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cuba

  • Three political changes since 1945

    Batista seizes power again and presides over an oppressive and corrupt regime
  • Three political changes since 1945

    Fidel Castro leads an unsuccessful revolt against the Batista regime
  • first significant conflict in cuba since 1945

    first significant conflict in cuba since 1945
    Castro lands in eastern Cuba from Mexico and takes to the Sierra Maestra mountains where, aided by Ernesto "Che" Guevara, he wages a guerrilla war.
  • Three political changes since 1945

    castro lands in eastern Cuba from Mexico and takes to the Sierra Maestra mountains where, aided by Ernesto "Che" Guevara, he wages a guerrilla war.
  • second significant conflicts since 1945

    second significant conflicts since 1945
    Cuban missile crisis ignites when, fearing a US invasion, Castro agrees to allow the USSR to deploy nuclear missiles on the island. The US released photos of Soviet nuclear missile silos in Cuba - triggering a crisis which took the two superpowers to the brink of nuclear war.
  • 90 PERCENT OF CUBANS OWN THEIR OWN HOMES

    The high homeownership rate on the island is supported by President Raúl Castro’s economic reform agenda, which attempts to “preserve socialism while introducing new forms of market-based mechanisms,” writes Ted Piccone. In addition to the ability to buy and sell property, Cuban citizens can now open small businesses, have cell phones, and form cooperatives both on and off of farms.
  • CUBA RECEIVES ALMOST 100,000 BARRELS OF OIL A DAY FROM VENEZUELA

    The easing of diplomatic hostilities between the United States and Cuba may work to lessen Cuban dependence on the Venezuelan regime, Ted Piccone notes. Russian President Vladimir Putin also recently wrote off $32 billion, 90 percent of the debt Cuba owed dating back to the Soviet era.
  • MORE THAN TWO-THIRDS OF THE 2 MILLION CUBANS AND CUBAN-AMERICANS IN THE UNITED STATES LIVE IN FLORIDA; 18 PERCENT OF MIAMI RESIDENTS IDENTIFY AS CUBAN.

    how these demographic distributions play a key role in normalizing relations with Cuba. Currently, a visa lottery system allows 20,000 Cubans to emigrate every year to the United States, while others try to make the trek by sea—the U.S. Coast Guard stopped 500 such potential immigrants in December 2014 alone. Thousands more cross the border where they can claim asylum and get expedited green card privileges.