There is much to say about the difficult times
humanity is experiencing. Today, however, is a day
of special interest for us and perhaps for many
other people. Throughout our short revolutionary
history, since the insidious coup, carried out by
the empire on March 10, 1952 against our small
county, we have often been faced with the need to
take important decisions.
When there was no other alternative, other young
people, from any other nation faced with our
complicated situation, did, or intended to do the
same as us, although, in the particular case of
Cuba, fate, as on so many other occasions throughout
history, played a decisive role.
Due to the scenes created in our country by the
United States at that time, with no other objective
than to curtail the risk of limited social advances
which could inspire future radical changes in the
Yankee property that Cuba had become, our Socialist
Revolution was conceived.
The Second World War, which ended in 1945,
consolidated the dominance of the United States as
the principal economic and military power, and
turned the country – which itself lay far from the
battle fields – into the most powerful on the planet.
The crushing victory of 1959 - this we can assert
without a shadow of chauvinism - became an example
of what a small nation, fighting for itself, can
also do for others. Latin American countries, with a
minority of honorable exceptions, leaped upon the
crumbs offered up by the United States; for example,
Cuba’s sugar quota which, for almost a century and a
half had supplied this county during its most
critical years, was divided up among producers eager
to enter world markets.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, the illustrious U.S.
General who governed the country at the time, had
led allied troops in the war in which they liberated,
despite their own powerful means, just a small part
of Europe occupied by the Nazis. The substitute for
President Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, turned out to
be the traditional conservative who usually assumes
such political responsibilities in the United States
during difficult times.
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics – which,
until the end of the 20th century was the greatest
nation in the history of the struggle against the
ruthless exploitation of human beings – was
dissolved and replaced with a Federation which
reduced the area of that great multinational State
by no less than 5.5 million square kilometers.
There was something, however, that could not be
dissolved: the heroic spirit of the Russian people
who, together with their brothers from the rest of
the USSR, have managed to preserve a force powerful
enough that, in addition to the People’s Republic of
China and countries such as Brazil, India and South
Africa, they constitute a group with the necessary
power to curb the attempts to recolonize the planet.
We experienced two illustrative examples of these
realities in the People’s Republic of Angola. Cuba,
like many other socialist countries and liberation
movements, collaborated with Angola and others who
were fighting against Portuguese control in Africa.
This control was exercised through direct rule with
the support of its allies.
Solidarity with Angola was one of the key issues
for the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries and the
Socialist Camp. The country’s independence was
inevitable and was accepted by the international
community.
The racist State of South Africa and the corrupt
government of the former Belgium Congo, with the
support of European allies, carefully prepared to
conquer and divide up Angola. Cuba, who had been
supporting the nation’s struggle for many years,
received a request from Agostinho Neto to train the
Angolan armed forces which, stationed in Luanda, the
country’s capital, should be ready by November 11,
1975, when Neto would officially take office. The
soviets, faithful to their commitments, had supplied
military equipment and were only awaiting the day of
independence to send instructors. Cuba, for its part,
agreed to send the instructors requested by Neto.
The racist regime of South Africa, globally
condemned and despised, decided to advance its plans
and send forces in armored vehicles, equipped with
powerful weaponry which, having advanced 100
kilometers from its border, attacked the first
training camp, where various Cuban instructors died
following heroic resistance. After several days of
fighting by those valiant instructors and Angolans,
they managed to halt the South African advance
towards Luanda, the capital of Angola, to where a
battalion of Special Troops from the Ministry of the
Interior had been transported from Havana, in the
Cuban airline’s old Britannia fleet.
That was how the epic struggle in that sub-Saharan
African country began, terrorized by the racists
whites, in which motorized infantry battalions and
tank brigades, armored artillery and other fighting
means, repelled the racist South African forces,
forcing them to retreat back to the same border from
which they had come.
It was not in 1975 that the most dangerous period
of struggle occurred. That would come approximately
12 years later, in southern Angola.
Thus what seemed liked the end of the racist
escapade in southern Angola was only the beginning,
but at least they had learnt that the revolutionary
forces of white, mulato and black Cubans, together
with the Angolan soldiers, were able to make the
supposedly invincible racists swallow the dust of
defeat. Perhaps they relied too heavily on their
technology, wealth and the support of the dominant
empire.
Although it was never our intention, the
sovereign attitude of our country was not without
conflict with the USSR, which itself did so much for
us in truly difficult times, when cutting the fuel
supplies to Cuba from the United States could have
led to a prolonged and costly conflict with the
dominant Northern power. Whether this danger existed
or not, the dilemma we faced was deciding whether to
be free or to resign ourselves to being slaves to
the powerful neighboring empire.
In a situation as complicated as that of Angolan
independence, in the direct fight against
neocolonialism, it was impossible for differences
regarding some aspects not to arise, which could
have had serious consequences on the planned
objectives, which in Cuba’s case, as part of this
struggle, had the right and duty to lead it to
success. Whenever we believed that any aspect of our
foreign policy could be at odds with the strategic
policy of the USSR, we did everything possible to
avoid it. The common objectives required that each
respect the merits and experience of the other.
Modesty is not incompatible with the serious
analysis of the complexity and importance of each
situation, although in our policy we were always
very strict with everything relating to solidarity
with the Soviet Union.
At decisive moments of the struggle in Angola
against imperialism and racism, such a situation
occurred, which stemmed from our direct
participation in the fight and the fact that our
forces not only fought, but also trained thousands
of Angolan combatants, who we supported in their
struggle against the pro-Yankee and pro-racist
forces of South Africa. A soviet solider was the
government advisor and directed the Angolan forces.
We disagreed however, on an important point: the
reiterated frequency with which he defended the
erroneous measure of stationing the best trained
Angolan troops more than 5,500 kilometers from the
capital of Luanda, an idea relating to a different
kind of warfare, nothing like the subversive and
guerilla character of the Angolan
counterrevolutionaries.
In reality the National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola didn’t have a base, nor did
Savimbi have a point from which to resist, it was a
trap by the South African racists which served only
to lure the best and most well equipped Angolan
troops there, to strike them at will. We therefore
opposed the strategy - which was applied more than
once – until the end when it was demanded that we
hit the enemy with our own forces which led to the
battle of Cuito Cuanavale. I would say that the
prolonged military confrontation against the South
African army was the result of the last offensive
against Savimbi´s supposed "capital" – in a distant
corner of the border between Angola, South Africa
and occupied Namibia -, toward which the valiant
Angolan forces, departing from Cuito Cuanavale, a
former NATO military base, well equipped with the
newest armored cars, tanks and other combat means,
began their 100 kilometer march to the supposed
counterrevolutionary capital. Our bold fighter
pilots supported them with Mig-23s whilst they
remained still within their combat radius.
Once they passed those limits, the enemy launched
a heavy attack against the Armed Forces for the
Liberation of Angola soldiers with their combat
planes, heavy artillery and well equipped ground
forces, resulting in heavy casualties of dead and
injured. But this time, in their pursuit of the
battered Angolan brigades, they headed towards the
former NATO military base.
The Angolan units retreated in a front several
miles wide separated by gaps of a few kilometers.
Given the severity of the losses and the dangers
which could result from them, employing the usual
means, a request was sent to the President of Angola
to appeal to Cuba for support, and that’s what he
did. The firm response this time was that the
request would only be accepted if all Angolan forces
and means of combat on the Southern Front were
subordinated to Cuban military command. This
condition was immediately accepted.
Forces were quickly mobilized for the battle of
Cuito Cuanavale, where the South African invaders
and their sophisticated arms clashed with armored
units, conventional artillery and the Mig-23s flown
by our brave pilots. The Angolan artillery, tanks,
and other means in the area which lacked personnel
were made ready for combat by Cubans. The Angolan
tanks which during their retreat could not overcome
the obstacle of the mighty Queve River, to the east
of the former NATO base – the bridge over which had
been destroyed weeks before by an unmanned South
African plane laden with explosives – were buried
and surrounded by anti-personnel and anti-tank
mines. The advancing South African troops came up
against an insurmountable barrier against which they
crashed. In this way, with a minimal number of
casualties and advantageous conditions, the South
African forces were decisively defeated on Angolan
soil.
But the fight was not over; the complicity of
Israeli imperialism had turned South Africa into a
nuclear country. Once again our army was faced with
the risk of becoming the target of such weapons. But
this point, with all the relevant facts, requires
further elaboration, which can perhaps be written in
the coming months.
What happened last night which led to this
lengthy analysis? Two things, I consider to be of
singular significance:
The departure of the first Cuban Medical Brigade
to Africa to fight against Ebola.
The brutal murder in Caracas, Venezuela, of the
young revolutionary Member of Parliament, Robert
Serra.
Both events reflect the heroic spirit and
potential of the revolutionary processes taking
place in the homeland of José Martí and the
birthplace of the liberation of Latin America, the
heroic Venezuela of Simón Bolívar and Hugo Chávez.
How many shocking lessons can be learnt from
these actions! Words can hardly express the moral
value of such events, which occurred almost
simultaneously.
I will never be able to believe that the murder
of the young parliamentarian was the work of chance.
It would be really inconceivable if the repugnant
act, comparable to those orchestrated by the worst
Yankee intelligence organizations, had not been
committed intentionally, even when it absolutely
fits the plans and actions of the enemies of the
Venezuelan Revolution.
Anyway, the position of the Venezuelan
authorities to emphasize the need to thoroughly
investigate the nature of the crime seems absolutely
correct to me. The people, however, have expressed
their deep conviction regarding the nature of the
brutal and bloody act.
The departure of the first Medical Brigade to
Sierra Leone, noted as one of the areas most
seriously affected by the cruel Ebola epidemic, is
an example which the country can be proud of; as in
this instance it is not possible to reach a higher
place of honor and glory. Just as nobody had the
slightest doubt that the hundreds of thousands of
combatants who went to Angola and other African
countries, had provided humanity with an example
which will never be able to be erased from human
history; nor can it be denied that the heroic action
of the army of white coats will occupy one of the
highest places of honor in this history.
It won’t be the producers of lethal weapons who
receive this deserved honor. May the example of the
Cubans heading to Africa also capture the hearts and
minds of other doctors around the world, especially
those who posses resources, practice a religion or
have the deepest conviction to fulfill the duty of
human solidarity.
Those heading to fight against Ebola and for the
survival of other human beings have a difficult task
ahead of them, even risking their own lives. We must
not cease in our efforts to ensure that those who
fulfill such duties count on the maximum safety in
the tasks they undertake and the measures they must
take to protect themselves and our own country from
this and another illnesses and epidemics.
The personnel heading to Africa are also
protecting those who remain here, because the worst
that can happen is that this epidemic or other more
serious illnesses reach our continent, or the heart
of any community in any county in the world, where a
child, mother or human being could die. There are
enough doctors on the planet to ensure that no one
has to die due to lack of medical attention. This is
what I wish to express.
Honor and glory to our valiant fighters for
health and life!
Honor and glory to the young revolutionary Robert
Serra and his partner María Herrera!
I wrote these ideas on October 2 when I learnt of
both pieces of news, but I preferred to wait another
day in order for public opinion to form and ask
Granma to publish it on Saturday.

Fidel Castro Ruz
October 2, 2014
8:47 p.m.