The transition to oligarchy: planning for the recolonization of Cuba
By Tom Crumpacker
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Jul 14, 2006, 01:03
The plan
The Bush administration’s “Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba,”
co-chaired by our secretaries of State and Commerce, presented a lengthy and
comprehensive report to the president last week, detailing the steps which
the US government and other “vital actors” will be taking to bring Cuba back
into the family of overt US colonies, which now include some of the Pacific
Islands, Puerto Rico, Kabul, and the Green Zone in Baghdad.
The administration was roundly criticized for not having such a plan for
Iraq after its conquests there. Some even claimed it was the reason for the
failure of the occupation. One of the purposes of this plan may be to forestall
such criticism in Cuba’s case.
Nevertheless this plan is much the same as the one for Iraq (which was
not publicly articulated beforehand.) By privatizing what used to be done
publicly, it will bring Cuba into the modern, civilized world by creating a
capitalist utopia where private entrepreneurs from the “international
community” (mostly US corporations) and the “Cuban community abroad” (mostly US
citizens), unencumbered by societal restraint, will unleash their full creative
powers to save the long-suffering Cuban people from continuing poverty and
tyranny -- while incidentally benefiting themselves.
The recommendation for Cuba destabilization activities going on now is
to continue or increase everything, especially the radio-TV projects illegally
being forced on Cubans by the US, denying hard currency to Cuba by tightening
the blockade, i.e., fining foreign banks which deal in Cuba transactions,
punishing and rewarding foreign governments which increase or decrease Cuba
trade, and tightening travel restrictions and increasing punishment for
violating them, the cost of which already triples what we spend trying to trace
"terrorist" funds.
The funding for this will be a new US slush fund of $80 million
increased by $20 million per year, plus all the dirty destabilization money
(unknown multimillions per year) now being funneled through AID, NED, the
so-called NGO's in Florida, and the US Interests Section in Havana.
Under the plan, in the future all Cuban communication, electric power,
transport, mining, industry, agriculture, medical, and other productive
enterprise will be privatized and the vital actors (the US and its
entrepreneurs) will build and create for Cuba a water and sanitation system, a
health care system, an education system, a transportation system, a
communication system, a shelter system (homes for everyone), a food security
system (a chicken in every pot), all presumably similar to what we are doing
for or to the Iraqi people. Much more, in fact, than we are willing to do for
the people of New Orleans.
Our generosity to the Cubans is conditioned however on their acceptance
of a new political economy which is similar to our own. There's very little
said in the plan about what already exists in Cuba, and nothing about the
effects of our blockade and terrorism against Cubans. It’s as if the
institutions, infrastructure and protective capabilities which have been
created in 45 years of independence are so insignificant they're not worth
mentioning.
Not surprisingly, this plan is rife with the usual code words this
administration uses to manipulate public opinion, such as “democracy”
(commercial oligarchy), “freedom” (of the big fish to eat the little ones),
“dissenters” (the few hundred Cubans, US paid mercenaries, on the island). The
plan is also full of statements about what changes the Cuban people want (with
no supporting evidence), but says little about any role for them in pursuing
their supposed desires. Indeed, they are treated overall as the objects of a
transformation to be carried out by others. They are seen as helpless and
ignorant, in desperate need of education and training in the complexities of
modern consumer society. Somewhat similar in tone but much more intense than
the 19th century French idea of “noblesse oblige” (the noble obligation) or the
English idea of “the white man’s burden.” (Kipling)
The plan is to rebuild the Cuban nation from the bottom up, from scratch
to an eventual capitalist neo-colony similar to those which now exist in
Central America and the Caribbean. Nothing is said, however, about how we get
from present reality to “scratch.” The first six months are said to be crucial.
This is when the Cuban Transition Government (CTG) will be set up. Clearly this
means a puppet government such as were created for Afghanistan and Iraq. The
nation building will be done on request of these puppets. Funding will consist
of an imposed IMF structural adjustment loan, other international bank loans,
international investment, especially by the “Cuban community abroad,” and
direct US taxpayer help where deemed appropriate.
Cuban Constitution.
Much concern is expressed in the plan about Fidel Castro’s “strategy”
for succession. Cuba has a constitution, but no mention of it is made in the
plan. Nor, seemingly, is one to be written for them, as was done in Afghanistan
and Iraq. Apparently constitutions are no longer considered necessary. The plan
says that Castro’s strategy is that his brother becomes president when he
leaves office, which the plan’s vital actors (US and its entrepreneurs) will
not allow to happen.
The Cuban Constitution was developed at local and provincial levels in
the early 1970s, and was approved by 97 percent of eligible Cuban voters in
1976. Following the “rectification” period in the late 1980s, it was
substantially amended in 1992 by the same process and a more than two-thirds
vote in the National Assembly as required. In 2002, in response to the “Varela
Project,” it was reaffirmed by a vote of over 8 million Cubans, 95 percent of
the adult population.
This constitution establishes a nonpartisan participatory/representative
electoral system, which is not similar to ours, but in some respects is more
accountable and democratic. At the local and provincial levels there must be
two or more candidates for each office, at the national level it’s a
parliamentary type system where any candidate for the 619, five-year National
Assembly seats must receive at least 50 percent of the vote to win office. The
executive (called the Council of State, analogous to our president and cabinet)
consists of 24 elected (every five years) members of the Assembly headed by a
president and vice president, which presently are the duly elected Castro
brothers.
The constitution provides that if the president is unable to continue or
leaves for any reason, the vice president will take his place until the
National Assembly elects a new president. The Assembly and the Castro brothers
have frequently said the succession will occur per the constitution. The only
way it could be stopped or changed is by a US military intervention. Thus, this
plan is in effect, as Cuba's Assembly President Richard Alarcon has stated, a
declaration of war. It’s a combination of unsupported, vague generalities,
gross exaggeration, insults, hypocrisy and outright falsehoods. It’s a
tunnel-visioned ultimatum which acknowledges no possibility that there may be
other views and perspectives about Cuba. It eliminates the likelihood of public
discussion of such in the US before our superior military power is introduced
to settle the matter. It bears no relation to the reality of Cuba or the
century and half struggle of its people for autonomy. It’s another blast in the
relentless Cuba propaganda campaign which our government has been conducting
for years.
Many Americans are becoming aware of how unreliable our media are and
how we are being manipulated through them by our government. After all, for
most of us, everything we know about foreign countries comes from the media. In
the past, by exercising our constitutional right to travel to other countries
at peace with us, we were able to see and learn the truth ourselves or from
reports by honest people. In the case of Cuba, however, the effects of the
false propaganda are multiplied exponentially by prohibiting travel there. Our
government knows that if we were able to learn the reality of Cuba, its entire
re-colonization effort would quickly disappear in ridicule.
The plan in its larger context.
It’s unusual to publicly issue beforehand a plan for the subjugation of
a sovereign nation. The last historical example which comes to mind is the 1924
publication of Adolph Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.” which outlined his proposed steps
in the upcoming takeover of Germany by the Nazi Party. Unfortunately, no one in
Europe paid much attention to it. Americans should ask themselves why our
government is issuing a plan like this at this time.
Clearly, pander is an important factor. The South Florida business
community, which consists of people with all kinds of ancestry, including
American, Latin, Cuban, tends to see Cuba as its competitor in the main
industry, tourism. It funds most of our national and Florida anti-Cuba politicians
and receives from them in return a brutal blockade, a vicious anti-Cuba policy,
and even more taxpayer money in return.
Many of these people see the present administration as their last chance
to retake power in Cuba. At this point the overbuilt South Florida real estate
market is looking like a lead balloon and things are getting a little “iffy” in
the construction, mortgage, banking, tourism, stock markets and other areas.
Moreover, significant oil deposits have been located off the North coast of
Cuba which the present Cuban government, if left in power, will develop to
benefit only the Cubans on the island. As suggested in the plan, business
conferences are being held frequently in Miami to plan the rapid takeover of
Cuba. They are already arguing among themselves about the spoils. The image is
one of a pack of salivating hounds looking across the Florida Straits to an
island with significant resources and 11 million workers/consumers waiting to
be exploited.
The plan alleges that Cuba and Venezuela are “intermeddling” in other
Latin countries’ internal affairs, which is something the US would never do. No
Latin country has complained of such and no evidence has ever been produced to
support such a charge. It’s true that Cuba sends physicians, nurses and
teachers to help poor people in Latin America, the Caribbean and Africa, but
only on request of their governments. The truth is that after a century of US
corporate exploitation, some countries in South America are becoming
independent nations. The Cuban Revolution stands as a shining example that such
can be done.
The plan says it was written and assembled by over 100 experts from
various government agencies, but the CIA is not among these. There are plenty
of reasons to believe that the CIA, at least the agents who know something
about Cuba, agree with previous onsite Pentagon investigations of Cuban
military installations that Cuba constitutes no risk to our national security.
Nevertheless part of the plan is being kept secret on national security
grounds.
We know now that our government has been at least allowing anti-Cuba
terrorist groups like Alpha 66 to conduct weekly arms training sessions in and
near the Everglades National Park and elsewhere. In recent months, local
authorities in Ft. Lauderdale and Los Angeles have happened upon large arms
caches which are intended for another Cuba invasion. The weapons include rocket
launchers, bazookas, Uzis, all kinds of grenades and machine guns. The
possessors have been charged locally but it’s very unlikely they'll ever be
tried publicly. In the Los Angeles case, the defense of the Alpha 66 member
with over 1,500 war weapons in his home is that they were provided by our
government.
There are several possible scenarios which could be used to publicly
justify another military intervention in Cuba. One of the most unfounded,
pernicious, dangerous aspects of the US propaganda campaign is the assertion
that the Cuban Revolution has been the work of one man ("the tyrant")
and the people on the island are desperate to return to corporate rule. Three
years ago a poll indicated that 25 percent of Miamians of Cuban ancestry want
to return to Cuba when the leadership there changes. Many of these, especially
the younger ones, do not fit in with our commercial culture and are not doing
well in Miami, the poorest big city in the US per capita.
Thus, there's a distinct possibility of a boat exodus from South Florida
to Cuba when the Cuban leadership changes, possibly tens or hundreds of
thousands of people. In the Clinton years Washington, Florida and Miami had
contingency plans to prevent this by using the Coast Guard and various
agencies. This is nowhere mentioned in the plan but it can be inferred that
such contingency plans no longer exist or will not be used. Most of these boat
people will be law abiding, but some of them will be US citizens who could
cause trouble in Cuba and seek US government intervention for help.
Americans would be wise, in their own self-interest, to try to reign in
this administration before it further executes this plan. Any intervention in
Cuba will lead to a brutal war and a long, harsh and bloody
occupation/insurgency, which will end only when the Americans withdraw
completely.
Tom Crumpacker is a member of the Miami
Coalition to End the US Embargo of Cuba.
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