Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Statement
THE U.S. Interests Section in Havana continues to
function as the general staff in charge of
implementing the government's policy of subversion
toward Cuba, which has as one of its principal goals
the fabrication of an opposition movement
challenging the legitimate Cuban government and
fomenting internal destabilization, in order to
provoke a 'regime change' in the country.
As has been previously denounced, over the last
years, the Interests Section has continued to carry
out illegal activities, which are far removed from
the accepted functions of a diplomatic mission. Its
personnel are promoting, advising, instructing,
training, financing and supplying their mercenaries
with technology. Diplomats from this office
continually incite these individuals, who respond to
the interests of the U.S. government against Cuba in
exchange for monetary compensation, to carry out
provocative activities, mount media campaigns
distorting the country's reality and to challenge
Cuba's constitutional order.
In its attempt to play a decisive role in the
impossible task of turning these mercenaries into a
credible internal opposition movement, the Interests
Section channels funds from the U.S. budget and
government financed material aid to support the
internal subversion business.
In its efforts to interfere in Cuba’s internal
affairs, the Interests section has gone so far as to
assume training tasks, establishing illegal internet
connections and networks to provide training and
offer courses to people, with the objective of their
acting against the interests of the Cuban state in a
flagrant violation of the Vienna Convention on
Diplomatic Relations, Cuban law and the very
agreement which led to the establishment of the
Interests Sections.
In Cuba, as in many countries, the agreement of
the Cuban state and the approval of the Ministry of
Higher Education are required to impart educational
programs or offer courses. Authorization and an
operating license from the Ministry of Information,
Technology and Communications are also needed to
provide Internet service. The Interests Section has
no such permission to provide these services, which
it does without the consent of Cuban authorities,
making them illegal.
It is unacceptable and cynical that the type of
programs promoted by the Interest Section, which are
moreover incompatible with the purpose of a
diplomatic mission, are undertaken by the country
which by law, and according to decisions made by its
government, maintain an openly hostile policy and
blockade meant to defeat and destroy the Revolution,
which, among other effects, restricts educational,
cultural, academic, scientific and sporting
exchanges between the two countries and prevents
Cuba from accessing the dozens of underwater
Internet cables which surround the island.
There is undisputable evidence that the illegal
activities undertaken by the Interest Section are
financed by official U.S. government funds, millions
of dollars of which are allocated annually by the
Department of State and the U.S. Agency for
International Development, in virtue of section 109
of the Helms-Burton Act, which has as its explicit
objective a change in Cuba’s political, economic and
social system.
These subversive actions, in addition to the
tightening of the economic, commercial and financial
blockade, the increasingly vindictive attacks on
Cuban financial transactions, and the utilization of
new pretexts to avoid Cuba’s proposal to hold a
serious, respectful dialogue between the two
countries based on equal terms, which Cuba has
reiterated, demonstrate that the current U.S.
administration is not truly committed to moving
beyond the worst Cold War practices and policies,
nor has it curtailed efforts to force our country to
submit to its demands.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs denounces the
illegal, interventionist, offensive and provocative
actions of the U.S. Interests Section and demands an
end to its continual incitement of actions intended
to subvert the constitutional order which the Cuban
people have legitimately and freely chosen.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs reiterates that
Cuba will not leave itself open to intervention and
will use all legal means available to defend the
sovereignty it has won and ensure that the people
and laws of Cuba are respected.
Havana, November 1, 2012