CUBA

kyooˈbə, Span. kooˈbä, officially Republic of Cuba, republic (1995 est. pop. 10,938,000), 42,804 sq mi (110,860 sq km), consisting of the island of Cuba and numerous adjacent islands, in the Caribbean Sea. Havana is the capital and largest city.

Land and People

Cuba is the largest and westernmost of the islands of the West Indies and lies strategically at the entrance to the Gulf of Mexico, with the western section only 90 mi (145 km) S of Key West, Fla. The south coast is washed by the Caribbean Sea, the north coast by the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico, and in the east the Windward Passage separates Cuba from Haiti. The shores are often marshy and are fringed by coral reefs and cays. There are many fine seaports—Havana (the chief import point), Cienfuegos, Matanzas, Cárdenas, Nuevitas, Santiago de Cuba, and Guantánamo (a U.S. naval base since 1903). Of the many rivers, only the Cauto is important. The climate is semitropical and generally uniform.

Cuba has three mountain regions: the wild and rugged Sierra Maestra in the east, rising to 6,560 ft (2,000 m) in the Pico Turquino; a lower range, the scenic Sierra de los Órganos, in the west; and the Sierra de Trinidad, a picturesque mass of hills amid the plains and rolling country of central Cuba, a region of vast sugar plantations. The rest of the island is level or rolling.

The origins of the population include Spanish (over 35%), African (over 10%), and mixed Spanish-African (over 50%). Spanish is spoken and Roman Catholicism, the dominant religion, is tolerated by the Marxist government. Santería, an African-derived faith, is also practiced, and there are a growing number of Protestant evangelical churches. The principal institutions of higher learning are the Univ. of Havana (founded 1728), in Havana; Universidad de Oriente, in Santiago de Cuba; and Central Universidad de las Villas, in Santa Clara.

Economy

Cuba's topography and climate are suitable for various crops, but sugarcane has been dominant since the early 19th cent. It remains the most prevalent crop, but in 2002 the government reduced the acreage devoted to sugarcane by 60%; prior to the cutbacks, it had been grown on about two thirds of all crop land. The abandoned cane fields were converted mainly to vegetable farms or cattle ranches. Nearly half the nation's sugar mills were also closed. Sugar and its derivatives are, nonetheless, still the most important exports. Other important exports include nickel, medical products, fish and shellfish, citrus fruits, cigars, and coffee. An excellent tobacco is grown, especially in the Vuelta Abajo region of Pinar del Río, and coffee, rice, corn, citrus fruits, and sweet potatoes are important crops.

Large-scale fishing operations have been encouraged in recent decades, and that industry is now one of the largest in Latin America; Cuban fishing fleets operate from Greenland to Argentina. Livestock raising has also been highly developed.

Manufacturing is centered chiefly in the processing of agricultural products; sugar-milling has long been the largest industry, and Cuba is also known for its tobacco products. There is also a substantial oil-refining industry. Some consumer goods (textiles, fertilizer, cement, etc.) are also manufactured, as well as chemicals and steel.

Although Cuba's nickel deposits are among the largest in the world, extraction is difficult because of the presence of other metals in the nickel ore. Production has nevertheless increased considerably, and nickel is the country's second most valuable export item (after sugar). Large amounts of copper, chromite, and cobalt are also mined, as well as lesser quantities of salt, lead, zinc, gold, silver, and petroleum. Limestone, clay, gypsum, and sulfur production easily meet the country's needs. There are immense iron reserves, but problems of extraction and purification are even greater than with nickel, and iron production is still slight.

In general, the Cuban economy has suffered severely from the collapse in 1990 of the Soviet bloc, upon whose trade Cuba was dependent; from the continuing effects of the U.S. trade boycott; and from internal structural economic problems. The economy showed some recovery in the mid-1990s, due to better economic planning and an increase in productivity. Cuba has upgraded its tourist facilities since 1990, and visitors from Canada, Europe, and elsewhere have revitalized the industry. Tourism has increasingly become the most important source of foreign income for the country.

Government

Cuba is a one-party Communist state; the Cuban Communist party (PCC) is the only legal political party. The country is governed under the constitution of 1976. The government is led by Fidel Castro, who became prime minister in 1959 and president in 1976. The unicameral legislature, the national assembly, is elected directly by the people. Cuba's legal system is based on Spanish and American law mingled with Communist legal theory. Administratively, Cuba is divided into 14 provinces.

History

Pre-Independence History

The island was inhabited by several different indigenous groups when it was visited in 1492 by Christopher Columbus. The Spanish conquest began in 1511 under the leadership of Diego de Velázquez, who founded Baracoa and other major settlements. Cuba served as the staging area for Spanish explorations of the Americas. As an assembly point for treasure fleets, it offered a target for French and British buccaneers, who attacked the island's cities incessantly.

The native population was quickly destroyed under Spanish rule, and was soon replaced as laborers by African slaves, who contributed much to the cultural evolution of the island. The European population was continuously replenished by immigration, chiefly from Spain but also from other Latin American countries. Despite pirate attacks and the trade restrictions of Spanish mercantilist policies, Cuba, the Pearl of the Antilles, prospered.

In the imperial wars of the 18th cent. other nations coveted the Spanish possession, and in 1762 a British force under George Pocock and the earl of Albemarle captured and briefly held Havana. Cuba was returned to Spain by the Treaty of Paris in 1763 and remained Spanish even as most of Spain's possessions became (early 19th cent.) independent republics. The slave trade expanded rapidly, reaching its peak in 1817. Sporadic uprisings were brutally suppressed by the Spaniards.

Desires for Cuban independence increased when representation at the Spanish Cortes, granted in 1810, was withdrawn, yet neither internal discontent nor filibustering expeditions (1848–51) led by Narciso López, achieved results. The desire of U.S. Southerners to acquire the island as a slave state also failed (see Ostend Manifesto). Cuban discontent grew and finally erupted (1868) in the Ten Years War, a long revolt that ended (1878) in a truce, with Spain promising reforms and greater autonomy. Spain failed to carry out most of the reforms, although slavery was abolished (1886) as promised.

Revolutionary leaders, many in exile in the United States, planned another revolt, and in 1895 a second war of independence was launched with the brilliant writer José Martí as its leader. There was strong sentiment in the United States in favor of the rebels, which after the sinking of the Maine in Havana harbor led the United States to declare war on Spain (see Spanish-American War). The Spanish forces capitulated, and a treaty, signed in 1898, established Cuba as an independent republic, although U.S. military occupation of the island continued until 1902. The U.S. regime, notably under Leonard Wood, helped rebuild the war-torn country, and the conquest of yellow fever by Walter Reed, Carlos J. Finlay, and others was a heroic achievement.

The New Nation

Cuba was launched as an independent republic in 1902 with Estrada Palma as its first president, although the Platt Amendment (see Platt, Orville Hitchcock), reluctantly accepted by the Cubans, kept the island under U.S. protection and gave the United States the right to intervene in Cuban affairs. U.S. investment in Cuban enterprises increased, and plantations, refineries, railroads, and factories passed to American (and thus absentee) ownership. This economic dependence led to charges of "Yankee imperialism," strengthened when a revolt headed by José Miguel Gómez led to a new U.S. military occupation (1906–9). William Howard Taft and Charles Magoon acted as provisional governors. After supervising the elections, the U.S. forces withdrew, only to return in 1912 to assist putting down black protests against discrimination.

Sugar production increased, and in World War I the near-destruction of Europe's beet-sugar industry raised sugar prices to the point where Cuba enjoyed its "dance of the millions." The boom was followed by collapse, however, and wild fluctuations in prices brought repeated hardship. Politically, the country suffered fraudulent elections and increasingly corrupt administrations. Gerardo Machado as president (1925–33) instituted vigorous measures, forwarding mining, agriculture, and public works, then abandoned his great projects in favor of suppressing opponents.

Machado was overthrown in 1933, and from then until 1959 Fulgencio Batista y Zaldívar, a former army sergeant, dominated the political scene, either directly as president or indirectly as army chief of staff. With Franklin Delano Roosevelt's administration a new era in U.S. relations with Cuba began: Sumner Welles was sent as ambassador, the Platt Amendment was abandoned in 1934, the sugar quota was revised, and tariff rulings were changed to favor Cuba. Economic problems continued, however, complicated by the difficulties associated with U.S. ownership of many of the sugar mills and the continuing need for diversification.

In Mar., 1952, shortly before scheduled presidential elections, Batista seized power through a military coup. Cuban liberals soon reacted, but a revolt in 1953 by Fidel Castro was abortive. In 1956, however, Castro landed in E Cuba and took to the Sierra Maestra, where, aided by Ernesto "Che" Guevara, he reformed his ranks and waged a much-publicized guerrilla war. The United States withdrew military aid to Batista in 1958, and Batista finally fled on Jan. 1, 1959.

The Castro Regime

Castro, supported by young professionals, students, urban workers, and some farmers, was soon in control of the nation. Despite its popular support, the revolutionary government proceeded with a severe program of political purges and suppressed all remaining public opposition. The new government soon initiated a sweeping reorganization patterned after the countries of the Soviet bloc. Among its successful policy goals have been the provision of adequate medical care and education to the majority of the population. Less successful have been its attempts to diversify agricultural production and achieve a self-sufficient economy.

The expropriation of U.S. landholdings, banks, and industrial concerns led to the breaking (Jan., 1961) of diplomatic relations by the U.S. government. That same year Castro declared his allegiance with the Eastern bloc. Opposition to Cuba's Communist alignment was strong in the United States, which responded with a trade embargo and sponsorship of the Bay of Pigs Invasion. The quick collapse of the latter was especially humiliating to the United States because of its direct involvement.

Cuba's significance in the cold war was further dramatized the following year when the USSR began to buttress Cuba's military power and to build missile bases on the islands. President Kennedy demanded (Oct., 1962) the dismantling of the missiles and ordered the U.S. navy to blockade Cuba to prevent further importation of offensive weapons. After a period of great world tension, Soviet Premier Khrushchev agreed to withdraw the missiles (see Cuban missile crisis).

Cuba's relations with other Latin American countries deteriorated quickly during this period because of its explicit intention of spreading the revolution to those countries by guerrilla warfare. In Feb., 1962, the Organization of American States (see also Pan-Americanism and Punta del Este) formally excluded Cuba from its council, and by Sept., 1964, all Latin American nations except Mexico had broken diplomatic and economic ties with Cuba. After the death (1967) of Guevara while engaged in guerrilla activity in Bolivia, Cuban attempts to encourage revolution in other countries diminished somewhat, and by the early 1970s several nations resumed diplomatic relations with Cuba.

In the late 1960s and 70s Cuba's government policies went through a significant reformulation, including an increased leadership role among less developed nations and a reorganization of its domestic political and economic systems. From 1961 to the late 1980s Cuba was heavily dependent on economic and military aid from the Soviet Union. Cuban support of Soviet foreign policy (notably its invasion of Afghanistan in 1979) caused difficulties in its chosen role as a leader of less developed countries. Cuba also sent large numbers of troops to Angola, where they supported the Soviet-armed government forces in the civil war.

Contemporary Cuba

In the late 1980s Cuban-Soviet relations became distanced as the Soviets moved toward more liberal policy positions. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Cuba lost its primary source of aid, and with the collapse of the whole Soviet bloc, Cuba largely lost its main sources of hard currency and oil and its principal markets for sugar. Castro apparently remained in firm control of the country. Most of those who had initially opposed him had fled the island (between Dec., 1965, and Apr., 1973, a Cuban government–controlled airlift carried more than 250,000 people between Havana and Miami, Fla.). Despite Cuba's severe economic problems, Castro enjoyed some popularity for his social programs. However, Cuba's decision to allow further emigration in 1980 resulted in an exodus of over 125,000 people from Mariel, Cuba, to Florida before it was halted, indicating a significant level of popular discontent.

The economic problems caused by the collapse of Soviet aid, the continuing dependence on sugar, and a long-lasting U.S. embargo led the regime to reverse some of its socialist policies. In 1992 and 1993, the government allowed the use of U.S. dollars, authorized the transformation of many state farms into semiautonomous cooperatives, and legalized individual private enterprise on a limited basis. In 1994 all farmers were allowed to sell some produce on the open market. During the same year, there was a new flood of boat refugees; it stopped only after a U.S.-Cuban agreement was reached. The accord called for Cuba to halt the exodus and for the United States to legally admit at least 20,000 Cubans per year.

U.S.-Cuba tensions increased in 1996 after Cuba shot down two civilian planes operated by Miami-based Cuban exiles. The U.S. economic embargo, which previously had to be renewed yearly, was made permanent, and Americans were allowed to sue foreign companies that profited from confiscated property in Cuba. These measures angered many of America's major trading partners, including Canada, Mexico, and the European Union (the UN General Assembly has voted annually for the embargo's end since 1992). Following a visit by Pope John Paul II to Cuba in 1998, the United States eased restrictions on food and medicine sales to Cuba, and on the sending of money to relatives by Cuban-Americans. U.S. legislation in 2000 exempted food and medicine from the embargo but prohibited U.S. financing of any Cuban purchases. Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter visited the country in 2002. During his visit he criticized both the Cuban government and U.S. policy toward the island. President George W. Bush tightened certain aspects of the embargo in 2003.

Bibliography

See W. F. Johnson, The History of Cuba (4 vol., 1920); E. Abel, The Missile Crisis (1966); R. R. Fagen, The Transformation of Political Culture in Cuba (1969); B. Silverman, comp., Man and Socialism in Cuba (1971); R. E. Bonachea and N. P. Valdés, ed., Cuba in Revolution (1972); J. I. Dominguez, Cuba: Order and Revolution (1978); C. Brundenius, Revolutionary Cuba, the Challenge of a Revolutionary Society (1984); J. Suchlicki, Cuba: From Columbus to Castro (2d ed. 1986); P. S. Falk, Cuban Foreign Policy (1986); L. A. Perez, Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution (1988); J. Stubbs, Cuba: The Test of Time (1989).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Cuba  - 15129 results

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...and Decline of United States Colonies in Cuba, 1898 1930, Hispanic American Historical...727 66. Del Aguila, J. M. 1994 , Cuba. Dilemmas of a Revolution 3rd edn , Boulder...Sergio 1983 , The Health Revolution in Cuba, Austin, TX: University of Texas Press...
...on telecommunications improvement, since Cuba has linked release of the frozen account...Postal Service to provide direct mail to Cuba on charter planes in the absence of common carrier service. Cuba has long held the position that it will...
...overthrow the new revolutionary government of Cuba. However, the complexion of historical...Bloc by agreeing to trade with and aid Cuba and to defend it militarily, was affording...imperial role the United States had played in Cuba. They did not learn of the critical role...
Cuba Transition Project, Repression Intensifying and Broadening in Cuba, Staff Report, Coral Gables, Fla.: University of...for Latin American Studies, The Caribbean Project, Cuba Briefing Paper, No. 18, July 1998. de la Torre...
Banco Nacional de Cuba. 1986. Informe Economico March : 6...Alexis. 1987. "Worker Incentives in Cuba." World Development January . Comision...economicas de los organismos centrales." Cuba: Economia Planificada 4 July-September...
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journal articles on: Cuba  - 4617 results

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Comparative Foreign Policies toward Cuba: Plus CA Change... by Peter McKenna...Charlottetown and the co-author of Canada-Cuba Relations: The Other Good Neighbor Policy...hardening of views towards Fidel Castros Cuba--in part because of Havanas crackdown...
...British West Indian immigrant workers in Cuba, 1912-1939. by Marc C. McLeod In late...upon the sugar central Ermita in eastern Cuba and rounded up a "numerous contingent...Haitian cane cutters who had been working in Cuba for years, including the "elderly" couple...
Foreign Investment in Cuba: Prospects and Perils by Matias F. Travieso-Diaz , Charles...the few sources of foreign capital currently available to Cuba is direct foreign investment. Cuba receives virtually no aid from foreign governments or international...
The Sanctions Malaise: the Case of Cuba by Omar Sanchez WHEN A COUNTRY DOES SOMETHING...explores the use of US sanctions against Cuba to illustrate what is dangerous about their...feasible - informs Washingtons policy towards Cuba. A complex amalgam of factors, including...
Kennedy, Cuba, and the Press by James T. Graham John...Cold War made countries such as China and Cuba off limits to television cameras.9 Kennedy...manipulation was nowhere more evident than in his Cuba policy. Scholars can only now differentiate...
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magazine articles on: Cuba  - 6444 results

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Dateline Cuba: hanging on in Havana. by Andrew Zimbalist...in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, Cuba is now little more than an isolated anomaly...for the United States to pursue a Cold War Cuba policy in a post-Cold War world? If President...
Cuba: The Democrats; a Party Divided and Paralyzed...William M. LeoGrande Washingtons policy toward Cuba in the 1980s resembles nothing so much as...States refuses to recognize Fidel Castros Cuba, as it refused to recognize Mao Zedongs China...
What Cuba can teach Russia by Ana Julia Jatar-Hausmann...account of the disintegration of Castros Cuba." Oppenheimer was not alone in his assessment...the Soviet Union meant the imminent fall of Cuba. Few thought that the only remaining communist...
Cuba Today and the Future of Cuban Socialism...Cuban Philosophers and Social Scientists in Cuba in June 1995. This brief article is motivated...1) There have been a number of changes in Cuba over the last year that impact on several...
The New Cuba Divide. by Daniel P. Erikson THE U.S. embargo of Cuba has been an extraordinarily resilient foreign policy...to cut off the funds to enforce travel restrictions to Cuba; key Senators pushed for even broader repeal of the...
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From Cuba, with unease; Seeds of democracy struggle...Sands and Tom Carter, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Cuba marks tomorrow the centenary of its official...granted to the newly constituted Republic of Cuba on a spring day in 1902 shortly after the...
Can Cuba Cope with More Travelers? Byline: Associated...Congress to do away with U.S. travel bans on Cuba could set off a flood of American visitors...the days of Meyer Lansky and Al Capone. Cuba has about as many hotel rooms as Detroit...
Cuba won game, but falls short otherwise by Tom Knott...They have an abundance of tropical weather in Cuba. They have a shortage of everything else. How can you impress a Cuban in Cuba? Just show one a bar of soap. A tube of toothpaste...
Easing of Cuba embargo clears a major hurdle. by Tom Carter...yesterday to allow food and medicine sales to Cuba, clearing the way for a final historic...agriculture appropriations bill and pointed to the Cuba language as an infringement on the presidents...
Embargoed; Focus on Cuba diverts terror war Byline: Carter Dougherty...attention to what Americans are doing in Cuba. Treasury Secretary Paul H. ONeill and...laws that clamp a tight trade embargo on Cuba. The Office of Foreign Assets Control...
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encyclopedia articles on: Cuba  - 244 results

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CUBA kyoo b , Span. koo ba, officially Republic of Cuba, republic (2005 est. pop. 11,347,000), 42,804 sq mi (110,860 sq km), consisting of the island of Cuba and numerous adjacent islands, in the Caribbean Sea. Havana...
SANTIAGO DE CUBA santya go tha koo ba, city (1994 est. pop. 385,800), capital of Santiago de Cuba prov., SE Cuba. Cubas second largest city, Santiago is situated on a cliff overlooking...
PINAR DEL RIO , province, Cuba penar del re o, province (1994 est. pop. 700,000), W Cuba, the westernmost province of Cuba. Pinar del Rio is the capital. The province, occupying a narrow area, has an irregular and swampy coast; it...
COLON , city, Cuba kolon , city (1994 est. pop. 44,000), Matanzas prov., W central Cuba. It is a rail hub and commercial center for the surrounding agricultural region. Colons sugar industry has declined since the mid-19th cent...
CAMAGUEY , city, Cuba city (1995 est. pop. 295,000), capital of Camaguey prov., E Cuba. The islands third most populous city, Camaguey, is a leading hub of rail, road, and air transport as well as an important commercial center...
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