All about Masetti
Rolando Pérez
Betancourt
MASETTI is known, as is his attempt
to open a guerrilla front in the Salta region of
Argentina, in 1963, as the vanguard of the Guerrilla
Army of the People, to be headed by Che. Some things
are known but not everything and there were always
questions about its tragic end, as well as others,
which now, for the first time, are clarified in
Jorge Ricardo Masetti, el comandante Segundo, a
book of 300-plus pages in length, by Conchita Dumois
and Gabriel Molina, recently released by the Capitán
San Luis Publishing House.
Conchita Dumois, Masetti's widow and
a History and Political Science scholar, died before
the book came off the presses. Gabriel Molina is an
experienced journalist and writer, honored with the
National Prize for Journalism for his life-long
contributions to the field and the author of
Diario de Girón and Bahía de Cochinos, el
mayor error de Kennedy.
Both authors had the good fortune to
know and work with Masetti, from the early days of
Prensa Latina, which allowed them to gauge the
personality of the Argentine who first came to Cuba
with the idea of going up into the Sierra Maestra to
interview Fidel and who bid farewell to the country
a few years later, to become a guerrilla fighter,
following the example of the Cuban Revolution, at a
time when many in Latin America saw no other route
to change beyond armed struggle.
Given the content and the way it is
recounted, El comandante Segundo is one of
those books that grabs you and won't let go. Anyone
who thinks this might be a glorification of the man
is mistaken. The book reveals a detailed
investigation, with much first-hand testimony and
opinions from participants in events - which do not
always concur in their points of view or analyses.
It contains an exhaustive, revealing bibliography,
documents from a variety of sources, including
correspondence between Masetti and his wife, the
first reconstruction of the guerrilla effort: the
preparations in Cuba, the arrival of the group in
Argentina via Bolivia, life during the campaign,
betrayals, and the fighters' final hours.
"During the following months, around
April, 1964," the narration states, "everything was
finished. Dependence on the outside for food, total
isolation and the conditions of the terrain became a
mortal trap. Nothing was ever again heard from
Segundo or his one companion. Masetti disappeared
thinking about the essence of life, which he was
always able to embrace, this essence he perceived
and which struck his soul like a bolt of lightning
during his last hours as a revolutionary man."
Among the testimonies which Conchita
Dumois and Gabriel Molina recount, appear two of an
exceptional nature, offered by the only Cubans who
survived those days in Salta, now Army General
Abelardo Colomé Ibarra, and Captain Alberto
Castellano.
The narrative does not proceed in
chronological order, but rather begins with the
kidnapping of Masetti by the Costa Rican National
Guard, in 1960, when he and a group of journalists
including Molina, attended a OAS Conference of
Foreign Ministers, during which the United States
government again tried to isolate Cuba. The first
attempt in this body had taken place in August of
1959.
Although the book concludes with the
guerrilla effort in Salta, one of its virtues lies
in the interrelationship it establishes between the
Argentine journalist, Cuba and the rest of the world
during the early years of the Revolution.
Multiple events are recounted: the
friendship between Che and Masetti, the two meeting
during midnight hours; Playa Girón, with Masetti
participating as a journalist; The Missile Crisis,
Nikita, the Mangosta plan –– Kennedy's vengeful
effort to finish off the Revolution; the blossoming
of national liberation movements; CIA attempts to
assassinate Fidel with the help of the mafia;
Algeria and its leaders providing Masetti support;
García Márquez reminiscing about his days as a
Prensa Latina correspondent in New York; Peronist
politics; journalistic trends in the Cuban press at
the time and even the nefarious sectarianism which
Masetti faced within Prensa Latina, expressed by a
group of provocateurs who were later, thankfully,
uncovered.
Historical memory - sometimes filed
away, all but forgotten - revelations and objective
analysis of an heroic effort, about which something
was known, but not everything, make Jorge Ricardo
Masetti, el comandante Segundo required reading.