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Seven days ago I wrote about one of the great men
in history: Salvador Allende, a man the world remembered
with deep emotion and respect on his first centennial.
However, no one quivered or even recalled the date of
October 24, 1891, when the Dominican despot Rafael Leonidas
Trujillo was born, eighteen years before our admired Chilean
brother.
Both countries, one in the Caribbean and the other
in the extreme south of Latin America, suffered the
consequences of the danger that Jose Marti foresaw and tried
to avert. As he indicated in his celebrated posthumous
letter to his Mexican friend who had fought with Juarez,
--and this is an idea I never tire of repeating: “Now, I am
everyday in danger of giving my life…to timely prevent with
the independence of Cuba that the United States expand over
the Antilles and that, with that additional force, they may
come against our American lands. Everything I’ve done until
today, and everything I’ll do, is for that purpose.”
Our victorious Revolution was a friend of Allende, at
the same time it hated Trujillo. This was an uncouth
Pinochet begotten by the United States in the Caribbean. The
despot had been the result of one of the Yankees’ military
interventions in the island that country shares with Haiti,
a country which was the first Spanish colony.
The American Navy infantry had invaded that sister
republic to secure its country’s economic and strategic
interests. Of course, there was not even a Platt Amendment
there to cover up the action with a legal mantle.
In 1918, they recruited, among others, the
adventurous and greedy native Dominican, the son of a small
merchant, who was then trained and admitted, as a 27-year
old, to the National Army. In 1921, he went on to another
training course with the Military Academy established by the
country’s occupants. After he finished there, he was
appointed unit chief and promoted to the rank of Captain for
the services paid to the interventionist forces, although he
was not previously a Lieutenant.
At the end of the Yankee occupation in 1924,
Trujillo was ready to act as an instrument of the United
States in high posts in the military, which he would use to
deal the classic coup d’etat and the typical “democratic
elections” leading him to the presidency of the republic in
1930. The beginning of his term coincided with the years of
the Great Depression that hit the US economy so badly.
Cuba, the country most dependent and shackled by
the trade agreements, stood to suffer the most severe
consequences of that crisis. On the other hand, the Naval
Base and the humiliating and unwarranted for Amendment would
give them constitutional rights to intervene in our nation
and to tear to pieces it glorious history.
In the neighboring country, with less direct
economic dependence, the shrewd and voracious Trujillo
handled whimsically the properties of the Dominican middle
class and the oligarchy. The major sugar mills and many
other branches of industry became his private property. That
cult to private appropriation did not offend the capitalist
concepts of the empire. Many neon signs claimed everywhere
“God and Trujillo.” Many cities, avenues, roads and
buildings were named after him or his relatives. The same
year he became President, a hurricane hit hard on Santo
Domingo, the country’s capital. After the city recovered
from the damages, he renamed it Trujillo City. Never before
had the world known such a personality cult.
In the year 1937, he carried out along the border a
huge massacre of Haitian workers. This was his reserve labor
force in agriculture and construction.
He was a steady US ally. He was involved in the
inception of both the United Nations and the OAS in 1948. On
December 15, 1952, he traveled to Washington in his other
capacity as plenipotentiary ambassador to the Organization
of American States and stayed in that country for three and
a half months. On July 2, 1954, he traveled to Spain on
board a transatlantic ship which took him to Vigo. Franco,
who was already an ally of the empire, welcomed him at the
Madrid North Station accompanied by all members of the
diplomatic corp.
My relationship with the Dominican Republic dates
back to my days at the University. I had been honored with
an appointment to President of the Committee for Dominican
Democracy. It did not sound as a very important position,
but since I was kind of rebellious, I took it seriously. The
time to do something came up unexpectedly. The Dominican
exiled fostered in Cuba the creation of an expeditionary
force. I enlisted with it when I had not yet completed my
sophomore. I was 21 years old.
I have told the story before of what happened then.
After the frustrated Cayo Confites expedition, I was not
among the over one thousand prisoners taken to the Columbia
military camp, where Juan Bosch went on a hunger strike.
These men had been incarcerated by the Head of the Army in
Cuba, General Perez Dameras, who had received money from
Trujillo to intercept the expedition. The General did this
when the expeditionary were close to the Wind Passage.
A Cuban Navy frigate, aiming with its bow cannons
at our leading boat, ordered us to return and to dock at the
Antilla’s port. I then jump into the water of the Nipe Bay
together with three other expeditionary. We were four armed
men.
I had met Juan Bosch, an outstanding Dominican
leader, in Cayo Confites, where we trained, and we talked at
length. He was not the chief of the expedition but he was
certainly the most prestigious personality among the
Dominicans, even if he was ignored by some of the main
leaders of that movement and by the Cuban chieftains who had
rather important and well paid official relations. I was
then very far from even imagining this that I’m writing
today!
Eleven years later, when our fight on the Sierra
Maestra Mountains was about to successfully conclude,
Trujillo granted a credit to Batista to buy weapons and
ammunitions, which were brought by plane in the second
quarter of 1958. He also volunteered to airborne three
thousand Dominican troops, and later another force that
would land in Oriente.
Batista’s tyranny was defeated on January 1st,
1959, thanks to the hard blows dealt by the Rebel Army and
the revolutionary general strike. The repressive state came
crumbling down all throughout the island and Batista left
for the Dominican Republic. He traveled there in the company
of other sinister characters of that regime such as the well
known thug Lutgardo Martin Perez, his 25-year old son
Roberto Martin Perez Rodriguez, and a group of the top
military chiefs of his defeated army.
Trujillo offered Batista a warm welcome and
accommodated him at an official residence for distinguished
guest, although he later sent him to a luxurious hotel. He
was concerned over the example of the Cuban Revolution,
therefore, he counted on the top chiefs of Batista’s former
army and the likely support of the tens of thousands of
members of the three army branches and the police, to
organize a counterrevolution and support it with the
Caribbean Legion, which might have had about 25 thousand
soldiers from the Dominican Army.
The US Administration, being aware of these plans,
sent a CIA officer to Santo Domingo to talk with Trujillo
and assess his plans against Cuba. By midst February 1959,
this man met with John Abbes Garcia, head of the Dominican
Intelligence services to whom he recommended to send agents
to recruit hostile elements in the ranks of the victorious
Revolution. He did not say that the US government already
had William Alexander Morgan Ruderth, an American citizen
and CIA agent, who had infiltrated the Second Front in the
Escambray, a man they had promoted to the rank of Commander
and who was one of the main chiefs there.
The development of these events, which make for a
fascinating story, can be found in the books of senior Cuban
Intelligence and Security officers, in the testimonies of
leaders of military units of the Rebel Army who were
directly involved, in autobiographies, official statements
made in those days and reports by national and foreign
journalists, all of whom it would be impossible to mention
in this Reflection.
There is another book in the process of publication
written by a comrade who joined the Militias when he was 17,
and who for his good conduct and sharp mind was then
transferred to the Prime Minister’s and Commander in Chief’s
security detail where he studied to become a stenographer,
then took notes of the conversations and collected the
testimony of hundreds of participants in the events he
narrates. This chapter of the history of our Revolution has
yet to be recounted.
As is understood, the top revolutionary leaders
were constantly informed of the news about the enemy’s
plans. We then conceived the idea of dealing the Yankee’s,
Batista’s and Trujillo’s counterrevolution a hard blow.
When the weapons sent by sea from Florida to carry
out the first actions and the chiefs and plotters were all
under strict control, we simulated a successful
counterrevolution in the mountainous Escambray zone, and in
Trinidad, which had an airstrip. We then proceeded to
isolate the municipality of that small and friendly town
where revolutionary political work was intensified.
Trujillo was full of enthusiasm. A company of our
soldiers disguised as peasants shouted at the airstrip:
“Long live Trujillo! Down with Fidel!” which was reported to
headquarters in the Dominican Republic. They had dropped
plenty of ammunitions from planes. Everything was unfolding
according to plan.
On August 13th, a plane came in with a
special envoy from Trujillo. It was Luis del Pozo Jimenez,
the son of a former mayor and Batista follower in the
capital and a prominent figure with the regime. He pointed
out on a map the positions that would be bombed by the
Dominican Air Force and inquired about the number of
legionnaires necessary in the first stage.
Another notable envoy came with him. It was Roberto
Martin Perez Rodriguez who, as we have already indicated,
had traveled with his father and Batista as they escaped to
the Dominican Republic that January 1st. He was
accompanied by several mercenary leaders who would stay
behind. The plane had to go back. Its crew was the same that
had carried Batista when he ran away.
I was in the proximity of the airstrip with Camilo
Cienfuegos and other military chiefs. The head of the Cuban
military personnel who had to unload the weapons and
communication equipment had understood that they should
arrest the aircraft crew. At this point, a copilot realized
that something was wrong shot on them and a shootout ensued.
Trujillo’s envoys and the other mercenary chiefs were then
arrested. There were casualties.
That same night I visited the wounded from both
sides. We couldn’t go ahead with the plan. Up until then,
communications between Trujillo and the counterrevolution in
the Escambray had taken place through short wave.
Trujillos’s official radio station broadcast triumphant
military reports similar to those we would hear from Radio
Swan and Miami in the days of Giron. We never used Cuba’s
public stations to spread false official reports.
It would have been possible to continue with the
game even after the plane had been seized and Luis del Pozo
Jimenez and Roberto Martin Perez Rodriguez were arrested. We
could have faked a mechanic failure of the plane that should
have returned there, but that would have misled and confused
our people, which were by then restless over the news about
the alleged counterrevolutionary victories in Escambray
publicly spread from Trujillo City.
That August 13, 1959 was my 33rd
birthday. I was in my prime, physically and mentally strong.
It was a major revolutionary victory, but at the
same time a signal about the times that would come and a sad
gift from Rafael Leonidas Trujillo on my anniversary. Twenty
months later we would be fighting at Giron; there would be
violence and bloodshed in the Escambray, by the sea shore,
in towns and all over the country. It was the
counterrevolution organized by the United States.
In that country they would have executed Roberto
Martin Perez Rodriguez and Luis del Pozo Jimenez, as
mercenaries in the service of an enemy power. The
Revolutionary Courts sentenced them to prison, and they were
not mistreated. What was the final destiny of Martin Perez?
He migrated to the United States, legally, and he is today a
standard bearer of the Cuban American terrorist Mafia which
supports Republican candidate McCain.
A distinguished Canadian journalist and researcher,
Jean-Guy Allard, describes the terrorist life of Roberto
Martin Perez Rodriguez as follows:
“…in fact, since early in his life, ‘Macho’ (his
nickname) Martin Perez joined the Batista police and, for
his special merits, that is, his beating of the prisoners in
the last months of the bloody regime, he earned the rank of
Sergeant.
“Both, the father and son were so close to Batista
that, on January 1st, 1959, instead of running
away to Miami, they followed the dictator to his sanctuary
in the Dominican Republic.
“…released on May 29, 1987…in 1989 he joined the
Cuban American National Foundation (CANF) established by the
CIA under Ronald Reagan.
“He would very soon be leading the paramilitary
committee created by this organization which ensures the
financing, among others, of the terrorist group Alpha 66 and
other extremist groups acting against Cuba.
“…Martin Perez Rodriguez took part in the
arrangement of a series of failed attempts on the life the
President of Cuba during various Ibero American Summits.
“In 1994, on the occasion of Fidel’s attendance to
the 4th Summit, in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia…
he purchased a 50 mm Barret gun and explosives which were
transferred to Colombia from Miami…by plane!
“…he plotted with Jimenez Escobedo and Eugenio
LLameras with a view to the 5th Ibero American
Summit in 1995. That year, he revived the same plan for the
Non Aligned Movement Summit, also in Cartagena de Indias,
Colombia.
“In 1997, at Margarita Island, Venezuela, on the
occasion of the 7th Ibero American Summit of
Heads of Sate and Government, Posada mounted another
conspiracy with direct support from Martin Perez Rodriguez
and other leaders of CANF…”
“…he signed the Declaration of support for
terrorism against Cuba published by the Foundation on August
11th…Roberto Martin Perez, Feliciano Foyo and
Horacio Garcia are some of the people Posada publicly named
as the ‘financiers’ of his terrorist actions during his
interview with the New York Times in 1997.
“…he sponsored in Miami an exhibition of paintings
by [Orlando] Bosch and Posada [Carriles], the two
masterminds of the sabotage against the Cuban civilian
plane, in 1976, where 73 people were killed.
“In 1998, the great advocate of the ‘political
prisoner’ carried out one of his dirtiest deeds: with other
Miami Mafia ringleaders…he led the new FBI chief, the very
corruptible Hector Pesquera, to the arrest of five Cubans
who had infiltrated the ranks of the terrorist
organizations.
“…his unfailing friendship with Guillermo Novo
Sampol, the murderer of Chilean leader Orlando Letelier is
well known…
“The Republican candidate should know that his
73-year-old protégé was the first to assert that on the day
of his longed for victory over the Cuban Revolution he would
drive a bulldozer from the Cabo San Antonio to the Punta de
Maisi crushing the island population guilty of any links
with the Revolution.
“…on another occasion, asked about the risk of
killing innocents in an attempt on Cuban leaders he said
that he didn’t care if ‘the Pope died’.”
The historical truth tells us that John McCain’s
father commandeered the amphibious attack, the invasion and
occupation of the Dominican Republic in 1965 against the
nationalist forces led by Francisco Caamaño, another great
hero of that nation whom I knew very well and who always had
confidence in Cuba.
I dedicate this Reflection on historical events to
our dear journalists, since it coincides with the 8th
Congress of the Union of Cuban Journalists (UPEC, by its
Spanish acronym), whom I consider like family. How I would
have liked to study the techniques of their trade!
The UPEC has been very generous in publishing a
book under the title Fidel, the journalist, which
will be presented tomorrow afternoon. They sent me a copy
with several articles published in clandestine or legal
newspapers over five decades ago, with a prologue by
Guillermo Cabrera Alvarez and the selection, introduction
and notes by Ana Nuñez Machin.
I gave Guillermo Cabrera the nickname of “the
genius” since I first met him. It was the impression I
received from that great man who unfortunately passed away
last year. He had had a heart surgery some time ago at the
prestigious Cardiovascular Center established by our
Revolution in Santa Clara City.
I reread some of the articles published in
Alerta, Bohemia and La Calle, and I relived those
years.
I wrote those articles when I felt the need to
convey certain ideas. I did it out of pure revolutionary
instinct. I always applied the principle that words should
be simple and the concepts understandable to the masses.
Today I have more experience, but I’m not as strong; it’s
harder for me to do it. Our people’s educational level is
higher with the Revolution, thus the task is more difficult.
From the revolutionary point of view, discrepancies
are not important; it is the honesty of the opinion that
counts. And, it is from the contradictions that the truth
will emerge. Perhaps, it would be worthwhile some other time
to make an effort to make some observations on this issue.
Yesterday, an important event took place, which
will be an issue the following days. This is the release of
Ingrid Betancourt and a group of people held by the FARC,
that is, the Revolutionary Armed Forces from Colombia.
On January 10th this year, our
ambassador to Venezuela, German Sanchez, following a request
of the Venezuelan and Colombian governments, took part in
the release of Clara Rojas to the International Red Cross.
She had been a candidate to vice President of Colombia when
Ingrid Betancourt was running for President and was
kidnapped on February 23, 2002. Consuelo Gonzalez, a member
of the House of Representatives, kidnapped on September 10,
2001, was released with her.
An era of peace was opening for Colombia. This is a
process Cuba has been supporting for over two decades, as it
is most convenient for the unity and peace of the peoples of
our America, using new ways in the special and complex
circumstances prevailing after the demise of the USSR in the
early 1990s --which I wont try to analyze here-- very
different from those existing in Cuba, Nicaragua and other
countries in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s of the 20th
century.
The bombing of a camp in Ecuadorian soil in the
early hours of March 1st, --while Colombian
guerrillas and young visitors from different nationalities
were sleeping-- using Yankee technology; the occupation of
the territory, the coup de grace on the wounded and the
kidnapping of corpses as part of the terrorist plan from the
United States government was repudiated the world over.
A Rio Group meeting was then held in the Dominican
Republic on March 7th. There the events were
strongly condemned while the US administration applauded.
Manuel Marulanda, a peasant and communist militant,
the main leader of that guerrilla founded almost half a
century ago was still alive. He passed away on the 26th
of that same month.
Ingrid Betancourt, feeble and sick, as well as
other captives with a serious health condition could hardly
resist any longer.
Out of
a basically humanist sentiment, we rejoiced at the news that
Ingrid Betancourt, three American citizens and other
captives had been released. The civilians should have never
been kidnapped neither should the militaries have been kept
prisoners in the conditions of the jungle. These were
objectively cruel actions. No revolutionary purpose could
justify it. The time will come when the subjective factors
should be analyzed in depth.
We won
our revolutionary war in Cuba by immediately releasing every
prisoner absolutely unconditionally. The soldiers and
officers captured in battle were released to the
International Red Cross; we only kept their weapons. No
soldier will ever surrender if he thinks he will be killed
or subjected to cruel treatment.
We are
watching with concern how the imperialists try to capitalize
on what happened in Colombia in order to hide and justify
their heinous crimes of genocide against other peoples. They
want to deflect international attention from their
interventionist plans in Venezuela and Bolivia and from the
presence of the 4th Fleet in support of the
political line that intends to obliterate the independence
of the countries located south of the United States while
taking possession of their natural resources.
These
should be illustrative examples for all of our journalists.
In our times, truth is navigating rough seas, where the mass
media are in the hands of those threatening human survival
with their immense economic, technologic and military
resources. That’s the challenge faced by the Cuban
journalists!
Fidel
Castro Ruz
July 3,
2008
4:26
p.m.
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