CUBA

And so now we will travel a mere 50 miles north to witness a radically  different experience. We pick up the story from the common history of the Caribbean highlighted above. 

1762 – Sugar, tobacco and fruit exported to Spain and the Pope.

1809  – Thomas Jefferson – “It will be objected to our  receiving Cuba   that   no  limit  can  then  be  drawn   to   our   future acquisitions…  nothing should ever be accepted that  would  require a Navy to defend it”

1819  – Cubans riot –  repeated in 1826, 1828, 1830,  1848,  1851 and  1855  …  by this stage no Cuban could have  the  right  to trial, travel without military permission, occupy a public  post, set  up  in industry or business, have anyone  staying  in  their house, or marry inter-racially.

1868 – Carlos Manuel de Cespedes liberates his slaves and  starts the rebellion amongst the negroes, mulattoes and cafe-au-laits.

1878  – Cuban revolt crushed at the cost of 85,000 Spanish  lives and 50,000 Cubans. Cespedes is Cuba’s version of George  Washington. Slavery abolished.

1895  – Jose Marti, Cuban poet and fundraiser “Doing is the  best way of saying” sees the U.S. threat and returns to fight – killed by  the  very first bullet! By the following year 60,000  Cubans were  fighting 200,000 Spaniards with the U.S.  gun-ship  “Maine” docked at Havana to “protect Americans living in Cuba”.

1898  –  Cubans  blow up the Maine. But, having  fought  off  the Spaniards, the Cubans lost to the Americans who, while they  were there,  took Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines – revenge  for the 266  US Serviceman who died. U.S. install Mr Wood as the  first Governor  and the money starts getting paid to  Washington.  U.S. and  Spain sign Cuban treaty in Paris. The Platt amendment  which the  Cubans  are  forced to sign to get rid of  the  U.S.  troops, allows  the  U.S.  to re-invade to protect any  threat  to  their interests. U.S. install Thomas Estrada Palma who receives  orders and wages from Washington.

1906  – Palma re-elected. Rebellion. U.S. armed intervention.  Mr Magoon  installed as President. After three years, Palma left,  a millionaire after 3 years of administrative corruption.

1916-21  – Another U.S. armed intervention to protect $1200 million of investments and to put down striking Sugar workers.

1925 – U.S. control all Government, Banks, Mines, Trains,  Sugar, Cattle and Tobacco … 70% of everything in Cuba.

1925  –  Gerardo Machado, Cuba’s first  dictator,  with  personal Police Force of 15,000 men to assassinate opponents.

1933  – General Strike. Machado flees. Provisional Government  of Carlos de Cespedes. U.S. backed Sergeant Fulgencio Batista  leads coup. Promoted to Colonel.

1940 – Election. Batista becomes President. Free and fair? Batista was “elected” because no-one else dared stand.

1948 – Cubans form the Ortodox Party, led by Eduardo Chipas.

1952  –  Batista stages another coup to avoid election  defeat  – abolishes  the  constitution,  dissolves  congress,  outlaws  the Communist  Party  and gets more aid from the U.S. to  expand  the military.

1953  –  Fidel Castro of the Ortodox party (who  were  unable  to control  him) gets 150 crazies to attack the 1000 strong  Moncado garrison. Attack fails. Castro gets 19 years hard labour.

1955  –  To appease the people, Batista releases Castro  and  his friends  and organises elections. Castro goes with the others  to Mexico  to learn a bit more. Trained by General Bayo,  a  Spanish war veteran. Castro meets Che Guevara, an Argentinean doctor. 

In  another failed attempt to overthrow Batista (hurricane this  time and met by Batista’s troops), they flee to the mountains, recover and gain support from the Ortodox, the Communists and the  Campesinos.  The growing army conquers the Oriente (the  mountains  in the  South)  and  urban terrorism starts in  support  of  Castro. Batista  responds  “No wounded, no prisoners” and kills  20,000, supported by aeroplanes, tanks, machine guns and ammunition.

1958  –  Revolution wins! Castro inherits 43%  illiteracy  and  5 million  people (out of 6 million) living in huts. 550 of  Batista’s assassins executed. INRA – the National Institute for Agrarian  Reform starts giving land to the people and compensation  to the previous owners as Government bonds. Urban reform halves rent for property owners. Extra houses appropriated from the Rich  but to  be  paid  for within 10 years at the value  declared  by  the owner. The American-installed Prostitution racket moves to Puerto Rico  and  Miami. Newspapers and the Church support  the  U.S.  Cubans stop reading newspapers and stop going to church. 

1959 – U.S., clearly delighted by Cuba’s new found capacity to care for its people and determine its own future, react by  napalming the Cuban cane-fields.

1960/61 – French steamship “La Couvre”, carrying Belgian  weapons for Cuba, is bombed by the CIA. John Foster Dulles says “The U.S. does  not  have  friends only interests”.  In  retaliation,  Cuba nationalises the U.S. refineries of Esso, Texaco and Sinclair and refines Soviet oil. U.S. impose sugar embargo. Cuba  nationalises all U.S. property. U.S.SR and China agree to buy 700k and 500k of sugar  respectively.  U.S. sabotage increases.  Castro  arms  the people – every neighbourhood has a “Committee for the Defence  of the Revolution”. U.S. prepare for invasion with mercenaries  from Honduras, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Florida. The U.S. may like  to suggest  that  these mercenaries were an International  Force  of sympathetic countries? No. These are mercenaries –  ex-Plantation Owners, Militarists, Police, War Criminals, Fugitives,  trigger-happy Playboys and Bums.   

1961 – 120,000 literacy workers spread out across the island.  By the end of the year, illiteracy falls from 23% to 3%.

1961 – The Bay of Pigs – 1500 mercenaries, 5 U.S. ships, 2 battle ships, 3 freighters loaded with tanks and artillery from  Nicaragua and all escorted by 2 U.S. Navy Destroyers invades  (remember Jefferson?)  Defeated in 48 hours by the locals. The  Mercenaries came to defend the “Principles” of 804,000 acres of U.S. land, 10,000  buildings, 70 industries, 10 Sugar Mills, 5 mines,  2  banks and 2 newspapers. Cuba exchanged U.S. hostages for medicines.

1962 – Cuban Missile Crisis – Nikita Kruschev sends arms to Cuba. U.S. blockade. Missiles return to U.S.S.R. on the condition  that the  U.S. do not invade Cuba (remember the Platt amendment?)  and end the blockade. Missiles withdrawn, but blockade continues.

1980s  – U.S. approve $32 million for TV channel to be beamed  at Cuba – “TV Marti” (remember Jose Marti the Poet? See 1895 above)

1982 – 350 hospitals, compared with 50 in 1958  pre-revolutionary Cuba.  Polio and malaria have been eliminated. Infant  mortality, literacy, life expectancy better than Chicago or the U.S.  Navajo Indian reservation.

In recent years, after the embargoes against Cuba by Reagan and then Bush, along with the naming of Cuba as part of the “axis of evil”, relations have begun to thaw with Obama’s visit to see Raul Castro in 2015. Raul took over from his brother Fidel in 2008.

Currently Cuba may be viewed as probably the only country in the Caribbean that is genuinely able to determine to a larger degree its own future direction. It is in the interests of the U.S. to accept this in order to prevent Cuba making alternative arrangements with Russia or China and so Cuba has, for now at least, escaped from the “axis of evil” still being experienced in Haiti at the hands of US Foreign Policy. There will nevertheless be a “Cuban desk” at the CIA who will always be on the lookout  for ways to undermine the autonomy of any country beyond the direct control of U.S. capital.

The U.S. will eventually insist that Cuba has ”free and fair” elections, at which point expect to see mega-US-funded candidates who are very quietly very interested in the needs of U.S. corporations. Massive campaigns will saturate the streets and the TV screens of Cuba with promises of all shades of rosy future, Cubans would be well advised to have a look at what that rosy future looks like in Haiti and to remember why they had a revolution in the first place.

How could I be guilty of such rampant speculation about future American actions in Cuba? By looking at past American actions in Chile, where we turn next.

But before that, now we have some idea of the different experiences of our friends in central America and in the Caribbean, it is time for us to look at the facts of their existence and to reveal how beneficial a close relationship with the United States can be.

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