Bay Of Pigs Essay

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The Bay of Pigs Invasion was a failed military invasion of Cuba undertaken by the Central Intelligence Agency; it wasn’t originally John F. Kennedy 's idea. As the communist nature of Fidel Castro 's regime became apparent, the urge to topple his government grew. Dwight D. Eisenhower 's administration planned the invasion, which would be handled by the CIA. Planning for the invasion began in 1960, before diplomatic ties with Cuba had been broken. The location was in the southern coast of Cuba. The Invasion was divided between Commanders and leaders, the commanders were Fidel Castro, José Ramón Fernandez, Juan Almeida Bosque, Che Guevara, Cuba Efigenio Ameijeiras and the leaders John F. Kennedy, Allen Dulles, Charles Cabell, Pepe San Roman and Erneido Oliva.
In the 1950s, a young, …show more content…

The CIA formulated a plan to recruit Cuban exiles living in the Miami area. It would train and equip the exiles to infiltrate Cuba and start a revolution to ignite an uprising across the island and overthrow Castro. At least that was the intended outcome. Top US Government officials watched as their decisions led to an entirely different outcome: one that would leave a covert operation exposed, embarrass the new Kennedy administration, end the career of the longest serving Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles, and, ultimately, leave Fidel Castro in power for decades to come.
In April 1960, several CIA officers traveled to Miami, Florida. They were searching for members of the Frente Revolucionario Democratico (FRD), an active group of Cuban exiles who had fled Cuba when Castro took power. These revolutionaries were the ideal individuals to lead an uprising in Cuba, and the CIA, operating with a $13 million budget, recruited 1,400 of them to form Brigade 2506. The Brigade was taken to Useppa Island, a private island off the coast of Florida that was secretly leased by the