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ForeignPolicy

What Does Castro's Resignation Mean for Cuba?

By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted February 20, 2008.


The Cuban people have suffered under an arrogant and idealistic revolutionary whose vision floundered on the rocks of cynical U.S. foreign policy.
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The resignation of Fidel Castro is more promising for the burnishing of his legacy than the mostly septuagenarian Cuban hard-liners in Miami and their fawning allies in the Bush administration would like to believe. After all, Mao Tse-tung is still honored in communist China, the fastest-growing capitalist power in the world, and former KGB agent Vladimir Putin is, at least for now, a very popular elected Russian leader.

Those hoping for a "freedom flotilla" of Cuban exiles returning to remake Havana in the image of 1959, threatening the very future of Las Vegas with legalized prostitution as well as gambling, are likely to be disappointed. Odds are that Castro's successors, beginning with his rhetoric-weary brother, are likely to finally get serious, after decades of fitful starts and reversals, about ending the grip of a moribund statist economy. Reform leading significantly down the path of the Chinese model, or more appropriately that of Venezuela, which has thrown a lifeline to the ailing Cuban economy, is more likely than sudden upheaval.

But those changes will come too late to justify the suffering of the Cuban people for half a century at the hands of a revolutionary, as arrogant as he is idealistic, who witnessed his vision flounder on the rocks of an incredibly cynical U.S. policy. Prime responsibility for that suffering does go to the Colossus of the North, which in the pursuit of economic exploitation and Cold War paranoia consistently preferred Latin American dictatorships to serious experiments in popular rule and strangled the Cuban economy with an embargo in place for the almost five decades since Castro dared move against the U.S. corporations that claimed to own much of the island.

If Castro had attempted to listen to the better angels of his fervid imagination and pursued the path of democratic socialism rather than communist dictatorship, his effort most likely would have been subverted by the CIA, as was the case throughout the world, but it would have been an effort worth making. That was the promise of Castro's famous Moncada speech, offered when he was a jailed young revolutionary dreaming of genuine populist power, and even he must have doubts as to whether, as he predicted back then, "history will absolve me" for the price paid in individual freedom for the revolution's survival in power.

Not that the United States was likely to easily accommodate any populist challenge, as has been shown by the hysterical reaction to Venezuela's finally sharing some of the oil loot with the poor. The failure of Fidel Castro's Cuban revolution to provide a democratic socialist alternative was sealed by the decision of John F. Kennedy, that inexplicable hero of American liberalism, to invade an island that posed no threat to the United States. The U.S. had backed the brutal dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, and the Kennedy administration even enlisted U.S. Mafia thugs, who had the run of Havana under Batista, in a failed attempt to assassinate Castro.

Only months into his presidency, Kennedy ramped up the Cold War -- which Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower had done his best to tamp down -- by committing the United States to military confrontation on opposite ends of the world. In a subversion of Eisenhower's decision not to send U.S. troops to Vietnam, Kennedy lied to the American public about the purpose of his decision to send "flood control" advisers to Saigon as well as the U.S. complicity in the death of Ngo Dinh Diem, the U.S. puppet once proclaimed the George Washington of Vietnam and then summarily murdered in a hit job overseen by Kennedy's CIA operatives. And after Eisenhower resisted calls to overthrow Castro in reprisal for his nationalizing American-owned power grids, nickel mines and sugar plantations in Cuba, Kennedy, in the first months of his administration, ordered the Bay of Pigs invasion.

Yes, the dumbest moves of the Cold War were authorized by a lionized Democratic president and accelerated by his successor, another grand Democrat, Lyndon Baines Johnson. Both, as the record of memoirs, academic research and, in Johnson's case, White House tapes has proved, were motivated by a fear of appearing weaker on national security than their Republican rivals. It provides a cautionary tale in considering the current presidential sweepstakes.

How easy it is to claim to champion universal human rights when you exempt your own country from judgment. When did the U.S. ever care about human rights in Cuba, or anywhere else in Latin America before Castro, if those rights conflicted with the rape of the region's resources? And what a mockery we have made of the cause of democratic rule when our president, twice elected by the people, has created one of the world's most fearsome symbols of torture on the U.S. "liberated" territory of Guantanamo, Cuba.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: venezuela, china, castro, kennedy, cuba, miami, batista, moncada

Robert Scheer is the co-author of The Five Biggest Lies Bush Told Us About Iraq. See more of Robert Scheer at TruthDig.



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I Never Hear Any Kind Words About Batista
Posted by: hole11 on Feb 20, 2008 10:01 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Would it be better if Cuba was run by jewish mafia?

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Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Feb 21, 2008 3:51 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Invasion Time


Direct Primaries!

Direct Elections!

Direct Democracy!

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Arrogant?
Posted by: anna banana on Feb 21, 2008 5:52 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gee whiz, you can't even escape the pseudo progressive crap even on this site! This is an article by a person who apparently doesn't know the history of the last 60 years in Cuba, so he smears Castro with the same anti-Castro stink that comes wafting out of Miami. What did he want Castro to do -- invite the Miami scum to come home for free elections? Invite American businesses -- better yet, the Mafia -- as a way to increase the well-being of the Cuban people? This article is so idiotic! It supposes there was a choice for Cuba to remain independent while joining the Western exploit and ruin foreign policy gluttony. This guy is just another Castro-hating, right-wing goon masquerading as a true progressive, whatever the fuck that is. If this is an indication of what's in store for the Cubans, they should consider mass suicide, Jonesville style. That's right, the alternative being to kiss the ass of the Big Whitey and to join the capitalist brigades that have tried to wipe them off the face of the earth. Thank goodness the Cuban people aren't as stupid as this guy and his cohorts at the NY Times and the Washington Post seem to be -- otherwise they're have those darker Cubans in the brothels before you can say Meyer Lansky.

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» RE: Arrogant? Posted by: callejero
"floundered"?
Posted by: cmcconne on Feb 21, 2008 8:25 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Um...isn't the expression "foundered on" rather than "floundered on"?

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» RE: "floundered"? Posted by: lib3288
Not the way it was!
Posted by: navy-vet on Feb 21, 2008 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Scheer seems to be losing his brains, although this article sounds more right-wing than it is. Castro was arrogant, but Scheer goes on to say why Cuba needed a stubborn, arrogant revolutionary--although Castro often over-reacted. I disagree on many points in this article. The moves against Cuba weren't begun by JFK--although he was a Cold War brinkman--but were from the Eisenhower administration. This is easily corroborated, and it's surprising that Scheer doesn't know that the Bay of Pigs was planned before Kennedy took office, concocted by the Dulles brothers, V-P Nixon, and the US military.

As a Floridian I vividly remember Castro as OUR icon. To many of us in college he was a hero, a Simon Bolivar figure. I graduated from the U of Miami, right on Cuba's doorstep. A Phi Beta meeting I attended in the fall of 1956 broke up when a Cuban-American student ran up to the podium screaming that Batista, the murderous and corrupt dictator of Cuba, had arrested his brother, a student-body officer at the U of Havana, and had him murdered by the police for the crime of speaking in favor of Castro. Oh, we knew Batista very well. For a good portrayal of the vile Batista regime, re-read THE GODFATHER. ANY REPLACEMENT was better, and Castro a lot more promising than most.

I graduated in 1957, two years before the Cuban Revolution, and joined the Navy. Most of the college kids I knew, especially from Latin America, were Castro enthusiasts--even the ones whose dads were rich like Castro's father. Castro got a lot of help from non-Hispanic Floridians. I knew Anglo college boys, who were hardly left-wingers, only idealists. The more adventurous guys began taking their speedboats out to sea during school breaks and vacations, running food and medical supplies (one boat ran guns, so this boy bragged) to Castro's followers in Oriente Province, where they'd been attacked and gone into hiding. At the end of 1956 Castro's force came out of hiding and gathered a vast army of ordinary folk and deserters from Batista's army.

Castro was not a "Soviet" Communist until many months after taking power in 1959--maybe he never was ideologically, but was forced into the rhetoric and alliances with the Soviets by the stupidity of the US, just to keep the Cuban people alive. He was a well-educated upper-class Socialist in love with the US Constitution and Bill of Rights, just as Ho Chi Minh was before we began bombing him, an austere Catholic "Puritan" educated by Jesuits, a social justice lawyer who loathed corruption and crime.

What was his difference? Unlike most other revolutionaries, he kept his promises! He immediately kicked out the Mafia and quickly followed the British lead and nationalized the worst US exploiters, United Fruit, Bell Telephone, and the sugar-field barons. I wasn't the only American (or the only registered Republican) who cheered. When his government nationalized healthcare and milk production and nurtured the healthiest milk-fed kids in the Western Hemisphere south of Canada, we cheered even louder. In 1959 I'd been a Naval officer for two years, and when I gave opinions favorable to what Castro was doing none of my colleagues thought I was a "commie," which, of course, I wasn't. Many of them shared the same opinions, but true information on Castro was getting hard to come by. On TV, the smears and lies began as soon as he nationalized the first big US industry. Fortunately I had subscriptions to RAMPARTS and NATION magazines and got the real scoop.

For Cuba to move now in the direction of labor-exploiting China would be a disaster; I pray they choose Venezuela as a role model.

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» Wow Posted by: RobbieUMD
» RE: Not the way it was! Posted by: daniel1982
Castro arrogant??
Posted by: fearn on Feb 21, 2008 11:25 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How can a person from a country that tries to manipulate EVERY country on earth call a man who never threatened or attacked America "arrogant"? Soon after Castro took over in 1959 America made it clear to him that his government was threatened. Not only did America try to kill Castro on many occasions but it launched numerous attacks against his country. The Bay of Pigs being the most infamous. Instead of helping Cuba to become a more secure and democratic country America did just the opposite.
America arrogance and ignorance is the real problem and it is alive and well at the NYTimes.

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» RE: Castro arrogant?? Posted by: tjg1984
U.S. media response to Castro announcment
Posted by: farleya on Feb 21, 2008 12:28 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Response to the CNN coverage of the Castro announcement, 02/19/08:

How does (U.S. corporate) media, so wrapped in smugness, virtually unnoticed in its assumptions (following the recent Castro announcement of “retirement”), while simultaneously claiming to advocate "democracy" for Cuba and it's people (and “the world”), manage to get by so simply in its near gleeful speculations over plans for “investment" in Cuba (?). How is it that the U.S. media coverage (nearly without exception), reportiing on issues relating to Cuba, assumes the opinions of “exiled”-anti-Castro-Miami-Cubans, fairly represent what are probably the enormously more complicated political views of Cubans now living in Cuba ? Network TV, mogul media, and Washington (D.C.), should “give us a break”, and provide the U.S. public with a bit more useable information and a thorough and public exploration of the issues and spectrum of opinions available, before they assume the views of their audience or constituents (Cuban or American) are no more complicated than those expressed in their coverage of either Cuban or U.S. politics. In spite of Castro, the U.S. Cuban embargo, and (well documented) sixty year U.S. propaganda battle against Castro in this country, there is ample reason to believe and many who would agree that there are aspects of “Castro’s Cuba”, worth protecting from much of the destructive change that unregulated global capital would bring to that culture, society, and its people.

Farley Andrews
farleya@earthlink.net

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Arrogant Part ll
Posted by: anna banana on Feb 21, 2008 2:16 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Now here is someone who has been watching too many Andy Garcia movies. Big Bad Castro – who most Cubans regard as the greatest hero in their history – is defamed by a person who has the nerve to consider himself a progressive. If only Castro had supported a Democratic Socialism, no doubt El Coloso del la Norte would have pulled in its horns to the extent that the CIA mules who were carrying vials of swine fever would have exchanged them for fat Cuban cigars – and satchels full of pesos with which to buy the next election. And no doubt Alan Dulles and his successors at The Agency would have sat squirming at the table, their knives and forks at the ready, saliva pouring down their eager chinny chin chins. Apparently our freedom loving anti-Castro scribe has never heard of Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, Chile, and, until recently, Venezuela. Or maybe he thinks that Father Castro should have adopted the Costa Rican model of Democracy, and simply disbanded its armed forces so as to forestall the inevitable coup d’etat. Unfortunately, this has the effect of leaving the rear of the bank perpetually open, so that any large object can ram its U.S. model up the vault – i.e., an abject surrender to El Coloso. Although said Scribe apparently can’t, others might see why El Presidente resisted this craven, albeit unique, system. Probably he has no desire to see the flowering blossoms of his country giving blow jobs to rich gringos in darkened doorways. Apparently our blogging dilettante is in full-blown ignorance of the role that The Agency has played, not only in Latin America, but in every nook and cranny in the world – where ever move toward any kind of real democracy is viewed as an opportunity to seize control – just ask the folks in Iran, circa 1954, or in pre-Taliban Afghanistan. Such ignorance such as our Senior Blogger displays in his self righteous blather is for the most part inexcusable, given the availability of so much information as regards the ins and outs of Agency’s worldwide intercourse throughout its history; indeed, Osama bin Laden’s favorite American author, William Blum, has written a fairly concise record of this history, available in his book, "Killing Hope." Notwithstanding the propagandistic bathos of Senor Garcia, the notion that Castro had any room to do other than what he did is ridiculous. It’s easy for our left-right-left progressives to pronounce how they might have done it had they been the bee in El Presidente’s ear – there’s simply no risk in shooting off one’s mouth with any cockeyed, ahistorical drivel that occurs to one. It’s another thing when a 6 trillion ton gorilla is trying to squeeze your balls to pate. Personally I wish there were consequences for taking a political position – then the silence would be, as we say, deafening, which is preferable to the crap we’re increasingly exposed to, and which is trying to pass itself off ‘progressive’ and ‘democratic.’ Living as I do in Europe, I have many friends who vacation in Cuba – and what they report is nothing like what's reported in the U.S. media – and on U.S. Blogs. The only anti-Castroism they find is in the wishful thinking of American media types, and of course, with their kindred whackos in Miami.

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» RE: Arrogant Part ll Posted by: GrannyBgood
Anti-communist ? Or just plain stupid?
Posted by: adamskiinasia on Feb 22, 2008 4:11 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Is this guy idealizing western democracy ? Why is the western media so positive that western democracy = good. Other forms of government = bad? This author seems to have forgotten that what America has is not democracy, not even "representative" democracy but rather a plutocracy where elections are a joke to almost half of Americans who don't vote anymore. Most Americans that don't vote aren't tuned out but rather fed up and cynical.

This author seems to think that because Cuba is poor then Castro must be hated and must be evil. China has a one-party state and though most would prefer elections of some kind, they aren't overly oppressed. I lived there as I'm sure many who have lived in Cuba would also say similiar things about Cuba. Mainly that a country's wealth has nothing to do with their happiness or well-being.

If anybody has been to Thailand they would question whether democracy has been good to that country when compared to a country like Burma with authoritarian rule.

One can argue that while peaceful, Thailand's desire to make tourism their main product has polluted and over-developed once-pristine beaches. Burma or for that matter Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia are all opening their borders and despite the west carpet-bombing and spraying defoliants over large portions of it, they remain communist and peaceful. Remember, it was the COMMUNIST Ho Chi Min that sent troops to Cambodia to stop Pol Pot.

In the end I think that though Scheer seems balanced and progressive in most articles I've read from him. He seems the opposite when talking about Communism and other forms of government. Its as though he is pining for the days of Doc Duvalier or Samosa in that region. Has he forgotten America locks up its citizens without trial or access to attorney also? He is assuming that all political prisoners are angels ? Perhaps its the propaganda from the Florida cuban exile community that he laps up ? For all we know perhaps Castro is merely locking up CIA operatives. God knows that country has had its fair share of those (as well as any other country that disagrees with American policy).

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twice ELECTED!?
Posted by: GrannyBgood on Feb 22, 2008 6:02 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ER..Excuse ME, Mr Scheer!
If it is Bush Jr. you're speaking of, NO! He was NOT elected even ONCE! He STOLE both of them.
Let's stop Floundering around and tell it like it is!

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Some corrections to revisionist history
Posted by: ReallyBearish on Feb 22, 2008 10:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Batista was originally removed from power during WWII when FDR forced Cuba to have free elections. Batista was voted out of office.

We might not have had to deal with Castro had the Eisenhower Administration not recognized Bastista's coup that put him back in office. That puts the blame back on Eisenhower and not Kennedy.

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When I first saw the headline,
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Feb 22, 2008 11:04 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought it was about the Cubs, hahahahahaha...

jdfu!

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We're nothing more than...
Posted by: DPS on Feb 23, 2008 12:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great Britian in the post-WWII era...

We're just losing all our 'colonies'...

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This could have been an article in any paper
Posted by: thelostsailor on Feb 23, 2008 2:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
since it carries the same Castro condemnation as the rest of the corporate media. While you did take a couple shots at our government (a corporate media no no...), you spin Castro in a dark light throughout. How about an article praising the many great facets of Cuba's government and country- that would truly be an article not from the depths of corporate media.

It is our great friends over at corporate media that are to blame for the blind, lack of critical thinking and immediate condemnation of Castro.
Give our great media a chance and sadly, most of the country may consider Obama to be a member of Al Qaida before the REAL campaign articles begin with journalistic IEDs set off on your doorstep, desktop, and TV every few hours....

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Cubans do not need American style democracy
Posted by: Lector on Feb 24, 2008 4:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as America stays out of Cuba, Cuba will be fine.

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Cuba has free healthcare
Posted by: jlfittro on Feb 26, 2008 7:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for all you do for the corporate empire of America Mr. Scheer.

Cuba-free healthcare, free education, 92% of the population votes.

USA- no healthcare for me, no free education for my son, no one votes.

You need to get out more often Mr. Scheer.

I can't take this "progressive" site anymore.
No more reading or posting, just raises my bloodpressure. Of course, if I lived in Cuba I could afford to see a doctor, Mr. Scheer.

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