History will never absolve Castro
Posted on Thu, Feb. 21, 200
By CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
www.firmaspress.com
Fidel Castro has decided to die as former president. He can no longer 
bear his infirmities. After half a century of being gloriously dressed 
in olive drab, disguised as a heroic guerrilla, it is very difficult to 
rule a country in a jogging suit, sitting on a rocking chair in a hospital.
The balance of these 50 years is horrendous. There is no human way that 
history will absolve him. The obstacles are two million exiles, 
thousands of political prisoners -- of whom almost 300 are still behind 
bars -- thousands of executions, an absolute absence of freedoms, broken 
families and the worst material failures in the history of Latin 
American dictatorships. Almost all those long tyrannies -- Stroessner in 
Paraguay, Somoza in Nicaragua, Trujillo in the Dominican Republic -- 
were corrupt and cruelly tormented societies, but they left behind 
countries that were richer and better equipped than those they began with.
In Cuba, things have been different. As a consequence of the clumsy 
governance of Fidel Castro, a pathologically capricious man, along with 
the harebrained communist system imposed on the country responsible for 
the island's astounding unproductivity, the five basic elements that 
measure the quality of life of any society have worsened terribly -- 
food, housing, clothing, transportation and communications. Beyond 
ideology, daily life in Cuba is an insufferable nightmare of discomfort 
and shortages.
Has nothing good happened in that period? Yes. The country has 800,000 
professionals, among them 65,000 good physicians, for a population of 11 
million. But that fact, far from exempting Fidel Castro from blame, 
incriminates him severely. Only a thoroughly incompetent ruler can keep 
in poverty a society that possesses such human capital. In all corners 
of the world, professionals are part of the social middle levels and 
live with some degree of legitimate comfort. In Cuba, they vegetate 
without any hope, amid utter poverty.
I think Gen. Raúl Castro concurs with this diagnosis and wishes to 
substantially improve the lives of Cubans. Raúl does not have (as Fidel 
has) an ideological vision of the social problems; his viewpoint is 
practical. Before the age of 20, after a short trip to Eastern Europe 
intended as revolutionary tourism, he became a communist out of his 
naive admiration for the Soviet Union -- not because he read the sect's 
books. He has little theoretical density, something that paradoxically 
makes him more human. Raúl is closer to the manager than to the apostle, 
to the administrator than to the commissar. Since 1959, he has headed 
the Armed Forces, an institution that, within the general chaos 
afflicting the country, functions reasonably well.
In effect, Raúl Castro will begin a cautious economic reform. What will 
the changes be?
• First, more space for the self-employed workers, and the emergence of 
small, family-run private enterprises that can provide the services the 
state cannot furnish.
• Second, the authorization for people to freely sell or buy houses and 
cars.
• Third, permission for Cubans (athletes included) to leave the country 
and return.
No political reform is expected in the direction of democracy, but we 
may look forward to the gradual release of the prisoners of conscience 
and greater tolerance for the domestic dissidents, along with a more 
open environment within the Communist Party, so the comrades may better 
examine the myriad problems that afflict the country without being 
persecuted. It is also probable that Raúl will cancel the ''acts of 
repudiation'' -- violent pogroms against the opposition democrats -- and 
renounce the climate of permanent international confrontation maintained 
by his brother since his first day in power. Raúl's principal and secret 
objectives are to make peace with the United States and achieve a 
self-sufficient economy, without renouncing the single party.
Why? At 76, Raúl knows that he hasn't much time to revitalize the 
economy and strengthen institutionality, crushed by Fidel's weight, so 
the country may have a legitimate manner to transfer authority after he 
leaves the stage. The last poisoned apple given to him by Fidel was the 
prosthetic leadership of Hugo Chávez, along with a suggestion for the 
union of the two countries. But the defeat suffered by the Venezuelan in 
last December's referendum exposed the precariousness and discredit of 
the Bolivarian revolution, a political mishmash even weaker than the 
Cuban dictatorship. Raúl is not unaware that placing Cuba's fate in the 
hands of Chávez, as Fidel wished, would be not just stupid but also a 
suicidal irresponsibility.
What will Fidel Castro do from now until he dies or is totally 
incapacitated? For sure, he will back the so-called Talibans -- the 
Stalinist sector -- and will serve as sniper, sabotaging the reforms 
with his newspaper commentaries, convinced that mankind awaits with 
bated breath his expressions of supreme wisdom in order to understand 
reality. That's how narcissists are, even with one foot in the grave.
©2008 Firmas Press
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