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Reflections of Fidel
Seven daggers in the heart of
America
Taken from CubaDebate
I read and re-read data and articles written by
intelligent figures, known or little known, who
contribute to various media and take their
information from sources that are not questioned by
anyone.
The peoples who inhabit the planet – everywhere –
are running economic, environmental and military
risks derived from the policies of the United States,
but in no other part of the world are they
threatened by such grave problems as those of its
neighbors, the peoples located on this continent to
the south of that hegemonic country.
The presence of such a powerful empire which has
deployed – on every continent and in every ocean –
military bases, aircraft carriers, nuclear
submarines, modern warships and sophisticated combat
planes carrying all kinds of weapons, and hundreds
of thousands of soldiers whose government demands
total impunity for them, constitutes the most
important headache for any government, whether it is
leftist, centrist or rightist, an ally or not of the
United States.
For those of us who are its neighbors, the problem
is not that another language is spoken there and
that it is a different nation. There are U.S.
citizens of all colors and origins. They are people
just like us and capable of any sentiment in one
sense or another. The dramatic aspect is the system
that has been developed there and imposed on
everybody. Such a system is not new in terms of the
use of force and methods of domination that have
prevailed throughout history. The new part is the
epoch in which we are living. Approaching the issue
from traditional points of view is an error and does
not help anybody. Reading and learning about what
the defenders of the system are thinking is highly
illustrative, because it signifies being aware of
the nature of a system that is based on constantly
appealing to egotism and people’s most primary
instincts.
If a conviction of the value of conscience and its
capacity for prevailing over instincts did not exist,
one could not express even the hope of change in any
period of the extremely brief history of humankind.
Neither could one comprehend the terrible obstacles
that are being raised for various political leaders
in the Latin American or Ibero-American nations of
the hemisphere. At the end of the day, the peoples
that lived in this region of the planet from tens of
thousands of years ago to the famous discovery of
America, had nothing Latino, Iberian or European
about them; their physical traits bore a closer
resemblance to Asian peoples, from where their
forebears came. Nowadays we see them in the face of
the Indians of Mexico, Central America, Venezuela,
Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil, Peru, Bolivia, Paraguay
and Chile, this last a country in which the
Araucanos wrote indelible pages. In certain areas of
Canada and Alaska they conserve their indigenous
roots with all possible purity. But in the principal
territory of the United States, many of its former
inhabitants were exterminated by the white
conquistadors.
As everybody knows, millions of Africans were torn
away from their lands to work as slaves in this
hemisphere. In certain nations like Haiti and a
large part of the Caribbean islands, their
descendents constitute the majority of the
population. In other countries they form broad
sectors. In the United States the descendents of
Africans constitute tens of millions of citizens who,
as a rule, are the poorest and most discriminated
against.
Throughout the centuries that nation demanded
privileged rights over our continent. In the time of
[José] Martí it attempted to impose a single
currency based on gold, a metal whose value has
remained the most constant throughout history. In
general, international trade was based on it.
Nowadays, not even that. Since the Nixon years,
world trade has been conducted with the paper bill
printed by the United States: the dollar, a currency
that is now worth approximately 27 times less than
at the beginning of the 1970s, one of the many forms
of dominating and swindling the rest of the world.
However, today, other currencies are replacing the
dollar in international trade and in hard currency
reserves.
While on the one hand the empire’s hard currency is
being devaluated, on the other its reserves of
military force are growing. The latest science and
technology, monopolized by the superpower, has been
directed to a considerable degree to weapons
development. At the present time, we are not just
talking of thousands of nuclear missiles, or the
modern destructive power of conventional weapons; we
are talking about drone aircraft, automatically
piloted. That is not just simple fantasy. Some
aircraft of this type are already being used in
Afghanistan and other points. Recent reports note
that in the relatively near future, in 2010, long
before the Antarctic cap melts, the empire plans to
have available – among its 2,500 warplanes – 1,100
F-35 and F-22 combat planes, in their fifth-generation
fighter and bomber versions. To have some idea of
that potential, suffice it to say that the ones they
have on the Soto Cano base in Honduras for training
that country’s pilots are F-5’s; the aircraft
supplied to the Venezuelan air forces before Chávez,
to Chile and other countries were small squadrons of
F-16’s.
More importantly still, the empire is planning for
all U.S. combat planes, from fighters to heavy
bombers and tanker aircraft, to be crewed by robots
within 30 years.
That military might is not a necessity of the world;
it is a necessity of the economic system that the
empire is imposing on the world.
It is within anyone’s comprehension that if robots
can replace combat pilots, they can also replace
workers in many factories. The free trade agreements
that the empire is trying to impose on the counties
of this hemisphere imply that their workers will
have to compete with the advanced technology and
robots of the yanki industry.
Robots don’t go on strike, they are obedient and
disciplined. We have seen machines that pick apples
and other fruits on television. It is worth asking
the question of U.S. workers as well. Where will the
jobs be? What is the future that a capitalism
without borders, in its advanced phase of
development, is assigning to citizens?
In the light of this and other realities, the
governments of the countries of UNASUR, MERCOSUR,
the Rio Group and others cannot avoid analyzing the
extremely just Venezuelan question: what is the
meaning of the military and naval bases that the
United States wants to establish around Venezuela
and in the heart of South America? I recall that a
number of years ago, when relations between Colombia
and Venezuela, two nations twinned by geography and
history, became dangerously tense, Cuba quietly
promoted important steps toward peace between those
two countries. We Cubans will never encourage war
between sister countries. Historical experience, the
manifest destiny proclaimed and implemented by the
United States, and the weakness of the charges
against Venezuela of supplying weapons to the FARC,
associated with negotiations aimed at Colombia
conceding seven points of its territory for the
aerial and naval use of the armed forces of the
United States, unavoidably oblige Venezuela to
invest in arms resources that could be utilized in
the economy, the social programs and cooperation
with other countries in the region with less
development and resources. Venezuela is not arming
itself against the sister nation of Colombia, it is
arming itself against the empire, which tried to
destroy the Revolution and is now attempting to
install its sophisticated weaponry in the vicinity
of the Venezuelan border.
It would be a grave error to think that the threat
is only against Venezuela; it is directed at all the
countries of the south of the continent. None of
them can avoid the issue and a number of them have
stated that.
The present and future generations will judge their
leaders in the light of the conduct that they adopt
at this moment. It is not just about the United
States, but the United States and the system. What
is it offering? What it is seeking?
It is offering the FTAA; in other words, the
anticipated ruin of all of our countries, the free
movement of goods and capital, but not the free
movement of people. They are currently experiencing
the fear of that opulent consumer society being
inundated with poor Latinos, Indians, people of
African or mixed descent or whites without
employment in their own countries. They are
returning all those who commit offenses or are
surplus to requirements. They are killing them on
many occasions before they enter, or returning them
like herds when they no longer need them; 12 million
Latin American or Caribbean immigrants are illegal
in the United States. A new economy has arisen in
our countries, particularly in the smallest and
poorest: that of remittances. When there is a
crisis, it hits immigrants and their families the
hardest. Parents and children are cruelly separated,
sometimes for ever. If immigrants are of military
age, they are given the possibility of joining the
army to fight thousands of kilometers away, "in the
name of freedom and democracy." On their return, if
they don’t die, they are granted the right to become
U.S. citizens. As they are well-trained, they are
offered the possibility of being contracted not as
official soldiers, but as the civilian soldiers of
the private companies that provide their services in
the imperial wars of conquest.
There are other extremely grave dangers. News is
constantly coming in of immigrants from Mexico and
other countries of our region dying trying to cross
the current border of Mexico and the United States.
The quota of victims every year is exceeding in
bounds the total number of those who lost their
lives during the close to 28 years of existence of
the famous Berlin Wall.
What is even more incredible is that news of a war
that is currently costing thousands of lives per
year is barely circulating in the world. To date in
2009, more Mexicans have died than U.S. soldiers who
died in Bush’s war on Iraq throughout his entire
administration.
The war in Mexico has been unleashed because of the
largest market for drugs in the world: the United
States. But within its territory there is no war
between the police and the armed forces of the
United States and the drug traffickers. The war has
been exported to Mexico and Central America, but in
particular to Mexico, closer to U.S. territory. The
footage of piled-up corpses broadcast on television
and news arriving of persons murdered right in the
operating rooms where doctors were trying to save
their lives are horrifying. None of those images
come from U.S. territory.
That wave of violence and bloodshed is spreading to
a greater or lesser degree throughout the countries
of South America. Where does the money come from
without the infinite spring that emerges from the
U.S. market? In its turn, consumption is also
tending to expand to the other countries of the
region, giving rise to more victims and more direct
or indirect damage than AIDS, malaria and other
diseases put together.
Imperial plans of domination are preceded by
enormous sums assigned to the tasks of lying and
misinforming public opinion. For that, they have the
total complicity of the oligarchy, the bourgeoisie,
the intellectual right and the mass media.
They are experts in divulging the errors and
contradictions of politicians.
Humanity’s fate cannot be left in the hands of
robots converted into persons or persons converted
into robots.
In 2010, the U.S. government is to spend $2.2
billion via the State Department and USAID to
promote its politics, 12% more than the sum received
by the Bush government in the last year of his
mandate. Of that total, close to $450 million is
allocated for demonstrating that the dictatorship
imposed on the world signifies democracy and respect
for human rights.
They constantly appeal to the instincts and egotism
of human beings; they scorn the value of education
and awareness. The resistance demonstrated by the
Cuban people over 50 years is evident. Resisting is
the weapon that can never be renounced by the
peoples; the Puerto Ricans succeeded in halting the
military maneuvers on Vieques by placing themselves
on the firing range.
The homeland of Bolívar is currently the country
that most concerns them, given its historic role in
the independence struggles of the peoples of America.
Cubans providing services there as health
specialists, educators, teachers of physical
education and sports and computer studies,
agriculture technicians and those working in other
areas, must give their all in fulfilling their
internationalist duties, in order to demonstrate
that the peoples can resist and be the bearers of
the most sacred principles of human society. If not,
the empire will destroy civilization and the species
itself.

Fidel Castro Ruz
August 5, 2009
11:16 a.m.
Translated by Granma International
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Reflections
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Fidel
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