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We're reading different history books, I've read the generals disobeyed his orders which caused the invasion to fail.
Here is what happened.
The background has a number of elements. First of all, when the corrupt leadership of China, then our ally, was defeated by a communist revolution a few years after World War II, just as America was reaching peak 'red scare', it was a huge political issue in the US who to blame for "Who lost China?", as if it was someone in the US's 'fault' for not defeating the Chinese revolution. We were in strong denial about it, not recognizing the new government in mainland China.
This was still very strong as JFK became president. Eisenhower and Nixon told Kennedy that the one issue that they would attack him for publicly would be if he recognized China - ironic considering how that was seen as Nixon's top foreign policy achievement later.
There was an element of a feeling of betrayal regarding Castro. From Castro's view, he tried to 'work with the US' as a leftist leader, but was completely rebuffed by an administration who had been overthrowing democracies to install corrupt right-wing dictators. They slammed the door in his face. Then for the survival of his government he turned to the other alternative, the Soviets, who were glad to get an ally close to the US, after the US had been recruiting allies near them.
The CIA had actually supported Castro at first; the American people saw Castro as someone who had hidden his plan to become a Soviet ally and communist once in power, and they felt betrayed.
At the same time, the Soviets had recently been the first to launch a satellite. There was a myth that the Soviets had many more nuclear missiles than we did (actually, they had four to our thousands). the American people were scared. "Who lost Cuba" echoed the "Who lost China" politics, and there was a great demand to undo Castro.
The Eisenhower administration had made the CIA a covert operations agency; the first was Iran in 1953, next Guatemala in 1954 that became the model. They were used to designing plots. As Kennedy won the election, Eisenhower ordered the assassination of the first elected president of the Congo, Patrice Lumumba, who Kennedy had planned to make his key ally in Africa.
So, it was natural for the administration to make a plan for Cuba, which involved a secret support for Cuban exiles to be trained and invade. Nixon badly wanted the operation launched before the election to help him win, but they were unable to complete the preparations, including training the Cubans in Guatemala, in time.
During the window while Kennedy was president-elect, the operation greatly expanded. Nixon had been the political leader; the operation's designer was Richard Bissell, head of covert operations, the man who had run the U-2 program.
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