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[TEASER] Cuba Pt. 8: Lessons from the Fall of the USSR w/ Helen Yaffe

Upstream

Upstream

Politics, News, Society & Culture

4.9 • 2.1K Ratings

🗓️ 26 May 2026

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is a free preview of the episode "Cuba Pt. 8: Lessons from the Fall of the USSR w/ Helen Yaffe." You can listen to the full episode by subscribing to our Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/upstreampodcast

As a Patreon subscriber you'll get access to at least one bonus episode a month (usually two or three), our entire back catalog of Patreon episodes, early access to certain episodes, and other benefits like stickers and bumper stickers—depending on which tier you subscribe to. access to bi-weekly bonus episodes ranging from conversations to readings and more. Signing up for Patreon is a great way to make Upstream a weekly show, and it will also give you access to our entire back catalog of Patreon episodes along with stickers and bumper stickers at certain subscription tiers. You'll also be helping to keep Upstream sustainable and allowing us to keep this project going.

In this episode, part 8 of our ongoing Cuba series, we're joined again by Helen Yaffe for a conversation exploring the lessons Cuba learned from the crisis brought on by the fall of the USSR—known as Cuba's "special period". Helen Yaffe is a professor of Latin American political economy at the University of Glasgow. She is the author of We Are Cuba! How a Revolutionary People Have Survived in a Post-Soviet World, and Che Guevara: The Economics of Revolution. She is also the cohost of the Cuba Analysis podcast and the documentary "Cuba's life task: combating climate change."

Our conversation begins with an introduction to Cuba's "special period", the period of economic crisis in Cuba which occurred as a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union. Helen gives us some context on how closely entwined Cuba's economy was to its primary trading partner, the Soviet Union, before describing how this partnership was impacted in 1991 and what this meant for Cuba more broadly. 

Before we discuss the ways that Cuba adapted to the loss of the USSR, we discuss how the United States took advantage of the crisis in 1991 to strengthen sanctions through mechanisms like the Torricelli Act and the Helms-Burton Act while also engaging in outright terrorism out of Miami—including the "Brothers to the Rescue" incident (and the CIA-trained terrorist network within which it was situated) that serves as the pretext for the Trump administration's recent indictment of Raúl Castro.

Helen then goes on to describe in more detail the impacts on Cuba of the fall of the USSR and takes some time to talk about how Cubans adapted in the midst of this crisis, drawing from both her scholarly work and also from her experience living in Cuba during this period. We end by discussing the Cuban medical brigades and how this program adapted in the post-Soviet era, particularly in shaping Cuba's relationship with many states in Latin America and reshaping its own economy, before drawing lessons for the current crisis facing Cuba.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

A quick note before we jump into this Patreon episode.

0:03.1

Thank you to all of our Patreon subscribers for making upstream possible.

0:07.3

We genuinely couldn't do this without you.

0:10.0

Your support allows us to create bonus content like this

0:13.2

and to provide most of our content for free

0:15.5

so we can continue to offer political education media to the public

0:19.6

and help to build our movement.

0:21.7

Thank you, comrades. We hope you enjoy this conversation. This incredible thing happened, which is that the Cubans pulled together and they pulled through,

0:51.3

and they survived as individuals, a society and as a socialist

0:55.6

country. And so that's why there are so many lessons in the special period. And interestingly,

1:01.7

when it started to get really difficult in Cuba, Miguel Diascanal, the president who took over from

1:07.9

2018, came out several times and says, we're looking at the special

1:13.0

period. You know, we're going to learn from methods that we adopted then to survive. You're

1:18.2

listening to Upstream. Upstream. Upstream. Upstream. A show about political economy and society

1:25.7

that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew

1:29.2

about the world around you. I'm Robert Raymond. And I'm Della Duncan.

1:34.6

Cuba's special period was a period of economic crisis in Cuba, which occurred as a result

1:40.2

of the collapse of the Soviet Union, a block of communist states which accounted for the vast majority of Cuba's economic trade.

1:49.0

During this crisis, Cuba and its people learned many lessons in adaptation and struggle,

1:55.0

both in the face of material shortages, but also in terms of ideological resolve.

2:03.0

And these lessons are being applied now to Cuba's present crisis, one which resembles

2:08.5

the special period in many, many important ways.

...

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