Posted on Monday, 03.31.14
Adolfo Suárez and the dream of a free Cuba
BY CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
ELBLOGDEMONTANER.COM
In 1990, I asked Adolfo Suárez for help. At the time, I had made a 
political calculation that the former prime minister could be useful to 
Cuba's democratization and was a generous person.
In Spain, his political flow had been exhausted but he had gained 
immense international prestige because he successfully engineered 
Spain's peaceful transformation in barely four years.
Not long before, the Berlin Wall had been brought down and Europe's 
communist dictatorships collapsed, while Marxism was relegated to the 
ridiculous category of a dusty theoretical absurdity.
On the other hand, Suárez headed the Liberal International, one of the 
world's great ideological federations, an organization that brought 
together some 80 parties of that political family, including the Cuban 
Liberal Union that we had founded. I was led into his office by Prof. 
Raúl Morodo, his strategist and a great political manager in the Liberal 
International. Morodo had been extremely supportive of the Cuban democrats.
In summer of 1990, we liberals, along with other exiles associated with 
the Christian Democratic and Social Democratic movements, forged in 
Madrid the Cuban Democratic Platform. We were trying to start in Cuba a 
political transition to freedom and democracy similar to the one Spain 
went through under Suárez's extraordinary guidance.
We thought, no doubt naively, that Fidel Castro would admit the 
uselessness of sustaining a failed, collectivist, one-party dictatorship 
against the sense of history and would seek a way to peacefully bury his 
bloody experiment, creating the conditions for his supporters to evolve 
toward other forms of militancy, as had happened in the so-called 
Eastern Bloc.
Common sense told us that Castro and his entourage would feel safer if 
the dismantling of their tyranny were done at a table guaranteed by a 
rainbow of major democratic political formations from all over the world.
The procedure would be similar to Spain's: Go "from law to law." Change 
the rules of the single party, release the political prisoners, respect 
the right to free expression of people's thoughts and broaden the 
margins of electoral participation so Cubans might bury communism in a 
democratic ballot box, as the Spaniards had done with Francoism.
What better guarantee of an operation of that nature, I told Suárez, 
than having as referee the man who built the Spanish transition?
If Castro were the least interested in finding an honorable way out for 
the dictatorship, we could land in Havana 90 days later with 100 or so 
political and economic leaders from the free world, with the promise of 
abundant aid from Europe and the United States so that Cuba's 
transformation could be swift and painless.
We called it "the shock of hope."
Suárez listened to us with great interest and offered us his support, 
but appeared skeptical about the results. He was grateful to Castro, he 
told us, for taking in some ETA activists [Basque separatists] that he 
wanted out of Spain.
Although he sympathized with our ideas, he said, his intention was not 
to serve the opposition or the power but to extend a hand to all Cubans, 
so they might overcome the communist dictatorship.
But when Suárez and Morodo went to Havana and spoke with Fidel, they ran 
into a man indifferent to reality who repeated two colossal barbarities 
as if they were mantras.
First, that "Cuba would sink into the sea before it abandoned 
Marxism-Leninism." Second, that the island would remain as a kind of 
vivarium, a Marxist-Leninist Jurassic Park. Once mankind regained reason 
and returned to the communist essence, it would have a practical model 
to organize societies in accordance with the Cuban experience.
Almost a quarter of a century later, Fidel is a mad old man who 
bequeathed a destroyed nation to his brother Raúl. The heir, faithful to 
the legacy, futilely tries to create a hybrid and impossible 
totalitarian system that exhibits the worst of both worlds — socialism 
without subsidies and capitalism that prohibits growth and the 
accumulation of capital.
If Fidel had not been dogmatic and inflexible, and if he had gone along 
with Suárez, Cuba would have made its transition in time and today would 
be at the head of Latin America. There was enough human and economic 
capital to accomplish that.
In a criminal way, we have lost another 25 years.
Source: Adolfo Suárez and the dream of a free Cuba - Other Views - 
MiamiHerald.com - 
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/03/31/4030941/adolfo-suarez-and-the-dream-of.html
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