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The Cold War Divides the World Ch. 33, Sec. 4 Cuba Advanced World History Adkins.

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Presentation on theme: "The Cold War Divides the World Ch. 33, Sec. 4 Cuba Advanced World History Adkins."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Cold War Divides the World Ch. 33, Sec. 4 Cuba Advanced World History Adkins

2 3 Worlds Following WWII, countries were grouped politically into 3 “worlds”. – 1 – Industrialized capitalist nations – 2 – communist nations led by the Soviet Union – 3 – developing nations, often newly independent, who were not aligned with either superpower These nonaligned countries provided another arena for competition for the Cold War superpowers (space race, arms race)

3 The three worlds as they were separated during the Cold War era, each with its respective allies. Cold War First WorldFirst World: the United States and its allies. United States Second WorldSecond World: the Soviet Union and its allies. Soviet Union Third World: Non-aligned and neutral countries.Non-alignedneutral

4 Third World Latin America, Africa, and Asia Economically poor and politically unstable – Due in large part to a long history of colonialism Ethnic conflicts Lack of technology and education These third world countries needed a new economic and political system. Which are they going to choose  Soviet-style communism or U.S. style free market? Some chose to remain neutral (nonaligned nations). Ex: India and Indonesia

5 Cuba - Castro 1950’s – Cuba was ruled by an unpopular dictator, Fulgencio Batista, who was backed by the U.S. 1959 – Revolution overthrew Batista. This revolution was led by Fidel Castro, a lawyer. Castro brought social reforms, but he too soon became a dictator – suspended elections, jailed\executed opponents, controlled press Castro nationalized the economy – he took over U.S. –owned sugar mills. Eisenhower ordered an embargo  Castro turned to USSR for help.

6 Cuba  Bay of Pigs Invasion 1961 - U.S. trained Cuban exiles invaded Cuba. Invaders were defeated. – U.S. did not provide support from the U.S. Air Force (decided by Kennedy). – Cuban population did not support the invasion. This defeat showed the USSR (Nikita Khrushchev) that the US would not resist Soviet expansion in Latin America.

7 Sound familiar? U.S. Naval Base Guantanamo Bay is the oldest U.S. base overseas and the only one in a Communist country. We began leasing this land in 1903. In the lease it is required that both the U.S. and Cuba must mutually consent to terminate the lease.

8 Cuba – Cuban Missile Crisis 1962 – Khrushchev begins building missile sites on Cuba. An US spy plane discovers the sites. Kennedy demands their removal (too close to the U.S.) and sets up a blockade to block more Soviet missiles from coming. Luckily for the U.S. and the World, Soviet ships turn back. Khrushchev agrees to remove the missiles  US agrees not to invade Cuba.

9 Who are these men? What nations do they represent? What are they sitting on? What are they both getting ready to touch? Why are they sweating.


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