Story

I Fought for Fidel

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Authors: Neill Macaulay

Historic Era: Era 9: Postwar United States (1945 to early 1970s)

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November 1991 | Volume 42, Issue 7

Like a hurricane spawned in distant waters, the full force of the collapse of world communism has finally reached the island of Cuba and seems poised to sweep away the last vestiges of the Marxist-Leninist structure erected there over the last three decades. The demise of Cuban communism has been better foretold than its rise: in 1958, few Americans could have imagined the establishment, 90 miles off their shores, of a Soviet-allied state that, within four years, would bring the world to the brink of nuclear catastrophe. I certainly had no idea it could happen; America’s Cold War obsession with communism at home and abroad seemed to ensure that nothing like that would happen. But as it turned out, I unwittingly participated in the making of one of history's great surprises.,

Cuba was in the news in the summer of 1958. One of the biggest stories was the kidnaping of 28 servicemen from the U.S. naval base at Guantánamo Bay by forces allied with Raúl Castro, brother of the Cuban rebel leader Fidel, in June. By the time I arrived in New York City—from Korea via Fort Jackson, South Carolina, where I had separated from the U.S. Army after a tour of duty in the Far East—it was August and Raul had released the hostages after publicly decrying the United States’s alleged support for the Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. Raúl’s stunt had not gone over well with the American public; it gave new credibility to old charges by Batista spokesmen that the Castro brothers were anti-American and pro-communist. But I chose not to believe those charges. I was in New York to make contact with Fidel’s 26th of July Movement and volunteer for his army in Cuba—and to see an American girl I’d met in Mexico two years earlier.

 
By the end of the week, Nancy and I had married. We agreed that she would return to her parents, while I would go to Cuba and rise to power with the revolutionary forces.

Joining the Cuban Revolution seemed like a good idea. I’d followed its progress in Time magazine during my fifteen months in Korea. I had a history degree from The Citadel and two years in the infantry, and soldiering was the only job I’d been trained for. I was temperamentally unsuited for peacetime military service, though. For a while I thought about going to South America to look for lost trails and lost cities, but my application for a Fulbright grant to study archeology in Peru was rejected while I was in Asia. After halfheartedly considering law school, I returned to the States from Korea intent on joining the Cuban rebel army.

But first, I met up with Nancy Copenhaver, who took a week off from her summer job in New Hampshire to see me in New York. By the end of that week we were married. This was a time in