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The press dispatches bring the news; it
belongs to the Astute Class, the first of its
kind to be constructed in Great Britain in more
than two decades.
“A nuclear reactor will allow it to
navigate without refuelling during its 25 year
of service. Since it makes its own oxigen and
drinking water, it can circumnavigate the globe
without needing to surface,” was the statement
to the BBC by Nigel Ward, head of the shipyards.
“It’s a mean looking beast”, says another.
“Looming above us is a construction shed 12
storeys high. Within it are 3 nuclear-powered
submarines at different stages of construction,”
assures yet another.
Someone says that “it can observe the
movements of cruisers in New York Harbor right
from the English Channel, drawing close to the
coast without being detected and listen to
conversations on cell phones”. “In addition, it
can transport special troops in mini-subs that,
at the same time, will be able to fire lethal
Tomahawk missiles for distances of 1,400 miles",
a fourth person declares.
El Mercurio, the Chilean newspaper,
emphatically spreads the news.
The UK Royal Navy declares that it will be
one of the most advanced in the world. The
first of them will be launched on June 8 and
will go into service in January of 2009.
It can transport up to 38 Tomahawk cruise
missiles and Spearfish torpedoes, capable of
destroying a large warship. It will possess a
permanent crew of 98 sailors who will even be
able to watch movies on giant plasma screens.
The new Astute will carry the latest
generation of Block 4 Tomahawk torpedoes which
can be reprogrammed in flight. It will be the
first one not having a system of conventional
periscopes and, instead, will be using fibre
optics, infrared waves and thermal imaging.
“BAE Systems, the armaments manufacturer,
will build two other submarines of the same
class,” AP reported. The total cost of the
three submarines, according to calculations that
will certainly be below the mark, is 7.5 billion
dollars.
What a feat for the British! The
intelligent and tenacious people of that nation
will surely not feel any sense of pride. What
is most amazing is that with such an amount of
money, 75 thousand doctors could be trained to
care for 150 million people, assuming that the
cost of training a doctor would be one-third of
what it costs in the United States. You could
build 3 thousand polyclinics, outfitted with
sophisticated equipment, ten times what our
country possesses.
Cuba is currently training thousands of
young people from other countries as medical
doctors.
In any remote African village, a Cuban
doctor can impart medical knowledge to any youth
from the village or from the surrounding
municipality who has the equivalent of a grade
twelve education, using videos and computers
energized by a small solar panel; the youth does
not even have to leave his hometown, nor does he
need to be contaminated with the consumer habits
of a large city.
The important thing is the patients who are
suffering from malaria or any other of the
typical and unmistakable diseases that the
student will be seeing together the doctor.
The method has been tested with surprising
results. The knowledge and practical experience
accumulated for years have no possible
comparison.
The non-lucrative practice of medicine is
capable of winning over all noble hearts.
Since the beginning of the Revolution, Cuba
has been engaged in training doctors, teachers
and other professionals; with a population of
less than 12 million inhabitants, today we have
more Comprehensive General Medicine specialists
than all the doctors in sub-Saharan Africa where
the population exceeds 700 million people.
We must bow our heads in awe after reading
the news about the English submarine. It
teaches us, among other things, about the
sophisticated weapons that are needed to
maintain the untenable order developed by the
United States imperial system.
We cannot forget that for centuries, and
until recently, England was called the Queen of
the Seas. Today, what remains of that
privileged position is merely a fraction of the
hegemonic power of her ally and leader, the
United States.
Churchill said: Sink the Bismarck! Today
Blair says: Sink whatever remains of Great
Britain’s prestige!
For that purpose, or for the holocaust of
the species, is what his “marvellous submarine”
will be good for.
Fidel Castro Ruz
May 21, 2007
5:00 p.m.
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