Posted by admin | Posted in Scale Models | Posted on 01-09-2008
Tags: a-20 attack bomber, a10 attack bomber, attack, attack bombers, bomb, bomber, douglas a-20 attack bombers, fast 3 attack bomber, suicide, terrorism
Searching For Attack Bomber ? Limited Offers Below
![]() |
![]() SU 17 Fitter Plastic Model Kit military unused DIY NIB unused kits US $10.99
|
![]() Avro Arrow THE STORY OF THE AVRO ARROW FROM ITS EVOLUT US $27.31
|
![]() INTELLIVISION ATLANTIS BY IMAGIC NIB US $19.95
|
![]() PC Global Ops Commando Libya Game NEW SEALED US $39.99
|
![]() Star Wars Collection 1995 2011 19 Creatures 30 Vehicles 626 Figures US $2,750.00
|
![]() 1942 Press Photo US Bombers Attack Points Solomon Map US $19.88
|
For more well priced, quality Attack Bomber Scroll Down Now
The Bay of Pigs Invasion, John F. Kennedy
A TOTAL FAILURE. Many of the men of Brigade 2506 believed fervently that they were the first wave of Cuban freedom fighters who would liberate their homeland from Castro. They were convinced as they storrned ashore that they would be supported overhead by some of the finest fighter pilots of the U.S. Air Force, and they thought that as they advanced into Cuba, the U.S. Marines would be right behind them. Whether the insurgents had talked themselves into this conviction or the trainers from the United States had made such a promise is still a subject of debate.
The air support promised by the CIA consisted of sixteen B-26 twin-engine light attack bombers. From an airstrip in Nicaragua to the Bay of Pigs was a journey of 1,000 miles, round-trip, which left a B-26 with enough fuel to provide less than forty minutes of air cover for the Brigade. Anything longer than forty minutes and the pilots risked running out of gas somewhere over the Caribbean.
On April 14, 1961, just three days from the invasion, Kennedy called CIA Operations Chief Bissell to ask how many planes he planned to use in the operation. Bissell told the president the CIA planned to use all sixteen of their B-26s. "Well I don't want it on that scale," Kennedy replied. "I want it minimal." So Bissell cut the number of planes for the invasion to eight. The next day, those eight planes attacked the three airfields of the Cuban air force, knocking out some of the aircraft, but not enough to cripple the fleet.
On the morning of April 17, as the Cuban militia pinned down the men of Brigade 2506, the Cuban planes that had survived the air strikes attacked the exiles from the air. Meanwhile, the B-26s, their fuel low and their forty minutes up, veered away from the beach for the flight home. The Brigade's commander, San Román, radioed his CIA handlers for help. "We are under attack by two Sea Fury aircraft and heavy artillery," he reported. "Do not see any friendly air cover as you promised. Need jet support immediately." When San Roman's request was denied, he replied, "You, sir, are a son of a bitch."
With the sea at their backs, no means of retreat, and no chance of advancing into the interior of Cuba, the Brigade was in a desperate position. Back in Washington, the CIA and the Kennedy administration concluded that the invasion would fail. In a conversation with his brother, Robert Kennedy, the president said he wished he had permitted the use of U.S. ships to back up the Cuban exiles. "I'd rather be an aggressor," he said, "than a bum."
On April 18, Kennedy authorized six fighter jets from the aircraft carrier Essex to provide one hour of air cover for the CIAs attacking B-26s over the beach at the Bay of Pigs. But the jets from the Essex and the B-26s missed their rendezvous because the Pentagon forgot to factor in the one-hour difference in time zones between the B-26s' base in Nicaragua and the beach in Cuba.
That same day, Kennedy's national security advisor, McGeorge Bundy, gave the president a status report on the invasion. "The Cuban armed forces are stronger, the popular response [is] weaker, and our tactical position is feebler than we had hoped," Bundy said. That was perhaps the kindest possible description of the Bay of Pigs operation.
As a humanitarian concession, the president permitted U.S. destroyers to approach the Cuban coast to pick up survivors. The ships were authorized to get within two miles of shore after dark, but no closer than five miles during daylight hours. The directive meant the rescue mission was beyond the reach of almost every man in Brigade 2506. A handful who had managed to swim to one or another of the bay's outlying cays were picked up, but the rest lay dead on the beach or were captured by Castro's forces.
At 2 p.m. on April 19, after two days of being pounded by militia, tanks, and the Cuban air force, Commander San Román and Brigade 2506 surrendered. "Everything is lost," Allen Dulles told former vice president Richard Nixon. "The Cuban invasion is a total failure."
Sixty-eight Cuban exiles were killed in the Bay of Pigs debacle; 1,209 were captured, and nine of them died of asphyxiation in a windowless sealed truck that took them from the beach to prison in Havana. After twenty days of interrogation, the prisoners were given show trials and sentenced to life in prison.
Soon after the conviction of the men of Brigade 2506, Castro made a public offer to exchange the prisoners for Farm Machinery. Kennedy leapt at the proposal. Immediately he formed the Tractors for Freedom Committee, chaired by former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, with the purpose of collecting donations to purchase farm equipment for Cuba. But the group was not able to meet Castro's exorbitant demand of $30 million worth of capital relief, and it disbanded. The tractor deal fell through.
Negotiations between the two governments went on sporadically over the next twenty months. Finally, on December 24,1962, Castro announced that he was releasing the Brigade 2506 prisoners in exchange for $53 million in medicine and food from the United States. He also promised, "as a Christmas bonus," to permit 1,000 of the prisoners' relatives to emigrate to the United States.
The animosity between Cuba and the United States intensified after the Bay of Pigs debacle. Cuba allied itself with the Soviet Union, while America continued its policy of isolating Cuba economically and diplomatically. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev viewed America's failure at the Bay of Pigs as a sign of Kennedy's weakness and inexperience, an assessment he felt was confmned after meeting Kennedy at the Vienna Summit of April 1962, where it appeared to some that Kennedy was sandbagged by Khrushchev's threat to cut off West Berlin from the Western powers. Within six months, Khrushchev was placing nuclear missiles in Cuba, an action that brought the world as close as it has ever come to all-out nuclear war.
In the face of the missile crisis, Kennedy held firm. The Soviets backed down, removing the nuclear weapons from Cuba, but the tension between Cuba and the United States has dragged on for more than forty years. During that time, political observers and historians have argued that the failed invasion actually strengthened Castro's grip on Cuba. Certainly Che Guevara thought so. In August 1961, at a meeting of the Organization of American States in Uruguay, he sent a note to Kennedy saying, "Thanks for Playa Giron [another name for the site of the invasion]. Before the invasion, the revolution was weak. Now it is stronger than ever."
The above is an excerpt from the book Failures Of The Presidents; From The Whiskey Rebellion And War Of 1812 To The Bay Of Pigs And War In Iraq
by Thomas J. Craughwell with M. William Phelps
Published by Fair Winds; September 2008;$19.95US/$21.95CAN; 978-1-59233-299-1
Copyright © 2008 Thomas J. Craughwell
About the Author
Thomas J. Craughwell is the author of several books, most recently How the Barbarian Invasions Shaped the Modern World (Fair Winds Press, 2008) and Stealing Lincoln's Body (Harvard University Press, 2007). He has written articles on history, religion, politics, and popular culture for the Wall Street Journal, American Spectator, and U.S. News & World Report. He lives in Bethel, Connecticut.
Journalist, lecturer, and historian M. William Phelps is the author of eleven books, including his most recent, Nathan Hale: The Life and Death of America’s First Spy(Thomas Dunne Books, 2008). He lives in Vernon, Connecticut.
![]() |
![]() SU 17 Fitter Plastic Model Kit military unused DIY NIB unused kits US $10.99
|
![]() Avro Arrow THE STORY OF THE AVRO ARROW FROM ITS EVOLUT US $27.31
|
![]() INTELLIVISION ATLANTIS BY IMAGIC NIB US $19.95
|
![]() PC Global Ops Commando Libya Game NEW SEALED US $39.99
|
![]() Star Wars Collection 1995 2011 19 Creatures 30 Vehicles 626 Figures US $2,750.00
|
![]() 1942 Press Photo US Bombers Attack Points Solomon Map US $19.88
|
![]() ATOMBOMBER PC ARCADE CLASSIC ATOM BOMBER BRAND NEW US $6.75
|
![]() Mussolinis War NEW by Joseph Frank US $43.93
|
![]() Schweinfurt German Hat Lapel Pin HP7123 US $9.95
|
![]() EURO JET 1144 F TOYS PANAVIA TORNADO ITALY Fighter Aircraft Plane FT UR SP3 US $22.49
|
![]() Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Samurai Scooter Vintage 1989 Collectable NEW US $49.95
|
![]() STEALTH NEW DVD US $4.35
|
![]() WAR EVIL AND THE END OF CHARLOTTE MANDELL BERNARD HENRI LEVY PAPERBACK NEW US $20.86
|
![]() Original 7x9 Aerial Photo VULTEE VALIANT BOMBER 1939 US $9.50
|
![]() BLACK SHEEP SGUADRON PHOTOGRAPH SIGNED US $4,500.00
|
![]() Original 8x10 Aerial Photo BOMB ATTACK PTO CENSORED Taken From B 25 Bomber US $9.50
|
![]() Source Code DVD 2011 Brand New Never Opened US $10.00
|
![]() Plan of Attack by Dale Brown 2004 Abridged Compac US $8.99
|
![]() Tamiya 60777 1 72 Junkers Ju88 C 6 Heavy Fighter US $24.00
|
![]() ACADEMY 1 48 scale USAF AARDVARK General Dynamics F 111A Attack Bomber NIB 1647 US $43.00
|
![]() Stealth DVD 2005 2 Disc Set Full Frame US $6.00
|
![]() Car Bomb DVD US $8.88
|
![]() Battle of Europe for PCThe honor of the RAF must be maintained at all costs US $10.49
|
![]() Revell Germany 1 32 Tornado ECR TigerMeet Model Kit US $68.65
|
![]() Second World War Battle of Britain Silver Proof Coin US $115.60
|
![]() Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe Vol 2 DVD 2004 US $3.95
|
![]() 1945 Douglas Bomber A 26 Invader Vintage Color Pin up US $4.99
|
![]() WWII RAF Royal Air Force Pilots Falcon Field Arizona US $38.50
|
![]() Aaron Ahmed by Jay Cantor 2011 Hardcover US $9.99
|
![]() CALL OF DUTY UNITED OFFENSIVE 2 PC Games BRAND NEW SEALED 98 ME 2000 XP US $11.95
|
![]() Sweet Relief The Marla Ruzicka Story by Jennifer Abrah US $9.95
|
![]() LIFE March 19 1945 WALCHEREN ISLAND EARL OF HALIFAX US $12.00
|
![]() 1944 July 31 WWII LIFE Magazine Warplanes Rangers US $12.50
|
![]() 11 Vintage Vietnam War Films F 105 Thunderchief On DVD US $2.25
|
![]() STAR WARS LEGO LOT 8014 8015 8016 8017 8018 8019 8037 US $500.00
|
![]() Just a Dream by Moreland Arbuckle CD Aug 2011 Telarc US $10.50
|



US $10.99


























































