"There were places where they had to move lampposts or
even houses to get through. If the missiles had to pass a populated place, the
electricity would be cut and no-one was allowed out of their houses. But people
talked - they knew what was happening."
'Two huge
powers'
The key moment, though, was when a US spy plane snapped aerial images of one
of the launch sites. The USSR originally thought the 22 metre-long missiles
could be mistaken for palm trees.
"I think the Soviets could have concealed the missiles if they'd asked for
Cuban help. They could have disguised the site as a chicken farm or tobacco
sheds," Mr Jimenez argues.
"They barely took any camouflage measures. It's one of the incomprehensible
aspects of the crisis," he says.
Two days after the photographs were taken, President Kennedy was informed and
on 22 October he announced a naval blockade of Cuba.
Older Cubans remember the tense days that followed. Across the island, men
had been mobilised. Others took crash courses in first aid, learning how to act
under bombardment.
Some recall revolutionary fervour; many stress that work, and socialising,
went-on as normal; but plenty were aware of the danger.
"If something had gone wrong, it would all have been over," Julio Luaces, now
76, remembers with a grimace.
His family farm was on one site chosen for a Soviet base so he was moved out,
but retained access to round-up his animals that would wander there. He saw the
missiles, and spoke to the soldiers.
"These were two huge powers, the USSR and USA. They weren't two lads messing
around. We knew the danger for everyone. It was ugly," Mr Luaces says.
'We're still here'
That danger peaked on 27 October when an American spy plane was shot down
over Cuba. What the US didn't know then is that the USSR had also sent 100
tactical nuclear missiles to the island. An invasion would likely have triggered
their use, and a deadly chain reaction.
Critically, cool heads prevailed. Two days later, Nikita Khrushchev agreed to
remove the strategic missiles, and John F Kennedy pledged not to invade Cuba.
Quietly, the US also agreed to remove its missiles from the Soviet border with
Turkey.
The world breathed an enormous sigh of relief. But in Cuba, that was mixed
with anger.
"People didn't understand why they removed the missiles in return for a
verbal agreement, something that can be broken," explains Mr Jimenez, a young
militia member himself at the time.
"People in our battalion cried that day: not from fear, but indignation. We
felt betrayed by the Soviets, doing a deal with the US without considering Cuba.
It hurt us a lot," he says.
Fidel Castro's own five demands for a deal, including ending the US trade
embargo on Cuba and the return of Guantanamo from the US military, were ignored.
Those remain festering issues today.
But the 1962 crisis can boast one result for Communist Cuba, 50 years on.
"We're still here," points out Oscar Fernandez Mel, then commander of the
armed forces in western Cuba.
"When it finished, what we thought was - we've won another one! They didn't
bomb or attack us," he says.
"It was this little island, against the most powerful country in the world
and we're still here."
Logan P.
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