|
The Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of
the European Union adopted several decisions on
Cuba last 18 June.
The document, released by the European Union
under the title “Conclusions on Cuba,” contains
a proposal for “a comprehensive and open
political dialogue with the Cuban authorities…on
the basis of reciprocity and mutual interest,”
of which the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs
has taken note and considers it to be a
necessary rectification.
However, such document does not mention the
so-called sanctions that the European Union
tried to enforce on Cuba, in an unjust and
thoughtless manner, in 2003 and which it has
only maintained “in abeyance” for two years now
out of haughtiness.
With Cuba, a dialogue will only be possible if
between sovereign and equal partners, without
any conditions or impending threats. If the
European Union wishes to engage in any dialogue
with Cuba, it must definitely eliminate those
sanctions, which since then have turned out to
be impracticable and unsustainable.
The “Conclusions” also failed to mention the
so-called “Common Position,” agreed upon in a
hasty fashion by the Ministers of Finance of the
EU in 1996 under the pressure of Aznar and based
on a draft written at the US State Department.
After so many mistakes and failures, the only
obvious conclusion that the European Union
should fittingly draw is that the so-called
“Common Position” must disappear, since there
were no and there are no reasons whatsoever for
its existence and because it hinders any normal,
mutually respectful relationship of common
interest with our country.
It must be recognized that a group of
influential European nations have endeavored to
change this ludicrous situation. Others, such as
the Czech Republic, have confirmed to be
American pawns on the European map.
On the other hand, the “Conclusions of the
Council” slanderously meddle with matters that
are of Cuba’s strict concern, pass judgment and
announce intrusive and hypocritical actions that
Cuba regards as offensive and unacceptable,
while strongly rejecting them.
We do not recognize any moral authority in the
European Union to pass judgment on or advise
Cuba.
If when the Council refers to the temporary
transfer of President Fidel Castro’s duties to
comrade Raúl Castro, regarding it as a “new
situation,” it is expressing the illusion that
there may be contradictions or differences among
the leaders of the Revolution and division among
Cuban revolutionaries, it is wrong once again.
The Revolution is more solid and is more united
than ever before.
Our country has risked its own existence, has
shown heroic endurance and has relentlessly
fought for over a century in order to defend its
independence. Cuba is an independent and
sovereign country and the European Union makes a
mistake if it believes that it can treat it
differently and not as an equal.
The European Union has shown a persistent and
humiliating subordination to the United States,
which renders it incapable of holding positions
based on European interests and turns it into an
accessory, despite references to the contrary,
to the ruthless and inhumane blockade that the
US enforces against the Cuban people, and about
which the “Conclusions” did not even dare say a
single word. In the declaration from the Summit
that it held last April with the United States,
the European Union yielded to them to question
Cuba and accepted a reference that acknowledges
legitimacy to the “Bush Plan.” Known are its
collusions with the Empire’s envoys, even with
the spurious inspector appointed by the United
States for Cuba, and frequent is the presence of
its officials at anti-Cuban rallies and events
in Miami or held in Europe but budgeted from
Washington.
The European Union is shamelessly hypocritical
when unjustly talking about Cuba while keeping
silence on the US-led tortures at the illegal
Naval Base of Guantánamo, which encroaches on
Cuban territory, and at Abu Ghraib, where these
are even administered to European citizens. It
impudently remains silent on the kidnappings by
the US special forces in third countries and has
offered its territory to cooperate with the
CIA’s secret flights and to harbor illegal
prisons. Nor has it said anything about the tens
of persons who have disappeared under such
circumstances or about the hundreds of thousands
of civilians murdered in Iraq.
It is up to the European Union to rectify the
mistakes made in respect of Cuba. Any step in
the right direction will be aptly welcome. But
there is no rush: we have all the time in the
world.
Havana, 22 June 2007
(Minrex) 22-06-2007
|