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Friday, June 04, 2010

Fidel Castro claims US sank South Korean warship

Fidel Castro claims US sank South Korean warship
Posted: 05 June 2010 0201 hrs

HAVANA: US navy commandos sank a South Korean warship in March in order
to blame North Korea, raise tensions and convince Japan to keep US
forces in Okinawa, Cuban former president Fidel Castro wrote in an
editorial on Friday.

Castro, who based his information on press reports, blasted Washington's
"cynicism" and "lack of scruples" in the incident.

According to Castro, US Navy SEALS torpedoed South Korea's Cheonan
corvette in a bid by Washington to sway Japan to allow a US military
base to remain on Okinawa island.

Castro, 83 and convalescing away from government since 2006, writes
regular columns for Cuban media commenting on world events.

A multinational investigation last month concluded that a North Korean
submarine torpedoed the South Korean warship on March 26, killing 46
people on board.

Yukio Hatoyama resigned as Japan's prime minister this week amid a row
over an unpopular US Marine Corps airbase on Okinawa, having failed to
fulfil a campaign promise to close the military facility.

Castro said rising tensions on the Korean peninsula were among the
causes for Hatoyama's resignation.

"Political leaders and world opinion have proof of the cynicism and lack
of scruples that characterizes US imperial policy," Castro wrote.

"Thus, in a surprisingly easy manner, the United States managed to solve
an important problem: to liquidate the national unity government of
Yukio Hatoyama's Democratic Party of Japan," he added.

Castro noted that Washington's alleged hand in the Cheonan ship came at
a high price, having "deeply offended its South Korea allies."

The former Cuban leader also hailed fellow communist Kim Jong Il, who
has rejected any responsibility in the incident, and highlighted China's
muted response to the conflict. The Asian giant has resisted pressure to
condemn North Korea and called for efforts to ease regional tensions. -
AFP/fa

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/1061176/1/.html

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