Revolutionary leader Fidel Castro died this week at age 90. The former Cuban president, known as El Comandante, survived 10 U.S. presidential administrations — and also hundreds of assassination attempts by the CIA.
Many in the U.S. government criticized the socialist leader and the Republic of Cuba he helped establish after a 1959 revolution against a U.S.-backed right-wing dictatorship. Immediately after Castro's death, President-elect Donald Trump took to Twitter to dismiss Castro as a "brutal dictator"— days before the far-right demagogue made the draconian proposal that the citizenship of Americans should be revoked for burning the U.S. flag in protest (something protected by the Constitution).
In February when the U.S. government eased some of its harsh sanctions against Cuba after five decades, President Barack Obama condemned the huma n rights record of the tiny island nation. "America will always stand for human rights around the world," he insisted.
This is ludicrous to hear from the leader of a country that's now bombing[1] six Muslim-majority countries[2] and helping grind impoverished, hunger-stricken Yemen[3] into dust. Not to mention that Obama leads a superpower that imprisons the most people in the world[4], forces refugees and migrants into privatized, for-profit, internment camp-like[5] detention centers and deports millions[6] of them. Plus the U.S. props up brutal dictatorships in the Gulf and beyond and unarmed black people are repeatedly killed by police and indigenou s "water protectors[7]" are brutalized.
Yet the hypocrisy of the U.S. criticizing Cuba over human rights is even harder to grasp when one considers that the part of Cuba with the worst human rights practices is the area controlled by the U.S.
At the Guantánamo Bay naval base, the U.S. has imprisoned hundreds of people without trial; many have been tortured. President Obama has pledged countless times to close it; he campaigned in 2008 on such a promise. Yet it remains open — with many of its former prisoners released, but still open nonetheless.
The Cuban government considers the U.S. military base at Guantánamo Bay to be on illegally occupied[8] turf. The U.S. considers Guantánamo its rightful property; after all, the U.S. seized it when it turned Cuba from a Spanish colony into a de facto U.S. colony in the bloody Spanish-American War of 1898.
Torture is by no means the only human rights abuse committed on this soil, nor are U.S. crimes from the post-9/11 period. In the early 1990s, Guantánamo Bay was used to detain Haitian refugees who had fled a regime initiated by a CIA-backed coup[9] in their impoveri shed country. The administrations of both George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton used the HIV/AIDS scare to justify forcing tens of thousands of desperate Haitians into what a U.S. federal judge described[10] as a squalid "HIV prison camp."
The evident contradiction of American politicians making such moralistic pronouncements is further compounded by the history of U.S.-backed terrorism in Cuba.
As Salon detailed in a previous story, the U.S. has terrorized Cuba for more than 50 years[11], since Castro led the revolution that freed his country from the yolk of American imperialism. Scholar Noam Chomsky has called U.S. policy in Cuba a "terrorist campaign[12]" and a decades-long "murderous terrorist war[13]."
In 1978 Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and historian Garry Wills wrote[14] in The New York Times about the U.S. "campaign of terror and sabotage directed against Castro." Even establishment historian Arthur Schlesinger, who advised president John Kennedy and his brother Robert, spoke of the U.S. attempt to unleash "the terrors of the earth" on postrevolutionary Cuba.
Two years after the Cuban revolution of 1959, the U.S. launched a military invasion of island, attempting to violently overth row a government that it admitted was very popular and killing and wounding hundreds of Cubans, perhaps thousands according to some estimates.
Former U.S. attorney general Robert Kennedy wrote in notes about a 1961 White House meeting, "My idea is to stir things up on island with espionage, sabotage, gender disorder, run & operated by Cubans themselves." He added that that "no time, money, effort — or manpower — be spared." People at the White House meeting discussed using chemicals to incapacitate Cuban sugar workers and considered encouraging "gangster elements" on the island.
References
- ^ now bombing (www.salon.com)
- ^ Muslim-majority countries (www.salon.com)
- ^ impoverished, hunger-stricken Yemen (www.salon.com)
- ^ imprisons the most people in the world (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ internment camp-like (www.latimes.com)
- ^ deports millions (www.salon.com)
- ^ indigenous "water protectors (www.salon.com)
- ^ illegally occupied (www.washingtonpost.com)
- ^ CIA-backed coup (www.democracynow.org)
- ^ described (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ the U.S. has terrorized Cuba for more than 50 years (www.salon.com)
- ^ terrorist campaign (chomsky.info)
- ^ murderous terrorist war (books.google.com)
- ^ wrote (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ words (history.state.gov)
- ^ opposed by much of the international (www.salon.com)
- ^ 638 Ways to Kill Castro (www.theguardian.com)
- ^ declassified (www.miamiherald.com)
- ^ Miami (www.diariolasamericas.com)
- ^ fake Twitter-like website (www.washingtonpost.com)
- ^ infiltration of Cuba's hip-hop scene (www.reuters.com)
- ^ best health care (www.independent.co.uk)
- ^ best education system (www.huffingtonpost.com)
- ^ block a minimum wage (www.businessinsider.com)
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