The U.S.'s Policy Towards Cuba Essay by The Research Group
The U.S.'s Policy Towards Cuba
Focusing on the Clinton Presidency, Cold War ideology, politics, economics, legislation, goals, tactics and the embargo.
# 14024
| 1,350 words
| 5 sources
| 1999
|

Published
on Feb 05, 2003
in
History
(U.S. Presidency)
, International Relations
(Cold War)
, International Relations
(U.S.)
, History
(U.S. Post-Modern 1965-Present)
, Latin-American Studies
(Socialist/Marxist/Communist Movements)
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From the Paper:
"This paper will discuss the trends which have driven the foreign policy of the United States towards Cuba. The main emphasis of discussion will be the changes in policy which have taken place during the administration of President Bill Clinton. However, the first part of the paper will briefly discuss the origins of the policy during the Cold War.The foreign policy of the United States towards Cuba has changed little since 1961. U.S. leaders have felt that Cuba was a "special case" in terms of foreign policy ever since U.S. military force ended Spain's control over the island in 1898. Until 1934, U.S. law permitted intervention in Cuban affairs; after 1934, U.S. capital controlled most of the Cuban economy. The revolution led by Fidel Castro in 1959 tapped into strong anti-American ..."
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The U.S.'s Policy Towards Cuba (2003, February 05)
Retrieved September 24, 2023, from https://www.academon.com/essay/the-us-policy-towards-cuba-14024/
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"The U.S.'s Policy Towards Cuba" 05 February 2003.
Web. 24 September. 2023. <https://www.academon.com/essay/the-us-policy-towards-cuba-14024/>