RT Article T1 Caribbean Taliban: Cuban American terrorism in the 1970s JF Terrorism and political violence VO 31 IS 2 SP 390 OP 409 A1 McPherson, Alan LA English YR 2019 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/187023734X AB Most scholars have not taken Cuban-American terrorism in the 1970s seriously, despite the unprecedented campaign of terror it unleashed. Borrowing a framework of self-identity usually applied to other terrorist groups and using case studies of the Cuban Nationalism Movement in New Jersey and of Alpha 66 in Florida, this article argues that Cuban-American political ideology was the key to its impact and its support from communities in Florida and New Jersey. Militant exiles saw themselves as betrayed by two enemy states, entitled to rule in their homeland, and imbued with a mission of civilizational renewal. In these ways, Cuban-American terrorists were similar to the Taliban in Afghanistan and their reign of terror in the 1970s should be appreciated as a major episode in the history of U.S. and global terrorism. NO Gesehen am 14.11.2023 NO Published online: 25 Oct 2018 K1 Cuba K1 Cuban Americans K1 Cuban Nationalist Movement K1 Alpha 66 K1 Ideology DO 10.1080/09546553.2018.1530988