Castro
Strikes Defiant Tone Toward US Criticism
Miami, Apr. 27 2003 (VOA News) -- Tensions between
the United States and Cuba are at their highest level
in nearly a decade. The Bush administration has blasted
Cuba's recent crackdown on internal dissent, while
Cuba has accused the United States of meddling in
its internal affairs and provoking conflict that could
lead to war between the two nations.
Some observers are wondering whether Cuba may be preparing
to unleash a mass exodus of asylum-seekers into the
Florida Straits.
In
the past month, Cuba has sentenced scores of dissidents
to prison terms of up to 28 years and executed three
men who led a failed attempt to hijack a passenger
ferry to the United States.
The
moves have prompted an outcry from the Bush administration,
human rights groups and most recently the Vatican.
Late
Friday, Cuban President Fidel Castro struck a defiant
tone. The communist leader said harsh measures are
required to protect the island-nation from U.S. and
Cuban exile-led efforts to destabilize the country.
Mr.
Castro said the arrest of several dozen mercenaries,
who betrayed their homeland for privileges and money
from the United States, and the capital punishment
for common criminals who hijacked a boat in Havana
Bay with guns and knives, were the result of a conspiracy
directed by the U.S. government and the terrorist
mafia in Miami.
He
said Cuban authorities bear absolutely no responsibility
for the situation. He went on to accuse the United
States of a "sinister" plot "to provoke
a conflict."
At
the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban Studies,
professor Jaime Suchlicki says no one should be surprised
by Mr. Castro's actions.
"Fidel
Castro has repressed the Cuban people periodically
over the past 43 years. There have been periods of
repression followed by periods of some tolerance,
followed again by periods of repression," he
said. "So this is nothing new. He does not like
dissidents or people that oppose him. And no totalitarian
leader accepts opposition or criticism."
Mr.
Suchlicki says the Castro government most likely planned
the crackdown long ago, but waited for an opportune
moment to carry it out.
"It
has come at a time when he [Castro] probably thought
that world opinion would be more concerned with [war
in] Iraq than with anything else," he said.
Cuba
has complained bitterly that the United States encourages
acts like the ferry hijacking by allowing all who
reach U.S. soil to remain in the country, almost regardless
of the means employed to get there.
The
Castro government has also denounced a backlog of
visa applications by Cubans wishing to emigrate legally
to the United States.
State
Department officials admit that this year the United
States has issued fewer than 3,000 of the 20,000 visas
promised annually under a bilateral immigration accord
reached in 1994. The Bush administration blames the
slowdown on new, stringent requirements for issuing
visas mandated by the war on terrorism.
Dagoberto
Rodriguez of Cuba's Interests Section in Washington
recently accused the United States of attempting to
create, "crisis conditions", by fomenting
and concentrating dissent on the island. Mr. Rodriguez
added that his government has no choice but to do
what is necessary to ensure domestic security.
"We
hope that the message the U.S. government will receive
from this situation is that there are no ways to impose
its will on Cuba," he said.
Mr.
Rodriguez says the visa slowdown could provoke a mass
exodus of Cubans taking to the sea.
Such
talk has not gone unnoticed in Washington, where the
Bush administration sees the Cuban rhetoric as a thinly-veiled
threat to open the floodgates of illegal immigration,
should the United States take punitive measures against
Cuba in response to the crackdown on dissidents.
In
recent months, the U.S. Coast Guard and other elements
of the federal government have updated emergency plans
to deal with any exodus from Cuba that may occur.
But
not everyone is worried. A spokesman for the Miami-based
Cuban American National Foundation, Joe Garcia, says
he doubts Bush administration will allow itself to
be blackmailed.
"This
administration is not going to go for the bait. This
administration has basically said that disorderly
migration will be met with orderly repatriation,"
he said. "This means that he [Castro] will not
be able to threaten south Florida with hundreds of
thousands of Cubans [taking to the sea]."
Fallout
from the surge in tensions between Havana and Washington
has been swift and dramatic. Two years ago, the United
States eased its longstanding economic embargo against
Cuba to allow the sale of food and medicine to the
island. Embargo opponents in the United States had
hoped the measure would be the first step towards
dismantling the embargo entirely. But the Cuba Policy
Foundation, a prominent Washington-based group dedicated
to promoting closer ties between the estranged nations,
has disbanded in the wake of recent events on the
island. Members of the group have expressed shock
and disillusionment over repression on the island.
One
of the few remaining voices urging closer ties between
Washington and Havana is Iowa Senator Tom Harkin,
who visited Cuba last week. "It is clear to me
that the best course of action now is moderation,
not escalation; engagement, and not isolation,"
he said.
University
of Miami professor Suchlicki compares the crackdown
on dissidents to purges committed by other dictators
towards the end of their rule.
"This
is a totalitarian regime at the end doing what Mao
did in China, what Stalin did in the Soviet Union:
eliminating opposition before the new generation takes
over," he said. "So I think that this is
a calculated move by Fidel."
Jaime
Suchlicki says Fidel Casto is determined to protect
his legacy by ensuring an eventual transfer of power
to another committed communist: his brother, Raul.
To accomplish this goal, Mr. Suchlicki argues, Fidel
Castro chose to silence those who would most forcefully
argue for democracy upon his death; hence the imprisonment
of his critics on the island.
--
Michael Bowman
- Voice of America in Miami
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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