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- The Bay of Pigs Invasion.
-
-
- The story of the failed invasion of Cuba at the Bay of Pigs is
- one of mismanagement, overconfidence, and lack of security. The
- blame for the failure of the operation falls directly in the lap of
- the Central Intelligence Agency and a young president and his
- advisors. The fall out from the invasion caused a rise in tension
- between the two great superpowers and ironically 34 years after the
- event, the person that the invasion meant to topple, Fidel Castro,
- is still in power. To understand the origins of the invasion and
- its ramifications for the future it is first necessary to look at
- the invasion and its origins.
-
- Part I: The Invasion and its Origins.
- The Bay of Pigs invasion of April 1961, started a few days
- before on April 15th with the bombing of Cuba by what appeared to
- be defecting Cuban air force pilots. At 6 a.m. in the morning of
- that Saturday, three Cuban military bases were bombed by B-26
- bombers. The airfields at Camp Libertad, San Antonio de los Baños
- and Antonio Maceo airport at Santiago de Cuba were fired upon.
- Seven people were killed at Libertad and forty-seven people were
- killed at other sites on the island.
- Two of the B-26s left Cuba and flew to Miami, apparently to
- defect to the United States. The Cuban Revolutionary Council, the
- government in exile, in New York City released a statement saying
- that the bombings in Cuba were ". . . carried out by 'Cubans inside
- Cuba' who were 'in contact with' the top command of the
- Revolutionary Council . . . ." The New York Times reporter
- covering the story alluded to something being wrong with the whole
- situation when he wondered how the council knew the pilots were
- coming if the pilots had only decided to leave Cuba on Thursday
- after " . . . a suspected betrayal by a fellow pilot had
- precipitated a plot to strike . . . ." Whatever the case, the
- planes came down in Miami later that morning, one landed at Key
- West Naval Air Station at 7:00 a.m. and the other at Miami
- International Airport at 8:20 a.m. Both planes were badly damaged
- and their tanks were nearly empty. On the front page of The New
- York Times the next day, a picture of one of the B-26s was shown
- along with a picture of one of the pilots cloaked in a baseball hat
- and hiding behind dark sunglasses, his name was withheld. A sense
- of conspiracy was even at this early stage beginning to envelope
- the events of that week.
- In the early hours of April 17th the assault on the Bay of
- Pigs began. In the true cloak and dagger spirit of a movie, the
- assault began at 2 a.m. with a team of frogmen going ashore with
- orders to set up landing lights to indicate to the main assault
- force the precise
- location of their
- objectives, as well as
- to clear the area of
- anything that may impede [Map of Cuba was here]
- the main landing teams [Link to Map to be added when
- when they arrived. At time permits]
- 2:30 a.m. and at 3:00
- a.m. two battalions came
- ashore at Playa Girón
- and one battalion at Playa Larga beaches. The troops at Playa Girón
- had orders to move west, northwest, up the coast and meet with the
- troops at Playa Larga in the middle of the bay. A small group of
- men were then to be sent north to the town of Jaguey Grande to
- secure it as well. (See figure 1).
- When looking at a modern map of Cuba it is obvious that the
- troops would have problems in the area that was chosen for them to
- land at. The area around the Bay of Pigs is a swampy marsh land
- area which would be hard on the troops. The Cuban forces were quick
- to react and Castro ordered his T-33 trainer jets, two Sea Furies,
- and two B-26s into the air to stop the invading forces. Off the
- coast was the command and control ship and another vessel carrying
- supplies for the invading forces. The Cuban air force made quick
- work of the supply ships, sinking the command vessel the Marsopa
- and the supply ship the Houston, blasting them to pieces with five-
- inch rockets. In the end the 5th battalion was lost, which was on
- the Houston, as well as the supplies for the landing teams and
- eight other smaller vessels. With some of the invading forces'
- ships destroyed, and no command and control ship, the logistics of
- the operation soon broke down as the other supply ships were kept
- at bay by Casto's air force. As with many failed military
- adventures, one of the problems with this one was with supplying
- the troops.
- In the air, Castro had easily won superiority over the
- invading force. His fast moving T-33s, although unimpressive by
- today's standards, made short work of the slow moving B-26s of the
- invading force. On Tuesday, two were shot out of the sky and by
- Wednesday the invaders had lost 10 of their 12 aircraft. With
- air power firmly in control of Castro's forces, the end was near
- for the invading army.
- Over the 72 hours the invading force of about 1500 men were
- pounded by the Cubans. Casto fired 122mm. Howitzers, 22mm. cannon,
- and tank fire at them. By Wednesday the invaders were pushed back
- to their landing zone at Playa Girón. Surrounded by Castro's forces
- some began to surrender while others fled into the hills. In
- total 114 men were killed in the slaughter while thirty-six died as
- prisoners in Cuban cells. Others were to live out twenty years or
- more in those cells as men plotting to topple the government of
- Castro.
- The 1500 men of the invading force never had a chance for
- success from almost the first days in the planning stage of the
- operation. Operation Pluto, as it came to be known as, has its
- origins in the last dying days of the Eisenhower administration and
- that murky time period during the transition of power to the newly
- elected president John F. Kennedy.
- The origins of American policy in Latin America in the late
- 1950s and early 1960s has its origins in American's economic
- interests and its anticommunist policies in the region. The same
- man who had helped formulate American containment policy towards
- the Soviet threat, George Kennan, in 1950 spoke to US Chiefs of
- Mission in Rio de Janeiro about Latin America. He said that
- American policy had several purposes in the region,
-
-
- . . . to protect the vital supplies of raw materials
- which Latin American countries export to the USA; to
- prevent the 'military exploitation of Latin America by
- the enemy' [The Soviet Union]; and to avert 'the
- psychological mobilization of Latin America against us.'
- . . . .
-
-
- By the 1950s trade with Latin America accounted for a quarter
- of American exports, and 80 per cent of the investment in Latin
- America was also American. The Americans had a vested interest
- in the region that it would remain pro-American.
- The Guatemalan adventure can be seen as another of the factors
- that lead the American government to believe that it could handle
- Casto. Before the Second World War ended, a coup in Guatemala saw
- the rise to power of Juan Jose Arévalo. He was not a communist in
- the traditional sense of the term, but he ". . . packed his
- government with Communist Party members and Communist
- sympathizers." In 1951 Jacobo Arbenz succeeded Arévalo after an
- election in March of that year. The party had been progressing with
- a series of reforms, and the newly elected leader continued with
- these reforms. During land reforms a major American company, the
- United Fruit Company, lost its land and other holdings without any
- compensation from the Guatemalan government. When the Guatemalans
- refused to go to the International Court of Law, United Fruit began
- to lobby the government of the United States to take action. In the
- government they had some very powerful supporters. Among them were
- Foster Dulles, Secretary of State who had once been their lawyer,
- his brother Allen the Director of Central Intelligence who was a
- share holder, and Robert Cutler head of the National Security
- Council. In what was a clear conflict of interest, the security
- apparatus of the United States decided to take action against the
- Guatemalans.
- From May 1st, 1954, to June 18th, the Central Intelligence
- Agency did everything in its power to overthrow the government of
- Arbenz. On June 17th to the 18th, it peaked with an invasion of 450
- men lead by a Colonel Carlos Castillo Armas. With the help of air
- support the men took control of the country and Arbenz fled to the
- Mexican Embassy. By June 27th, the country was firmly in control of
- the invading force. With its success in Guatemala, CIA had the
- confidence that it could now take on anyone who interfered with
- American interests.
- In late 1958 Castro was still fighting a guerilla war against
- the corrupt regime of Fulgencio Batista. Before he came to power,
- there was an incident between his troops and some vacationing
- American troops from the nearby American naval base at Guantanamo
- Bay. During the incident some US Marines were held captive by
- Casto's forces but were later released after a ransom was secretly
- paid. This episode soured relations with the United States and
- the chief of U.S. Naval Operations, Admiral Burke, wanted to send
- in the Marines to destroy Castro's forces then but Secretary of
- State Foster Dulles disagreed with the measures suggested and
- stopped the plan.
- Castro overthrew Batista in 1959. Originally Castro was not a
- communist either and even had meetings with then Vice-President
- Richard Nixon. Fearful of Castro's revolution, people with money,
- like doctors, lawyers, and the mafia, left Cuba for the United
- States. To prevent the loss of more capital Castro's solution was
- to nationalize some of the businesses in Cuba. In the process
- of nationalizing some business he came into conflict with American
- interests just as Arbenz had in Guatemala. ". . . legitimate U.S.
- Businesses were taken over, and the process of socialization begun
- with little if any talk of compensation." There were also
- rumours of Cuban involvement in trying to invade Panama, Guatemala,
- and the Dominican Republic and by this time Castro had been
- turn down by the United States for any economic aid. Being rejected
- by the Americans, he met with foreign minister Anasta Mikoyan to
- secure a $100 million loan from the Soviet Union. It was in
- this atmosphere that the American Intelligence and Foreign
- Relations communities decided that Castro was leaning towards
- communism and had to be dealt with.
- In the spring of 1960, President Eisenhower approved a plan to
- send small groups of American trained, Cuban exiles, to work in the
- underground as guerrillas to overthrow Castro. By the fall, the
- plan was changed to a full invasion with air support by exile
- Cubans in American supplied planes. The original group was to
- be trained in Panama, but with the growth of the operation and the
- quickening pace of events in Cuba, it was decided to move things to
- a base in Guatemala. The plan was becoming rushed and this would
- start to show, the man in charge of the operation, CIA Deputy
- Director Bissell said that,
-
-
- . . . There didn't seem to be time to keep to the
- original plan and have a large group trained by this
- initial cadre of young Cubans. So the larger group was
- formed and established at La finca, in Guatemala, and
- there the training was conducted entirely by Americans .
- . . .
-
-
- It was now fall and a new president had been elected.
- President Kennedy could have stopped the invasion if he wanted to,
- but he probably didn't do so for several reasons. Firstly, he had
- campaigned for some form of action against Cuba and it was also
- the height of the cold war, to back out now would mean having
- groups of Cuban exiles travelling around the globe saying how the
- Americans had backed down on the Cuba issue. In competition
- with the Soviet Union, backing out would make the Americans look
- like wimps on the international scene, and for domestic consumption
- the new president would be seen as backing away from one of his
- campaign promises. The second reason Kennedy probably didn't abort
- the operation is the main reason why the operation failed, problems
- with the CIA.
-
- Part II: Failure and Ramifications.
- The failure at the CIA led to Kennedy making poor decisions
- which would affect future relations with Cuba and the Soviet Union.
- The failure at CIA had three causes. First the wrong people were
- handling the operation, secondly the agency in charge of the
- operation was also the one providing all the intelligence for the
- operation, and thirdly for an organization supposedly obsessed with
- security the operation had security problems.
- In charge of the operation was the Director of Central
- Intelligence, Allan Dulles and main responsibility for the
- operation was left to one of his deputies, Richard Bissell. In an
- intelligence community geared mainly for European operations
- against the USSR, both men were lacking in experience in Latin
- American affairs. Those in charge of Operation Pluto, based
- this new operation on the success of the Guatemalan adventure, but
- the situation in Cuba was much different than that in Guatemala. In
- Guatemala the situation was still chaotic and Arbenz never had the
- same control over the country that Castro had on Cuba. The CIA had
- the United States Ambassador, John Puerifoy, working on the inside
- of Guatemala coordinating the effort, in Cuba they had none of this
- while Castro was being supplied by the Soviet block. In
- addition, after the overthrow of the government in Guatemala,
- Castro was aware that this may happen to him as well and probably
- had his guard up waiting for anything that my indicate that an
- invasion was imminent.
- The second problem was the nature of the bureaucracy itself.
- The CIA was a new kid on the block and still felt that it had to
- prove itself, it saw its opportunity in Cuba. Obsessed with
- secrecy, it kept the number of people involved to a minimum. The
- intelligence wing of CIA was kept out of it, their Board of
- National Estimates could have provided information on the situation
- in Cuba and the chances for an uprising against Castro once the
- invasion started. Also kept out of the loop were the State
- Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff who could have provided
- help on the military side of the adventure. In the end, the CIA
- kept all the information for itself and passed on to the president
- only what it thought he should see. Lucien S. Vandenbroucke, in
- Political Science Quarterly of 1984, based his analysis of the Bay
- of Pigs failure on organizational behaviour theory. He says that
- the CIA ". . . supplied President Kennedy and his advisers with
- chosen reports on the unreliability of Castro's forces and the
- extent of Cuban dissent." Of the CIA's behaviour he concludes
- that,
-
-
- . . . By resorting to the typical organization strategy
- of defining the options and providing the information
- required to evaluate them, the CIA thus structured the
- problem in a way that maximized the likelihood the
- president would choose the agency's preferred option . .
- . .
-
-
- The CIA made sure the deck was stacked in their favour when the
- time came to decide whether a project they sponsored was sound or
- not. President Kennedy's Secretary of State at the time was Dean
- Rusk, in his autobiography he says that,
-
-
- . . . The CIA told us all sorts of things about the
- situation in Cuba and what would happen once the brigade
- got ashore. President Kennedy received information which
- simply was not correct. For example, we were told that
- elements of the Cuban armed forces would defect and join
- the brigade, that there would be popular uprisings
- throughout Cuba when the brigade hit the beach, and that
- if the exile force got into trouble, its members would
- simply melt into the countryside and become guerrillas,
- just as Castro had done . . . .
-
-
- As for senior White House aides, most of them disagreed with
- the plan as well, but Rusk says that Kennedy went with what the CIA
- had to say. As for himself, he said that he ". . . did not serve
- President Kennedy very well . . ." and that he should have
- voiced his opposition louder. He concluded that ". . . I should
- have made my opposition clear in the meetings themselves because he
- [Kennedy] was under pressure from those who wanted to proceed."
- When faced with biased information from the CIA and quiet advisors,
- it is no wonder that the president decided to go ahead with the
- operation.
- For an organization that deals with security issues, the CIA's
- lack of security in the Bay of Pigs operation is ironic. Security
- began to break down before the invasion when The New York Times
- reporter Tad Szulc ". . . learned of Operation Pluto from Cuban
- friends. . ." earlier that year while in Costa Rica covering an
- Organization of American States meeting. Another breakdown in
- security was at the training base in Florida,
-
-
- . . . Local residents near Homestead [air force base] had
- seen Cubans drilling and heard their loudspeakers at a
- farm. As a joke some firecrackers were thrown into the
- compound . . . .
-
-
- The ensuing incident saw the Cubans firing their guns and the
- federal authorities having to convince the local authorities not to
- press charges. Operation Pluto was beginning to get blown wide
- open, the advantage of surprise was lost even this early in the
- game.
- After the initial bombing raid of April 15th, and the landing
- of the B-26s in Florida, pictures of the planes were taken and
- published in newspapers. In the photo of one of the planes, the
- nose of it is opaque whereas the model of the B-26 the Cubans
- really used had a plexiglass nose,
-
-
- . . . The CIA had taken the pains to disguise the B-26
- with "FAR" markings [Cuban Air Force], the agency
- overlooked a crucial detail that was spotted immediately
- by professional observers . . . .
-
-
- All Castro's people had to do was read the newspapers and they'd
- know that something was going to happen, that those planes that had
- bombed them were not their own but American.
- In The New York Times of the 21st of April, stories about the
- origins of the operation in the Eisenhower administration appeared
- along with headlines of "C.I.A. Had a Role In Exiles' Plans"
- revealing the CIA's involvement. By the 22nd, the story is
- fully known with headlines in The New York Times stating that "CIA
- is Accused by Bitter Rebels" and on the second page of that
- day's issue is a full article on the details of the operation from
- its beginnings.
- The conclusion one can draw from the articles in The New York
- Times is that if reporters knew the whole story by the 22nd, it can
- be expected that Castro's intelligence service and that of the
- Soviet Union knew about the planned invasion as well. Tad Szulc's
- report in the April 22nd edition of The New York Times says it all,
-
-
- . . . As has been an open secret in Florida and Central
- America for months, the C.I.A. planned, coordinated and
- directed the operations that ended in defeat on a
- beachhead in southern Cuba Wednesday . . . .
-
-
- It is clear then that part of the failure of the operation was
- caused by a lack of security and attention to detail on the part of
- the Central Intelligence Agency, and misinformation given to the
- president.
- On the international scene, the Bay of Pigs invasion lead
- directly to increased tensions between the United States and the
- Soviet Union. During the invasion messages were exchanged between
- Kennedy and Khrushchev regarding the events in Cuba. Khrushchev
- accused the Americans of being involved in the invasion and stated
- in one of his messages that a,
-
- . . . so-called "small war" can produce a chain reaction
- in all parts of the world . . . we shall render the Cuban
- people and their Government all necessary assistance in
- beating back the armed attack on Cuba . . . .
-
-
- Kennedy replied giving American views on democracy and the
- containment of communism, he also warned against Soviet involvement
- in Cuba saying to Khrushchev,
-
- . . . In the event of any military intervention by
- outside force we will immediately honor our obligations
- under the inter-American system to protect this
- hemisphere against external aggression . . . .
-
-
- Even though this crisis passed, it set the stage for the next
- major crisis over Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba and probably lead
- to the Soviets increasing their military support for Castro.
- In the administration itself, the Bay of Pigs crisis lead to
- a few changes. Firstly, someone had to take the blame for the
- affair and, as Director of Central Intelligence, Allen Dulles was
- forced to resign and left CIA in November of 1961 Internally,
- the CIA was never the same, although it continued with covert
- operations against Castro, it was on a much reduced scale.
- According to a report of the Select Senate Committee on
- Intelligence, future operations were ". . . to nourish a spirit of
- resistance and disaffection which could lead to significant
- defections and other by-products of unrest." The CIA also now
- came under the supervision of the president's brother Bobby, the
- Attorney General. According to Lucien S. Vandenbroucke, the
- outcome of the Bay of Pigs failure also made the White House
- suspicious of an operation that everyone agreed to, made them less
- reluctant to question the experts, and made them play "devil's
- advocates" when questioning them. In the end, the lessons
- learned from the Bay of Pigs failure may have contributed to the
- successful handling of the Cuban missile crisis that followed.
- The long term ramifications of the Bay of Pigs invasion are a
- little harder to assess. The ultimate indication of the invasions
- failure is that thirty-four years later Castro is still in power.
- This not only indicates the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion,
- but American policy towards Cuba in general. The American policy,
- rather than undermining Castro's support, has probably contributed
- to it. As with many wars, even a cold one, the leader is able to
- rally his people around him against an aggressor.
- When Castro came to power he instituted reforms to help the
- people and end corruption, no longer receiving help from the Soviet
- Union things are beginning to change. He has opened up the Cuban
- economy for some investment, mainly in telecommunications, oil
- exploration, and joint ventures. In an attempt to stay in
- power, he is trying to adapt his country to the new reality of the
- world. Rather than suppressing the educated elite, he is giving
- them a place in guiding Cuba. The question is, will they
- eventually want more power and a right to control Cuba's fate
- without Castro's guidance and support? If the collapse of past
- regimes is any indication, they will eventually want more power.
- When Castro came to power in 1959, the major opponents in
- America to him, as with Guatemala, were the business interests who
- were losing out as a result of his polices. The major pressure for
- the Americans to do something came, not only from the Cuban exiles
- in Florida, but from those businesses. Today, the tables are turned
- and businesses are loosing out because of the American embargo
- against Cuba. It is estimated that if the embargo were lifted, $1
- billion of business would be generated for US companies that first
- year. Right now, 100 firms have gone to Cuba to talk about doing
- business there after the embargo is lifted. Will American
- policy change toward Cuba because of pressure from business
- interests and growing problems with refugees from Cuba? Given the
- reasons why the United States got involved in Latin American
- politics in the first place, it is very likely that their position
- will change if they can find a face saving way to do so. American
- policy at this time though is still stuck in the cold war, the
- chairmen of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Jesse Helms said
- that,
-
-
- . . . Whether Castro leaves Cuba in a vertical or
- horizontal position is up to him and the Cuban people.
- But he must and will leave Cuba . . . .
-
-
-
-
- The failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion was caused by
- misinformation and mismanagement, the consequences of that was egg
- in the face for the Americans and an increase in tension between
- the superpowers at the height of the cold war. We will only have to
- wait and see if the Americans have really learned their lesson and
- will not miss another opportunity to set things right in Cuba. Bibliography
-
-
- Fedarko, Kevin. "Bereft of Patrons, Desperate to Rescue his
- Economy, Fidel Turns to an Unusual Solution: Capitalism." Time
- Magazine, week of February 20th, 1995. Internet,
- http://www.timeinc.com, 1995.
-
-
- Meyer, Karl E. and Szulc, Tad. The Cuban Invasion: The
- Chronicle of a Disaster. New York: Frederick A. Praeger,
- Publishers, 1962 and 1968.
-
-
- Mosley, Leonard. Dulles: A Biography of Eleanor, Allen, and John
- Foster Dulles and their Family Network. New York: The Dail
- Press/James Wade, 1978.
-
-
- Prados, John. Presidents' Secret Wars: CIA and Pentagon Covert
- Operations Since World War II. New York: William Morrow and
- Company, Inc., 1986.
-
-
- Ranelagh, John. CIA: A History. London: BBC Books, 1992.
-
-
- Rositzke, Harry, Ph.d. The CIA's Secret Operations: Espionage,
- Counterespionage, and Covert Action. New York: Reader's Digest
- Press, 1977.
-
-
- Rusk, Dean and Richard. As I Saw It. New York and London: W.W.
- Norton and Company, 1990.
-
-
- The New York Times. 16 April to 22 April, 1961. New York: The New
- York Times, 1961.
-
-
- United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Cuba. Map, 22 by 52
- cm, No. 502988 1-77. Washington, D.C.: Central Intelligence
- Agency, 1977.
-
-
- Vandenbroucke, Lucien S. "Anatomy of a Failure: The Decision to
- Land at the Bay of Pigs." Political Science Quarterly, Volume
- 99, Number 3, Fall 1984.
-
-
-
-