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465 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 29, 2011
Ironically, Foster’s sense of an inexorable communist advance and capitalist collapse resembled Karl Marx’s theory of history. But it related little to reality. Khrushchev spoke frequently of his desire to demonstrate in the Soviet Union progress that the world would wish to follow. So far, though, the glittering delights of life under communism were not apparent to many people. Since June 1953, fifteen thousand people had been leaving East Germany through Berlin every month. The Soviet Union had fallen disastrously behind in the arms race against the United States. It was also in the process of falling out with China, its most significant and substantial ally: Mao sneered at Khrushchev’s poetic aspirations toward “peaceful cooperation” with capitalist states. If the Soviets really were bent on world domination, they were making a poor job of it. But by predicating his foreign policy on inevitable conflict with the left, extending friendship to almost any regime on the right, however deplorable, and defining communism as the ultimate anti-Americanism, John Foster Dulles helped create the conditions for a far more virulent spread of communism than Khrushchev’s hazy ideas of Soviet progress ever did.With respect to the Cuban Revolution, she summed things up nicely (p. 246):
The State Department had been hoodwinked by the central myth of the Cuban Revolution: that twelve undercover communists had stolen an entire island from a well-armed pro-American dictator. But there were not just twelve of Castro’s men; the Granma survivors had been able to link into a large and well-connected island-wide underground. They were not undercover communists; most of them had not been communists at all. And they had not stolen the island; Batista and his army had given to them. All the decisive facts of the Cuban Revolution were ignored, and with them all its real lessons. It was now believed—absurdly, but sincerely—that a group of communists barely numerous enough to make up a football team would be capable of taking over entire nations in the blink of an eye. Communism, it seemed, was uncontrollably powerful. It had to be found, and it had to be stopped.Her final paragraph is worth remembering (p. 377):
The secret war in the Caribbean destroyed any hope of freedom and democracy in Cuba, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic. It toppled democracies. It supported dictators. It licensed those dictators’ worst excesses. It financed terrorism. It set up death squads. It turned Cuba communist, and kept it communist for half a century. It did massive and permanent damage to the international reputation of the United States. It nearly triggered a nuclear holocaust. The fact that this war began, and was run, with good intentions is not a mere historical curiosity. It may be one of the most important lessons of our age.This book is an important compilation of a grim historical record, one which policy makers should keep front of mind as they make future important security decisions. Then again, since there are so many examples of poor policy-making, wouldn't you think the technocracy, stabled as it is with legions of PhDs, would have learned from them by now? I guess not. And a final request, can someone please explain logically why American policy is so hostile to Cuba more than 60 years following its revolution? I’m surprised this work has not garnered greater acclaim and popularity, both of which are much deserved.