ON February 7, 1901, President Tomás Estrada
Palma signed the agreement ceding Cuban territory to
the United States in order to construct its naval
base in Guantánamo.

Prisoners without legal aid subjected
to physical and psychological torture.
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Guantánamo Bay is one of the country’s deepest
and largest bays. Christopher Columbus discovered it
during his second voyage to the New World on April
30, 1494. It has some very special natural
characteristics: profundity, security and the
capacity to receive large ships.
For centuries, it was virtually under-utilized,
given that the Spanish colonizers were not capable
of appreciating its qualities.
After an attempt by the British to occupy the bay
in July of 1741 in the hope of establishing a base
of operations there, the colonial government
understood the site’s strategic importance.
U.S. REFOCUSSES ON CUBA
In the early 19th century, the United States
publicly stated its interest in taking over Cuba on
realizing that the island had a privileged
geographical location, natural resources, as well as
its historical, economic and social characteristics
and those of its population.
Attempts to buy the island from Spain were made
in 1805, 1807 and 1808, but according to the Central
Report of the First Congress of the Communist Party,
"if Spanish obstinacy ever served Cuba’s cause, it
was in its systematic refusal to assent to the
buying and selling operation that the United States
repeatedly proposed to that country during the last
century."
In 1823, John Quincy Adams, the U.S. secretary of
state, articulated the "ripe fruit" thesis, holding
that Cuba would inevitably fall into U.S. hands as
soon as it was no longer a Spanish colony. And that
same year, President James Monroe developed the
doctrine that bears his name, warning the European
powers that America was reserved solely and
exclusively "for the Americans." At the same time,
his country obstructed and discouraged the Cuban
people’s attempts at independence for years.
In 1895, U.S. investments in the island totaled
some 50 million pesos, particularly in the sugar and
tobacco industries, along with iron, chrome and
manganese deposits.
Thus, in 1898, the Americans understood that
conditions were propitious for intervening in the
armed conflict before the imminent end of the
Spanish colonial empire and the unstoppable advance
of the Liberation Army.
Taking advantage of the growing sympathy among
U.S. Americans for Cuba’s cause, the U.S. Congress
in April 1898 approved the Joint Resolution that
brought about the Northern giant’s intervention in
the Spanish-Cuban conflict.
The Spanish-Cuban-U.S. War, described as the
first imperialist war of pillage, was centered
primarily in the eastern provinces of Cuba and the
Guantánamo region. On July 16, 1898 the surrender
was signed and on December 10 that same year the
Treaty of Paris was signed. The United States took
over Puerto Rico, the Philippines and Guam; Cuba
remained as a "special territory" from which the
Americans were to withdraw after the "appeasement."
The administrative government, with General
Leonard Wood heading it, convened a Constituent
Assembly charged with drawing up the Constitution of
the future republic. But in order to firmly
establish future relations between Cuba and the
United States, the occupying forces brought heavy
pressure to bear and imposed the notorious Platt
Amendment, with two clauses that atrociously
encroached on national sovereignty and represented
serious implications for the nascent republic’s self-determination.
Clause 3 of the Amendment reserved the right of
the United States to intervene for the preservation
of Cuba’s independence and the support of a
government appropriate to its interests, while
Clause 7 forced Cuba to cede part of its territory
for the establishment of naval bases or coaling
stations.
Historian Miguel D’Estéfano Pissani, in his book
Derecho de Tratados (Treaty Law), explains: "The
Platt Amendment became a Damocles’ Sword, whose
edges were the naval and coaling concessions. The
strength of the Constitutional appendix was based,
precisely, on the military base clause."
On November 8, 1902, the U.S. government asked
for a permanent lease of land in the bays of Nipe,
Honda, Cienfuegos and Guantánamo. But due to a
violent reaction by the people, it was limited to
the Honda and Guantánamo bays.
One of the most outstanding individuals of our
independence struggles, Juan Gualberto Gómez, made
his voice heard, warning that Articles 3 and 7 of
the Platt Amendment "...were the same as handing the
keys of our house over to the Americans, so that
they could come in at any hour..., day or night,
with good or bad intentions..." and that "...its
purpose is none other than to reduce the power of
future Cuban governments and the sovereignty of our
Republic."
Finally, after various negotiations, on December
10, 1903, the United States took possession of the
territory for its naval base in Guantánamo. Via a
supplementary agreement signed on July 2, 1903, the
U.S. government promised to pay 2,000 pesos per year
in U.S. gold (about $4,085 at today’s values), a
risible figure that it would continue to deposit but
which Cuba has refused to accept or cash since the
triumph of the Revolution in 1959.
According to Doctor Fernando Alvarez Tabío, in
his article "La Base Naval de Guantánamo y el
derecho Internacional" (The Guantánamo Naval Base
and International Law"), the leasing contract for
the naval base lacks legality and juridical validity
because it is marred in its essential elements:
(...) due to the inability of the Cuban
government to cede a piece of its national territory
in perpetuity... and because the consent was
snatched via irresistible and unjust moral violence...
Rejecting Honda Bay, the United States
concentrated on Guantánamo. That choice was due to a
strategic objective. Because of its exceptional
value and geographic characteristics, it made it
possible to assure military predominance in the
Caribbean and fix its eyes on Panama’s inter-ocean
canal, for which it had obtained the construction
rights that year as well, in 1903.
A CENTURY OF INFAMY
During its century of existence, the U.S. naval
base in Guantánamo has been the scene of shameful
episodes and events.
Once the base was established, U.S. capital
investment accelerated, first with the construction
of the base’s necessary aqueduct and then in the
sugar industry, railroads and electric power.
Gambling, prostitution and contraband proliferated
with the arrival of the Marines, and became
lucrative businesses for the national bourgeoisie.
The enclave’s presence also had repercussions on
the region’s political life. In 1917, 1919 and 1922,
the Marines were sent out from the base to "protect"
the sugar mills and other U.S. economic interests in
response to the revolt by the Partido
Independiente de Color (Colored Independence
Party), the Chambelona uprising and that of the
liberals against the Menocal government.
During the final liberation war led by Fidel and
the Rebel Army, the base was used as a supply point
for the Batista dictatorship’s air force, which
indiscriminately bombed and fired on campesinos and
civilians in the liberated zones. The base was also
a launching point for U.S. troops invading other
countries, like Haiti in 1915 and the Dominican
Republic in 1918.
After the revolutionary triumph in January 1959,
the base became a refuge for the old regime’s
murderers and torturers, and has been used as a
platform for aggression against Cuba, including
infiltration by enemy agents; the protection of
counterrevolutionary bands; pretexts for justifying
direct aggression against the island; a center of
radio-electronic espionage and a point of
concentration for ships and planes enabling a naval
blockade to be imposed on the island in a short
space of time.
Throughout these years, the military enclave has
been the center of provocations and violations
against our country and against the Border Guards
responsible for patrolling the exterior perimeter.
According to official figures, from 1962 to August
1992, more than 13,000 such incidents have been
registered, including shots fired with rifles and
pistols (taking the lives of two Cuban Border Guards);
aiming with machine guns, tanks and cannons; the
throwing of objects; obscene gestures; breaking
through the border fence and violating air and
maritime space with ships, planes and helicopters.
The most recent ugly episode in the base’s
history is its use as a prison, where more than 500
prisoners accused of being terrorists or having
links to terrorism have been held and subjected to
physical and psychological torture, without the
right to legal assistance or a decent trial. The
world has been shaken by the spine-chilling images
of chained men being subjected to extreme
degradation and force fed after waging a hunger
strike to protest conditions in the prison, where
they are denied access to their lawyers,
humanitarian organizations or the United Nations.
The Constitution of the Republic of Cuba,
approved by the people on February 24, 1976, says in
Article 11 that our country "...rejects and
considers null and void the treaties, pacts or
concessions agreed to under unequal or unknown
conditions or that diminish its sovereignty or
territorial integrity."
Thus, Cuba demands the return of that territory
because, as Fidel affirmed, "...That base is in
their possession against the will of our people...it
is a dagger thrust into the heart of Cuba’s land..."