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Cuba
and the "Necessary Viciousness" of the Bushites
by
Kurt Nimmo
October
11, 2003
In
order to please crucial "swing" voters in his brother's state, Junior
has ratcheted up the anti-Castro rhetoric.
Bush
has not threatened Castro outright -- not yet anyway -- but instead has said he
will increase "restrictions" on Cuba. "The transition to freedom
will present many challenges to the Cuban people and to America, and we will be
prepared," declared Bush. He told Secretary of State Colin Powell and
Housing Secretary Mel Martinez to "plan for the happy day when Castro's
regime is no more and democracy comes to the island."
It
wasn't all that long ago Bush said the same about Iraq.
In
response to Bush's latest saber-rattling, Dagoberto Rodriguez, head of Cuba's
diplomatic mission, said Bush should "stop acting like a lawless
cowboy" and "start listening to the voices of the nations of the
world."
Not
likely. Bush doesn't know anything but the "lawless cowboy" routine.
Like the run-of-the-mill playground bully, it's how he and the neocons deal
with the world.
Of
course, considering how strapped the Pentagon is with the whole Iraq imbroglio,
chances they will invade Cuba anytime soon are slim to none. Instead, they will
continue to make life miserable for a few million Cubans.
But
then, thanks to over four decades of economic warfare, misery is common fare
for the vast majority of Cubans.
Paying
for the egregious sin of deposing the brutal military dictator Fulgencio
Batista Zaldívar -- friend of both US business interests and gangster Meyer
Lansky -- is a never-ending and ever-increasing debt for the Cuban people.
It
seems the lawless cowboy in Washington wants them to hanker for the good old
days when Havana served as an international drug port and as the "Latin
Las Vegas" for the likes of Frank Costello, Vito Genovese, Santo
Trafficante Jr., Moe Dalitz and other notable mobsters.
Neoconservatives,
who like to call themselves "Conservative Internationalists," have
always had it out for Castro and the communists of Cuba. But then so have any
number of US presidents, from Kennedy to Clinton.
It's
just that the Bushites are more operatic about it.
Last
year Josh Bolton, US Under Secretary of State, gave a speech before the rabid
rightwing Heritage Foundation entitled "Beyond the Axis of Evil." In
the speech, Bolton designated Cuba, Libya and Syria as "rogue
states," in other words states facing possible military action. Bolton
went so far as to say "Cuba's threat to our security has often been
underplayed," stopping an inch short of claiming Castro plans to attack
Florida with biological weapons.
It
was the other way around, though.
Back
in 1961 and 1962, the CIA used biological weapons on Cuba's agricultural
workers. A decade later, the CIA introduced swine fever into the island,
precipitating an epidemic which culminated in the death of 500,000 pigs.
The
Washington Post further detailed the US covert war against Cuba in 1979 when it
published an article claiming the Pentagon had produced biological agents to
use against Cuba's sugar cane and tobacco production. Other suspicious disease
outbreaks include haemorraghic conjunctivitis, dengue fever, dysentery,
ulcerative mammillitis, black sigatoka, and citric sapper blight, to name but a
few. In 1977, CIA documents disclosed that the Agency "maintained a
clandestine anti-crop warfare research program targeted during the 1960s at a
number of countries throughout the world," according to the Washington
Post.
"In
1984, Eduardo Arocena, leader of the terrorist group OMEGA-7, admitted to an
American jury that he had taken part in operations to introduce deadly viruses
into Cuba as part of a secret biological warfare programme against
Havana," writes Marcia Miranda. Arocena was trained in the use of
explosives by Cuban exiles who were trained by the CIA.
And
then there was Operation Northwoods.
As
James Bamford writes in his book, Body of Secrets, "Operation Northwoods
called for a war in which many patriotic Americans and innocent Cubans would
die senseless deaths -- all to satisfy the egos of twisted generals back in
Washington, safe in their taxpayer-financed homes and limousines."
So
fanatically anti-Castro was Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Lemnitzer
that he not only proposed killing scores of innocent Cubans, but also John
Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth. "Thus, as NASA prepared to
send the first American into space, the Joint Chiefs of Staff were preparing to
use John Glenn's possible death as a pretext to launch a war," Bamford
writes.
As
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee reported in 1961, right-wing extremism
was prevalent in the Pentagon. "Among the key targets of the extremists,
the Committee said, was the Kennedy administration's domestic social program,
which many ultraconservatives accused of being communistic... much of the
administration's domestic legislative program... would be characterized as
steps toward communism." Not long after the Senate issued its report, Kennedy
was assassinated.
Now
we call "ultraconservatives" neocons.
No
doubt this current crop of fascistic rightwingers would love to engineer the
same sort of social chaos in Havana they engineered in Baghdad. Imagine Raul
and Ramon Castro, the younger brothers of Fidel, suffering the same fate as
Uday and Qusay Hussein. Imagine yet another deck of playing cards distributed
by the Pentagon with pictures of Carlos Rafael Rodríguez, Ramiro Valdés
Menéndez, Lázaro Peńa, and other members of the Communist Party of Cuba.
Naturally,
the Bushites will not be invading Cuba soon, especially considering how over
stretched and bogged down they are in Iraq. No, there are more practical
matters at hand, such as the United Nations vote on easing the embargo on Cuba
next month. Junior has also warned that he will veto any measure approved by
the Congress that gives relief to the Cuban people.
"Cuba
sera pronto libre [Cuba will soon be free],'' said Bush from the Rose Garden
the other day. In the meantime, however, he will settle for a spate of new
visas and investigations by the Ministry of Homeland Security of Americans who
travel to Cuba.
As
to the former -- well, of course, the election is a little over a year away and
closing in fast.
Let's
not forget how instrumental Florida was in the last Bush coup d'etat. Recall
the role played by Republican Party operatives and Cuban fascists in Broward
County four years ago. Likewise tactics may serve well again, especially
considering how bad the Bush economy is and how terrible the Bush occupation of
Iraq is going. No doubt the political trickster and former Donald Segretti
understudy Karl Rove understands all this very well. As the Valerie Plame
affair demonstrates, there is no shortage of "necessary viciousness"
(as John Dean terms it) on the part of the Bushites.
Junior's
going to need all the extra votes he can get come November, 2004.
Kurt Nimmo is a
photographer, multimedia artist and writer living in New Mexico. To see his
photo work and read more of his essays, visit his excellent “Another Day in the
Empire” weblog: http://www.drmenlo.com/nimmo/
* Bush's
Speech: Internationalizing the Whirlwind
* The
Imam Ali Mosque Bombing: Round Up the Usual Suspects
* Iraq's
WMD: The Lie that Will Never Die
* UN Bombing:
Terrorism or National Liberation?
* Saddam
Hussein: Taking Out the CIA's Trash
* The Bug
Exterminator Goes to Jerusalem
* Bread,
Circuses, Uday and Qusay