Fellow countrymen:
History can be unpredictable and move along
strange labyrinths. Twenty-five years ago, in this very same square, we
bid a final farewell to a small number of coffins. They contained tiny
fragments of human remains and personal belongings of some of the 57
Cubans, 11 Guyanese —most of them students on scholarships in Cuba—
and five North Korean cultural officials who were the victims of a brutal
and inconceivable act of terrorism. What was particularly moving was the
death of almost the entire Cuban juvenile fencing team, both women and
men, coming home with every single one of the gold medals awarded in this
sport at a Central American and Caribbean tournament.
A million of our fellow countrymen, with
tears filling their eyes and running down their cheeks, gathered here to
bid a more symbolic than actual farewell to our brothers and sisters whose
bodies rested on the ocean floor.
Nobody, except for a group of friendly
personalities and institutions, shared our pain and sorrow. There was no
upheaval around the world, no acute political crises, no United Nations
meetings, nor the imminent threat of war.
Perhaps, few people in the world understood
the terrible significance of that event. How important could it be that a
Cuban jetliner was blown up in mid-flight with 73 people aboard? It was
almost a common occurrence. Thousands of Cubans had already died in La
Coubre, the Escambray Mountains, the Bay of Pigs, and in hundreds of other
terrorist acts, pirate attacks and similar actions, had they not? Who
could pay any attention to the denunciations of this tiny country? All
that was needed, apparently, was a simple denial from the powerful
neighbor and their media, which inundate the world, and the matter was
forgotten.
Who could have predicted that almost
exactly 25 years later, a war with totally unpredictable consequences
would be on the verge of breaking out as a result of an equally heinous
terrorist attack, which claimed the lives of thousands of innocent people
in the United States? Back then, in what now appears to be a tragic omen,
innocent people from various countries died; this time, there were victims
from 86 nations.
Then, as now, there was hardly anything
left of the victims. In Barbados, not a single body could be recovered and
in New York, only a few were and not all of them identifiable. In both
cases, the families were left with an appalling emptiness and infinite
grief; a deep indignation and an unbearable sorrow was brought on the
peoples of both nations. It had not been an accident, a mechanical failure
or a human error; these were both deliberate acts, planned and executed in
cold blood.
There were, however, a few differences
between the monstrous crime in Barbados and the abhorrent, unimaginable
terrorist attack against the American people. In the United States, the
act was the work of fanatics willing to die alongside their victims, while
in Barbados it was the work of mercenaries who did not run the slightest
risk. In the United States, the main goal of the perpetrators was not that
of killing the passengers. They hijacked the planes to attack the Twin
Towers and the Pentagon, albeit absolutely mindless of the death of the
innocent traveling with them. In Barbados, the basic objective of the
mercenaries was to kill the passengers.
In both cases, the anguish suffered by the
travelers in those final minutes of their lives, particularly the
passengers on the fourth plane hijacked in the United States –who
already knew what had happened in New York and Washington– must have
been unbearable, the same as that of the crew and passengers of the Cuban
plane during the desperate attempt to land when it was clearly impossible
for them to do so. There were clear demonstrations of courage and
determination in both cases as well: in Barbados, we learned of them
through the recorded voices of the Cuban crew; in the United States,
through subsequent reports on the attitude assumed by the passengers.
There is moving filmed footage of the
horrific events in New York. As for the explosion of the plane off the
coasts of Barbados and its plunge into the sea, there could not be, and
there is not, so much as a photograph. The only testimony lefts are the
recordings of the dramatic communications between the crew of the doomed
aircraft and the Barbados airport control tower.
This was the first time in the history of
Latin America that such an act had been promoted from abroad.
Actually, the systematic use of such
politically motivated ruthless and fearsome practices and procedures was
initiated in this hemisphere against our country. But, it was preceded in
1959 by another equally absurd and irresponsible practice: that of
hijacking and diverting planes in mid-flight, a phenomenon that was
practically unknown in the world at the time.
The first of such acts involved a DC-3
passenger plane bound from Havana to the Isle of Youth. It was hijacked by
a few former members of Batista’s tyranny repressive corps, who forced
the pilot to change course and fly them to Miami. This happened on April
16, 1959, less than four months after the triumph of the Revolution. The
perpetrators were never punished.
Between 1959 and 2001, a total of 51 Cuban
jetliners were hijacked and most of them diverted to the United States.
Many of these hijacked aircraft were never returned to our country despite
the fact that not a few pilots, guards and other people were murdered or
injured. Also, several planes were destroyed or seriously damaged in
frustrated hijacking attempts.
The consequence of this was that the plague
of "skyjacking" soon spread throughout the United States itself.
For the most varied reasons, a number of individuals –the vast majority
of them mentally unbalanced, thrill-seekers or common criminals, from both
the United States and Latin America– started to hijack airplanes using
guns, knives, Molotov cocktails, and on a number of occasions, simple
bottles of water, which they claimed contained gasoline and would be used
to set fire to the plane.
Thanks to the painstaking care of our
authorities, not a single accident occurred upon landing. The passengers
always received proper treatment and were immediately returned to their
places of origin.
The majority of hijackings and diversions
of Cuban aircraft took place between 1959 and 1973. Faced with the risk of
a major catastrophe in the United States or Cuba –given that there were
even hijackers who, once they had the plane under control, threatened to
fly it into the Oak Ridge nuclear power station [in the United States] if
their demands were not met– the Government of Cuba took the initiative
of approaching the Government of the United States —led at the time by
President Richard Nixon, with William Rogers as Secretary of State— and
proposing an agreement to deal with cases of aircraft hijacking and
maritime piracy. The proposal was accepted, and the agreement was quickly
drawn up and signed by representatives of both governments on February 16,
1973. It was also immediately published in our country’s press and given
wide coverage.
That rational and well thought-out
agreement established heavy sanctions against hijackers of planes and
boats, and it did serve as a deterrent. From that date forward, there was
a considerable reduction in the hijacking of Cuban planes, and for more
than ten years, every attempted hijacking in our country was foiled.
However, the brutal terrorist attack that
led to the explosion of the Cuban plane in mid-flight dealt a devastating
blow to that exemplary and effective agreement. The Cuban government,
faced with this inconceivable act of aggression that had taken place as
part of a new wave of terrorist acts unleashed against Cuba in late 1975,
denounced the agreement, in full accordance with the clauses stipulated
therein. Nevertheless, it did continue to abide by the procedures set
forth to prevent the hijackings of U.S. planes, including the application
of heavy sanctions, which had been considerably stepped up as a result of
the agreement, with sentences of up to 20 years imprisonment. Even before
the agreement was signed, Cuban courts had been applying the sanctions
provided in our own Penal Code against hijackers, although these had been
less severe.
Despite the rigorous application of
sanctions, a few other American jetliners were hijacked and diverted to
our country. Then, the Government of Cuba, after issuing duly advanced
warnings, decided to return two hijackers to the United States; thus, on
September 18, 1980, they were delivered to the authorities of that
country.
Our records show that between September
1968 and December 1984, there were 71 cases of airplanes hijacked and
diverted to Cuba. Sixty-nine participants in these hijackings faced trials
in courts of law and were given prison sentences ranging between three and
five years. Subsequently, after the signing of the 1973 agreement,
sentences ranged between 10 and 20 years.
As a result of these measures adopted by
Cuba, the fact is that for the last 17 years there has not been a single
further hijacking or diversion of an U.S. plane to Cuba.
On the other hand, what has been the stance
of successive U.S. administrations? Since 1959, until today, the U.S.
authorities have not sanctioned a single one of the hundreds of
individuals who have hijacked and diverted dozens of Cuban aircraft to
that country, not even those have committed murder in the course of the
hijacking.
It is impossible to conceive of a greater
lack of basic reciprocity, or a greater incitement to the hijacking of
planes and boats. This unbending policy has remained unchanged throughout
more than four decades and continues to be maintained today, without a
single exception.
The constructive agreement on the hijacking
of planes and boats signed between the governments of Cuba and the United
States, whose results were immediately evident, was seemingly accepted by
the top leaders of the terrorist groups. Some had actively cooperated or
participated in the organization of irregular warfare through armed gangs
that, at times, had expanded to the six former provinces of Cuba. The
majority of them had been recruited by the U.S. government in the days of
the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Missile Crisis, and in later years. They
participated in all manner of violent actions, particularly assassination
plots and terrorist attacks, that did not leave out a single sphere of the
country’s economic and social life, a single method, a single procedure,
a single weapon.
They were taken to all kinds of
institutions, schools and training programs, sometimes to be trained,
sometimes to be kept busy.
Dramatic events like the assassination of
President Kennedy led to in-depth investigations, like that carried out by
an U.S. Senate Committee. The embarrassing situations and major scandals
that resulted forced a change in tactics, although there was never really
any change in the policy towards Cuba. As a consequence, after periods of
relative calm, new waves of terrorism have continued to break out.
This is exactly what happened in late 1975.
The Church Commission had presented its famous report on assassination
plots against the leaders of Cuba and other countries on November 20 of
that year, therefore, the Central Intelligence Agency could not continue
assuming direct responsibility for assassination plots and terrorist acts
against Cuba. The solution was simple: their most trustworthy and
best-trained terrorist personnel would adopt the form of independent
groups, which would act on their own behalf and under their own
responsibility. This led to the sudden emergence of a bizarre coordinating
organization, called the CORU, and made up by the main terrorist groups in
operation, which as a rule were fiercely divided, due to leadership
ambitions and personal interests. A wave of violent terrorist actions was
then unleashed. To mention just a few, chosen from among the numerous and
significant terrorist acts carried out during this new stage, I could
point out the following that took place in a period of just four months:
A pirate attack by speedboats from Florida
against two fishing boats, leading to the death of a fisherman and serious
damage to the boats, on April 6, 1976.
A bomb planted in the Cuban embassy in
Portugal, which caused the death of two diplomatic officials, serious
injuries to others, and the total destruction of the premises, on April
22.
An explosive attack against the UN Cuban
Mission, causing serious material damages, on June 5.
The explosion of a bomb on the cart
carrying the luggage that was about to be loaded on a Cubana Airlines
flight at the Kingston, Jamaica, airport on July 9.
The explosion of a bomb in the British West
Indies Air Ways offices in Barbados, which represented Cubana Airlines in
that country, on July 10.
The murder of a fishing industry specialist
during the attempted kidnapping of the Cuban Consul in Mérida, Mexico, on
July 24.
The abduction and vanishing of two Cuban
embassy officials in Argentina, on August 9; both disappeared without a
trace.
The explosion of a bomb in the Cubana
Airlines offices in Panama City, causing considerable damage, on August
18.
Obviously, this was real war. Numerous
attacks were aimed at commercial airlines.
Even the New York Times and the U.S.
News and World Report described it as a new wave of terrorism against
Cuba.
The groups that made up the CORU, which
began to operate in the first months of 1976, although it was not
officially founded until June of that year, issued public statements in
the United States claiming responsibility for every one of the terrorist
acts they perpetrated. They sent their war dispatches –as they
themselves called them– from Costa Rica to the Miami press. One of their
publications printed an article entitled "War Dispatch"
recounting the destruction of a Cuban embassy. That was the day they did
not hesitate in publishing a particularly significant communiqué signed
by the five terrorist groups that made up the CORU: "Very soon we
will attack airplanes in mid-flight."
To carry out their attacks, the CORU
terrorists freely used as the main bases for their operations the
territories of the United States, Puerto Rico, Somoza’s Nicaragua, and
Pinochet’s Chile.
Only eight weeks later, the Cuban jetliner
would be blown up in mid-flight off the coasts of Barbados with 73 people
aboard.
Hernán Ricardo and Freddy Lugo were the
two Venezuelan mercenaries who planted the bomb during the Trinidad and
Tobago-Barbados leg of the flight. They got off the plane in Barbados and
returned to Trinidad, where they were arrested and immediately confessed
to their involvement.
The Barbados police commissioner declared
before an investigative committee that Ricardo and Lugo had confessed that
they were working for the CIA. He added that Ricardo had pulled out a CIA
card and another one where the rules for the use of C-4 plastic explosives
were described.
On October 24, 1976, The New York Times indicated
that "the terrorists who launched a wave of attacks in seven
countries during the last two years were the product and instruments of
the CIA."
The Washington Post noted
that confirmed contacts with the U.S. embassy in Venezuela "cast
doubt" on the statement issued on October 15 by U.S. Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger, with regard to the claim that "no one related
to the U.S. government had anything to do with the sabotage of the
airplane" from Cuba.
A correspondent from the Mexican daily Excelsior
commented from Port of Spain that "with the confession made by
Hernán Ricardo Lozano, the Venezuelan detained here in Trinidad, about
his responsibility in the attack on a Cubana aircraft that crashed off the
coast of Barbados with 73 people aboard, a major anti-Castro terrorist
network that is somehow linked with the CIA is on the verge of
exposure."
Le Monde wrote
that the CIA connection with Cuban-born terrorist groups that moved about
freely on U.S. soil was public knowledge.
Many of the world’s most respected news
publications expressed the same view.
Luis Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch, who
masterminded the terrorist crime, had links with the CIA dating back to
1960. They were arrested and submitted to a dubious trial plagued with
irregularities amidst enormous pressures. The Venezuelan magistrate, Dr.
Delia Estaba Moreno, initiated legal proceedings against them for murder,
manufacture and use of firearms, and forging and carrying of false
documents. But, her honesty and integrity provoked a violent reaction
among the extreme right-wing political mobsters.
General Elio García Barrios, the presiding
judge of the Military Appeal Court, maintained a steadfast and determined
stance, thanks to which the two terrorists were forced to spend a number
of years in prison. But, the Miami terrorist mob took revenge by riddling
one of his sons with bullets in 1983.
Posada Carriles was rescued by the
Cuban-American National Foundation, that sent 50,000 dollars via Panama to
finance his escape, which was successfully carried out on August 18, 1985.
In a matter of hours, he turned up in El Salvador. He was visited there,
having barely arrived, by the top leaders of the Foundation. Those were
the days of the dirty war in Nicaragua. He immediately began to execute
important tasks under direct orders of the White House, in the air supply
of weapons and explosives to the Contras in Nicaragua.
The cold figure of 73 innocent people
murdered in Barbados could not possibly express the significance and
magnitude of the tragedy.
Certainly, Americans will better understand
by comparing the population of Cuba 25 years ago with that of the United
States on September 11, 2001. The death of 73 people aboard a Cuban
jetliner blown up in mid-flight is to the U.S. people as if seven American
jetliners, with over 300 hundred passengers each, had been destroyed in
full flight the same day, at the same time, by a terrorist conspiracy.
We could still go further and say that if
we were to consider the 3,478 Cubans who have perished in over four
decades as a result of acts of aggression —including the invasion by the
Bay of Pigs as well as all the other terrorist acts sustained by Cuba,
which originated in the United States— it would be as if 88,434 people
had died in that country, that is, a figure almost similar to the number
of Americans who died in the Korean and Vietnam wars combined.
This denunciation we are making here today
is not inspired in either hate or rancor. I understand that American
officials do not even want to hear us raise these embarrassing issues.
They say that we simply should look ahead.
However, it would be senseless not to look
back at the sources of errors whose repetition should be avoided, and at
the causes of major human tragedies, wars and other calamities that,
perhaps, could have been prevented. There should not be innocent deaths
anywhere in the world.
This massive demonstration against
terrorism has been called to pay homage and tribute to the memory of our
brothers and sisters who died off the coasts of Barbados 25 years ago, but
also to express our solidarity with the thousands of innocent people who
died in New York and Washington. We are here to condemn the brutal crime
committed against them while supporting the search for ways conducive to a
real and lasting eradication of terrorism, to the prevalence of peace and
against the development of a bloody and open-ended war.
I am deeply convinced that relations
between the terrorist groups created by the United States in the first 15
years of the Revolution, to act against Cuba, and the U.S authorities have
never been severed.
In a day such as this, it is only right
that we ask what will be done about Posada Carriles and Orlando Bosch, the
main culprits of the obnoxious terrorist act perpetrated in Barbados; and
what about those who planned and financed the bombs that were set up in
hotels of the country’s capital and have been restlessly trying, for
over four decades, to murder Cuban leaders.
It is not too much to ask that justice be
done, for these professional terrorists, acting from inside the very
territory of the United States, have not ceased to apply their despicable
methods against our people to sow terror and to destroy the economy of a
harassed and blockaded nation, one from which terrorist devices have never
come —not even a gram of explosives— to blast in the United States.
Never has an American been injured or killed, nor has a facility big or
small in that large and rich country ever suffered the least damage from
any action coming from Cuba.
As we are involved in the worldwide
struggle against terrorism, —committed to take part alongside the United
Nations and the rest of the international community— we have the full
moral authority and the right to demand the end of terrorism against Cuba.
The economic warfare, itself a genocide and a brutal act to which our
people have been subjected for more than 40 years, should also end.
Our brothers and sisters who died in
Barbados are no longer only our martyrs, they are also symbols in the
struggle against terrorism. They rise today like giants in this historic
battle for the eradication of terrorism from Earth, that repulsive
procedure that has caused so much damage and brought so much suffering to
their closest relatives and their people that have already written
unprecedented pages in the history of their Homeland and their times.
The sacrifice of their lives has not been
useless. Injustice starts to shake before the eyes of a forceful and
virile nation that 25 years ago cried out of indignation and sorrow, and
that today cry out of emotion, of hope and pride in remembering them.
History, that can be unpredictable, has
wanted it that way.
On behalf of the martyrs of that day in
Barbados, let us say:
Socialism or Death!
Homeland or Death!
We shall overcome!