1 / 15

The Cuban Missile Crisis

The Cuban Missile Crisis. CHST 540 May 26, 2005. American Policy Towards Cuba. 1960: US reduces Cuban sugar quota, then imposes embargo; Cuba nationalizes all US holdings January 1961: diplomatic relations severed April 1961: Bay of Pigs invasion; US imposes embargo

lynnea
Download Presentation

The Cuban Missile Crisis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Cuban Missile Crisis CHST 540 May 26, 2005

  2. American Policy Towards Cuba • 1960: US reduces Cuban sugar quota, then imposes embargo; Cuba nationalizes all US holdings • January 1961: diplomatic relations severed • April 1961: Bay of Pigs invasion; US imposes embargo • January 1962: at US urging, Cuba expelled from Organization of American States (OAS)

  3. Cuban-Soviet Ties • Cuba turns to the USSR • Cuba had not been granted entrance to the Warsaw Pact • Agreed to Operation Anadyr to deter US and to strengthen “moral defense” of sovereignty Castro & Khrushchev, 1960

  4. CIA Assessments • ‘The Military Build-up in Cuba’ (NIE of Sept. 19, 1962) • misjudged Khrushchev’s will to gamble • missed crucial evidence of deployment of Soviet medium and intermediate range ballistic missiles to Cuba • failed to link construction of SAM anti-aircraft sites and presence of Soviet combat forces to deployment of ballistic missiles

  5. Khrushchev’s Gamble • Policy of bluff? • Deterrent (to American invasion)? • Balancing move?

  6. The Crisis Begins • October 14, 1962: first evidence of Soviet MRBM sites in Cuba (PSALM) • EX-COMM (Executive Committee of NSC) meets • Armed forces readiness raised to unprecedented DEFCON 2 • October 22, 1962: Kennedy goes public

  7. Role of Intelligence: Imagery • National Photographic Intelligence Center (NPIC), headed by Arthur Lundahl • U-2 reconnaissance flights

  8. Imint: MRBM Launch Site 1

  9. Imint: Close-ups of Missile Sites Close-up of missile transporters and missile-ready tents Close-up of missile preparation area (taken from altitude of 250 feet)

  10. Role of Intelligence: Human • KGB Colonel Oleg Penkovsky • Run jointly by the CIA and SIS (MI6) • ‘Ironbark’ reports • Arrested by Soviets in Sept. 1962; later executed

  11. Resolution of the Crisis • October 28, 1962: Khrushchev ordered construction work stopped on installations in Cuba; missiles to be dismantled, packed up and shipped back to USSR • Khrushchev dropped demand that US withdraw missiles from Turkey

  12. Excerpt from a post-crisis report

  13. Soviet Intelligence • Highly skilled at security and surveillance within their totalitarian system • Khrushchev acts as own intelligence analyst; rejects professionalization of intelligence • KGB fails to influence policy-making • Soviet intelligence fails to grasp sophistication of US technology

  14. American Intelligence • Analysis still weak and flawed at times • Far greater ability than Soviet intelligence to influence policy-making • Far more technically sophisticated than Soviets (U-2, etc.)

  15. For further info: • James G. Blight, Intelligence and the Cuban Missile Crisis (Frank Cass, 1998) • David Alvarez, ‘American Signals Intelligence and the Cuban Missile Crisis’ Intelligence and National Security 15:1 (2000) 169-77. • A.V. Fursenko, One Hell of a Gamble: Khrushchev, Castro, and Kennedy, 1958-1964 (W.W. Norton, 1997)

More Related