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Cuba's Useful Idiot

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 16, 2008 at 08:53 PM

Cuba's Useful Idiot 	
By Humberto Fontova
FrontPageMagazine.com | Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Last month Dan Rather's new gig as host of HDNET's "Dan Rather Re****ts" 
found him, as so often during his CBS days, "re****ting" from Cuba. From 
Dan we heard of "dramatic changes" down there, of a "remarkable 
transformation." "The door (to the U.S.) is open, "explained Dan. "The 
best time to talk is now."

Dan was chanting a familiar tune, one we've heard almost nonstop from 
the MSM's pet "Cuba Experts'" for the past 21 months.

As usual when dealing with Cuban matters, a sober look behind the 
carefully constructed and dutifully re****ted Castroite facade, shatters 
almost everything coming over the Mainstream Media's mics, cameras and 
wires. The Heritage Foundation, for instance, in its recently published 
Index of Economic Freedom, ranks Cuba as more economically repressive 
this year than before Castro's "resignation." Under Raul Castro's 
nominal rule, Cuba slipped down 1.1 notches to number 155 -- where it 
ranks almost neck to neck with North Korea.

With Dan Rather, however, recent history shows that simple ignorance of 
Castroite practices wont cut it as an alibi.

Recall the Elian Gonzalez tragedy and Dan Rather's 60 Minutes interview 
with Elian's father, Juan Miguel. America saw an innocent, bewildered 
and heartsick father simply pleading to be allowed to have his 
motherless son accompany him back to Cuba, his cherished homeland. How 
could anyone oppose this? How could simple decency and common sense 
possibly allow for anything else?

Well, ask those wicked Miami Cubans. Their political showboating was 
thwarting the desperate father every step of the way, for motives to 
shame Ebeneezer Scrooge, Benito Mussolini, Judas Iscariot and Bruno 
Hauptmann (the Lindberg child kidnapper.)

"Did you cry?" the pained and frowning Dan Rather asked the "bereaved" 
father during the 60 Minutes drama.

"A father never runs out of tears," Juan (actually, the voice of Juan's 
drama school-trained translator) sniffled back to Dan. And the "60 
Minutes" prime-time audience could hardly contain their own sniffles. 
Polls at the time showed that 70% of the American public took Juan 
Miguel's pleas (as transmitted by Dan Rather) to heart and sided with 
his wishes for Elian's return to Stalinist Cuba.

Here's what America didn't see:

"Juan Miguel Gonzalez was surrounded by Castro Security men the entire 
time he was in the studio with Rather." This is an eye-witness account 
from Pedro ****ro, who served as Dan Rather's translator during the 
famous interview. Dan Rather would ask the question in English into 
****ro's earpiece whereupon ****ro would translate it into Spanish for 
Elian's heavily-guarded father.

"Juan Miguel was never completely alone," says ****ro. "He never smiled. 
His eyes kept ****fting back and forth. It was obvious to me that he was 
under heavy coercion. I probably should have walked out. But I'd been 
hired by CBS in good faith and I didn't know exactly how the interview 
would be edited -- how it would come across on the screen."

"The questions Dan Rather was asking Elian's father during that 60 
Minutes interview were being handed to him by attorney Gregory Craig," 
continues Pedro ****ro. Clinton crony Gregory Craig, you might recall, 
flush from his fame getting Bill Clinton off the Lewinsky rap, was at 
the time acting as Juan Miguel's (read Fidel Castro's) attorney.

"It was obvious that Craig and Rather where on very friendly terms," 
says ****ro. "They were jo****ng and bantering back and forth, as Juan 
Miguel sat there petrified. Craig was stage managing the whole thing -- 
almost like a movie director. The taping would stop and he'd walk over 
to Dan, hand him a little slip of paper, say something into his ear. 
Then Rather would read the next question into my earpiece straight from 
the paper."

Midway through watching that "60 Minutes" broadcast, "I felt like 
throwing up," said ****ro. "My stomach was in a knot." His worst fears 
were confirmed.

The Craig/Rather "60 Minutes" soap opera was a major hit. As polls 
showed, America ate it up. Craig, after all, had come to Castro highly 
recommended. And he performed magnificently, employing a major media 
outlet as aides, props and publicists for Castro's case. Fidel Castro, 
of course, is an old pro at this. To cap it all, at that time Craig 
worked for the law firm Williams & Connolly -- that also represented 
CBS. Gregory Craig now serves as the Obama campaign's chief advisor on 
Latin America.

Some of the sources featured on Rather's recent HDNET program also merit 
closer scrutiny. Throughout his program denouncing (however subtly) the 
U.S. "embargo" of Cuba and touting her dramatic "opening," Rather 
interviews Phil Peters, described as a "former Reagan-Bush State dept 
official." (See!? See!? He's no Castro-loving pinko!) and as Vice 
President of the Wa****ngton D.C. based Lexington Institute, a 
free-market think tank (See?! See!? Again!)

Much as during the Elian episode, America (actually, the minuscule 
****tion that views Hdnet) might have benefited from a "behind the 
scenes" view of Dan's source, Phil Peters, who serves as a "consultant" 
to a Canadian Cor****ation named Sherrit International. This Canada-based 
mining company derives much of its profits from criminal activities. 
Applying legal standards recognized from the code of Hammurabi to even 
Janet Reno's Justice Department, Sherrit qualifies as a trafficker in 
stolen property and an accessory to theft.

In a joint venture with Cuba's Stalinist regime, Sherrit occupies and 
operates the Moa nickel mining plant in Cuba's Oriente province, stolen 
at Soviet gunpoint from its U.S. managers and stockholders in July 1960 
(when it was worth $90 million) by Castro gunmen. Here's a legal memo 
uncovered as part of a recent court case discovery by intrepid bloggers 
at Babalu Blog, and posted on their site:

 From Robert L. Muse:

"Canada's Sherritt works quietly in Wa****ngton...recently it has given 
money to a former State Department employee, Phil Peters, to advance its 
interests. The money to Peters goes through contributions to the 
Lexington Institute, where Peters is a Vice-President. Because the 
Lexington Institute is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit, there is no public 
record of Sherritt's funding. This has allowed Peters to advise and 
direct the Cuba Working Group (a Congressional anti-embargo cabal) in 
ways beneficial to Sherritt while presenting himself to the Group as an 
objective think-tank scholar with a specialization in Cuba."

But Sherritt's criminality hardly stops there. Sherritt's workers are 
chosen and assigned by the Cuban regime who sets their wages and 
dictates the payment schedule. After Sherritt pays these wages (not to 
the workers, but to the Cuban regime) the latter dribbles .5% of the 
total to the workers, pocketing the rest. As dreadful as they make life 
for their subjects, the Red Chinese and Red Vietnamese regimes dictate 
nothing of the sort when hosting western companies as business partners.)

By the way, prior to the glorious revolution, which is to say, during 
Cuba's unspeakable tenure as a playground for Yankee land-barons, 
robber-barons, playboys, gangsters,racists, fascists, and other such 
swinish exploiters, Moa nickel plant's workers enjoyed the 8th highest 
industrial wages--not in the hemisphere--but in the world, higher than 
those in Britain,France and Germany. And these wages were paid in Cuban 
dollars, convertible, in those dark and dreadful ages,one to one with 
the U.S. dollar. Humberto Fontova is the author of Exposing the Real Che 
Guevara and the Useful Idiots Who Idolize Him. Visit www.hfontova.com

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=CDFF92A9-356B-4570-9EB1-788C712DA236
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Cuba's Useful Idiot
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-16 20:53:13 

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tan12V112 Mon Oct 6 23:19:18 CDT 2008.