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Cuba: The Struggle Continues

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 8, 2008 at 01:18 PM

Cuba: The Struggle Continues

Saul Landau | May 7, 2008

Editor: John Feffer

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Cubans have lived 
through a "special period." This euphemism stood not only for a drastic 
decline in the standard of living, but for a sharp alteration of social 
values as well. Soviet aid vanished along with the advantageous trade 
with the Soviet bloc. As Cuba's economy went south, the state broke its 
part of the social contract: it no longer provided Cubans with their 
material needs of sufficient food and clothing. Basic health care and 
education remained, albeit cut back. But the government cut rations by 
more than half and cheap food disappeared. To survive, each Cuban felt 
himself morphed from the values of communism (sharing) to the values of 
individualism (dog eat dog).

In the early 1990s, U.S. government experts and prestigious pundits 
predicted the imminent fall of the Fidel Castro government. Office 
parties in Wa****ngton's national security bureaucracy held lotteries 
(which day or week would Castro fall?). Pulitzer Prize winner Andres 
Oppenheimer penned a 1992 book called Castro's Final Hour (giving new 
meaning to the words "final" and "hour").

Seventeen years after the USSR vanished Cuba remains the world's only 
socialist state. Its critics call it a "failed state" or "a basket 
case," but over the last decade Cubans' standard of living has risen 
steadily. Bookies have stopped taking bets on the date of its demise.
Miraculous Survival

Cuban leaders admit in private it's a miracle they survived. The answer 
might lie in Castro's Machiavellian policy of ex****ting his enemies to 
the United States (almost 1 million). He even got his most militant 
detractors to regularly send money to their relatives on the island, 
thereby repleni****ng his nearly empty treasury to the tune of $1 billion 
a year in remittances.

Castro's political agility, however, has not helped realize his more 
quixotic vision of making Cuba into a magnetic model for other third 
world countries looking for proper paths to development. Indeed, Cubans 
continue to leave their island perilously in rafts or smugglers' boats 
to seek more op****tunity in Florida. Engineers, scientists and PhDs in 
literature choose not to spend their work lives making pizzas or paper 
boxes, or teaching grade school.

Cubans also want to earn enough money to survive. During the "special 
period" adults found "hustles" to make enough for family survival. This 
meant breaking the law, buying or selling illegally, or turning an 
occasional trick. It meant theft of state property and thriving black 
market operations.

By 2006, however, China and Venezuela had begun to pour hundreds of 
millions of investment dollars into the island's mineral and oil 
resources. In addition, the discovery of off-shore oil brought other 
investors to Cuba. With the new money, Cuba began to rebuild its 
decaying infrastructure. In the mid-1990s, summer blackouts lasted up to 
20 hours on bad days. In 2008, the refurbished electrical grid allowed 
the government to sell appliances to the public and gradually raise the 
standard of living.
Rejecting Other Models

By 2007, Cuban leaders began a public debate to address some of the 
problems that developed in the post-Soviet period. Some of these 
problems had roots in the Soviet model itself. The leader****p, however, 
had no intention of going capitalist. Those who have pushed the Chinese 
or Vietnamese models did not prevail when, last July 26, Raul Castro 
spoke of solving the pressing issues like daily adversity, shortage of 
food and low agricultural productivity, within a socialist model.

The government has responded to popular discontent, alienation, and 
downright cynicism and over the last two years im****ted 35% more food. 
Raul also admitted that "wages are clearly insufficient to meet people's 
needs." This statement does not mean what U.S. journalists re****t or 
sneer at when they re****t that the average Cuban wage comes to $20 a 
month. They don't factor in free health care and education from nursery 
school to PhD; no rent or taxes; practically free trans****tation, 
entertainment, and subsidized food. But it is still a long way from the 
cradle-to grave security Cubans experienced before the Soviet demise.

Most foreign re****ters also omit the obvious fact: Cuban leaders make 
choices on the basis of needs of the 11-plus million people, underlining 
health and education as basics. Re****ters hold as axiomatic the values 
of their consumer societies, one with supermarkets and department stores 
stocked with multiple brand names. If Cubans wish to maintain equality 
as a value, such a model will not appear on the island. Although Cuban 
trade has increased, especially with Venezuela and China, it remains a 
far cry from competitive. Its work force has remained low on the 
productivity scale for production, partly as a result of labor laws that 
make it difficult to fire or even discipline workers.

Allowing more goods for sale will not mean a mass rush of sales because 
most Cubans do not possess excess foreign cash. Cubans will have to 
choose between the new items available – including stays at posh hotels.

Cubans who receive remittances from family members abroad or get paid in 
hard currency continue to enjoy buying privileges – institutionalized 
inequality – that grate at much of the population. But freedom to shop 
cannot sustain a socialist country – especially a third world nation 
built on the twin themes of justice and equality.

Cuba's new investment has also gone into public trans****tation – 
especially urban and long-hop buses and trains. The reforms also allowed 
more freedoms for small farmers who had done better than the massive 
state operations. More food, better trans****t, and no more costly 
blackouts mean a lot in the life of Cubans.
Revolution in Trouble

The new mood has extended beyond the material. The artists and 
intellectuals declared they would not tolerate censor****p. The 
leader****p agreed. All of the openings and reforms spelled progress. But 
all the positive steps aside, the revolution is in trouble. In the first 
months of this year, several thousand Cubans fled the island for 
Florida. They didn't leave because of lack of freedom of speech, but 
rather for freedom to practice their professions and envision more 
possibilities for their and their children's futures.

Fidel Castro warned that although the Cuban revolution had successfully 
defied imperialism, Cubans could lose their own revolution. In his April 
3, 2008 letter to Artists and Writers Union President Miguel Barnet 
Castro wrote: "everything that ethically fortifies the Revolution is 
good; everything that weakens it is bad." He said something similar in 
1961 to Cuba's intellectuals: "Inside the revolution, everything; 
outside the revolution; nothing." The revolution meant sovereignty and 
independence, social justice and equality. If one agrees and 
sympathizes, one had to wince when Cuban leaders acted in ways that 
contradict or ignore this starting point.

Some recent events are especially disturbing. In early April 2003, Cuban 
state security officials arrested three men who had tried to hijack a 
passenger ferry and killed a resisting pilot. The court then imposed the 
death penalty and gave the men only several days to appeal. Cuba's 
Supreme Tribunal and the governing Council of State upheld the 
sentences, and on April 11 the three were executed.

Cuban officials claimed that the speed of the process "set an example" 
for other potential hijackers. A spate of boat and plane thefts 
previously allowed Cubans to go to the United States, where officials 
neither punished the men nor returned the crafts. But the death penalty 
with virtually no time to appeal bespoke of panic rather than the 
usually reasoned response Cuban leaders presented to crises.

A month before, in March, Cuba arrested 75 dissidents, which shocked 
much of the world and saddened some of Cuba's sup****ters. At the 
subsequent trial, witnesses testified that the accused dissidents 
received goods and services from U.S. diplomats in Havana. Twelve 
witnesses were putative dissidents, including some of the most 
articulate members like journalist Nestor Baguer, who presented 
do***ents describing the transactions, which were a violation of a Cuban 
law designed to retaliate against the Helms Burton Act that punished Cuba.

In 1998, Baguer led the Independent Press Agency of Cuba. With a few 
other journalists he faxed re****ts to Re****ters Sans Frontiers and to 
the U.S. government funded Radio Martí. In the April 2003 trial, Baguer 
emerged as one of 12 moles planted by state security. The convincing 
evidence they presented to the court did not dissuade critics who 
believed that Cuba should not have punished people for holding 
dissenting views even if they took money from representatives of an 
enemy government.

Why retreat to the death penalty and arrest people whom they had 
neutralized by planting police agents inside their groups? And why 
expose the agents?

Cuban officials, some of them in semi-apologetic tones, told me they had 
to show the United States it could not act impulsively against Cuba as 
it had done in Afghanistan and Iraq. By executing hijackers and 
arresting dissidents, the government showed its determination: it would 
be tough – and bloody – against U.S. provocations. I felt unsatisfied,

although I believed the Cuban officials had told the truth.
Cuba Hurts

"The Cuban revolution was born to be different," the Uruguayan writer 
Eduardo Galeano once wrote. "Assailed by the incessant hounding from the 
empire to the north, it survived as it could and not as it wished. The 
people, valiant and generous, sacrificed a great deal to stay on their 
feet in a world of rampant servility. But as year after year of trials 
buffeted the island, the revolution began to lose the spontaneity and 
freshness that marked its beginning."

No kidding. In 1960, I watched creative chaos dominate everyday life. 
And like Galeano, I have seen, over 48 years, "revolutionary virtue" 
turned into "obedience to orders from above."

That's what happens, almost as a law of political nature when the United 
States wages a half-century-long war of aggression. Cuba's crime: 
disobedience. By puni****ng this upstart, Galeano wrote, the United 
States effectively blocked "the development of democracy in Cuba, 
feeding the militarization of power and providing alibis for 
bureaucratic rigidity."

Galeano continued. "The revolution which was capable of surviving the 
fury of 10 American presidents and 20 CIA directors," he wrote, "needs 
the energy that comes from participation and diversity to face the dark 
times that surely lie ahead. I say with sadness: Cuba hurts."

Could I or anyone I know have done better? Fidel claims the CIA tried to 
assassinate him 638 times. The CIA says this is slightly exaggerated. 
The Agency admits it launched thousands of terrorist attacks against 
Cuba and Cubans. For half a century, the United States attacked with an 
economic blockade, psychological and quite possibly biological and 
chemical warfare. It attempted to isolate Cuba diplomatically and 
continues to wage an aggressive propaganda assault with Radio and TV
Marti.
Democratic Opening

Cuba resisted and survived – but was wounded in the process. In March 
2008, however, the democratic opening Galeano and other long-time 
sympathizers waited for, had begun. Above and beyond the trumpeted 
freedom of Cubans to buy electronic appliances and cell phones and own 
their own houses free and clear, Cuba has signed the UN covenants on 
human rights and labor, which binds it to the terms of those accords. 
This means that unions cannot be part of government and that free 
speech, press, and politics must be respected. We shall see how this 
develops.

A citizen told Vice President Carlos Lage at a conference that the 
government lacked sensitivity to people's social needs and psychological 
problems, stuff money can't fix. Lage apologized. Cubans watched it on 
TV. Earlier this year, in Juventud Rebelde, an official newspaper, the 
government was ripped for fudging statistics on unemployment. Changes 
have begun, but the smugglers remain. The boats remain full as well.

Look at the Cuban revolution historically. It has been a success. It 
achieved independence and sovereignty, educated and made healthy its 
population, provided them with basic needs and educated its people to 
dance on the stage of world history. Cubans altered the destiny of 
southern Africa when its troops helped defeat the apartheid South 
African armies at Cuito Cuanavale in 1987-8. Mandela hugged Fidel at his 
inauguration. "You made this possible," he said for the world to hear. 
Cubans played a vital role in helping Angola maintain her independence 
and for Namibia to get hers. They played roles in the Vietnam War, the 
Yom Kippur war, and led the charge to slay the Monroe Doctrine.

Fifty years ago, Wa****ngton controlled Latin America; not one leader 
dared challenge its hegemony or its economic policies. Today, four of 
Fidel's ideological sons run countries (Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, and 
Nicaragua) and several of his cousins direct others (Brazil, Chile, 
Argentina, and Panama).

Cuban doctors and scientists, artists and dancers, writers and 
filmmakers have etched their names in the honor rolls of countless 
countries through their sterling performances. The Cuban revolution 
created them.

All those triumphs belong to the past. The question now is: can Cuba 
overcome the legacy of the special period, when individualism eroded the 
collective spirit, and can she transcend the three decades of the Soviet 
model that she had to adopt for survival? Her leaders have lived in and 
for the revolution and imparted its values to the population. Will 
Cubans respond and grab the initiative to maintain the enormous gains or 
suc***b to the ****ny lure of mass consumerism? We shall see.

Saul Landau, an internationally known scholar, author, commentator, and 
filmmaker on foreign and domestic policy issues, has been a fellow at 
the Institute for Policy Studies since 1972. He has written 13 books, 
thousands of newspaper and magazine articles and reviews, and made more 
than 40 films and TV programs on social, political, economic and 
historical issues. He is professor emeritus at Cal Poly Pomona 
University and a contributor to Foreign Policy in Focus (www.fpif.org).

http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/5206
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Cuba: The Struggle Continues
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-05-08 13:18:44 

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