This 1961 failed intervention convinced Castro that a Soviet nuclear deterrent was a sovereign necessity.
The Bay of Pigs
This specific technology provided the "smoking gun" evidence of Soviet MRBMs in October 1962.
U2 Aerial Photography
The public portion of the deal required the U.S. to issue this promise regarding Cuba’s sovereignty.
No invasion pledge
Feeling excluded from the negotiations, Castro reacted with this emotion toward the Soviet Union.
Betrayal
This school of history views Kennedy as a hero whose "rational restraint" saved the world from nuclear war.
Orthodox
This 1954 U.S. intervention served as a historical "lesson" to Castro regarding U.S. tolerance for left-wing regimes.
Guatemala
Kennedy chose this specific term for the naval blockade to avoid it being classified as an "Act of War."
Quarantine
This was the "secret" concession Kennedy made to Khrushchev that was kept from the American public.
Jupiter Missiles (Turkey)
This leader used the crisis to accuse Khrushchev of "capitulationism" and "revisionism."
Mao Zedong
This school of history blames Kennedy’s early aggression (Bay of Pigs/Mongoose) for forcing the Soviet hand.
Revisionist
Khrushchev’s primary strategic objective was to achieve this, countering the U.S. nuclear advantage.
Strategic Parity
This advisory body was established by JFK to debate the military vs. diplomatic response to the crisis.
ExComm
This permanent communication link was established to prevent nuclear war through miscalculation.
The Hotline
The crisis served as a primary catalyst for this shift in Cold War relations, aiming for a relaxation of tensions.
Detente
Historians often cite 1962 as the "Zenith" or highest point of this specific Cold War strategy.
This specific Soviet fear described the U.S. lead in Intercontinental Ballistic Missile technology.
The Missile Gap
The crisis reached its peak when this occurred over Cuba, nearly triggering a "Hot War."
U2 was shot down
This 1963 treaty was the first major international step toward slowing the nuclear arms race.
Test-Ban Treaty
Stung by the "humiliation" of 1962, the USSR began a massive buildup to ensure this never happened again.
Nuclear Parity
Post-1962, both superpowers agreed to respect these geographic or political limits that should not be crossed.
Red Lines
This term describes the Soviet geopolitical strategy of placing missiles in Cuba to counter U.S. missiles in Turkey.
Counter-Encirclement
This Secretary of State famously described the standoff as two superpowers being "eyeball to eyeball."
Dean Rusk
The peaceful resolution relied on this diplomatic concept, where both sides conceded to avoid total war.
Pragmatic Compromise
This region saw a sharp increase in U.S.-backed military dictatorships as a direct reaction to the crisis.
Latin America
The outcome of the crisis effectively stabilized this, ending the most dangerous phase of the Cold War in Europe.
Status Quo