Of all the presidents of the United States, and those who
aspire to that office, I only met one who, for
ethical-religious reasons, was not an accomplice to the
brutal terrorism against Cuba: James Carter. That assumes,
of course, another President who forbade that United States
officials should be used to assassinate Cuban leaders. That
was the case of Gerald Ford who replaced Nixon after the
Watergate scandal. Given his irregular manner of ascending
to the office, one might characterize him as a symbolic
President.
It is to the illustrious President Eisenhower, not in
the least opposed to anti-Cuban terrorism but rather its
initiator, that we owe thanks for at least providing a
definition of the industrial-military complex which today,
with its insatiable and incurable voracity, makes up the
motor that is driving the human species to its current
crisis. More than three billion years have gone by since
planet Earth saw the first forms of life springing up.
One day, Che [Guevara] and I went to play golf. He had
been a caddie once to earn some money in his spare time; I,
on the other hand, knew absolutely nothing about this
expensive sport. The United States government had already
decreed the suspension and the redistribution of Cuba’s
sugar quota, after the Revolution had passed the Agrarian
Reform Law. The golf game was a photo opportunity. The
real purpose was to make fun of Eisenhower.
In the United States, you can have a minimum of votes
and still become President. That is what happened to Bush.
Having a majority of electoral votes and losing the
Presidency is what happened to Gore. For that reason, the
State of Florida is the prize everyone aspires to, because
of the presidential votes it provides. In the case of Bush,
an electoral fraud was also needed; for this, the first
Cuban emigrants, who were the Batista supporters and the
bourgeois, were best masters.
Clinton is not excluded from all of this, neither is
the Democratic Party’s candidate. The Helms-Burton Act was
passed with his support, with a ready-made excuse: the
downing of Brothers to the Rescue planes, those which on
more than one occasion had flown over the city of Havana and
which had violated Cuban territory dozens of times. The
order to fend off flights over the Capital had been given to
the Cuban Air Force just weeks earlier.
I must tell you that, close to that episode,
Congressman Bill Richardson had arrived on a visit to Cuba
on January 19, 1996. As usual, he brought with him
petitions asking that several counter-revolutionaries be
released from prison. We explained to him that we were by
now tired of receiving such petitions, and I talked to him
about what was happening with the Brothers to the Rescue
flights. I also talked to him about the unfulfilled
promises regarding the blockade. Richardson returned a few
days later, on the 10th of February, and very earnestly told
me, to the best of my recollection, the following: "That
will not be happening again; the President has ordered those
flights to be suspended".
In those days, I believed that orders issued by the
President of the United States would be carried out. The
planes were brought down on February 24, some days after the
reply. The New Yorker Magazine supplies
details about that meeting with Richardson.
Apparently, Clinton gave the order to suspend those
flights, but nobody paid any attention to it. It was an
election year, and he took advantage of that excuse to
invite the Foundation leaders over and to sign that criminal
Act, with the approval of all.
Following the migratory crisis of 1994, we learned that
Carter wanted to do something to find a solution. Clinton
didn't accept it and he called Salinas de Gortari, the
President of Mexico. Cuba had been the last nation to
recognize his electoral victory. He had contacted him on
his inauguration as the new President of Mexico.
Salinas informed me by phone of Clinton’s decision to
find a satisfactory solution, and in turn he was asked for
his cooperation in this effort. That was how an agreement
was reached in principle. That agreement with Clinton
included the idea of putting an end to the economic
blockade. The only witness we could count on was Salinas.
Clinton had thus left out Carter. Cuba was not able to
decide who the mediator would be. Salinas relates this
episode accurately. Anyone with an interest can read about
it in his books.
Clinton was really kind when we informally crossed
paths at a UN meeting attended by many heads of state.
Moreover, he was friendly, as well as intelligent, in
demanding adherence to the law in the case of the kidnapped
boy, when he was rescued by special federal agents sent from
Washington.
The candidates are now immersed in the Florida
adventure: Hillary, the Clinton successor; Obama, the
popular African American candidate and several of the other
16 who, up until the present, have proposed their candidacy
in both parties, with the exception of Republican
Congressman Ronald Ernest Paul and the former Democratic
Senator from Alaska, Maurice Robert Gravel, and the other
three Democrats Dennis Kucinich, Christopher Dodd and Bill
Richardson.
I don’t know what Carter said during his race to the
White House. Whatever his position was, I was right when I
guessed that his election could avoid a holocaust for the
people of Panama, and that is just what I said to Torrijos.
He established the U.S. Interests Section in Cuba and
promoted an agreement about jurisdictional maritime limits.
The circumstances surrounding his term prevented him from
taking things any further and, in my opinion he embarked on
several imperial adventures.
Today, talk is about the seemingly invincible ticket
that might be created with Hillary for President and Obama
for Vice President. Both of them feel the sacred duty of
demanding “a democratic government in Cuba”. They are not
making politics: they are playing a game of cards on a
Sunday afternoon.
The media declares that this would be essential, unless
Gore decides to run. I don’t think he will do so; better
than anyone, he knows about the kind of catastrophe that
awaits humanity if it continues along its current course.
When he was a candidate, he of course committed the error of
yearning for “a democratic Cuba”.
Enough of tales and nostalgia. This is written simply
to increase the conscience of the Cuban people.
Fidel Castro Ruz
August 27, 2007.
4:56 p.m.