Ortsac cigars might seem like a curious name for a Nicaraguan cigar, but there's a good story behind it relating to the United States of America and Cuba in 1962.
Operation Ortsac was the code name of a proposed invasion of the Cuban mainland by the United States military. It was one of the possible solutions to the Cuban Missile Crisis discussed by the government, designed to remove the danger of nuclear weapons from a hostile outpost less than 100 miles away from the Florida coast. Ultimately, it was discarded in favor of a blockade, and negotiations resulted in the threat being removed without that kind of military escalation.
For those of a certain age, the thought of Cuban-American relations in the early 1960s conjures up memories of bomb shelters and air raid drills. Ortsac cigars might be the inspiration to at least mitigate that with thoughts of an excellent hand-made cigar filled with premium tobacco and crafted to be a smooth and satisfying experience. It's Nicaraguan, of course, rather than being Cuban in origin, but the experience is definitely that of smoking premium cigars.
As some of you may have noticed, Ortsac is also Castro spelled backwards. Perhaps not the most creative secret code name in the world when we're talking about military planning, but a fine-name indeed for a cigar like this one.

Operation Ortsac was the code name of a proposed invasion of the Cuban mainland by the United States military. It was one of the possible solutions to the Cuban Missile Crisis discussed by the government, designed to remove the danger of nuclear weapons from a hostile outpost less than 100 miles away from the Florida coast. Ultimately, it was discarded in favor of a blockade, and negotiations resulted in the threat being removed without that kind of military escalation.
For those of a certain age, the thought of Cuban-American relations in the early 1960s conjures up memories of bomb shelters and air raid drills. Ortsac cigars might be the inspiration to at least mitigate that with thoughts of an excellent hand-made cigar filled with premium tobacco and crafted to be a smooth and satisfying experience. It's Nicaraguan, of course, rather than being Cuban in origin, but the experience is definitely that of smoking premium cigars.
As some of you may have noticed, Ortsac is also Castro spelled backwards. Perhaps not the most creative secret code name in the world when we're talking about military planning, but a fine-name indeed for a cigar like this one.







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