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Monday, February 11, 2008

Three possible successors to Castro as president of Cuba

Three possible successors to Castro as president of Cuba
After Raul, three likely successors are in the wings
Ray Sanchez | Cuba notebook
February 10, 2008

For the first time since the 1959 revolution that brought Fidel Castro
to power, the political fate of Cuba's Maximum Leader is uncertain.

Will parliament again name Fidel Castro president of the nation's
highest governing body and chief of state later this month, despite his
long public absence, or will he assume more of an advisory role? Will
brother Raúl be named Cuba's new president? Or will a younger generation
take over?

The answers lie in a process that rivals a papal selection, rife with
speculation and cloaked in secrecy. When the 614-member assembly meets
on Feb. 24, its main order of business will be to select members and
officers of the Council of State, the island's highest governing body.

Ray Sanchez Ray Sanchez E-mail | Recent columns

Raúl Castro, 76, who temporarily assumed power after his brother
underwent emergency intestinal surgery in July 2006, could permanently
take over the presidency.

But Raúl, too, may be happier in an advisory role, even though he
garnered 99.4 percent of the vote in the Castro family stronghold of
Santiago in eastern Cuba — a percentage point more than the immensely
popular Fidel.

Still, Cuba watchers have identified three likely post-Castro
successors: Carlos Lage, Cuba's 56-year-old vice president and a former
physician; Felipe Perez Roque, the 42-year-old foreign minister; and
National Assembly President Ricardo Alarcón, 70.

Perez Roque, the youngest of the three, spent eight years as Fidel
Castro's chief of staff before becoming foreign minister in 1999. He
famously stepped to the microphone to calm the crowd when Fidel Castro
fainted during a speech in 2001, shouting "Viva Raúl! Viva Fidel!"

Perez Roque's Fidelista past, however, could work against him, according
to Frank Mora, a Cuba expert at the National War College in Washington,
and other analysts. The former electrical engineer has earned a
reputation as a hard-liner bent on maintaining his mentor's socialist model.

Affable and fluent in English, Alarcón is considered one of Cuba's most
powerful officials. His ties to the Castro brothers date to the
revolution. Alarcón also is Cuba's most experienced diplomat and has
long managed relations with the United States. But his age is a concern,
analysts said.

"Alarcón is the most experienced and I think he will certainly have a
very senior role but he's up there also," said Wayne Smith, director of
the Cuba program at the Center for International Policy, a Washington
research organization. "By the time Raúl moves aside, Alarcón may be too
old."

That leaves Lage.

"He's the person to watch," said Mora. "Lage seems to be someone who at
least is acceptable to multiple circles within the leadership – in the
military, in the party, with the Raúlistas."

Lage is credited with engineering and implementing the limited reforms
that restarted Cuba's economy after the Soviet collapse. The programs
included legalizing the dollar, creating small private enterprises and
agricultural cooperatives, and increasing foreign investment and
tourism. Although Fidel Castro reversed many of the reforms in 2003,
Lage is viewed favorably among foreign businessmen in Cuba as a
pragmatist open to economic change.

"Lage would make a very good president," said Smith, who served as
America's top diplomat in Havana from 1979 to 1982.

"He's very pragmatic and solid and he has a good economic head on his
shoulders."

Lage and Perez Roque are more than two decades younger than the Castros
who are among the "historicos," Cuba's revolutionary leaders. Gradually
the political leaders who fought in the Revolution are being replaced
with Cubans who grew up with the revolution, according to analysts. More
than 60 percent of the parliamentarians were born after 1959.

"There may come a time when this generational change could affect Cuban
policy in some dramatic way," Cuba expert Phil Peters of the Lexington
Institute, a research group outside of Washington, wrote in his blog
late last month. "For now … the importance of this electoral process is
that it forces a decision on the political future of Fidel Castro."

In a letter released in the state media in December, Fidel Castro said
he did not intend to "obstruct the path of younger people" aspiring to
lead Cuba. But he didn't withdraw his name from the list of Communist
Party candidates for the National Assembly, either. Which puts him in
line for the presidency. Again.

Ray Sánchez can be reached at rlsanchez@sun-sentinel.com.


http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-flrndcubanotebook0210sbfeb10,0,5273097.column

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