Saturday, November 26, 2016

Cuban dictator Fidel Castro dies at 90

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Fidel Castro, the Cuban dictator who helped bring the world to the brink of nuclear war, tormented 11 American presidents and exerted almost total control over the last remaining communist government in the Western Hemisphere, has died. He was 90.
President Raúl Castro delivered a statement on Cuban television to confirm his brother's death:
“With profound pain I appear to inform our people and the friends of the Americas and of the world, that today, November 25, at 10:29 pm, the Commander in Chief of the Cuban Revolution Fidel Castro Ruz died. In compliance with the expressed will of the Companion Fidel, his remains will be cremated. In the early hours of Saturday the 26th, the funeral organizing committee will provide our people with detailed information on the organization of the posthumous tribute that will be done for the founder of the Cuban Revolution. Ever onward to victory!”
For 47 years, Castro maintained his grip over the island nation by forging close bonds with the Soviet UnionVenezuela and China, inspiring a wave of anti-American leaders throughout Latin America along the way.
His undoing began with surgery in 2006 that forced him to cede power to his brother, Raúl Castro, and forever changed the image of the man. Gone was the romantic vision of the bearded, cigar-smoking guerrilla leading his group of rebels through the mountains of Cuba, replaced by occasional pictures and videos of a frail, old man recovering in bath robes and track suits.

The prolonged physical collapse gave hope to Washington and to more than a million Cuban-Americans who have fled his regime over the decades that a political change would soon follow. But his illness proved to be a blessing to those closest to him, easing the transition to a new leader and ensuring that they remained in power.
And true to his character, it did little to change his view of his own place in history.
“His personality was such that he always saw himself as the man on the horse, the only guy who could possibly do what he has done,” said Dennis Hays, a former chief Cuba analyst at the State Department. “In his mind, he was the only one who could hold back the tides of time and human nature as he has.”

Fidel Castro's rise to power

Castro’s ascent to international prominence was a meteoric one. In the span of seven years, he went from solitary confinement in a Cuban prison to dictator of a country that brought the world to the brink of nuclear war.
Once the Cold War ended and the Soviet Union collapsed, Cuba’s status as a security threat to the United States diminished greatly and Castro was left to hold together a system no longer benefiting from Soviet aid.
While universal health care and education remained the pillars of his revolution, crumbling infrastructure, a stagnant economy and widespread poverty became prevalent in Cuba, forcing the country to rely on outside help — including the United States — to simply feed its people.
Yet his influence on America continued, as waves of Cubans took to the seas in makeshift boats and rafts to flee his grip, a flight that continues today. That group — concentrated mostly in South Florida — has steered U.S. policy toward Cuba and has become a deciding factor in local, state and national politics.
His influence over his own country is visible everywhere, from the billboards bearing his image to the crumbling buildings to the pre-embargo American-made cars that are still chugging along.
Ever since Castro officially stepped down on Feb. 19, 2008, and his brother was named president, he watched as Raúl Castro made sweeping changes to Cuba and its relationship with the United States. Raúl Castro made economic changes, taking small steps toward a more capitalist economy. For the first time, Cubans were allowed to buy and sell their homes and cars. They were allowed to own cell phones and computers.
While many U.S. officials dismissed the changes as cosmetic, Phil Peters of the Lexington Institute said Raúl Castro’s rush to implement them speaks volumes about the Cuba that Fidel Castro left behind.
“It shows that when he left office, the socialist system was on an unsustainable course,” Peters said. “And it shows that politics and ideological purity always came first for Fidel, even at the expense of an economy that could function and provide for people’s basic needs.”
Then, on Dec. 17, 2014, Raúl Castro forged a historic deal with President Obama to end more than five decades of isolation and begin the long process of normalizing relations.
The Cold War foes have since reestablished diplomatic ties, reopened embassies in Washington and Havana and resumed regularly-scheduled commercial flights. U.S businesses, from airlines to cell phone carriers to Internet providers, have struck deals with Cuba and more people have traveled between the two countries.
President Obama even visited the island nation in March, sitting side by side with Raúl Castro at a baseball game, delivering a joint press conference and providing a clear sign that the times of Fidel Castro's rule were over. And even though Fidel Castro was nowhere to be seen during Obama's trip, the elder Castro made it clear in a newspaper column that completely normalized relations were still far off.
"We don't need the empire to give us anything," Castro wrote in Cuba's state-run newspaper, Granma.

Early life

Fidel Castro Ruz was born into a moderately affluent family, owners of a sugar-cane plantation in Cuba’s eastern Oriente province. His father, Angel Castro, was a self-made immigrant from Spain and his mother, Lina Ruz, had been the family cook.
Castro, one of eight children, went to Catholic elementary school and graduated from Belen, a prep school in Havana run by Jesuit priests.
He excelled in both academics and sports and was voted Belen’s best athlete in 1944. His preferred sport: the thoroughly American game of baseball. He’s said to have dreamed once of becoming a major league player in the USA.
Castro would later seize all the church-run schools in Cuba and be excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church.
Castro studied at the University of Havana and earned a law degree. He also acquired a taste for politics as a student activist.
“I was acquiring a socialist consciousness I had initiatives, I was active and I struggled,” he recalled in a 1982 interview with Colombian journalist Arturo Alape. “But let’s say that I was an independent struggling person at that time.”
In 1952, Fulgencio Batista staged a military coup that established a military dictatorship and propelled Castro into the role of revolutionary.

Cuban revolution

On July 26, 1953, Castro, Raúl and 150 followers attacked the Moncada Barracks in Santiago de Cuba. The assault failed and many of Castro’s men were killed or captured. Castro was tried and sentenced to 15 years in prison.
On trial, Castro delivered a speech that became known by its final line.
“I know that imprisonment will be harder for me than it has ever been for anyone, filled with cowardly threats and hideous cruelty,” Castro told the court. “But I do not fear prison, as I do not fear the fury of the miserable tyrant who took the lives of 70 of my comrades.
“Condemn me. It does not matter. History will absolve me.”
Castro, freed in a 1955 amnesty, went into exile in Mexico where he recruited and trained guerrilla fighters. That’s where he met Ernesto “Che” Guevara, an Argentine Marxist who would become synonymous with Castro’s revolution.
The next year, Castro and more than 80 followers boarded a boat named Granma and landed in eastern Cuba, setting up camp in the Sierra Maestra mountains near his boyhood home. Dubbed the 26th of July Movement, the rebels seized weapons in attacks against Batista’s military and received food and shelter from sympathetic Cubans.
Castro then began a slow march west, gaining in popularity as Batista was facing trouble all around. Even the U.S. government had lost faith in Batista, stopping arms shipments to him in 1958. On Jan. 1, 1959, Batista and his family fled Cuba.
That cleared the way for Castro, who rolled into Havana amidst throngs of supporters. He pledged to end corruption. He promised to improve living conditions. He had widespread support on and off the island, even as his true vision for Cuba remained a mystery.
So unclear was Castro’s plan that he was treated to a hero’s welcome during a much-publicized tour of the U.S., where he rounded up support from liberals and curious fascination from many others
“It was a triumphal procession,” said Mark Falcoff, a former staff member of the Senate foreign relations committee and author of Cuba the Morning After: Confronting Castro’s Legacy. “He was the most popular figure in the U.S.”
It wasn’t long before the new regime began Cuba’s transformation to communism, aligning itself with the Soviet Union.
The new government nationalized businesses and banks, confiscating more than $1 billion in American-owned property. Thousands of so-called “enemies of the revolution” were executed or imprisoned, and school curriculum was reshaped by Communist doctrine. Free speech was not an option, and the Cuban press was an extension of the government. That prompted many wealthy Cubans to leave the country — the first of several waves of Cubans to flee Castro’s Cuba.

U.S. breaks diplomatic ties with Cuba

In January of 1961, the United States broke off diplomatic relations with Cuba. Exiles in Miami, supported by the CIA, trained in the Everglades to topple Castro. In April of that year, 1,300 Cuban exiles made a disastrous invasion of Cuba at a southern coastal inlet, the Bay of Pigs.
Many in Miami viewed the humiliating event as a betrayal by President John Kennedy, who failed to send additional forces the Cuban exiles had expected. Ill will toward Kennedy, a Democrat, turned many Cuban-Americans against the political party. To this day, they remain among the most loyal Republican voters.
Andy Gomez, a senior fellow at the University of Miami’s Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies, said the failed invasion gave Castro the ability to claim that he was being targeted.
In fact, U.S. intelligence acknowledged eight failed attempts by the CIA to assassinate Castro between 1960 and 1965. But Gomez said Castro continued using the constant threat of a U.S. invasion as a way to control the Cuban population.
“He continues to talk about ‘There will be an American invasion of Cuba,’” Gomez said. “”That’s very unlikely now.”
The United States and the Soviet Union almost went to war over Cuba in 1962, after a U.S. U-2 spy plane photographed the construction of Soviet missile sites in what became known as the Cuban Missile Crisis. Kennedy ordered a naval blockade of Cuba to force Moscow to remove the missiles. Khrushchev agreed, in return for a U.S. promise not to invade Cuba and to remove U.S. missiles from Turkey.
In later years, U.S. efforts to dislodge Castro centered on economic and diplomatic measures. Tightened trade and travel restrictions replaced blockades.
Tensions continued as Cuban exiles flooded South Florida at various times over the decades. More than 125,000 refugees flooded the United States in 1980 during the Mariel boatlift. In 1996, two planes flown by Brothers to the Rescue — a group that patrolled the Florida Straits for endangered rafters — were shot down by Cuban fighter jets. Castro claimed the planes violated Cuban air space.
The Elian Gonzalez saga took the political stand-off to an international stage. Eleven Cuban refugees headed for Florida died on Thanksgiving Day, 1999, including Elian’s mother. The 5-year-old survived.
Elian’s relatives in Miami fought to keep him in the U.S., while his father in Cuba, with Castro’s fierce support, demanded his return. After a lengthy legal battle and a middle-of-the-night raid on Elian’s relatives’ house in Miami, the boy was sent home in June, 2000
While the United States has seen wave after wave of immigrants seeking a better life, the occasional bursts of immigrants from Cuba was unique.
In the early 1960s, more than 14,000 children were sent by their Cuban parents to host families in the United States. In 1980, Castro allowed people to leave the island in the Mariel Boatlift, resulting in more than 100,000 Cubans leaving the island.
The most stunning exodus occurred in the early 1990s, when tens of thousands of Cubans took to the high seas to avoid the economic conditions that followed the fall of the Soviet Union. Cubans who learned to get by with little during the hardest economic times used their ingenuity to fashion rafts and boats out to make the dangerous trek across the Florida Straits.
Lawn mower engines were refashioned into boat engines. Individuals hopped on inner tubes to paddle more than 100 miles of open ocean. In 2010, a Cuban made the journey on a 7-foot boat made almost entirely out of styrofoam.

Repressive regime

Cuba observers said one of the consistent themes behind each wave was the repressive nature of Cuba’s regime.
Carlos Mesa-Lago, a Cuban-born economics professor at the University of Pittsburgh, sums up Cuba’s economy under Castro simply: “He is an excellent politician, but he’s a terrible economist.”
Like most other aspects of Castro’s revolution, the economy was a centralized, state-run endeavor where few jobs were ever in the private sector. From factories to hotels to barbershops, the state operated nearly every enterprise and employed nearly every Cuban worker.
While that led to impressive employment numbers that hovered near 100% many years, Mesa-Lago said those figures meant little since most jobs were unnecessary and wages have historically remained low. Businesses that required 100 workers were assigned 200 workers, Mesa-Lago said, in order to give the appearance of a functioning economy.
“The saying was, ‘I pretend that I am working, and you pretend that you are paying me,’” Mesa-Lago said.
In the early years, Cuba’s vast sugar plantations sustained the economy. Cuba was the world’s largest sugar exporter for decades and the economy was further bolstered by the extraction of minerals, the tourism industry and the sale of the Cuban cigars and rum.
The Soviets also played a central figure, providing subsidies to the island though the height of the Cold War. According to the Institute for Cuba and Cuban-American Studies, Cuba was $20 billion in debt to the Soviet Union when it fell apart.
Cuba’s economic flaws were exposed following that collapse in 1991. What followed was an era dubbed the “Special Period” by the Cuban government, when the economy plummeted, food was scarce and even the state’s prized health and education sectors saw major cutbacks.
Mesa-Lago said Castro reluctantly instituted a series of reforms to fend off a collapse similar to that of the Soviet Union. The government allowed some people to open private businesses, farmers were able to sell some products on the open market, rules barring foreign investment were loosened and Cubans were allowed to use the U.S. dollar to purchase items.
“The reason that Fidel went along with this package of reforms was because he probably worried that the regime might be threatened,” Mesa-Lago said.
Once the economic situation stabilized, Castro pulled back many of those reforms. In later years, he formed a close bond with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who saw Castro as the elder statesmen of Latin America. Cuba would send tens of thousands of doctors and teachers to Venezuela in exchange for as many as 90,000 barrels of oil per day in 2008.
In his later years, Castro sat on the sidelines as he watched his brother institute a similar round of reforms. Fallow farmland was opened up for farmers to cultivate, more private business licenses were granted, the country opened up to more foreign investment and in late 2010, Raúl Castro’s government announced that up to 1 million Cubans — or about 20% of the work force — would be removed from the state payroll and allowed to further expand the private business sector.
One of Castro’s first pronouncements upon taking control of Cuba was that all citizens would have free access to an education and health care. And even though both sectors suffered because of the country’s economic troubles, those institutions endured.
Before Castro, access to education and proper health care were focused in the capital of Havana and other well-to-do areas. Castro made it a priority to ensure that every Cuban — poor people in cities, farmers in isolated provinces — had full access to schools and hospitals.
By many measures, he succeeded. Cubans’ life expectancy is over 77 years old, ranking it higher than more developed Latin American countries like Mexico, Argentina and Chile. And Cuba has the highest literacy rate in Latin America (99.8%), according to the CIA World Factbook.
“When you go to Cuba, you’re constantly meeting all these people with professional training, with scientific training,” said Dick Cluster, a professor at the University of Massachusetts at Boston who lived in Havana in the early 1990s. “Those successes are real.”
As other sectors of the country suffered, so did health care and education.
Cluster said people have unfettered access to doctors and hospitals, but a trip to the hospital usually meant bringing your own linens for the bed, food and clothing. In Castro’s later years, the government reduced class sizes in junior high schools and relief more on classes on TV.
“They are being held together by rubber band and tape, but they are being held together,” said Cluster, author of History of Havana.
Given the country’s stagnant economy, there is also little for successful students to do once they graduate. Many doctors and nurses are sent abroad to China, Venezuela and other countries to provide care in impoverished areas. Cubans battle for the few spots available at foreign companies working in Cuba, and some are allowed to leave the country to work for companies that do business with Cuba.
But that also leaves many college graduates driving taxis, serving drinks at tourist restaurants and working in other service-sector fields.
“The educational system keeps cranking out really qualified people, but it also loses them because the economy is not able to offer positions to make us of their qualities,” Cluster said. “There’s definitely frustration.”

Castro's influence overseas 

While his impact on American politics waned over the years, Castro’s popularity overseas continued to grow.
Castro’s supporters regarded him as one of the most effective revolutionary leaders in Latin America. A line of mostly leftist heads of state have paid homage to the ailing Castro in his final years, most frequently Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, whose country has largely stepped in to fill the economic vacuum left by the Soviet Union.
They cite his vast accomplishments in education and health care — two tenets of Castro’s socialist system that provides both services for free to Cubans. Despite years of economic difficulties following the fall of the Soviet Union, Castro still held extraordinary sway over many of his people. “Fidelismo,” or a kind of personality cult around Castro, managed to survive.
Philip Brenner, an American University professor of international relations who specializes in Cuba, says that Castro also remained popular in Third World countries and among the downtrodden.
“There’s a sense of, ‘Right or wrong, he stood up for the people of the world,’ ” Brenner said.
Just before his 2006 surgery, Castro gave a series of interviews to Spanish journalist Ignacio Ramonet, who asked Castro about his perception as a “cruel dictator” by many around the world.
“I honestly believe that a man who has dedicated his entire life to fight against injustice, against the oppression of every man, who serves others, who fights for others, who practices solidarity — I think all of that is incompatible with cruelty,” Castro said.
Yet many in Cuba, and many more Cubans living in exile, will remember a far different man.

'A disaster' 

Asked to sum up the Fidel Castro era of Cuba, Havana resident Vladimiro Roca said: “A disaster.”
Roca, one of hundreds of Cubans imprisoned for voicing their disapproval of the regime, said Castro completely ignored the nation’s infrastructure, ruined it’s economy and created a system of internal monitoring that bred fear and oppression. That combination, he said, has forced Cubans to live their lives in fear of their neighbors and willing to do anything — including stealing and other illegalities — to survive.
“The economic ruin he left can be fixed,” Roca said. “The moral ruin will be harder.”
That view left the Cuban-American community eagerly anticipating Castro’s death.
News of his surgery prompted mass celebrations in the streets of Miami, as Cuban-Americans believed his death was near. When he officially stepped down as president of Cuba, the reaction was more muted, but still excited. A sign outside a Little Havana store summed up the sentiment: “Don’t retire. Just die already.”
Castro routinely brushed aside such comments, dubbing the Cuban exile community the “Miami mafia.” He remained committed to the socialist system that guided his country — good or bad — until the day he died.
“I am a Marxist Leninist and I will be one until the last day of my life,” Castro said in 1961. He was good to his word.
Contributing: Bill Nichols and Deborah Sharp in Miami

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