Fair Play for Cuba Committee
The Fair Play for Cuba Committee (FPCC) was an activist group set up in the United States early in 1960. The FPCC's purpose was to provide grassroots support for the Cuban Revolution against attacks by the United States Government once Fidel Castro began openly admitting his commitment to Marxism and began the expropriation and nationalization of Cuban assets belonging to U.S. corporations. The Committee opposed the Bay of Pigs invasion of 1961, the imposition of the United States embargo against Cuba and was sympathetic to the Cuban view during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962.
Related Topics:
Activist - United States - 1960 - Grassroots - Cuban Revolution - United States Government - Fidel Castro - Marxism - Nationalization - Corporation - Bay of Pigs invasion - 1961 - United States embargo against Cuba - Cuban Missile Crisis - 1962
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The main current interest in this group is that its most visible member in the New Orleans, Louisiana area was briefly Lee Harvey Oswald, later the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy.
Related Topics:
New Orleans, Louisiana - Lee Harvey Oswald - Assassin - President - John F. Kennedy
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On May 26, 1963, Oswald wrote to the Fair Play for Cuba Committee and proposed "renting a small office at my own expense for the purpose of forming a FPCC branch here in New Orleans". Oswald was issued a membership card on May 29th, the same day he ordered 1,000 handbills from a local printer, they read "Hands Off Cuba! Join the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, New Orleans Charter Member Branch, Free Literature, Lectures, Everyone Welcome!". Throughout his period of activity, Oswald was the sole member of the FPCC's New Orleans branch.
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On August 9, 1963, Oswald got into a fight with Cuban exile Carlos Bringuier while handing out leaflets. As a consequence, Oswald was arrested and on August 12, found guilty and fined $10. While in prison he was visited by an FBI agent.
Related Topics:
August 9 - 1963 - Carlos Bringuier - August 12 - FBI
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On August 12, Oswald debated Bringuier on the issue of Castro and Cuba on the Bill Stuckey Radio Show explaining that "the principles of thought of the Fair Play for Cuba consist of restoration of diplomatic trade and tourist relations with Cuba.... We are primarily interested in the attitude of the US government toward Cuba. And in that way we are striving to get the United States to adopt measures which would be more friendly toward the Cuban people and the new Cuban regime in that country." Oswald did not fare well in the debate and was confronted with accusations about his past in the Soviet Union and his activities in New Orleans. A month later, he moved to Dallas.
Related Topics:
August 12 - Soviet Union - Dallas
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Like almost everything else associated with the Kennedy assassination, the Fair Play for Cuba Committee has been the subject of much speculation. It was often suspected of being a Soviet front with little real support outside of a few dedicated American Communists (such suspicions were not entirely unfounded, as it later came out that the Socialist Workers' Party had a huge hand in at least the Los Angeles branch); in more recent years it has also suspected of having largely or entirely been a puppet organization of the FBI or some other U.S. governmental agency used to identify Communists and Communist sympathizers.
Related Topics:
Kennedy assassination - Soviet - Communists - Socialist Workers' Party - FBI
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In his 2002 book, The Kennedy Conspiracy (2002), Anthony Summers asserted that documents indicate both the Central Intelligence Agency and the FBI infiltrated the FPCC. He quoted a CIA officer saying "We did everything we could to make sure it was not successful - to smear it... to penetrate it. I think Oswald may have been part of a penetration attempt."
Related Topics:
2002 - Anthony Summers - Central Intelligence Agency
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Lee shut down the national Fair Play for Cuba Committee in December 1963 when its landlord evicted the group from its national office; the notoriety accorded to it following the November 22 1963 Kennedy assassination made it impossible for the committee to continue its work. Although several groups are currently working to end the U.S. embargo against Cuba, none seem to be lineally descended from the Fair Play for Cuba Committee or to be interested in being associated with that exact name.
Related Topics:
November 22 - 1963
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