Why has one island shaped the ambitions of empires, triggered superpower confrontations, and repeatedly found itself at the centre of world history?
This is the story of Cuba - the largest island in the Caribbean, just 90 miles from Florida, and one of the most strategically important pieces of real estate on Earth.
Long before Fidel Castro, Che Guevara and the Cuban Missile Crisis, Cuba was coveted by great powers for a simple reason: geography. Spain built an empire around it. Britain tried to seize it. The United States spent generations trying to dominate it. The Soviet Union turned it into the frontline of the Cold War. Today, as Russian warships return to Havana and China expands its footprint on the island, Cuba's strategic importance is once again impossible to ignore.
But geopolitics is only half the story.
From the first Indigenous societies and the arrival of Columbus, through conquest, slavery and sugar plantations, independence wars, American intervention, dictatorship, revolution and communism, Cuba's history is a story of competing visions of freedom, sovereignty and power. It is a story of extraordinary resilience, profound suffering, revolutionary ambition and enduring controversy.
Bianca Nobilo explores just over five centuries of conflict, looking at one thing that never changed: Cuba was never just an island. It was a strategic platform - one the world has been fighting over ever since.
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