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Reflections of Fidel
The Trojan horse
RAFAEL Correa, president of Ecuador, currently
visiting Honduras, stated the day before the OAS
meeting: "I believe that the OAS has lost its raison
d’être, maybe it never had a raison d’être." The
news, circulated by ANSA, adds that Correa, "prophesized
‘the demise’ of that organization given the many
errors it has committed."
He affirmed "that the countries of the American
continent, given their geographic conditions, cannot
all be put ‘in the same basket.’ And for that reason
Ecuador proposed some months back the creation of
the Organization of Latin American States.
"’It is not possible for the region’s problems to be
discussed in Washington; let us construct something
of our own, without countries alien to our culture,
our values, and obviously including countries that
were inexplicably separated from the inter-American
system, and I am referring to the concrete case of
Cuba… that was a tremendous shame and demonstrates
the double standards that exist in international
relations.’" On his arrival in Honduras, both
President Zelaya and Correa stated that "The OAS
must be reformed and reincorporate Cuba; if not, it
will have to disappear."
Another cable from the DPA news agency affirms:
"Cuba’s reintegration in the Organization of
American States (OAS) has moved from being an issue
per se of the organization’s General Assembly in
Honduran San Pedro Sula, to once again being turned
into an excuse for a struggle of interests that goes
much further than the limits of the Caribbean island
and could (once again) call hemispheric relations
into question.
"The president of Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, made that
very clear on describing the hemispheric meeting
that begins this Tuesday in Honduras in quasi
military terms.
"It will be," he said, an ‘interesting battle’ in
which if it is demonstrated that the OAS ‘continues
being a ministry of the colonies’ that is not
transformed in order ‘to subordinate itself to the
will of the governments comprising it,’ it will be
necessary to propose ‘leaving’ the organization and
creating an alternative."
"’Latin American countries are making Cuba the
litmus test for the quality of the Obama
administration's approach to Latin America," Julia
E. Sweig, a Cuba scholar at the Council on Foreign
Relations, told The Washington Post on the
eve of the Honduran meeting."
In resisting the aggressions of the most powerful
empire ever to have existed, our people fought for
the other sister peoples of this continent. The OAS
was an accomplice of all the crimes committed
against Cuba.
At one moment or another, the totality of the
countries of Latin America were victims of
interventions and political and economic aggression.
There is not one single one that can deny that. It
is ingenuous to believe that the good intentions of
a president of the United States can justify the
existence of that institution that opened the gates
to the Trojan horse that backed the Summits of the
Americas, neoliberalism, drug trafficking, military
bases and economic crises. Ignorance,
underdevelopment, economic dependence, poverty, the
forced return of those who emigrate in search of
work, the brain drain, and even the sophisticated
weapons of organized crime were the consequences of
interventions and plundering proceeding from the
North. Cuba, a little country, has demonstrated that
it can resist the blockade and advance in many
fields, and even cooperate with other countries.
Today’s speech by the president of Honduras, Manuel
Zelaya, at the OAS General Assembly, contains
principles that could go down in history. He said
admirable things of his own country. I will confine
myself to what he stated on Cuba.
"…In the Assembly of the Organization of American
States that begins today in San Pedro Sula,
Honduras, we must initiate the process of wise
rectifications of old errors committed.
"We, the Latin Americans who were recently here, a
couple of weeks or months ago, had a grand summit
within the Rio Group in Salvador de Bahía, Brazil.
There we made a commitment. The commitment, which
was taken down in writing and unanimously by all of
Latin America, is that in this San Pedro assembly,
by majority vote or consensus, that old and worn
error committed in 1962 of expelling the Cuban
people from this organization would have to be
amended.
"We must not go from this assembly, my dear
dignitaries, without repealing the decree of that
8th meeting which sanctioned an entire people for
having proclaimed socialist ideas and principles,
principles now practiced in all parts of the world,
including the United States and Europe (Applause).
Today, principles of seeking different development
alternatives are evident precisely in the change
that there has been in the United States with the
election of President Barack Obama…
"We cannot go from this assembly without making
amends for that error and that infamy because, on
the basis of this Organization of American States
resolution, in existence for more than four decades,
an unjust and useless blockade has been maintained
against this sister people of Cuba, precisely
because none of its aims have been achieved, but
what it has demonstrated is that here, a few
kilometers from our country, on a little island,
there is a people prepared to resist and to make
sacrifices for their independence and sovereignty.
"… not doing so would make us accomplices of a 1962
resolution to expel a state from the Organization of
American States simple because it has other ideas,
other thoughts, and proclaims principles of a
different democracy. And we are not going to be
accomplices of that.
"…We cannot go from this assembly without repealing
what was enacted in that epoch.
"An exceptional Honduran, called in our country –
and one of our national heroes – José Cecilio del
Valle, the sage Valle, stated on April 17, 1826, in
his famous article ‘Sovereignty and non-intervention’
– we had just proclaimed our independence from the
Spanish kingdom – "’The nations of the world are
independent and sovereign. Whatever its territorial
extension or number of inhabitants might have been,
a nation must treat others with the same treatment
that it desires to receive from these. A nation does
not have the right to intervene in the internal
affairs of another nation.’"
With those words of Cecilio del Valle and the
mention of Mahatma Gandhi, Jesus Christ, Martin
Luther King, Abraham Lincoln, Morazán, Martí,
Sandino and Bolívar, he concluded his speech.
A few minutes later, at the press conference after
the opening of the Assembly, he responded to
questions and reiterated principles. Then he gave
the floor to Daniel Ortega, who was the author of
one of the most profound and well-argued papers at
the OAS Assembly. At Zelaya’s invitation, Fernando
Lugo, president of Paraguay, and Rigoberto Menchú
also spoke, expressing themselves in terms similar
to Zelaya and Daniel.
The Assembly has been debating for hours. As I am
concluding this Reflection, almost at nightfall,
there is still no news of the decision. It is known
that Zelaya’s speech was influential. Chávez is
talking with [Venezuelan Foreign Minister] Maduro
and urging him to firmly maintain that no resolution
can be admitted that conditions the repeal of the
unjust sanction against Cuba. Never has such
rebellion been seen. Without any doubt, the battle
is a hard one. Many countries are dependent on the
index finger of one hand of the government of the
United States pointing at the Monetary Fund, the
World Bank, the InterAmerican Development Bank or in
any other direction for punishing rebelliousness.
Having waged it is already a feat in itself on the
part of the most rebellious. June 2, 2009 will be
recalled by future generations.
Cuba is not an enemy of peace, nor reluctant to
interchange or cooperation among countries of
distinct political systems, but has been and always
will be intransigent in the defense of its
principles.

Fidel Castro Ruz
June 2, 2009
6:56 p.m.
Translated by Granma International
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Reflections
oF
Fidel
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