For nearly 50 years most Americans have been forbidden to travel to communist Cuba. This article will explain why we have the embargo on Cuba, what it entails and what happens when Americans travel there without permission. This article will not take sides but will simply offer unbiased explanations.
Most Americans know that they cannot travel to Cuba
but few understand why. This article
will provide a brief history of the U.S.-Cuba relations, why there is an
embargo, who is legally authorized to travel to Cuba
and what happens when people illegally visit the island. This article is based on fact and claims no
bias with either country’s position.
A Brief History Explaining the Embargo
For about 400 years Cuba
was controlled by Spain
until the U.S. won the Spanish-American war in 1898. The win gave America
four years of control in Cuba, until
1902 when the island was finally given its independence with one stipulation:
the protection of U.S. interests in Cuba
by military intervention (formally known as The Platt Amendment). However, Fulgencio Batista came to power in
1933 and abolished the aforementioned stipulation. The uprising along with Batista’s new power
was largely Communist and therefore not recognized by the U.S.
which viewed Communism as a threat to Democracy. U.S. President Eisenhower halted arms supplies
to Cuba and
Fidel Castro saw this weak point in relations as his chance to oust Batista and
assume power which he did on January 1, 1959.
Anger endured over U.S.
involvement following their freedom from Spain
and Cubans quickly supported Castro’s plan to gain autonomy from America. Castro partnered with the Soviet Union,
further straining ties with America. Consequently, the C.I.A. trained and armed the
Cuban exiles that landed at “The Bay of Pigs” in an effort to reclaim Cuba
from Castro. However, a leak in the
C.I.A. informed Castro of the invasion and rather than admit to the planned
attack, the Kennedy administration left the exiles on Cuban soil to be shot,
imprisoned or otherwise disposed. Many
American pilots tried to help the abandoned Cubans and were subsequently shot
down.
Seizing this lack of solidarity among the Americans
regarding the foiled assault, the Soviet Union decided to plant offensive
missiles in Cuba.
This further altered the balance of
power and increased the likelihood that these missiles could reach the U.S.
as opposed to their previous location in Europe. Thus began the Cuban Missile Crisis which
served as one of the strongest marks in securing Castro’s power. The United States
made a fast enemy of Cuba
and deemed the Communist island a threat to democracy, and Castro a threat to
Cubans. Therefore, the United
States banned trade with and travel to Cuba
and considered all countries who do engage in Cuban trade and travel to be an
enemy to the U.S.
Currently, America
has moved away from the initial reasons of the embargo and maintained the
stance that Cuba
is a massive violator of human rights, a claim which as of this time, no
respectable human rights organization has backed.