Bay
Of Pigs
Fidel Castro overthrew the US-backed Batista dictatorship in
January 1959 to take control of Cuba, and in 1960 he took over US oil
refineries in the country. In response, the United States stopped
buying Cuban sugar and Castro retaliated by seizing all US-owned
businesses in Cuba.
On April 17 1961, an armed force of approximately 1,500 Cuban
exiles (calling themselves the 2506 Brigade) landed in the Bahía de
Cochinos (Bay of Pigs) on the south coast of Cuba to stage an
unsuccessful invasion (codenamed "Operation Pluto") with the
support of the US government. The fighting force had been trained in
Guatemala by the CIA since May 1960. Supplied with arms by the US
government, the rebels intended to provoke an insurrection in Cuba and
overthrow Castro's regime.
They hoped to gain support from the local population, cross the
island to Havana, and overthrow Castro. Poorly planned and executed,
the invasion was a spectacular failure and the Cuban army easily
defeated the rebels by April 20.
The 2506 Brigade was outnumbered and outgunned, and the freighter
ships containing their reserve ammunition and communication equipment
for the invasion were sunk less than an hour into the battle. The
Cuban exiles fought bravely, but 114 died and more than 1100 were
taken to Cuban prisons. The chances of a successful invasion were slim from the start -
Security for the operation was poor, and a planned decoy
"attack" on the US base at Guantanamo never happened, nor
did the agency's other ace in the hole-the assassination of Castro . .
.
The CIA had hired the Mafia to kill Castro (something which both organizations
dearly desired), with the hit to occur at the same time
as the invasion. Ironically the Mob's hit man was almost assassinated
himself - He was one of eight JFK-backed exile leaders chosen to head
a post-Castro government, but Nixon had them detained during the
invasion. If the invasion had succeeded, all eight would have been
killed, so that Nixon-backed Cubans could take over.
The invasion provoked anti-US demonstrations in Latin America and
Europe, further soured US/Cuban relations and subjected President
Kennedy to severe criticism at home (although he had actually
inherited the invasion plan when he was elected to office and the
operation had been authorized in March 1960 by President Eisenhower).
In December 1962, Castro released 1,113 captured rebels in exchange
for $53 million in food and medicine raised by private donations in
the United States. The consequences of the failure of the Bay of Pigs
invasion lead to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
HISTORICAL NOTE
The CIA war against Castro continued for many years. The agency tried
to kill Castro more than two dozen times, up until at least 1987.
There have also been numerous cases of CIA sabotage in Cuba, including
the use of germ warfare.
As for the Cuban exiles involved in the Bay of Pigs, while some
turned to organized crime, many of those who fought for the CIA
remained loyal after the fiasco. Some Bay of Pigs veterans became
officers in the US Army in Vietnam,
including 6 colonels, 19 lieutenant colonels, 9 majors, and 29
captains. |