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Veiled Strategies in Foreign Intervention. Bay of Pigs Classified Planning CIA's Catastrophic Cuba Operation Before Truth Emerged
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- Nombre de pages165
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-45193-7
- EAN9783565451937
- Date de parution21/05/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
This book examines how veiled strategies in foreign intervention unfold when classified planning meets harsh reality, using the Bay of Pigs operation to reveal the consequences of secrecy breakdown in covert missions. The operation aimed to overthrow Castro but collapsed, exposing limits of deniability and prompting reassessment of covert action.
The intelligence flow relied on exile networks and paramilitary training, creating a channel that presumed secrecy.
This dependence introduced friction as logistical support and intelligence sharing proved inconsistent, undermining the assumption that covert actions could remain isolated. Decision-making hierarchy concentrated authority in a small executive circle that accepted risk assessments without broad scrutiny, enabling rapid approval despite internal doubts about feasibility. Such centralization meant that lower-level officers executed orders even when field reports indicated low chances of success, showing how top-down directives can override operational caution.
Incentive structures rewarded decisive action against communism, offering career advancement for those who delivered results while penalizing hesitation, which encouraged optimism over realistic appraisal of enemy strenngth. When the intervention failed, the resulting scrutiny revealed how these mechanisms had prioritized political deniability over effective coordination, prompting a reevaluation of how secret operations are authorized and supervised.
This dependence introduced friction as logistical support and intelligence sharing proved inconsistent, undermining the assumption that covert actions could remain isolated. Decision-making hierarchy concentrated authority in a small executive circle that accepted risk assessments without broad scrutiny, enabling rapid approval despite internal doubts about feasibility. Such centralization meant that lower-level officers executed orders even when field reports indicated low chances of success, showing how top-down directives can override operational caution.
Incentive structures rewarded decisive action against communism, offering career advancement for those who delivered results while penalizing hesitation, which encouraged optimism over realistic appraisal of enemy strenngth. When the intervention failed, the resulting scrutiny revealed how these mechanisms had prioritized political deniability over effective coordination, prompting a reevaluation of how secret operations are authorized and supervised.






