Reflections
by comrade Fidel
SWIMMING
UP STREAM
Following Obama’s speech, on May 23 this year, to the
Cuban American National Foundation established by Ronald Reagan, I wrote a
reflection entitled “The Empire’s Hypocritical Policy”. It was dated on the 25th
of the same month.
In that Reflection I quoted his exact words to the Miami
annexationists: “[…] together we will stand up for freedom in Cuba; this is my
word and my commitment […] It's time to let Cuban American money make their
families less dependent upon the Castro regime. […] I will maintain the
embargo.”
I then offered several arguments and unethical examples
of the general behavior of the Presidents who preceded the one who would be
elected to that position on the November 4 elections. I literally wrote:
“I find myself forced to raise various
sensitive questions:
10. Is it
honorable and sound to invest millions upon millions of dollars in the military
industrial complex, to produce weapons that can destroy life on earth several
times over?”
I
could have included several other issues.
Despite
the caustic questions, I was not unkind to the African American candidate. I
perceived he had greater capacity and command of the art of politics than his
adversaries, not only in the opposing party but in his own, too.
Last
week, the American President-elect Barack Obama announced his Economic Recovery
Program.
Monday,
December 1st, he introduced his National Security and Foreign Policy
teams.
“Vice
President-elect Biden and I are pleased to announce our national security team
[…] old conflicts remain unresolved, and newly assertive powers have put strains
on the international system. The spread of nuclear weapons raises the peril
that the world's deadliest technology could fall into dangerous hands. Our
dependence on foreign oil empowers authoritarian governments and endangers our
planet.”
“…our
economic power must sustain our military strength, our diplomatic leverage, and
our global leadership.”
“We will renew old alliances and forge new and enduring
partnerships […] American values are America's greatest export to the world.”
“…the team that we
have assembled here today is uniquely suited to do just that.”
“…these men and
women represent all of those elements of American power […] they have served in
uniform and as diplomats […] they share my pragmatism about the use of power,
and my sense of purpose about America's role as a leader in the world.”
“I have known
Hillary Clinton…,” he says.
I am mindful of
the fact that she was President-elect Barack Obama’s rival and the wife of
President Clinton, who signed the extraterritorial Torricelli and Helms Burton
Acts against Cuba. During the presidential race she committed herself with
these laws and with the economic blockade. I am not complaining, I am simply
stating it for the record.
“I am proud that
she will be our next Secretary of State,” said Obama. “[she] will command
respect in every capitol; and who will clearly have the ability to advance our
interests around the world. Hillary's appointment is a sign to friend and foe
of the seriousness of my commitment…”
“At a time when we face an unprecedented transition
amidst two wars, I have asked Robert Gates to continue as Secretary of Defense…”
“[…] I will be giving Secretary Gates and our military a
new mission as soon as I take office: responsibly ending the war in Iraq
through a successful transition to Iraqi control.”
It strikes me that Gates is a Republican, not a Democrat.
He is the only one who has been Defense Secretary and Director of the Central
Intelligence Agency, that is, he has occupied these positions under both
Democratic and Republican Administrations. Gates, who is aware of his
popularity, has said that first made sure that the President-elect was choosing
him for as long as necessary.
On the other hand, while Condoleezza Rice was traveling
to India and Pakistan under Bush’s instructions to mediate in the tense
relations between these two countries, two days ago, the minister of Defense
from Brazil gave the green light to a Brazilian company to manufacture MAR-1
missiles, but instead of one a month, as it had been the case until now, it
will produce five every month. One hundred of these missiles will be sold to
Pakistan at an estimated cost of 85 million euros.
In a public
statement, the minister said that “these missiles that can be attached to
planes have been designed to locate ground radars. They allow the effective
monitoring of both the ground and air space.”
As for Obama, he continued unflappable his Monday
statement: “And going forward, we will continue to make the investments
necessary to strengthen our military and increase our ground forces to defeat
the threats of the 21st century.”
On Janet Napolitano, he indicated: “[she] offers the
experience and executive skill that we need in the next Secretary of Homeland
Security…”
“Janet assumes this critical role having learned the
lessons – some of them painful – of the last several years, from 9/11 to
Katrina […] She understands as well as anyone the danger of an insecure border.
And she will be a leader who can reform a sprawling Department while
safeguarding our homeland.”
This familiar figure had been appointed a District
Attorney in Arizona by Clinton in 1993, and then promoted to State Attorney
General in 1998. Later on, in 2002, she became a Democratic Party candidate and
then governor of that bordering state which is the most common incoming route
used by illegal immigrants. She was elected governor in 2006.
About Susan Elizabeth Rice, he said: “Susan knows that
the global challenges we face demand global institutions that work… We need the
UN to be more effective as a venue for collective action – against terror and
proliferation; climate change and genocide; poverty and disease.”
On National Security Advisor James Jones he said: “[…] I
am convinced that General James Jones is uniquely suited to be a strong and
skilled National Security Advisor. Generations of Joneses have served
heroically on the battlefield – from the beaches of Tarawa in World War II, to
Foxtrot Ridge in Vietnam. Jim's Silver Star is a proud part of that legacy […]
He has commanded a platoon in battle, served as Supreme Allied Commander in a
time of war, (he means NATO and the Gulf War) and worked on behalf of peace in
the Middle East.”
“Jim is focused on the threats of today and the future.
He understands the connection between energy and national security, and has
worked on the frontlines of global instability – from Kosovo to northern Iraq
to Afghanistan.”
“He will advise me
and work effectively to integrate our efforts
across the government, so
that we are effectively using all elements of American power to defeat
unconventional threats and promote our values.”
“I am confident that this is
the team that we need to make a new beginning for American national security.”
Obama is somebody we can talk to anywhere he wishes since
we do not preach violence or war. He should me reminded, though, that the stick
and carrot doctrine will have no place in our country.
None of the phrases in his latest speech shows any
element of response to the questions I raised last May 25, just six months ago.
I will not say now that Obama is any less smart. On the
contrary, he is showing the mental faculties that enabled me to see and compare
his capacity with that of his mediocre adversary, John McCain, who was almost
rewarded for his “exploits” merely due to the traditions of the American
society. If it had not been for the economic crisis, television and the
Internet, Obama would not have won the elections against the omnipotent racism.
It also helped that he studied first in the University of Columbia, where he
graduated in Political Sciences, and then in Harvard where he graduated as a
lawyer. This enabled him to become a member of the modestly rich class with
only several million dollars. He is certainly not Abraham Lincoln, nor are these
times similar to those. That society is today a consumer society where the
saving habits have been lost while the spending habit has multiplied.
Somebody had to offer a calm and serene response even
though this will have to swim up the powerful stream of hopes raised by Obama
in the international public opinion.
I only have two more press dispatches left to analyze.
They all carry news from everywhere. I have estimated that only the United
States will be spending in this economic crisis over $6 trillion in paper
money, an amount that can only be assessed by the rest of the peoples of the
world with their sweat and hunger, their suffering and blood.
Our principles are the same as those of Baraguá. The
empire should know that our Homeland can be turned to dust but the sovereign
rights of the Cuban people are not negotiable.
Fidel Castro Ruz
December 4, 2008
5:28p.m.