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A Tale of Two Countries
What Did Cuba Ever Do to Us?
by SAUL LANDAU and NELSON P. VALDES
“…they cannot forgive us that we are just so close to them,
that we have made a Socialist revolution under
the very nose of the United States!”
– Fidel Castro, April 16, 1961
“And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that
trespass against us.”
– English book of Common Prayer, 1662
After 53 years, we ask. Did the Cuban revolution accomplish
its goals? Likewise, what happened to the US,
which has relentlessly tried to block Cuba’s
revolutionary path?
After the January 1959 revolutionary victory Washington’s
elite understood that in Fidel Castro they might
face serious rebelliousness to the accepted and
enforced notion: Washington rules this
hemisphere.
In 1954, Washington punished President Jacobo Arbenz for
nationalizing United Fruit company property in
Guatemala (a US-backed coup d’etat), to again
dramatize how the US treated disobedience.
Despite the long history of US punishment of insubordinate
Latin American leaders, Castro and compañeros
remained focused on goals emerging in the 1860s’
revolt against Spain: independence; sovereignty;
social justice.
When faced with Washington’s intransigent opposition Cuba’s
leaders accepted the consequences of a kind of
insurance policy written for their revolution in
Moscow. They had no other protectors.
They knew that Latin American leaders who failed to toe the
US line faced: assassination or military coups.
Unlike US influence, the Soviets would not own Cuban
property. The US held the best land in Cuba, the
biggest sugar mills, mines, telephone and
utility companies, banks, politicians, casinos
and much more. The Soviets never possessed an
acre of Cuban land. They did, however, expect
reciprocal ideological compliance.
From 1959 through the mid 1970s, Cubans became more
literate and healthier. Their social services
expanded along with a basically honest
government. Cuba became an integrated nation
state with a sense of purpose. But US policy
directors understood: an external threat would
compel revolutionaries to organize their
defense.
They grasped Alexander Hamilton’s Federalist #8: “Safety
from external danger is the most powerful
director of national conduct. Even the ardent
love of liberty will, after a time, give way to
its dictates.”
In Cuba, Batista had not permitted free speech or politics;
so no dramatic change took place. Unlike
Batista, the revolutionaries had more than
personal power to defend. And they understood
the possible consequences.
US military forces killed up to 4 million Vietnamese
(mostly civilians) and lost 58 thousand US
troops as Cuba’s revolution developed. Few
people today – or then – could explain the
purpose of that war.
While engaged in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, the CIA also
backed a string of military coups against
democratically elected governments of Brazil
(1964), Chile (1973) and interfering in
political processes of other client states:
invading the Dominican Republic and plotting in
Argentina and Uruguay.
Cuban doctors and teachers went abroad to aid others, Cuban
artists — painting and sculpture, poetry and
literature, film, music and dance – made
world-wide names for themselves. The CIA in
Africa assassinated Congolese liberation leader
Patrice Lumumba and backed merciless dictators.
Cuban troops helped maintain Angolan
independence despite serious threats from South
African and CIA-backed troops invading from the
south and east.
In 1994, at his inauguration as South Africa’s President
Nelson Mandela acknowledged to Fidel Castro:
“You made this possible.” He referred to the
role of Cuban troops in 1987-88 in helping the
Angolan army administer heavy losses to the
South African forces who had invaded southern
Angola, forcing the apartheid regime to change
its strategy from military to political.
During the 1980s, Washington backed murderous regimes
throughout the world, like those in El Salvador,
Honduras and Guatemala; same old policy, but
justified by Cold War rhetoric.
After the Soviets disappeared in 1991, the jubilation in
Miami exile circles and Washington office
parties ran at fever pitch: would the Cuban
revolution collapse in a year – or less?
Now, 21 plus years later and still alive, Cuba’s revolution
begins to change its economic and administrative
orders. The US media routinely describes Cuba as
poor, needy, miserable. But in 2012 on Cuba’s
non-violent streets there aren’t vast numbers of
homeless like those in US cities; and no hungry
children (1 of 2 American kids experienced
hunger last year).
In “free and democratic” Mexico and Central America
thousands of gang-drug related murders occur
annually. Cuba has no drug cartels or children
frightened of a drive-by bullet. As US wars
killed tens of thousands of Iraqi and Afghans
and thousands of its own troops, Cuban doctors
repaired the sightless vision of thousands of
third world people around the world.
The US holds more political prisoners in Cuba — in Gitmo —
than Cuba does, and now has laws allowing the
President to assas … oops, execute US citizens
he deems “terrorist” (without court procedures).
US citizens can get jailed indefinitely with no
recourse to Constitutional protections. But
Washington blithely accuses Cuba of human rights
violations.
Cuba does face a broken economy, a bloated
bureaucracy and other serious problems – like no
free press. Its leaders have begun a reform
process, and a broad dialogue has emerged
amongst the population.
In Washington denial prevails. Presidential aspirants on
both sides ignore the trillions wasted on
destructive wars, rotting infrastructure, spread
of poverty, and drop in the standard of living.
Cuba policy remains inflexible. Hard liners
demand ever more time for the policy to work!
It’s only been 53 years since Washington’s elite
decided to force regime change in Havana.
No one asks: What did Cuba do to us again?
Saul Landau, an Institute for Policy Studies fellow,
produced Will the Real Terrorist Please Stand Up
(Cinema Libre Studio). CounterPunch published
his Bush and Botox World.
Nelson P. Valdés is Professor Emeritus, U. of New Mexico
and director of the Cuba-L Project.
source : counterpunch.org |