Question for the conspiracy believers who think the CIA/government largely controlled (and still does) the media through Operation Mockingb ird.
How do you explain the below story? About 10 days before the invasion the NY Times ran a front page piece giving details about the plan. JFK had learned beforehand that they were going to run the story and called the NY Times and asked that it not be published. They refused. They did omit some details, reduced the story from four columns to the one below, and moved the story down but otherwise ran with it. JFK was furious.
So why didn't the CIA get the story stopped? Of all of the stories they would want to suppress this would be near the top. But they couldn't stop it? Why not? And I won't even start to mention all of the stories that exposed the CIA's abuses, the so-called "Family Jewels." If the CIA controlled the media how did *those* get published?

What if the CIA was responsible for leaking that story via the NY Times? Are you familiar with the term "limited hangout"? Plus, the NY Times has a history of publishing "scoops" directly from CIA sources.
David Talbot, who wrote a book about the life of Allan Dulles, has speculated that the planners of the Bay of Pigs intended for the operation to fail. The objective of the failed operation was to pressure JFK to use direct military force against Cuba.
Given how poorly planned the operation was and how it was one of the worst kept secrets at that time, it seems plausible that the goal was not a successful operation but for the failure to be used as a pretext for US escalation.