REPUBLIC OF CUBA
National Peoples´ Power Assembly
International Relations Commission
In a memorandum from the United States Department of State
dated on June 24, 1959, the essence of the policy which was
already being carried out against Cuba was stated. At that
time, they were considering the lifting of the Cuban sugar
quota on the U.S. market in order to bring about that "the
sugar industry would promptly suffer an abrupt decline,
causing widespread further unemployment. The large numbers
of people thus forced out of work would begin to go hungry".
At the same meeting, Secretary of State, Christian
Herter, was defining these initial actions as "economic
war measures".
Several months later, on April 6, 1960, at a meeting headed
by the President of the United States himself, a document,
adopted by the State Department, was being discussed which
textually read: "The majority of Cubans support Castro.
There is no effective political opposition in Cuba…the only
predictable measure we have today to alienate internal
support for the Revolution is through disillusionment and
desperation, based on dissatisfaction and economic duress.
Every possible means should be undertaken promptly to weaken
the economic life of Cuba, to decrease real salaries, to
bring about hunger, desperation and the overthrow of
government".
Since 1959, over the course of almost 50 years, the people
of Cuba have been victims of this cruel and criminal policy
that has been imposed, maintained and toughened by all
successive U.S. administrations, right up to the present
day.
Never before have any people had to withstand such a long
siege by the most powerful nation recorded in history.
Moreover, never have any people resisted so great an
aggression with such heroism, without capitulating, without
renouncing their independence and sovereignty, or their
right to construct the political, economic and social system
of their choice.
The recent report presented by Cuba at the United Nations
General Assembly irrefutably demonstrates the enormous
impact the blockade has on the lives of every Cuban man and
woman, two-thirds of whom were born and have grown up under
this irrational and demented policy.
For fifteen years, in overwhelming votes at the UN General
Assembly, the international community has expressed its view
of the need to put an end to this monstrosity of the United
States government; nevertheless, successive U.S.
administrations have turned a deaf ear on this universal
outcry, and far from making any steps towards its total
elimination, have systematically reinforced its
instrumentation and ever more rigorous application.
The Torricelli Act and the Helms Burton Law, with their
eminently extra-territorial natures, and later, President
Bush’s Plan for the re-colonization of Cuba in May 2004, in
its aim to bring about the internalization of its illegal
policy, have intensified pressures and sanctions against
governments, banks and companies of third countries,
achieving in several cases, as the report circulated by Cuba
indicates, an imposition of their will and a bringing about
of an effective application through blackmail and threats.
The systematic application of this economic war which has
already cost our country more than 89,000 million dollars,
together with the increase of all manner of aggression, by
open and extended state terrorism, have resulted in
thousands of victims among the Cuban population and have
been detrimental to the most elementary right to life,
attempting to destroy it through hunger and disease, in a
genuine act of genocide.
The Permanent Commission for International Relations of the
National People’s Power Assembly, reflecting the express
will of all the deputies in our National Assembly and of the
people we legitimately represent, calls on all
parliamentarians in the world and on their legislative
bodies, to denounce and demand the end of this policy of
extermination which has been in place for almost 50 years.
Meanwhile, in spite of the blockade and all aggression, the
Cuban people will continue their struggle to construct, day
by day, a country that has a greater sense of solidarity and
which, once and for all, achieves every justice.
Havana,
October 5, 2007.