Reflections by the Commander in Chief
THE EMPIRE’S
ILLEGAL WARS
When the United States and its NATO allies started the war on
Kosovo, Cuba immediately defined her position on the front
page of the newspaper Granma, on
March 26, 1999.
This was done in a Declaration of her Ministry of Foreign
Affairs under the title of
“Cuba's appeal to end NATO’s unjustified aggression against
Yugoslavia.”
I take essential paragraphs from that Declaration:
“After a number of painful and highly manipulated
political occurrences, extended armed confrontations and
complex, hardly transparent negotiations around the issue of
Kosovo, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization finally
launched its announced and brutal air attack against the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, whose peoples fought most
heroically in Europe against the Nazi hordes during World War
II.
“This action, conceived of as a 'punishment of the
Yugoslavian government’, is conducted on the margin of the UN
Security Council.
“The war launched by NATO rekindles humanity's justified fears
about the establishment of an offensive unipolar system,
governed by a warmongering empire acting as a world gendarme
and capable of dragging its political and military allies
along to the most insane actions. Something similar happened
at the beginning and in the first half of this century with
the creation of militaristic blocs that brought destruction,
death and misery to Europe, dividing and weakening it, while
the United States strengthened their economic, political and
military power.
“It is worthwhile wondering whether the use and abuse of force
could solve the world problems and defend the human rights of
the innocent persons who today are dying under the missiles
and bombs falling on a small country which is part of that
cultured and civilized Europe.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba
strongly condemns this aggression on Yugoslavia by NATO forces
led by the United States.
“At this moment of suffering and pain for the Yugoslavian
peoples, Cuba calls on the international community to mobilize
its efforts to bring an immediate end to this unjustified
aggression, to avoid new and even more deplorable losses of
innocent lives and to allow this nation to again take up the
peaceful path of negotiations to solve its internal problems,
a matter which depends solely and exclusively on the sovereign
will and free determination of the Yugoslavian peoples.
“The ridiculous attempt at imposing solutions by force is
incompatible with any civilized rationale and with the
essential principles of international law. [...] To continue
along this path, the consequences may be unpredictable for
Europe and for all of humanity.”
Because of these occurrences, I had sent a message to
President Milosevic the day before, through the Yugoslavian
ambassador in Havana and our ambassador in Belgrade.
“I beg you to communicate the following to President
Milosevic:
“After carefully analyzing everything that is happening and
the origins of the present dangerous conflict, we are of the
view that an enormous crime is being committed against the
Serbian people. At the same time, the aggressors are
committing a huge error, which they won’t be able to sustain
if the Serbian people are capable of resisting, as they did in
their heroic struggle against the Nazi hordes.
“Unless the terribly brutal and unjustifiable attacks in the
very heart of Europe cease, world reaction will be even
greater and swifter than that triggered by the war in Vietnam.
“This time as never before in recent history, powerful forces
and world interests are aware that such behavior in
international relations is not acceptable.
“Even though I have no personal relationship with him, I have
meditated extensively on the problems of today’s world. I
think that I have a sense of history, a concept of tactics and
strategy in the struggle of a small country against a great
superpower and I feel a deep hatred towards injustice, and so
I take it upon myself to transmit to him an idea in just three
words:
“Resist,
resist, resist.
“March 25,
1999.
Fidel Castro
Ruz
October 1, 2007
6:14 p.m.