More than 60 years after its conclusion, the Cuban Missile Crisis still offers lessons on decision making and leadership.
Nearly half of Cuba was left without power as blackouts worsened due to fuel shortages and the failure of aging power plants.
The blockade continues despite appeals to fundamental principles. A journalist in Havana portrays a “humanitarian crisis ...
Cuba's top leadership said its plan to help recover the communist-run island's bankrupt economy is advancing, but too slowly, ...
The deployment of Soviet medium-range missiles only 90 miles from Key West in 1962 brought the world as close as ever to a ...
The fresh regulations come into effect as Cuba navigates its worst economic crisis in decades, with severe shortages of food, fuel and medicine and a record-breaking exodus of its citizens.
Every day, Cuban mother Mayra Ruiz wakes up wondering if today might be the day she hears from her only son, Maiquel Gonzalez. Gonzalez disappeared ...
Cuba experiences extensive blackouts due to fuel shortages and failing power plants. The National Electric Union reports ...
In October of 1962, President John F. Kennedy faced off with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev over the Soviets’ emplacement ...
Kuznetsov, dispatched by the Kremlin to take over the Russian end of UN negotiations on the Cuban crisis, held his first conference with acting Secretary General Thant Kuznetsov was accompanied by ...
In the wake of these provocations, analysts fret about the heightened risk of military accidents and strategic misperceptions ...
The Cuban Missile Crisis happened one year after the construction of the Berlin Wall, which was a major source of Cold War tension in Europe. America and the Soviet Union were competing in the ...