On October twenty-seventh, nineteen sixty-two, the world came within a single vote of nuclear annihilation. Deep beneath the Caribbean Sea, Soviet submarine commander Valentin Savitsky prepared to launch a nuclear torpedo at American destroyers. Two officers had already said yes. Only Vasili Arkhipov's refusal to authorize the launch saved humanity from extinction. But that terrifying moment during the Cuban Missile Crisis didn't happen in a vacuum. It was the direct consequence of a botched invasion that had occurred eighteen months earlier on the beaches of Cuba's southern coast.
In this episode of Disturbing History, we take you inside the complete story of the Bay of Pigs invasion, from its origins in America's Cold War paranoia to its devastating aftermath that continues to shape global politics more than six decades later. We begin in Batista's Cuba, where American corporations owned the sugar fields and American mobsters ran the casinos. Meyer Lansky and Santo Trafficante turned Havana into a playground for tourists seeking pleasures that would get them arrested back home. Meanwhile, Batista's secret police tortured and murdered tens of thousands of Cuban citizens while Washington looked the other way and called him a valued ally.
Then came Fidel Castro. A young lawyer who traded courtrooms for mountain guerrilla warfare. A man who survived disaster after disaster, from the failed Moncada Barracks attack to the catastrophic Granma landing that left him with only twenty survivors. Yet within two years, he had toppled a dictator backed by the most powerful nation on Earth.
What happened next set the world on a collision course with destruction.We reveal how the CIA, drunk on its successes in Iran and Guatemala, convinced itself that Cuba would fall just as easily. How Allen Dulles and Richard Bissell assembled Brigade twenty-five oh six from Cuban exiles and trained them in the jungles of Guatemala. How the agency built an invasion plan on assumptions that were catastrophically wrong, then deceived a young President Kennedy about the operation's chances of success. You'll hear the full story of the invasion itself.
The air strikes that failed to destroy Castro's air force. Kennedy's fateful decision to cancel the second round of bombing. The coral reefs that shredded landing craft. The supply ships sunk by Cuban jets while the brigade watched helplessly from the beach. Seventy-two hours of desperate fighting by men who had been promised American support that never came. We examine the aftermath that changed everything. Kennedy's humiliation and his growing distrust of military advisors, a distrust that may have saved the world during the missile crisis.
Khrushchev's assessment that the young American president could be pushed around. Castro's transformation from embattled revolutionary to seemingly invincible leader with a Soviet nuclear umbrella. The episode traces the direct line from the beaches of Playa Giron to the thirteen days in October nineteen sixty-two when humanity stood at the brink. We explore Operation Mongoose, the CIA's obsessive campaign to assassinate Castro using everything from exploding cigars to mob hitmen. We show how these operations convinced Moscow that Cuba needed protection, leading directly to the deployment of nuclear missiles ninety miles from Florida.
Finally, we examine the long shadow the Bay of Pigs continues to cast over American foreign policy. The patterns of wishful thinking and intelligence failure that repeated themselves in Vietnam and Iraq.
The Cuban exile community's enduring influence on American politics. The embargo that has lasted more than sixty years without achieving regime change. And the human cost paid by the men who fought and died on both sides of a battle that accomplished nothing but tragedy. This is Cold War history at its most dramatic and its most disturbing. A story of hubris, deception, and unintended consequences. A reminder that the decisions made by a handful of men in Washington and Havana and Moscow brought our entire species to the edge of extinction. The beaches of Playa Giron are tourist resorts now. But the consequences of what happened there in April of nineteen sixty-one are still shaping our world today.