REFLECTIONS BY COMRADE FIDEL
WHAT I WROTE ON TUESDAY 19
That Tuesday there was no fresh international news. The modest message I
wrote to the Cuban people on Monday, February 18, was widely and easily
disseminated. As from 11 o’clock in the morning I started to receive
concrete news. The previous night I had slept like never before. I had a
clear conscience and I had promised myself a vacation. The days of tension,
awaiting the proximity of February 24, had left me exhausted.
Today I will not say a single word about persons very dear to me in Cuba
and in the world who in many different ways expressed their emotions.
I also received a great number of opinions collected in the streets through
reliable methods, which almost without exception and in a very spontaneous
way conveyed the deepest feelings of solidarity. Someday I shall discuss
that issue.
Right now I am focusing on the adversary. I enjoyed watching the
embarrassment of every United States presidential candidate. One by one they
all felt compelled to exact urgent demands from Cuba to avoid the risk of
losing a single vote. Anyone could have thought that I was a Pulitzer Prize
winner interviewing them on very sensitive political and even personal
issues for the CNN from Las Vegas, a place where the logics of the games of
chance prevails, and that should be humbly visited by anyone running for
President.
Fifty years of blockade seemed too little to the favorites. Change! Change!
Change! They all cried in unison.
I agree. Change! But, inside the United States. Cuba changed long ago and
will now follow a dialectical path.
We will never go back to the past! Cries our people.
Annexation! Annexation! Annexation! Responds the adversary. That is what it
really means when it speaks about change.
José Martí, unveiling the secret of his silent struggle, denounced the
voracious and expansionistic empire that his brilliant intelligence had
discovered and described more than one century after the enactment of the
revolutionary Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies.
The end of a historical period is not the same as the beginning of the end
of an unsustainable system.
All of a sudden, the weakened European powers, allied to that system, are
exacting the same demands. In their opinion, the time has come to dance to
the music of democracy and freedom, which since the times of Torquemada,
they never really knew.
The colonization and neo-colonization of entire continents, from which they
get energy, raw materials, and cheap labor, are a moral discredit to them.
An illustrious Spanish personality, once an impeccable socialist and
minister of Culture, who for some time now and even today has been
advocating for the war and the use of weapons, is the synthesis of sheer
nonsense. Kosovo and its unilateral declaration of independence are now
hunting them as an impertinent nightmare.
In Iraq and Afghanistan, men of flesh and blood wearing the United States
and NATO uniforms continue to die. The memories of the USSR, which
disintegrated in part because of the interventionist adventure in
Afghanistan, are chasing the Europeans like a shadow.
Bush senior endorses McCain as his candidate, while Bush junior declares in
some country of Africa –where man originated yesterday and which is a martyr
continent today- where no one knows what he was doing, that my message was
the beginning of the road towards freedom in Cuba, that is to say, the
annexation decreed by his government in a huge and thick text.
The day before, TV networks from all over the world showed a group of
state-of-the-art bombers performing spectacular maneuvers, giving full
guarantees that any bombs could be launched, that the aircraft that carried
them will not be detected by radars, and that this will not be considered a
war crime.
A protest raised by some important countries had to do with the imperial
idea of testing a new weapon under the pretext of avoiding the possible fall
on the territory of a foreign country of a spy satellite, one of the many
artifacts that the United States has put into the planet orbit for military
purposes.
I had thought not to write a reflection at least in 10 days, but I had no
right to remain silent for so long. We need to open ideological fire
against them.
I wrote this on Tuesday at 3:35 pm. Yesterday, I reviewed it and I will
deliver it today, Thursday, in the afternoon. I have begged that my
reflections be published on the second page or any other of our newspapers,
never on the front page, and that brief summaries of them should be
published in other media in case they are long.
I am now fully devoted to the effort of casting my full-slate vote in
support of the Presidency of the National Assembly and the new State
Council, as well as on the right way to do it.
I thank all readers for having waited so patiently.
Fidel Castro Ruz
February 21, 2008
6:34 p.m.
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WALTER LIPPMANN, CubaNews
Los Angeles, California
http://www.walterlippmann.comhttp://groups.yahoo.com/group/CubaNews/"Cuba - Un Paraiso bajo el bloqueo"
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