GOVERNMENT
Raúl Castro's inner circle hints at the future Cuba
Six months after Cuban leader Fidel Castro ceded power, a reformer has 
been taking on an increasingly prominent role while hard-liners slide.
BY FRANCES ROBLES
frobles@MiamiHerald.com
The latest leader to emerge in Cuba is a pediatrician and economic 
reformer who's known for biking to work.
Vice President Carlos Lage, a 55-year-old who once served on a medical 
mission to Ethiopia, became the nation's economic czar in the early 
1990s. And now Lage has become one of the few Cuban politicians to stand 
out as a rising confidant of interim leader Raúl Castro.
Lage's rise -- and the perceived slide of hard-liners close to Fidel 
Castro, such as Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque -- has marked the 
six months since Castro ceded power to his brother following surgery for 
a still undisclosed ailment.
As old-time communist stalwarts and young up-and-comers close ranks in 
Havana to consolidate power in a not quite post-Fidel Cuba, experts 
agree that Lage's heightened profile is a sign of a Cuba to come: one 
under Raúl, where an economic overhaul could be welcomed.
Once on the edges of the Cuban limelight, Lage has represented Cuba at 
most international gatherings, from presidential summits to 
inaugurations, and recently headed a top-level delegation to Caracas to 
sign a string of agreements with Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, 
Cuba's top ally and financial backer.
''Lage is key in all this,'' said Wayne Smith, a former chief of the 
U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana and critic of U.S. Cuba policy. ``Lage 
had been sort of put in the back seat, because he wanted to move ahead 
with economic reforms and Fidel didn't. Raúl comes in and makes Lage his 
right-hand man. He's been brought out of the closet, so to speak.''
PAST INITIATIVES
Lage was credited with pushing state enterprise administrators to 
increase productivity and keep the economy from collapsing without 
surrendering socialism after the fall of the Soviet Union. In the early 
1990s, he oversaw a series of economic changes that permitted limited 
and indirect land holdings and small businesses.
They were moves Raúl is believed to have supported, but Fidel curtailed 
them.
When Fidel announced July 31 that an intestinal ailment had sidelined 
him and he needed to relinquish power for the first time in 47 years, he 
assigned his pet projects to six senior officials.
He put energy and finance in the hands of Lage, a member of the 
Communist Party's ruling Politburo since 1991 and one of the younger 
members of Castro's inner circle. His son, also named Carlos, is now 
head of the influential Federation of University Students.
And while he has touted the need for economic changes, Lage by no means 
wavers in his commitment to socialism.
''Socialism in Cuba is irreversible . . . because with our efforts 
yesterday and today, we make it irreversible,'' he said in a speech last 
month. ``In Cuba, there will be no succession; there will be continuity.''
LONGTIME NEMESIS
Experts point to Ramiro Valdés as another person who has taken a more 
important role under Raúl Castro. Although long believed to be Raúl's 
nemesis, Valdés was named minister of communications, in charge of key 
sectors such as the Internet.
Although experts wonder whether Raúl Castro named Valdés so he could 
keep his enemies close, they note that it nevertheless is a sign of 
closing ranks. As long as Fidel Castro remains alive, analysts doubt 
drastic changes will take place.
''Differences will not emerge until people start competing for political 
power. And, at the moment, there is no such thing,'' said Frank Mora, a 
professor at the National War College in Washington. ``The fact that . . 
. these two hated guys could come together and hold hands tells you 
something: in a moment of uncertainty, they will come together.''
Despite the semblance of unity, some Cuban officials do appear to have 
lost some ground under Raúl Castro.
Experts agree that Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque appears to have 
taken a lesser role in the past few months. Although he gave a key 
speech during an international summit in Havana in September, he has not 
been part of many of the foreign delegations headed by Lage.
The lower profile is important, because Pérez Roque is a key member of 
Fidel's inner circle. He's among the hard-liners dubbed Talibans for 
their strict allegiance to communism.
''He was like a son to Fidel,'' said Susan Kaufman Purcell, director of 
the Center for Hemispheric Policy at the University of Miami. ``He has 
apparently been pushed aside. Raúl doesn't want totally devoted protégés 
of Fidel.''
Also playing lesser roles in the past few months have been Ricardo 
Alarcón, president of the National Assembly, and Young Communists 
leaders Hassan Pérez and Otto Rivero, Cuba watchers said.
Old-time officials such as Health Minister José Ramón Balaguer and 
Esteban Lazo and José Ramón Machado Ventura -- to whom Fidel assigned 
oversight of education -- are expected to keep their assignments but 
diminish in importance over time.
For now, no one is expecting anything dramatic.
''There's too much uncertainty,'' Kaufman Purcell said. ``Raúl can't 
really become Raúl until Fidel is gone.''
 
 
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