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EDITORIAL
Yesterday, June 12, a rabid lapdog of the empire
and the terrorist mafia in Miami, El Nuevo
Herald, published an article titled "U.S.
Interests Section in Havana Under Siege," in
which it accuses the Cuban government of cutting
off electricity and water supplies to that
office as a response to what it describes as "a
deepening of the diplomatic crisis" that began
when "the electronic billboard was installed on
the facade of the Interests Section."
According to the article, "the United States
Interests Section in Havana had issued
instructions to its personnel on Friday to begin
destroying all non-essential documents". It adds
this suspicious conclusion: "The sources who
offered this information to El Nuevo Herald
consider the destruction of documents in the
U.S. diplomatic offices in Havana the prelude to
an evacuation, or at the very least, a
preparation for one if it were necessary."
The El Nuevo Herald article insidiously
included a photo taken during one of the
historic Marches of the Combatant People that
passed by the Interests Section (USINT), in
which our people appear in the surroundings of
that office reaffirming their repudiation of the
imperialist and genocidal policies towards Cuba.
The purpose is to manipulate readers into
believing that at this moment the USINT is
permanently surrounded by our compatriots, when
everything is actually normal there and only the
specialized personnel charged with guarding that
facility are in the area.
The article ends by slipping in a sentence that
exposes the real hidden intentions behind this
latest maneuver: "In response to the aggravating
situation in its offices, the U.S. Interests
Section in Havana could be temporarily forced to
suspend its activities, something that would
explain the step of beginning to destroy
important documents."
A few hours later, confirming the U.S.
government’s involvement in the fabrication and
direction of this deceitful campaign, State
Department spokesman Sean McCormack cynically
insisted on accusing our government of harassing
USINT. Playing the victim, McCormack said that
despite the alleged difficulties with
electricity and water supplies, USINT continued
with "business as usual", including its efforts
to "reach out to the Cuban people," and
impudently affirmed that the alleged hostility
towards USINT could be linked to its efforts to
"offer basic information and facts to the Cuban
people."
Thus, the lying spokesman qualified the growing
attempts at espionage and subversion that USINT
is carrying out in Cuba as "business as usual".
What he referred to as "efforts to reach out to
the Cuban people" are the patronage, direction
and generous financing of mercenary grouplets
nursed by USINT in Cuba and comprised of
traitors and stoolies who collaborate with the
implementation of the brutal blockade intended
to bring our people to their knees through
hunger and sickness. And, at the height of
insolence, he describes as "offering basic
information and facts to the Cuban people" the
systematic launching of the crudest insults
towards our people via the electronic billboard,
which, in violation of the most elemental norms
of international law, they think they can
maintain with impunity on the facade of that
imperial lair.
To get an idea of the type of "information and
facts" that USINT has been spreading via its
electronic billboard, let’s take just one
example:
"Many decent Cuban women cannot live decently
without doing something indecent. If you are
young and pretty, what is it that pays more, to
pursue a career or a Spaniard?" (April 7 and 8)
In the afternoon, Drew Blakeney, spokesman for
the U.S. Interests Section in Havana, told a
bald-faced lie in a statement to the press when
he affirmed: "The regime's increasing resort to
bullying tactics in dealing with USINT and the
Cuban people comes as no surprise; it has been
trying to isolate and harass the Interests
Section for some time." He also added, "On
Monday, June 5, at approximately 3:00 a.m.,
electricity supplies to the main building of the
U.S. Interests Section in Havana were cut off."
El Nuevo Herald
and U.S. government spokespersons are
shamelessly lying when they hold our government
responsible for a supposed power cut and a
decrease in the availability of drinking water
to the Interests Section.
We categorically deny any premeditated
power-cuts aimed at obstructing the operations
of the US Interests Section. In fact, there were
a large number of power failures in the city of
Havana and throughout the country; one of them
occurred along the underground 13,000-volt
circuit Vedado2, which directly feeds the
Interests Section offices, and one of the two
channels that supplies electric power to the
Anti-Imperialist Tribune, due to the adverse
weather conditions experienced by the country
over the last two weeks up until yesterday
afternoon, Monday (June 12): repair work on this
interruption is underway just like on all the
others. In spite of that, as the spokespeople
admit, USINT has continued to operate
unhindered, as has its provocative electronic
billboard which, since January 16 and for almost
five months now, has been offending and
insulting our people, demonstrating that that
facility has not lacked even one watt of
electricity.
Maliciously, the U.S. government chooses to
avoid mentioning that every time USINT has
reported difficulties with the supply of
drinking water or electric power to its
facilities, these have been duly attended to by
the Cuban companies that provide those services.
USINT consumes an average of 26,000 kilowatts
monthly, the same amount of electricity consumed
by about 200 average Cuban families.
In spite of the reorganization of fuel
distribution undertaken in the entire country,
USINT has been supplied by CUBALSE, a total of
53,756 liters of fuel to date this year.
In spite of the severe drought, and general
difficulties in supplying drinking water to
Havana which, before the recent rains, were
affecting almost the entire country, the
capital’s water company has maintained a stable
water supply to USINT.
In response to a USINT request, in March of this
year, the water company sent its technicians to
the USINT main building and annex to check the
internal and external aqueduct mains and to
repair whatever faulty system it came across.
From January 2006 to date, Cuba’s CUBALSE
Company has carried out seven maintenance or
repair operations in the buildings housing USINT
officials.
In spite of the fact that, on February 1, USINT
rudely expelled from its facilities workers from
the Blas Roca Caderío Contingent, who were
carrying out construction work on the annex
building, CUBALSE has been punctually supplying
USINT with materials for continuing the
construction work. To date, USINT has received
the 44 cubic meters of premixed concrete, 540
meters of rebar and 300 meters of steel sheeting
that it has requested.
USINT currently has 302 Cuban workers under
contract. To date this year, nine of those
workers have traveled abroad on the request of
USINT, with the aim of receiving training needed
to carry out their duties.
The U.S. spokespersons likewise choose not to
mention the most important fact: that, during
this year alone, USINT has received immediate
approval for 33 requested operations to return
illegal emigrants, without any delay or
exception whatsoever; four operations to
repatriate Cuban citizens considered to be
ineligible by U.S. authorities, and eight
consular visits to U.S. citizens being held in
Cuban jails.
The latest accusations against the Cuban
government are part of the US administration’s
plans, exposed by comrade Fidel on January 22
and 24 of 2006, when he affirmed, verbatim:
"Under pressures from the Cuban-American mafia,
and as one of its next steps, the government of
the United States is intent on openly violating
the U.S.–Cuba Migratory Agreement (...) It is
looking for any pretext to prevent, at all
costs, the sale of agricultural products to
Cuba, which has been increasing, while our
country has paid every cent on time during five
years –something it did not expect from a
blockaded nation facing constant aggression
(...) And, unhappy with the decision taken by
President Carter on May 30, 1977, it intends to
force a rupture of its current minimal
diplomatic ties with Cuba. The gross
provocations that have been carried out from its
Interests Section offices in Havana do not and
cannot have any other purpose."
The latest accusations against Cuba also
perfidiously aim to draw attention away from the
real problem, the subversive and provocative
nature of the actions of USINT which, in frank
violation of the diplomatic status conferred
upon it by international agreements and
conventions, has become the General Staff of the
counterrevolution, which it directs and
materially and financially supplies in order to
incite the subversion of our country’s internal
order.
Perhaps they think that Cuba is afraid of the
constant provocations devised against our
homeland or the consequences of a rupture of the
minimal existing ties, already substantially
deteriorated due to the immoral and cynical
policies of the Bush administration.
It is up to the United State’s imperialist
government to explain its demented and
reiterated practice of devising and implementing
new brutal measures against Cuba, and its vain
attempts to break the heroic spirit of
resistance of our people.
The U.S. government is sinking morally and
materially in its war of conquest in Iraq,
corruption scandals, growing budget and account
deficits, high energy prices, inability to
overcome natural disasters, illegal espionage
against its own citizens, and the repugnant
practice of clandestine arrests and torture on a
global scale.
The Revolutionary government has provided a
lesson in equanimity, firmness and strict
adherence to diplomatic regulations in its
response to the vulgar, contemptible actions of
USINT and the mercenaries at its service in our
country.
With our moral authority and our principles, we
will defeat each and every one of its criminal
and cowardly campaigns, provocations and
aggressions!
Cuba looks the enemy in the face and has no
dirty tricks up its sleeve; it has no reason to
seek pretexts to harass USINT. It knows how to
say "yes" or "no" to requests by the empire’s
representatives. It is not looking for
subterfuges, or trying to cut electric cables to
turn off stupid little signs. It is not
harassing U.S. officials or representatives. The
millions of people who have paraded past those
facilities with honor and dignity, including
children and teenagers, have never thrown a
single stone against that building. Throughout
the history of the Revolution, Cuba has always
fought with a moral authority that crushes its
enemies. If the current U.S. government is
seeking pretexts to remove USINT, cut food sales
to our people and do away with the Migration
Agreement, then it should do so without
inventing them or attempting to perpetuate its
gross and cowardly provocations, which did not
come from Cuba, but from USINT, which has become
a bastion, headquarters and bank for the
mercenaries and a center for supplying
subversive materials smuggled in their
diplomatic pouches. Cuba could peacefully do
without all of that, and everything else that
interventionism and aggression entails. It would
not shed a single tear at its departure. There
is no need to burn papers, the monstrosity of
their content notwithstanding. Our Revolution
would never assault or break into a diplomatic
office. It never has and it never will.
Havana, Cuba
June 13, 2006
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