Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-06T06:25:05.453Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

U.S.-Cuban Relations: From the Cold War to the Colder War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Jorge I. Domínguez*
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Extract

Hundreds of thousands of Cuban troops deployed to nearly every corner of the globe—that seemed to be the nightmare of every US administration from the mid-1970s to the end of the 1980s. From its own perspective, President Fidel Castro’s government attempted to use its activist foreign policy first to protect itself from hostile US policies, and second to leverage support from the Soviet Union and other communist countries for Cuba’s own domestic development.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Amnesty International (1996) Cuba: Government Crackdown on Dissent. London : International Secretariat.Google Scholar
Banco Nacional de Cuba (1995) Economic Report, 1994. Havana.Google Scholar
Blank, S. (1994) “The End of the Affair: Moscow and Havana, 1989–1992”, pp. 97115 in Donald, E. Schulz (ed.) Cuba and the Future. Westport : Greenwood.Google Scholar
Blasier, C. (1985) The Hovering Giant: US Responses to Revolutionary Change in Latin America. Pittsburgh : University of Pittsburgh Press, revised edition.Google Scholar
Blight, J. G., Allyn, B. J., and Welch, D. A. (1993) Cuba on the Brink: Castro, the Missile Crisis, and the Soviet Collapse. New York : Pantheon.Google Scholar
Bohemia (1991) (n.t.) (Havana) 83, 15 (12 April): 33.Google Scholar
Congressional Record (1995) 104th Congress, 1st session. 24 October. S15584–S15589.Google Scholar
Cuba: Economic Report (1996) 1996 Summary. Fax courtesy of the Cuba Interests Section in the United States.Google Scholar
CubalNFO (1996a) (Washington, Dc) 8, 9 (11 July): 2–3.Google Scholar
CubalNFO. (1996b) 8, 13 (10 October): 1.Google Scholar
CubalNFO. (1995a) 7, 14 (2 November): 1–2.Google Scholar
CubalNFO. (1995b) 7, 16 (20 December): 1.Google Scholar
Cuba Interests Section in the United States (1991) General fax. 11 September.Google Scholar
Domínguez, J. I. (1992) “Cooperating with the Enemy? US Immigration Policies toward Cuba”, pp. 3188 in Christopher, Mitchell (ed.) Western Hemisphere Immigration and United States Foreign Policy. University Park : Pennsylvania State University Press.Google Scholar
Domínguez, J. I. (1989) To Make a World Safe for Revolution: Cuba’s Foreign Policy. Cambridge : Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
González, E. (1996) Cuba: Clearing Perilous Waters? Santa Monica : Rand Corporation.Google Scholar
Granma (1996) 27 March.Google Scholar
Granma. (1991) 18 June: 8.Google Scholar
Granma Weekly Review (1991) 9 June: 13.Google Scholar
Granma Weekly Review. (1990a) 27 May: 3.Google Scholar
Granma Weekly Review. (1990b) 1 July: 1.Google Scholar
Hidalgo, A. and Machado, T. (1996a) “Acuse de recibo del gobierno a Concilio Cubano. Miami: Buró de Información de Derechos Humanos (1 February).Google Scholar
Hidalgo, A. (1996b) “Elige Concilio Cubano secretariado y delegado nacional. Miami: Buró de Información de Derechos Humanos (12 February).Google Scholar
Hidalgo, A. (1996c) “Redada policiaca contra dirigentes de Concilio Cubano. Miami: Buró de Información de Derechos Humanos (15 February).Google Scholar
Hidalgo, A. (1995) “Concilio Cubano define objetivos comunes. Miami: Buró de Información de Derechos Humanos (29 October).Google Scholar
Instituto de Relaciones Europeo-América Latina (IRELA) (1996) “La posición común de la Ue sobre Cuba: debate interno, reacciones y repercusiones. Inf-96/6-Cuba. Madrid, 13 December.Google Scholar
Kaplowitz, M. D., with Kaplowitz, D. R. (1993) “Cuba and the United States: Opportunities Lost and Future Potential”, pp. 223243 in Donna Rich, Kaplowitz (ed.) Cuba’s Ties to a Changing World. Boulder : Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keohane, R. (1983) “Theory of World Politics: Structural Realism and Beyond” in Ada, W. Finifter (ed.) Political Science: The State of the Discipline. Washington : American Political Science Association.Google Scholar
Lage, C. (1995) “Discurso pronunciado por el Dr. Carlos Lage Dávila, vicepresidente del Consejo de Estado y secretario del Comité Ejecutivo del Consejo de Ministros, en la inauguración de la Xii Feria Internacional de La Habana. Dossier (Havana: Centro de Estudios sobre América). February. 87–89.Google Scholar
Naciones Unidas (1995) Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe. “La inversión extranjera en Cuba.” Lc/Mex/L.286. 22 November.Google Scholar
Pérez, S. (1993) “El fin de la Urss y Cuba. Cuadernos de Nuestra América 10, 20 (July–December): 83–98.Google Scholar
Pérez-López, J. F. (1995) “A Critical Look at Cuba’s Foreign Investment Program. Paper presented at the 19th Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Washington, Dc, 28–30 September.Google Scholar
Pérez Ruiz, A. (1990) “Saludos en la hora cero. Verde Olivo (Havana) 9: 8–11.Google Scholar
Perkins, D. (1963) A History of the Monroe Doctrine. Boston : Little, Brown.Google Scholar
Radio Rebelde, Noticiero (1995) “Boletín especial”. 26 July.Google Scholar
Republic of Cuba, Ministry for Foreign Investment and Economic Cooperation (1995) Foreign Investment Law. Havana : Editora Política.Google Scholar
Robaina González, R. (1996) “Statement by H. E. Roberto Robaina González, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba, to the Resumed 50th Session of the U.N. General Assembly”. 6 March.Google Scholar
Rohter, L. (1997) “Ceremonies Honor Fliers Shot down by Cuban Jets. New York times (25 February): A12.Google Scholar
Smith, W. (1993) “Cuba and the Soviet Union, Cuba and Russia”, pp. 127142 in Donna Rich, Kaplowitz (ed.) Cuba’s Ties to a Changing World. Boulder : Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thucydides, (1951) The Peloponnesian War. Trans. Richard Crawley. New York : Modern Library.Google Scholar
United Nations, Security Council (1996) Resolution 1067 (1996), S/Res/1067 (1996). 26 July.Google Scholar
United States, Central Intelligence Agency, Directorate of Intelligence (1995) Cuba: Handbook of Trade Statistics, Ala 95–10001. Washington, Dc.Google Scholar
United States, House of Representatives (1996) “Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (Libertad) Act of 1996. Report 104–168 (1 March).Google Scholar
Walker, P. G. (1996) “Cuba’s Revolutionary Armed Forces: Adapting in the New Environment. Cuban Studies 26: 6174.Google Scholar
Waltz, K. (1994) “The Emerging Structure of International Politics” in Armand, Clesse, Richard, Cooper, and Yoshikazu, Sakamoto (eds.) The International System After the Collapse of the East-West Order. Dordrecht : Martinus Nijhoff.Google Scholar
White House, Office of the Press Secretary (1994) “Remarks by the President in Live Telecast to Russian People. Moscow, 14 January.Google Scholar