American Backlash In Cuba

Words: 570
Pages: 3

While Cuba tried different ideas to help stimulate their economy, not much worked but they were getting by. Cubans started dollar stores where visitors with American dollars could buy consumer items like televisions, radios, fans, and more. They were a huge success and got over 1 million between 1979-1980. In the late 1970s, President Reagan suspended U.S. travel to Cuba in order to deprive them of getting money from U.S. tourism -- only diplomats, journalists, researchers, and family visits were allowed. In January 1962, Organization of American States voted to expel Cuba and sever diplomatic relations and have a trade boycott. Throughout the next two decades, regulations against Cuba became more and more strict and tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union increased. …show more content…
It also authorized the President to withhold U.S. foreign aid, debt relief, and free trade agreements with other countries that provided assistance to Cuba (Rumbaut and Rumbaut, p. 90). This bill faces a lot of backlash as it was put in place to provide more hardships for Cuba after they were already suffering from the Soviet Union collapse. This adds another point of when enough is enough and where people find themselves having anti-U.S. views because many of the Cuban people needed and wanted help but the U.S. was set on getting Fidel out of power no matter the consequences. Fidel was the same way with getting the U.S. out of Cuba, a plethora of measure were put in place to shut down U.S. businesses which caused thousands of Cubans to lose their jobs and suffer. It will be fascinating to see if Cuba and the U.S. will be ever to fully get past or overlook what happened between them since it hurt so many people on both