
London “Guardian” Says “Get Off Cuba’s Back!”
[A comprehensive and useful background
article on the current situation between the Cuban revolution, on the one hand,
and the U.S. and the wealthy European countries, on the other, appeared in the
July 31, 2003, issue of The Guardian (London), written by Seamus Milne.
Since it provides an excellent accompaniment to the first-hard report above, by
W.T. Whitney, on the July 2003 “Caravan to Cuba” and the July 26 fiftieth anniversary
celebrations on that island, we are reprinting Seamus Milne’s article for the
information of our readers. Some minor changes have been made, for consistency
with the style rules of our publication. The author can be reached at s.milne@guardian.co.uk—The Editors, Labor Standard.]
Why the U.S. fears Cuba
Hostility to the Castro regime doesn’t
stem from its failings, but from its achievements
Seamus Milne
Thursday July 31, 2003
Fifty years after Fidel Castro and his followers
launched the Cuban revolution with an abortive attack on the dictator Batista’s
Moncada barracks, Cuba’s critics are already writing its obituaries. Echoing
President Bush’s dismissal of Cuban-style socialism as a “relic”, the Miami
Herald pronounced the revolution “dead in the water” at the weekend. The Telegraph
called the island “the lost cause that is Cuba,” while the Independent
on Sunday thought the Cuban dream “as old and fatigued as Fidel himself” and a
BBC reporter claimed that, by embracing tourism, “the revolution has simply
replaced one elite with another.”
Bush is, of course, only the latest of 10
successive U.S. presidents who have openly sought to overthrow the Cuban
government, and Batista’s heirs in Florida have long plotted a triumphant
return to reclaim their farms, factories, and bordellos—closed or expropriated
by Castro, Che Guevara, and their supporters after they came to power in 1959.
But international hostility toward the Cuban
regime has increased sharply since April, when it launched its harshest
crackdown on the U.S,-backed opposition for decades, handing out long jail
sentences to 75 activists for accepting money from a foreign power, and
executing three ferry hijackers.
The repression, which followed 18 months of
heightened tension between the U.S. and Cuba, shocked many supporters of Cuba
around the world and left the Castro regime more isolated than it has been
since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Egged on by Britain and the rightwing
governments of Italy and Spain, the EU has now used the jailings to reverse its
policy of constructive engagement and fall in behind the U.S. neo-conservative
line, imposing diplomatic sanctions, increasing support for the opposition, and
blocking a new trade agreement.
But it’s not hard to discover the origins of
this dangerous standoff, which follows a period in which Amnesty International
had noted Cuba’s “more open and permissive approach” toward dissent. In the
aftermath of September 11, the Bush administration—whose election depended on
the votes of hard-line Cuban exiles in Florida—singled out Cuba for [alleged]
membership in a second-tier “axis of evil.” The Caribbean island, U.S.
under-secretary of state John Bolton insisted menacingly, was a safe haven for
terrorists, was researching biological weapons, and had dual-use technology it
could pass to other “rogue states.” He was backed by Bush, who declared that
the 40-year-old U.S. trade embargo against Cuba would not be lifted until there
were both multiparty elections and free market reforms, while Cuba was branded
a threat to U.S. security, overturning the Clinton administration’s assessment.
Into this growing confrontation stepped James
Cason as the new chief U.S. diplomat in Havana, with a brief to boost support
for Cuba’s opposition groups. The U.S.’s huge quasi-embassy mainly provided
equipment and facilities, but millions of dollars of U.S. government aid also
appears to have been channeled to the dissidents through Miami-based exile
groups. The final trigger for Castro’s clampdown was a string of US-indulged
plane and ferry hijackings [that culminated] in April, against a background of
U.S. warnings about the threat to its security and Cuban fears of military
intervention in the event of a mass exodus from Cuba—a scenario long favored by
Miami exiles.
Some have concluded that a paranoid Castro
walked into a trap laid by Bush. After 44 years of economic siege, mercenary
invasion, assassination attempts, terrorist attacks, and biological warfare
from their northern neighbor, it might be thought the Cuban leadership had some
reason to feel paranoid. But perhaps significantly, the U.S. has in the past
few weeks adopted a more cooperative stance, returning 15 hijackers to Cuba and
warning Cubans that they should only come to the U.S. through “existing legal
channels,” which allow around 20,000 visas a year. [Note: The U.S.
government, under Bush, has been granting only a few thousand visas, far below
the officially agreed-on 20,000—The Editors.]
And however grim the Cuban crackdown, it beggars
belief that the denunciations have been led by the U.S. and its closest
European allies in the “war on terror.” Not only has the U.S. sentenced five
Cubans to between 15 years and life for trying to track anti-Cuban, Miami-based
terrorist groups and carried out over 70 executions of its own in the past
year, but (along with Britain) supports other states, in the Middle East and
Central Asia for example, which have thousands of political prisoners and carry
out routine torture and executions. And, of course, the worst human rights
abuses on the island of Cuba are not carried under Castro’s aegis at all, but
in the Guantánamo base occupied against Cuba’s will, where the U.S. has
interned 600 prisoners without charge for 18 months, who it now plans to try in
secret and possibly execute—without even the legal rights afforded to Cuba’s
jailed oppositionists.
Which only goes to reinforce what has long been
obvious: that U.S. hostility to Cuba does not stem from the regime’s human
rights failings, but its social and political successes and the challenge its
unyielding independence offers to other U.S. and Western satellite states.
Saddled with a siege economy and a wartime political culture for more than 40
years, Cuba has achieved First World health and education standards in a Third
World country, its infant mortality and literacy rates now rivaling or
outstripping those of the U.S., its class sizes a third smaller than in
Britain—while next door, in the U.S.-backed “democracy” of Haiti, half the
population is unable to read and infant mortality is over 10 times higher.
Those, too, are human rights, recognized by the
UN declaration and European convention. Despite the catastrophic withdrawal of
Soviet support more than a decade ago and the social damage wrought by
dollarization and mass tourism, Cuba has developed biotechnology and
pharmaceutical industries acknowledged by the U.S. to be the most advanced in
Latin America. Meanwhile, it has sent 50,000 doctors to work for free in 93
Third World countries (currently there are 1,000 working in Venezuela’s slums)
and given a free university education to 1,000 Third World students a year. How
much of that would survive a takeover by the Miami-backed opposition?
The historical importance of Cuba’s struggle for
social justice and sovereignty and its creative social mobilization will
continue to echo beyond its time and place: from the self-sacrificing
internationalism of Che to the crucial role played by Cuban troops in bringing
an end to apartheid through the defeat of South Africa at Cuito Cuanavale in
Angola in 1988. But those relying on the death of Castro (the “biological
solution”) to restore Cuba swiftly to its traditional proprietors may be
disappointed, while the Iraq imbroglio may have checked the U.S.
neo-conservatives’ enthusiasm for military intervention against a far more
popular regime in Cuba. That suggests Cuba will have to expect yet more
destabilization, further complicating the defense of the social and political
gains of the revolution in the years to come. The greatest contribution those
genuinely concerned about human rights and democracy in Cuba can make is to
help get the U.S. and its European friends off the Cubans’ backs.