The Cuban Missile Crisis globalizes the revolution's consequences
In October 1962, the discovery of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba triggered the Cuban Missile Crisis, the most dangerous confrontation of the Cold War. Britannica dates the crisis from October 22 to November 20, 1962, while the U.S. Office of the Historian explains that Soviet deployment followed both the failed Bay of Pigs invasion and fears of another U.S.-backed attack. For Cuba, the crisis demonstrated that the revolution had irreversibly altered the island’s place in world politics. A movement that began as a domestic struggle against Batista had, within a decade, become entangled with superpower rivalry and nuclear strategy. The episode cemented Cuba’s importance in global history and defined the revolution’s long-term geopolitical legacy.