Nine Cubanologists analyze the causes, nature, and scope of the Cuban crisis.
Preface
Introduction: The Crises of the Castro Regime by Donald E.
Schulz
Treading Water: Cuba's Economic and Political Crisis by Andrew
Zimbalist
Where Does Cuba Stand? by Enrique A. Baloyra
Why Does Castro Survive? by J. Richard Planas
The Cuban Armed Forces and Transition by Phyllis Greene Walker
Informal Politics and the Crisis of Cuban Socialism by Damian J.
Fernandez
Political Changes and Social Attitudes in Cuba during the Special
Period: Implications by J. Richard Planas
The End of the Affair: Moscow and Havana, 1989-1992 by Stephen
Blank
Cuba and the United States: Thinking about the Future by Mark
Falcoff
In Search of a Modern Cuba Policy by Gillian Gunn
The United States and Cuba: From a Strategy of Conflict to
Constructive Engagement by Donald E. Schulz
The Cuban Crisis in Mid-1993: An Opportunity for the United States?
by Donald E. Schultz
Postscript: The Cuban Crisis in the Summer of 1993: An Opportunity
for the United States?
Bibliography
DONALD E. SCHULZ is an Associate Research Professor at the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College. He is the main editor of Revolution and Counterrevolution in Central America and the Caribbeanand Political Participation in Communist Systems and author of The United States, Honduras and the Crisis in Central America (forthcoming). His articles on Cuba and Central America have appeared in Foreign Policy, Orbis, Newsweek, The Washington Post, and other academic and nonacademic publications.
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