ABSTRACT

The Cuban Revolution of 1959 was a benchmark of triumph and a harbinger of tragedy to come. Rather than herald a new era of Cuba joining the world community of nations as a paragon of democracy as many fervently hoped and believed it would, it became instead a new stage in authoritarian rule in the Western hemisphere.For more than a half century since then Cuba has been defined by the capacity of a single family to command and determine the fate of a nation and to do so with a minimum of opposition. Incredibly, even those professing adhesion to democratic norms have been ready to forgive the dictator his excesses. This volume explains the theory and practice of this absence of internal opposition and the persistence of external support for the Castro family and its entourage.The Long Night of Dark Intent is chronological in order, with the author indicating major points in each of the five decades covered. The volume covers five centers of system analysis: economics, politics, society, military, and ideology. Who or what "determines" events and decisions is the stuff of real history. It is precisely due to variability in causal chains in society that we have huge variance in levels of predictability. The course of the Cuban Revolution gives strong support for such an approach to the Castro Era. This is a unique, unflinching account with a strong emphasis on the importance of U.S. policy decisions over time.

part |68 pages

1960s: Guerrilla Dictatorship

part |153 pages

1970s: Consolidation of Communism

part |32 pages

1980s: Militarization of the Regime

chapter 14|13 pages

C. Wright Mills and Listen, Yankee

chapter 16|4 pages

Fidel’s “Soft” Stalinism

part |231 pages

1990s: Regionalization and Retreat

chapter 19|10 pages

The Dictator Who Would Be King

chapter 20|10 pages

New Beginnings and Familiar Endings

chapter 23|19 pages

The Conscience of Castrologists

chapter 26|15 pages

Consequences of the American Embargo

chapter 28|4 pages

The Jewish Experience in Cuba

chapter 29|5 pages

Castro and the End of Ideology

chapter 31|8 pages

Cuban Models and Democratic Choices

chapter 32|5 pages

Endless Celebrations for an Old Dictator

chapter 33|14 pages

Reality Avoidance and Political Pilgrimage

part |110 pages

2000s: Dissolution of Political Power

chapter 37|7 pages

The Two Cubas of Elián González

chapter 39|10 pages

Humanitarian Capitulation

chapter 45|11 pages

Cuba, Castro, and Anti-Semitism

chapter 46|9 pages

Semper Fidel

chapter 47|11 pages

Mi Vida: The Manichean Face of Dictatorship