Marxism
mailing list archive

Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]

Date:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Thread:  [ Previous  | Next  ]      Index:  [ Author  | Date  | Thread  ]

[Marxism] The obsession with Castro's health



http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/06/AR2009020603312.html

The Mystifying Life and Many Deaths of Cuba's Talisman
By William Booth
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, February 7, 2009; A08

MEXICO CITY

On the front page of Cuba's state newspaper Granma last week, the lone
star on the Cuban flag had mysteriously faded away in an old
black-and-white photograph announcing a celebration of patriot José
Martí. Copies quickly sold out as rumors flew across the island. What
did it mean? Was it a portent? Had the inevitable finally happened?

As it turned out, Fidel Castro was not dead. Just as he has not been
dead for more than 50 years, ever since the United Press reported that
he had been killed by government soldiers on Dec. 2, 1956, hours after
returning to Cuba to wage guerrilla war.

The missing star? Apparently a printing error.

But over the past two years, the subject of Castro's health has become
an obsession among Cubans and Cuba watchers, and the fever peaked last
month as word circulated that he was on his deathbed, which turned out
not to be true. In fact, he was apparently up late Wednesday night,
blogging about President Obama. Castro informed Obama that previous U.S.
governments had pursued policies of criminal aggression, not that he was
blaming Obama.

"On the contrary," Castro posted, "being born of a Kenyan Muslim father
and a white American Christian deserves special merit in the context of
U.S. society and I am the first to recognize that."

The speculation about his continued viability is fueled by the fact that
Castro, 82, has not been seen in public since the summer of 2006, when
he underwent what is believed to have been intestinal surgery. The
whereabouts and medical condition of the reformed cigar smoker are state
secrets, even though he formally transferred power to his younger
brother Raúl last year.

"The fixation about the health of Fidel is without parallel," said
Daniel P. Erikson, an analyst at the policy group Inter-American
Dialogue and author of a new book, "The Cuba Wars," whose first chapter
is titled "Die Another Day."

"The death speculation, the death obsession, about Castro is varsity
league; nothing else is close," said Erikson, adding that interest in
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, who disappeared from public view for
months after reportedly suffering a stroke last summer, pales in
comparison. "And this could go on for a very long time, for clearly
Fidel is getting good health care, and it is, after all, Fidel Castro
we're talking about. He does not give up easily."

Some Cuba experts say that the long, slow fade of Castro, rather than
being a disaster for the communist government of Cuba, might serve to
preserve the power of the ruling elite by easing the transition -- first
from Fidel to Raúl, then from Raúl to a younger generation.

"It is as if Fidel has turned an actual crisis -- his inevitable death
-- into another opportunity," said David Scott Palmer, a Cuba scholar
and professor at Boston University, who says that Castro, in his essays,
blogs and "reflections," is preparing the country for his final exit.
"Little by little, Cuba gets used to the idea of life without Fidel. . .
. He seems to be skillfully managing his own departure."

Palmer and his colleagues stress that no one can predict what will
happen when Castro dies. It is the same lack of information that has
made it impossible to know much about Castro's health -- which leaves
Cuba watchers with only the faintest clues to work with. So they peer at
official photographs released by the government after state visits and
parse his blog entries, looking for signs of gathering frailty or
renewed vitality.

"For so long, for half a century, the stability of Cuba has depended on
Fidel to manage the country's affairs. And his government doesn't want
to break the spell. He is the talisman," the protective charm, Erikson said.

And though many Cuban exiles will party in the streets of Miami on the
day of his death, what happens on the island is the great unknown.

Being wrong about Castro's health is almost a tradition among U.S.
officials. In 2005, CIA analysts concluded that Castro was suffering
from Parkinson's disease. A few days later, Castro gave a five-hour
speech to a group of Havana University students and said he never felt
better.

In 2006, Director of National Intelligence John D. Negroponte said
Castro was knocking on death's door. "Everything we see indicates it
will not be much longer. . . . Months, not years," Negroponte said at a
meeting of Washington Post editors and reporters.

Journalists have also had a tough time predicting the end. One of the
most dedicated Cuba watchers, the Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald
columnist Andres Oppenheimer, foresaw a relatively rapid conclusion in
his book "Castro's Final Hour." The book was published in 1992.

Writing about the recent rumors of Castro's imminent death, the Chicago
Tribune in an editorial got the mood right with the headline: "Castro is
dying, again."

In a commentary published Sunday about the latest rumors, Manny Garcia,
a senior editor at the Miami Herald, wrote that "Fidel Castro is the
journalistic equivalent of a kidney stone -- a constant pain who never
seems to go away, and you pray that he passes, soon." Last month, based
on the rumors, the Herald sent reporters to cover Castro's death, again.

Though he has not been seen in public, Castro does meet with visiting
world leaders. He has been shown at undisclosed locations in photographs
released by the government. Is he in a hospital room? A house? A
government office?

In November, he was pictured with Chinese President Hu Jintao. Castro,
as is his custom now, was wearing his zippered track suit. He looked
okay. But then the photographs stopped.

Castro did not attend the 50th anniversary celebration of the revolution
in Santiago on New Year's Day. Instead, he penned a very short note
congratulating the Cuban people for their heroism. Then silence.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, who is a close ally and frequent flier
to Cuba, appeared to be saying something significant when he told his
radio and television show audience last month: "We know that the Fidel
who used to walk down streets and through towns at dawn, looking like a
warrior, wearing his uniform and embracing his people, will not return."
Instead, the Cuban leader "will remain in our memories."

On Jan. 21, Castro met with Argentine President Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner. Afterward, Raúl Castro accompanied her to the Havana airport,
where he told reporters, "Now you know that Fidel is fine." He said his
brother spends days "exercising, thinking and reading a lot, advising
me, helping me."

A few days later, a photograph was released showing Fidel Castro
greeting Fernández de Kirchner. He is standing and wearing his Adidas
track suit. Fernández de Kirchner told reporters that she and Castro
spoke for an hour, that he seemed healthy and that they talked politics.

Later, Chávez admitted that, "sure, there are once again some rumors
that Fidel died" but that his Cuban ally was still "alive and kicking."

So it seems. Because then Castro himself wrote one of his essays,
explaining that he has been rereading all of his articles and other
materials, reminiscing. "I have had the rare privilege to follow events
for such a long time," he wrote. "I get information and think quietly
about events.

"I don't expect to enjoy that privilege in four years, when Obama's
first presidential term ends," he wrote. "I feel fine, but insist that
no one should feel bound by my reflections, my state of health, or even
my death."

________________________________________________
YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
Send list submissions to: Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Set your options at:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40archives.econ.utah.edu



Other Periods  | Other mailing lists  | Search  ]