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Re: More re 'dreams and nightmares'



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. Add to this the fact that, despite an annual
quota established by treaty for a minimum of 20,000 legal immigrants from
Cuba, since October (the beginning of the year), the US Interests Section
had by March given out only 505 visas. Add to that recent statements from
US officials that they would view a mass illegal emigration from Cuba as a
threat to national security, the demands in Miami that Cuba be next after
Iraq and Rumsfield's comment that there was no intention of attacking Cuba
'now'---- and you can understand why Cuba might feel that the US was
attempting to provoke an incident in order to justify an attack.
As Fidel told the
foreign participants to the Marx conference at an unannounced evening
gathering (and subsequently told a Mexican journalist), the choice was
between those deaths and many more which would result from the US plan to
provoke an immigration crisis which would be used 'as a pretext for a naval
blockade, which would inevitably lead to war'.


Michael,
this is what I don't understand. Please explain.  The US encourages
hijackings by not prosecuting or returning hijackers; hijackings
escalate and very illegal immigration explodes; Bush then rallies the
US populace for a war against Castro in order to democratize Cuba so
that illegal emigration ceases?  I just don't see Bush selling such a
justification to the US populace or thinking that he has any chance
of imposing his regime in Cuba.

Now Nicky writes:

If the Cuban government can indeed rely on
widespread popular support, and if the opposition is small and unpopular,
why the "necessity" to resort to violent suppression of all internal
dissent?  There seems to me a fundamental contradiction in the calls for
internal repression by comrades who in the same breath remind us that the
Cuban people are, in general, grateful to Castro for all that he has done
for them.  If Cubans are so grateful that they would defend their
government, and if Castro believed this, then he would have little to fear
from setting in motion a process of democratic reforms.

I don't think Nicky addresses what Fred and others are saying.


Unpopular minorities can make history or at least coups. Especially ones backed by the most powerful and richest capitalist country (at least for the next several months) led by a president whose brother's re-election fortunes could well depend on turning the screws on a harassed country and who has attempted to put Otto Reich in positions of power. What is a piddling sum for the US could go a long way in Cuba. And Diego is surely correct that US backed forces would take Cuba backwards, especially regarding the security for the poorest workers and the most vulnerable. I can understand the impassioned pleas to this list. At very little cost to itself, the US can wreak havoc on Cuba. This should not be underestimated. We don't want our words to be as cynically naive as Reich's or Cason's--do we??!!

I don't know how consciously complicit with the US were those who
have been killed or imprisoned. A week does seem a very short time to
establish in a reasoned way that all those found guilty were aware
that they were dupes for the US and that their organizations were
funded and controlled by the US.

Yours, Rakesh



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