| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1959 - 1148 páginas
...SMITH. Senator, we are responsible for bringing Castro in power. I do not care how you want to wTord it. Senator DODD. Wouldn't you want to say the partiality...up, Senator, and that is the recognition of Castro. nized a new Government, to be sure of the following. I do not place them in order of their importance,... | |
| United States. Congress. House Internal Security - 1969 - 1130 páginas
...Smith, former American ambassador to Cuba, 'the US was so overwhelmingly influential in Cuba . . . that the American ambassador was the second most Important...sometimes even more important than the president." Actually, the president and other Cuban officials could only act within limits fixed by the VS The... | |
| Ash Narain Roy - 1999 - 152 páginas
...that "the United States, until the advent of Castro, was so overwhelmingly influential in Cuba that. . .the American Ambassador was the second most important...man in Cuba; sometimes even more important than the President".6 The story of other Latin American countries was only partly different. Political hegemony... | |
| Clara Nieto - 2003 - 628 páginas
...committee: "[T]he United States, until the advent of Castro, was so overwhelmingly influential in Cuba that the American Ambassador was the second most important...man in Cuba, sometimes even more important than the [Cuban] President." Smith also reiterated his fears of Communist infiltration in the rebel ranks.'8... | |
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