The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations

After its Revolution Cuba was forced into a Latin American and Caribbean diplomatic quarantine by the United States. In the 1960s, Cuba’s relations with the region were basically characterized by its support to insurgency and guerrilla movements. In the 1970s, Cuba overcame its isolation by normaliz...

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Main Author: Dirk Kruijt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institut des Amériques 2017-11-01
Series:IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2162
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spelling doaj-f1c997f3be144c79b2a8b3bd7ff040a82020-11-24T21:39:09ZengInstitut des AmériquesIdeAs : Idées d’Amériques1950-57012017-11-011010.4000/ideas.2162The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American RelationsDirk KruijtAfter its Revolution Cuba was forced into a Latin American and Caribbean diplomatic quarantine by the United States. In the 1960s, Cuba’s relations with the region were basically characterized by its support to insurgency and guerrilla movements. In the 1970s, Cuba overcame its isolation by normalizing relations in Latin America and with the newly independent Caribbean island-states. Support to the Armed Left was only given in the case of civil war against dictatorships; Cuba also assisted in building national umbrella organizations of insurgent movements. After 1985-1989 it used its Soft Power (medical brigades and facilities, literacy and post-disaster reconstruction teams), and its goods offices during peace negotiations to become a much-respected country in the region. During the government of Raúl Castro economic and political reforms were initiated while a rapport with the Catholic episcopate was established. It contributed in facilitating with success the decades-long negotiations with the United States about normalizing relations. A substantial part of this article is based on new and recent interviews with numerous Cuban key actors.http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2162CubaUnited StatesLatin AmericaSoft Power DiplomacyRevolutions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dirk Kruijt
spellingShingle Dirk Kruijt
The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
Cuba
United States
Latin America
Soft Power Diplomacy
Revolutions
author_facet Dirk Kruijt
author_sort Dirk Kruijt
title The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
title_short The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
title_full The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
title_fullStr The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
title_full_unstemmed The Long Itinerary to Normalization: The Cuban – Latin American Relations
title_sort long itinerary to normalization: the cuban – latin american relations
publisher Institut des Amériques
series IdeAs : Idées d’Amériques
issn 1950-5701
publishDate 2017-11-01
description After its Revolution Cuba was forced into a Latin American and Caribbean diplomatic quarantine by the United States. In the 1960s, Cuba’s relations with the region were basically characterized by its support to insurgency and guerrilla movements. In the 1970s, Cuba overcame its isolation by normalizing relations in Latin America and with the newly independent Caribbean island-states. Support to the Armed Left was only given in the case of civil war against dictatorships; Cuba also assisted in building national umbrella organizations of insurgent movements. After 1985-1989 it used its Soft Power (medical brigades and facilities, literacy and post-disaster reconstruction teams), and its goods offices during peace negotiations to become a much-respected country in the region. During the government of Raúl Castro economic and political reforms were initiated while a rapport with the Catholic episcopate was established. It contributed in facilitating with success the decades-long negotiations with the United States about normalizing relations. A substantial part of this article is based on new and recent interviews with numerous Cuban key actors.
topic Cuba
United States
Latin America
Soft Power Diplomacy
Revolutions
url http://journals.openedition.org/ideas/2162
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