Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The results of the Cuban Missile Crisis
- The consequences for the leaders
- Kennedy
- Crisis gave him a much needed foreign policy success - which
strengthened his presidency - To avoid humiliating Soviets he sensibly
ordered 'no boasting, no gloating, not even a claim of victory'
- Could claim to have removed the Soviet threat from the USA's
'backyard' and to have prevented a superpower nuclear exchange
- 10 days after crisis - Kennedy reaped domestic political
rewards in US Congressional elections - Democrats won their
biggest majority in the Senate for 20 years
- He pledged to not removed Castro from Cuba - hence accepted
that, for the foreseeable future, Cuba would be communist
- Kennedy secretly agreed to remove missiles from Turkey - decision taken
without knowledge of Turkish govt was not revealed to public until 1968
- Khrushchev
- Could claim credit for safeguarding Castro's regime by obtaining
the US pledge not to invade Cuba - Called this 'a spectacular
success' which was achieved 'without having to fire a single shot'
- Could also argue that Soviet action in Cuba had removed the US missiles in Turkey
- Ultimately - Khrushchev chose peace over brinkmanship but the
Soviet descent in October 1962 couldn't be disguised
- Soviet military never forgave him - saw it as a humiliating failure and
this was a key factor in Khrushchev's removal from office in 1964
- The easing of tension in 1963
- CMC had brought superpowers to brink of nuclear war
- In aftermath - both sides recognised that confidence-building
measures were needed to reduce tensions in crisis situations
and to limit likelihood of nuclear war
- Within a year - superpowers had signed 2 important
initiatives which helped to achieve this
- The 'hot-line' agreement June 1963
- CMC had highlighted need for rapid
communication between the superpowers
- As a result - 'hot-line' telegraph link was set up between the
Whitehouse and the Kremlin
- So that in crisis times - leaders could contact eachother
immediately to hold discussions
- Aim - to ensure that any misjudgements or misunderstandings
could be resolved before a serious crisis developed
- Nixon and Brezhnev used the 'hot-line' in 1971 during the India-Pakistan War
- The Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
August 1963
- By October 58 - both superpowers - aware of the positive publicity value - began
a voluntary suspension on nuclear tests which lasted almost 3 years
- During this period - formal agreement couldn't be reached as the
USSR rejected US demands for rigorous 'on-site' inspections
- August 1961 - USSR resumed atmospheric tests
- USA followed suit with new round of underground and atmospheric tests
- Sobering impact of CMC led the 2 and Britain to sign the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 1963
- Banned them from conducting nuclear tests in the atmosphere,
underwater or in space - Underground testing still permitted
- The beginnings of détente
- Restrained by the experience of the CMC - superpowers made
greater efforts to avoid direct confrontation in the future
- Superpowers only just avoided nuclear war in October
1962 - both sides were keen to establish better relations
- Led to a period of superpower détente which
reached a high point int he 1970s