Cuban Revolution.
Publié le 03/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Confederation of Labor, threw its support behind Batista.
In the same month, the U.S.
government cut off weapons sales to Batista’s government.
U.S.
envoys andpolitical moderates in Cuba tried to convince Batista to leave power peacefully, but Batista refused.
Meanwhile, revolutionaries from Castro’s movement and from otherorganizations escalated violent resistance.
During the second half of 1958, guerrillas seized ground in the countryside from the army.
In the cities, several of Batista’sleading henchmen were assassinated and numerous government buildings were bombed.
Batista’s forces responded by killing the leading urban revolutionaries.
As a result, Castro emerged as the only significant revolutionary leader.
In late 1958 Castro dispatched an invasion force led by Guevara and fellow revolutionary CamiloCienfuegos to central Cuba to coordinate activities with guerrillas independent of Castro’s organization.
In December of 1958 the only pitched battle of the war tookplace for control of the city of Santa Clara in central Cuba.
Following the battle, Batista’s army retreated and disintegrated, and Batista’s regime collapsed.
In the earlymorning hours of January 1, 1959, Batista fled the country.
IV BREAK WITH THE UNITED STATES
Victorious revolutionary forces established a new government, which disbanded Batista’s army, prohibited political parties, and deferred elections.
As the leader of thebest-known and most powerful revolutionary group, Castro exercised the greatest influence on government policies, and he became prime minister in February.
Castrovisited the United States in April, where the U.S.
government offered him assistance as well as criticism.
In May the new Cuban government enacted a major landreform law that nationalized most farms larger than about 400 hectares (about 1000 acres).
This action appropriated much of the Cuban property held by large U.S.agricultural firms.
Seeking to break the hold that the United States had on Cuba, Castro sought foreign support to counter the traditional influence of the United States.
In late 1959Castro approached the USSR, the leader of the world’s Communist nations, for support.
Although Cuba’s Communist Party had joined the insurgency against Batistaquite late, its leaders had increasingly assumed key roles in the new order.
In May 1960 Castro reestablished diplomatic ties with the USSR, which had been severedunder Batista’s regime, and made an agreement to import Soviet oil.
In June the Cuban government took over foreign-owned petroleum refineries that refused toprocess Soviet oil.
Within days the U.S.
government outlawed the purchase of Cuban sugar, the mainstay of Cuba’s economy.
Cuba then assumed control of all U.S.property on the island and established a military alliance with the USSR.
In January 1961 the United States broke diplomatic relations with Cuba.
As Cuban policy shiftedto the left, many moderate leaders resigned from the government or were forced out of office.
V SOCIAL CHANGES
To rally support, Castro appealed to Cuban patriotism and promised a better life for the poor.
A spellbinding public speaker, he spoke for hours at a time several times aweek, seeking and obtaining broad popular support.
He traveled frequently throughout Cuba in a campaign to meet people, find out about their problems, and elicittheir backing.
Castro’s government launched a number of programs aimed at improving social conditions among poor and uneducated Cubans.
In 1961 the government temporarilyclosed schools and sent about 270,000 students and teachers to the countryside to teach illiterate citizens how to read and write.
This crash program to increaseliteracy, and follow-up efforts in subsequent years, taught almost everyone to read and write.
Before the revolution about a quarter of all Cubans were illiterate, with amedian schooling level of third grade.
In the mid-1990s the literacy rate approached 95 percent, and the typical Cuban had a middle school education.
Also in 1961 the government decreed that all health care would be paid for by the state.
The government built clinics in rural areas that had no medical facilities, and itrequired graduates of medical schools to provide two years of health care service in these areas.
Seeking to shape a new society, the government strongly fostered cooperative activities in neighborhoods and in the work place.
Neighbors cleaned up streets andparks, encouraged recycling of materials, and helped in mass vaccination campaigns.
Workers built housing units next to their work places.
VI ECONOMIC CHANGES
In 1960 and 1961 the Cuban government took control of all private firms except small agricultural plots belonging to individual Cubans.
The government believed that itcould organize the Cuban economy more effectively than private firms; socialism, its leaders believed, was more rational than the market.
Following the break with the United States in the early 1960s Cuba’s economy suffered a number of setbacks.
The United States organized a partial embargo on tradewith Cuba in late 1960 and expanded it to a full embargo in early 1962.
The embargo made it illegal to import goods from Cuba to the United States, or to export toCuba any products that were manufactured or had parts that were manufactured in the United States.
The result was severe shortages of consumer goods in Cubawithin a few years.
The Cuban government faced a further economic setback when it attempted to decrease Cuba’s dependence on sugar by diversifying the economy.
Efforts were madeto encourage industrialization, including the manufacture of light consumer goods, as well as machinery and equipment.
The government also tried to increase thevariety of agricultural crops grown by Cuban farmers.
These efforts failed, partly because of poor planning, organization, and incentives by the government; partlybecause of lack of incentives; and partly because many of Cuba’s most qualified businessmen and technicians fled the country when Castro began nationalizingbusinesses in the early 1960s.
The Cuban economy declined drastically in the years that followed and the government began rationing food, clothing, and most goodsand services.
Cuba abandoned its diversification policy in the mid-1960s and again focused on sugar production.
In 1970 the government mobilized the country’s workers in anunsuccessful effort to produce a record annual total of 10 million tons of sugar.
The overemphasis on sugar production drained workers from other sectors of theeconomy and led to increased shortages of already scarce consumer goods.
With substantial Soviet assistance, the Cuban economy recovered and grew rapidly in the1970s, although it still specialized on sugar production.
Dependent on Soviet assistance, Cuba integrated its trade and investments with the USSR and the Communistcountries of Europe.
VII LEGACY OF THE CUBAN REVOLUTION
A Domestic Legacy
At home the Cuban government made major strides in improving social conditions.
By the 1980s Cuba’s health care system was the best in Latin America, and its infantmortality rate ranked among the lowest in the world, dropping to 9.4 per 1000 live births in 1995.
Between 1958 and 1995, Cuban life expectancy rose to 76 years,matching that of the United States.
The policies implemented by the Castro government caused a radical realignment of power in Cuba.
The private owners of the nation’s wealth lost their property and thegovernment came to own and operate nearly all aspects of economic life.
The small wealthy class that had ruled Cuba was replaced with a new elite of government.
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- REVOLUTION INDUSTRIELLE CHRONOLOGIE
- Fiche revision HG Revolution industrielle
- LA MUSIQUE EN FRANCE SOUS LA REVOLUTION ET L'EMPIRE
- Histoire, LA REVOLUTION FRANCAISE
- LA REVOLUTION FRANCAISE : Fiche composée par sylvain sylvain.