the Bay of Pigs -- 5. Operation MONGOOSE and the Fate of the Resistance -- 6. Aftermath of the Bay of Pigs Invasion -- Epilogue: "John Wayne's" Illusions -- App. 3. Chronology of U.S. Decisionmaking Regarding the Bay of Pigs Invasion and Operation MONGOOSE, January 1959-October 1962 -- App. 4. Chronology of Cuban Resistance, January 1959-July 1961 -- App. 5. Declassified Documents.
Summary: The defeat of the attempted April 1961 invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs was one of the worst foreign-policy disasters in U.S. history. Since then, explanations of the event have emphasized betrayal by one U.S. agency or another, seeking to assign blame for the "loss" of Cuba. With the benefit of new documentation, however - from U.S. government and Cuban exile sources - as well as the first-hand accounts of key participants, Politics of Illusion shows the current mythology to be just that.Summary: Based on an innovative series of meetings that brought together former CIA officials, former anti-Castro Cuban operatives, a former high-ranking Soviet official, and others who were directly involved in the events - nearly all speaking on the record for the first time - this critical oral history demonstrates that all of the anti-Castro parties were guilty of illusions, to one degree or another.Summary: Blight and Kornbluh provide a thorough and perceptive context for the discussions held at the meetings, transcripts of the actual sessions, a selection of the main documents discussed by the participants, and a discussion of the implications of the participants' conclusions for current U.S.-Cuban relations.
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Item type Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Print Print OPJGU Sonepat- Campus General Books Main Library 972.91064 PO- (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 121620

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Prologue: "John Wayne's" Betrayals -- 1. The Anti-Castro Resistance Meets the CIA -- 2. The CIA Calls the Shots -- 3. Kennedy's Attempts to Topple Castro -- 4. Assassination and the Use of U.S. Military Force at the Bay of Pigs -- 5. Operation MONGOOSE and the Fate of the Resistance -- 6. Aftermath of the Bay of Pigs Invasion -- Epilogue: "John Wayne's" Illusions -- App. 3. Chronology of U.S. Decisionmaking Regarding the Bay of Pigs Invasion and Operation MONGOOSE, January 1959-October 1962 -- App. 4. Chronology of Cuban Resistance, January 1959-July 1961 -- App. 5. Declassified Documents.

The defeat of the attempted April 1961 invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs was one of the worst foreign-policy disasters in U.S. history. Since then, explanations of the event have emphasized betrayal by one U.S. agency or another, seeking to assign blame for the "loss" of Cuba. With the benefit of new documentation, however - from U.S. government and Cuban exile sources - as well as the first-hand accounts of key participants, Politics of Illusion shows the current mythology to be just that.

Based on an innovative series of meetings that brought together former CIA officials, former anti-Castro Cuban operatives, a former high-ranking Soviet official, and others who were directly involved in the events - nearly all speaking on the record for the first time - this critical oral history demonstrates that all of the anti-Castro parties were guilty of illusions, to one degree or another.

Blight and Kornbluh provide a thorough and perceptive context for the discussions held at the meetings, transcripts of the actual sessions, a selection of the main documents discussed by the participants, and a discussion of the implications of the participants' conclusions for current U.S.-Cuban relations.

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