AT this moment, nobody doubts that
the Bush administration’s new foreign policy is
basically one of military intervention, without
respecting international institutions or world
public opinion. The excuse of fighting terrorism has
been demonstrated as the perfect alibi to substitute
the previous one: the threat of Communism during the
Cold war. Other less effective reasons lie behind it,
not so effective as the anti-drug fight. The silence
of the United Nations after the Iraq invasion, the
European Union (EU)’s copycat behavior and the
ferocious control it maintains on the great majority
of Arab countries via puppet dictators thus
guaranteeing impunity to the U.S. government.
The United States has not forgotten
to send out sound bites on its next military
objectives — Syria, Korea, Iran and Cuba. Just as in
Iraq, the strategy begins by sowing seeds in
international institutions, friendly governments and
world public opinion suggesting complicity with
international terrorism in those countries that are
the object of intervention. They are called
dictatorships and accused of human rights violations.
This campaign is undoubtedly being speedily
developed against Cuba. Let us see how.
On April 30, 2003 the U.S.
government once again included Cuba on its list of
countries sponsoring international terrorism, in an
annual report entitled Patterns of World Terrorism
(2) which also mentions Iraq, Iran, Syria, Sudan,
Libya and North Korea. The report specifies that
although Cuba has signed all the 12 international
conventions and protocols against terrorism, and
Sudan 11 of them, both countries continue supporting
international organizations that are designated
terrorist. This is a great paradox if we recall that
on four occasions, Cuba has officially proposed a
bilateral program to fight terrorism to the United
States and which the northern neighbor has always
rejected.
Nor should we forget Vice President
Dick Cheney’s statement on the day that Baghdad was
occupied. He affirmed that had happened was a clear
message to all the countries involved in terrorism
(3).
In May, 2002, Under Secretary of
State John Bolton accused Cuba of developing a
biological warfare program. Many notable statements
have been issued by Bush administration members; for
instance the president’s own brother Jeb Bush,
governor of Florida, who affirmed that after the
success in Iraq, Washington should put an end to the
regime in Cuba. Or Hans Hertell, U.S. ambassador to
the Dominican Republic, who assured that the war in
Iraq would send out a very positive sign and be a
very good example to Cuba. He added that the
invasion of the Arab country was only the beginning
of a crusade for freedom to reach all the countries
in the world, including Cuba (4).
The U.S. military intention in Cuba
can be seen in publication such as Military Review,
a magazine from the Command School and the U.S.
Chief of Staff. In the September-October 2002 (5)
edition, Lieutenant Colonel Geoff Demarest openly
refers to the subject of the U.S. army’s role
during a supposed transition period
in Cuba. He affirms in the second paragraph that the
U.S. army’s role could focus on stability operations
and, in the name of applying the and/or rule,
supporting aid agencies. He later includes an
epigraph eloquently entitled: "A role for the U.S.
Army?"
This is where he begins detailing
all the previous excuses serving to justify military
intervention: Migration to and from the island;
weapons arsenals (including thousands of small arms
and ammunition); the enormous Lourdes intelligence
collecting center; allegations of drug trafficking
on the part of members of Castro’s regime; and the
alleged biological weapons research and development
program are just some of the aspects to take into
consideration that could possible complicate
transition. The lieutenant colonel’s text concludes
by stating that the U.S. army has a clear message...the
U.S. army could be very useful for its potential to
interact with Cuban soldiers, as well as for its
ability to threaten them.
If we look at the footnotes
referring to the paragraph listing the reasons for a
U.S. army intervention it can be seen that all these
statements are based on journalist articles from
agencies and people financed by the U.S. government.
(El Nuevo Herald, The Miami Herald, Brothers to the
Rescue, Cubanet/Cubanews, The Washington Times
Insight magazine).
As we shall soon see, when the
United States talks about freedom of expression and
dissident journalists it is referring to press
agencies and writers directed and financed by the
Bush government with the sole aim of planting
arguments that, as this soldier’s text later proves,
will be used to justify a military intervention.
FINANCING DISSIDENCE
What mechanisms are used in
financing these supposedly independent journalists
and agencies?
The U.S. Interests Section
systematically hands over material and financial
support. This translates as radios and all types of
technical means plus a payroll of $100 per month for
all those visiting James Cason, head of the U.S.
mission (see note 4).
In 2000, USAID donated $670,000 to
three Cuban organizations to help publish the island’s
independent journalists’ work abroad...and
distribute their writing in Cuba (6).
USAID provides an exceptional amount
of funding for financing the Cuban dissidence. In
order to help create independent NGO’s in Cuba:
$1.602 million. Planning the transition in Cuba:
$2.132 million. Evaluating the program: $335,000.
Groups in the United States gather
together all this money. Let us see who some of them
are. In 2002, the Center for a Free Cuba, whose
function it is to collect information from human
rights groups in order to spread and distribute it,
received $2.3 million. Internal Dissidence Working
Group: $250,000. Freedom House, responsible for the
Cuban transition program’s strategic questions:
$1.325 million. Dissidence Support Group: $1,200.
There are others such as the
Democracy in Cuba Institute and the International
Republican Institute. In 2001, the Cubanet agency
received $343,000 plus another $800,000 in 2002. The
American Center for International Solidarity Work,
whose declared social objective is persuading
foreign investors not to invest in Cuba: $168,575.
Cuban Democratic Action received $400,000 in 2002
(7).
Between 1997 and 2002, USAID
destined $22 million to these ends. On March 2,
Curtis Struble, the assistant secretary of state for
western hemispheric affairs, indicated that this
year USAID would be investing another seven million
dollars in "economic aid" to Cuba. On March 26,
Colin Powell announced to the Senate a $26.9 million
budget for Radio and TV Martí transmissions (8).
Radio Martí transmits 1,200 hours a
week from the United States, contravening
International Telecommunication Union rules and
violating Cuba’s radio air waves space. The programs
encourage internal subversion, sabotage attempts,
desertion and illegal immigration.
It is obvious that nothing but U.S.
government money lies behind the so-called
dissidents and independent journalists and agencies,
with a clear and concrete proposition.
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
It is also important to discover the
profiles of the freedom fighters of the so-called
dissident leaders and intellectuals. The most
significant of those recently jailed is the poet
Raúl Rivera.
This former member of Cuba’s
Association of Journalists and Writers had a heady
conversion: he was employed by the powerful Miami
Herald, Southern Florida’s most conservative daily.
He was next catapulted to vice president of the
Inter-American Press Society (SIP) Caribbean
department, grouping U.S. and Latin America
mainstream press barons. This organization is an old
stronghold of Cold War conspirators in the service
of Washington.
One of the best known figures is
Carlos Alberto Montaner, imprisoned in Cuba in 1961
for taking part in a terrorist organization that hid
explosives in packets of cigarettes. He fled the
country during the October Missile Crisis and
enlisted in the U.S. army’s special Cuban forces.
The CIA recruited him in the 1970’s and he
reappeared in Spain (1970) to found the Firmas Press
news agency. Montaner was in charge of facilitating
terrorist Juan Felipe de la Cruz’ entry into France;
de la Cruz was killed when the bomb he was carrying
exploded. Montaner is one of those who openly
support the United States’ annexing Cuba. In 1990,
he founded the Cuban Democratic Platform and the
following year the Cuban Democratic Coordination
(CDC), a dissident organization inside the island.
CDC members include Cruz Varela, Huberto Matos, José
Ignacio Rasco and Juan Suárez Rivas. Carlos Montaner
was also a founding member of the Cuban Spanish
Foundation (FHC) (9).
Oswaldo Payá is another
internationally known dissident, especially after
the European Parliament gave him the Sajarov award.
They say that he has received massive popular
support in Cuba for his Varela Project, signed by
11,000 Cubans — in a country with 11 million
inhabitants — and five thousand Europeans from 15
countries. According to documents signed by Carlos
Alberto Montaner, foreign governments initiated the
Varela Project. James Cason, head of the U.S.
Interests Section in Havana, admitted that Miami’s
Cuban-American National Foundation (CANF) and the
Freedom for Cuba Council, responsible for various
attacks in Cuba in which civilians died and
assassination attempts on the Cuban president (see
note 8), are being consulted over the plan for a
democratic transition.
One of Payá’s charming exploits was
to accuse Fidel Castro of complicity in violating
human rights in Guantánamo (10); in an interview
with Madrid’s El Pais weekly on March 9, 2003 he
stated that that under the Batista dictatorship the
Cuban press was incredibly free. This brilliant
intellectual, with unknown sources of income, has
been on a two-month world tour. Carlos Fazio puts it
very clearly: The strategy for building leaders is
simple and the example of Oswaldo Payá eloquent:
create a letterhead, fabricate an organization or an
ad hoc NGO (in his case the Varela project);
organize well publicized and planned tours and meet
well-known figures (Pope John Paul II, Spanish head
of government José María Aznar, Mexican president
Vicente Fox, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell)
and accept prizes that increase the individual’s
visibility (Payá received the Sajarov human rights
award and has been proposed as a Nobel prize
candidate). This is the way to go about building a
certain kind of credibility profile around a person
to give them power, a task that is later amplified
by propaganda makers and the "great democratic pens"
of the U.S. and European mainstream press (see note
8).
Hubert Matos is another relevant
person. He spent twenty years in jail for rebelling,
along with his men (he was head of a rebel Army
regiment in Camagüey), ten months after the triumph
of the Cuban revolution. On leaving prison (and
Cuba) in 1979, he formed the Independent and
Democratic Cuba (CID) group. Former Batista
journalist Luis Manuel Martínez said that Matos has
been in "CIA hands" ever since he left the island.
He was director of the Voice of CID, a short wave
radio station broadcasting to Cuba partially
financed by the CIA, as radio Miami International
owner Jeff White has confirmed (see note 9).
Proof of his spirit of freedom can
be seen in the reply he gave to journalist Hernando
Calvo Ospina when he asked him about dissidents
links with company directors wishing to invest in
Cuba: we can’t guarantee the safety of these
investors after the regime falls; they won’t be
respected because they have been accomplices of the
regime; they will be a cause of friction. Of course
if they offer us good economic support then we can
do business (11).
The Estefan clan (Gloria and Emilio)
have big plans. They are Bacardi shareholders and
thus financiers of terrorist acts in Nicaragua,
Angola and Cuba and accomplices to stealing Cuban
patents. Gloria and Emilio Estefan sponsor other
para-terrorist organizations such as Brothers to the
Rescue whose aircraft have been violating Cuban
airspace for years.
The CIA recruited Martha Frayde,
former Cuban ambassador to UNESCO in Paris, when she
was working at that post. Together with Elizardo
Sánchez, Gustavo Arcos and Ricardo Bofill, she
organized a miniscule counterrevolutionary group
that has informed the U.S. delegation at the UN
about alleged human rights violations in Cuba. She
represented Gustavo Arcos at the inauguration of the
Cuban Spanish Foundation in Madrid (see note 9).
The writer Zoe Valdés is now very
much in fashion, although she was an absolute
unknown until she was given the Planeta prize.
Shortly before the war in Iraq began she wrote an
article for El Mundo (Madrid) daily affirming that
she wanted the war to start once and for all so that
she could have some peace from all those anti-war
signatures.
During a conversation in 1985, when
she was an unheard of writer and wife of a high
ranking official at the Cuban embassy in Paris,
Spanish journalist Javier Ortiz called Zoe Valdés’
opinions "truly cloying Castroism." (12)
Let us conclude with two important
figures who may not be of Cuban origin but must not
be forgotten: Robert Menard from France and Mexican
Jorge Castañeda. Menard is the secretary general of
NGO Reporters Without Frontiers, an organization
that, two days after two journalists were killed by
a tank fire in Baghdad, dedicated practically the
entire home page of its on-line web page to the lack
of free expression in Cuba (13). When asked by
journalist Hernando Calvo Ospina about the priority
his organization gave to Cuba, he replied: It’s
dangerous being a journalist in Colombia or Peru but
there is press freedom. Journalists are murdered and
imprisoned in those countries but their relatives
and colleagues are content with making denunciations
(see note 11).
On May 20, the UN Committee
responsible for NGO’s sanctioned Reporters Without
Frontiers, recommending that its consultative status
be suspended for one year due to behavior
incompatible with the principals and objectives of
the UN Charter. (14)
Former Mexican foreign minister
Jorge Castañeda has had the merit of ending the
historically good relation between Mexico and Cuba.
At the end of last year, White House
spokesman Ari Fleischer confirmed that Casteñeda’s
ministerial term was over even before President Fox
did. (15).
EMIGRATION AND DESTABILIZATION
One of the mechanisms used by the
United States to provoke the Cuban government and
destabilize the island’s society is emigration. U.S.
policy is based on providing incentives and
encouraging violent and spectacular emigration
attempts projecting an image of desperation to the
rest of the world. The objective is not to normalize
migration policy or offer possibilities in the
United States to Cuban dissidents; it is aimed only
at destabilizing. The 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act,
strongly criticized by the Cuban government, is one
of the laws serving this purpose and once again
demonstrates that the U.S. government is two-faced.
Different to any other Latin
American immigrant, a Cuban who arrives at the U.S.
coasts is guaranteed a visa — thanks to the
Adjustment Act. A Haitian rafter would immediately
be sent back to his or her country; but not Cubans.
After the 1994 rafters crisis when
waves of Cubans left Havana for the United States,
completely unrestricted by the Cuban government,
both countries signed an agreement regulating
emigration and establishing that the United States
would concede 20,000 visas a year to Cubans
requesting them. However, in 2002, the United States
only authorized 200 out of the 20,000. And in the
first five months of the present year, it only
issued 505, a number that has declined in relation
to previous years. This rate does not fulfill
migratory agreements, thus creating an atmosphere of
tension among those wanting to emigrate, encouraging
illegal emigration. Some Cubans not granted legal
entry visas by the U.S. authorities are then given
them in virtue of the Cuban Adjustment Act when they
leave on a raft or hijack whatever means of
transport. This is the opposite of European policy
aimed at dissuading illegal African and Latin
American migration. Europe rewards those who use the
legal embassy channels and punishes those who arrive
by illegal channels with repatriation and
prohibiting them from entering the country for
various years.
By not fulfilling migratory
agreements the U.S. objective is to increase
internal pressure and encourage boat and aircraft
hijacking. It is safe to say that if the Cuban
government once again applied its 1994 policy of
allowing uncontrolled emigration then the United
States would have a new excuse to intervene,
alleging a threat to its national security that the
mass arrival of illegal Cubans could bring.
Cuba is now experiencing the
greatest ever stimulus for illegal emigration. In
the seven months before the trials, seven Cuban
aircraft and boats were hijacked.
International law regards such
hijackings, some involving weapons and hostages, as
acts of terrorism punishable under international
conventions. Nevertheless, in four of the cases the
United Sates has not brought the hijackers to trial
and they remain at liberty in that country.
Fidel Castro has indicates that this
plan was put into action the same day that war began
— approximately two hours before war was initiated
in Iraq, at about 7:00 p.m. — when a passenger
aircraft on the Nueva Gerona (Isle of Youth)/Havana
route was hijacked. This was carried out by six
common criminals; they brandished knives in a
similar way to the hijackers of U.S. passenger
planes that were then flown into the Twin Towers.
The Cuban passenger aircraft carrying 36 passengers
was deflected from its route and forced to land in
Key West. A few days later the Miami DA Office set
the hijackers free on bail. It had been nine years
since a similar occurrence, the number of years
after the U.S.-Cuba migratory agreements were signed,
and it suddenly took place two hours before the war
(16). This impunity led the way for more kidnappings
involving dozens of hostages.
U.S. complicity in hijack terrorism
is such that on June 1, a U.S. judge confiscated
from the Cuban governmetn and auctioned the hijacked
DC-3 that put down in Key West and the Russian AN-24
hijacked in April by a man carrying grenades (17).
Terrorists armed with grenades who
hijack civil aircraft and take hostages are not just
left unpunished, but Cuban government property is
confiscated—and put up for auction. This entire
strategy follows a plan developed beforehand
consisting in using the wave of hijackings to
provoke a migratory crisis that could be used as a
pretext for a naval blockade, that would then
inevitably lead to war. Thus Kevin Whitaker, head of
the State Department’s Cuba Bureau, cynically warned
Havana that hijackers of Cuban aircraft and boats
are a threat to U.S. security. The behavior of the
U.S. and Cuban governments is diametrically opposed
when it comes to hijacking airplanes. The United
States has confiscated many of the 51 Cuban planes
hijacked between 1959-2001 and not one single
hijacker has been punished. Cuba has sentenced 69 of
those responsible for 71 cases of planes hijacked in
the United States and flown to the island; the other
two hijackers were handed over to the U.S. legal
authorities. (18)
38lemon2
A HISTORY OF TERRORISM
The possibility of a U.S.
intervention in Cuba is an evident one, as
demonstrated by the long history of hostile and
terrorist actions, attempts on the life of the
president and constant violation of international
law on the part of the United States in order to do
away with the Cuban socialist system.
Dating back to the attempted Bay of
Pigs invasion in 1961, armed attacks can be counted
in the hundreds. One of the most savage was the
sabotage of a Cubana passenger plane in full flight
in 1976 off the Barbados coast, which killed all 73
persons on board, and the wave of terrorist attacks
on tourist facilities in the 1990s, organized and
funded by the Cuban-American National Foundation (CANF),
which led to the death of an Italian tourist.
According to the Cuban government,
the U.S. policy of terrorism has caused the death of
3,478 Cuban citizens and left a further 2,099
incapacitated or seriously affected. The U.S.
government has tolerated assassination attempts on
President Fidel Castro and other revolutionary
leaders on hundreds of occasions, and has even been
physically involved itself. It is responsible for
the sabotage of the French vessel La Coubre, the
arson attack that destroyed El Encanto department
store, for organizing and giving armed forces’
backup at the failed Bay of Pigs invasion, for
numerous air and sea pirate attacks on defenseless
citizens and civilian installations. The United
States has supported the burning of cane fields, the
machine-gunning of Cuban territory, attacks on Cuban
fishermen and the murder of National Revolutionary
Police and Border Guard agents.
The U.S. government bears
responsibility for acts of terrorism involving bombs
and explosives against the Cuban diplomatic mission
in Portugal, to the United Nations and in other
countries, causing deaths and serious injury to
diplomatic personnel. It is responsible for the
disappearance of Cuban diplomats in Argentina and
the assassination of another diplomat in New York.
Those actions are continuing today.
On April 26, 2002 a plan to attack the legendary
Tropicana nightclub with explosives that could have
killed up to 1,000 people was thwarted, according to
the Cuban agent infiltrated into the commando group,
Percy Francisco Alavarado. (19)
On April 6 this year the Sun
Sentinel of Florida recounted how the paramilitary
Commando F-4 was training with heavy weapons to
execute armed actions against Cuba and for a
possible armed invasion of the country.
The U.S. attitude to terrorism is
totally contrary to that of Cuba’s. On December 20,
2001, Cuba passed a law against acts of terrorism
stipulating heavy sentences for those using Cuban
territory to organize acts of terrorism against any
country, including the United States. On the other
hand, the latter’s territory continues to be a
training ground for paramilitary groups operating
against Cuba.
Further evidence of U.S. cynicism is
the detention of the five Cubans who are serving
lengthy prison sentences, including double life, for
trying to stop ultra-right wing terrorist groups
exiled in Miami from perpetrating acts of violence
against Cuba. Have discovered their intentions, the
five Cubans informed the U.S. authorities and in
response, were jailed on espionage charges.
THE MEDIA
While all this has been going on,
the media is continuing its anti-Cuba harassment
campaign. While widely reporting manifestos
condemning the island, it silences those showing
support, such as one signed by more than 3,000
intellectuals, artists and professionals from 69
countries, including four Nobel prize winners,
entitled "To the conscience of the world." (20)
While criticisms by José Saramago
are aired, the backing of Adolfo Pérez Esquivel,
Noam Chomsky, Ernesto Cardenal, Mario Benedetti,
Augusto Roa Bastos, Gabriel García Márquez or
Rigoberta Menchú are omitted. The press presents
persons who planted bombs in Havana hotels in 1997
as dissidents, along with the hijackers of aircraft
and maritime vessels.
Cuban sentences passed on hijackers
are condemned and massacres committed by other
governments in attempts to resolve similar hostage
situations are ignored, like that in the Moscow
theater where 100 hostages and Chechen terrorists
died, or the cold-blooded killing on Fujimori’s
orders of those who seized the Japanese embassy in
Lima.
THE EUROPEAN UNION
For its part, the European Union
(EU), led in its anti-Cuba policy by José María
Aznar, has more than ever before revealed its
hypocrisy and double standards. The nations that
said nothing when international law was violated in
the case of the invasion of Iraq; who have never
condemned the death penalty against minors, the
mentally ill and foreigners refused their right to
consular attention, to the point of a total of 71
executions in the United States last year, are now
clamoring against Cuba.
The EU has called on the Cuban
authorities to avoid the useless suffering of
prisoners and to not subject them to inhumane
treatment, while looking the other way in terms of
the 600-plus prisoners, some of European origin, in
the Guantánamo concentration camp who have been
tortured, and have no right to legal aid or family
visits. A EU that is silent over the thousands of
prisoners in U.S. jails in the wake of the September
11 attack for the crime of beings Muslims, without
legal guarantees, trials and without their names
even being known.
Measures using diplomatic punishment,
suspending trade and cooperation agreements,
canceling bilateral government visits, reducing
European states’ participation in cultural events,
inviting Cuban dissidents to embassies in Havana,
suspending cooperation and solidarity programs with
Cuba. These are the European Union’s replies to a
country that only requests respect for the UN
Charter acknowledging Cuba’s right to choose its own
political system, acknowledging respect for the
principal of equality between states and the right
to peoples’ free determination.
The divorce between public opinion
and governments following the United States has
never been as evident as in the case of Cuba. Whilst
the majority of presidents apply policies against
the island that are in line with Bush dictates,
demonstrations of support and solidarity are
happening spontaneously in whatever country Cuban
leaders visit. All these governments, and especially
the U.S. one, must know that their peoples do not
share their acts of aggression and harassment
against Cuba. Peoples who should denounce and
confront the basis justifying military intervention
that, in the name of democracy and human rights, can
only bring death and pillage in its wake.
Notes:
Maurice Lemoine,
America Latina, Cuba y la democracia Le Monde
Diplomatique, Southern Cone edition, June 2003.
See U.S. State Department website