Rewarding a terrorist
president Fidel Castro
George
W. Bush is undoubtedly the most genuine representative of a system of terror
forced on the world by the technological, economic and political superiority of
the most powerful country known to this planet. For this reason, we share the
tragedy of the American people and their ethical values. The instructions for
the verdict issued by Judge Kathleen Cardone, of the El Paso Federal Court last
Friday, granting Luis Posada Carriles freedom on bail, could only have come from
the White House.
It was President Bush himself who ignored at all
times the criminal and terrorist nature of the defendant who was protected with
a simple accusation of immigration violation leveled at him. The reply is
brutal. The government of the United States and its most representative
institutions had already decided to release the monster
The backgrounds are well-known and reach far back.
The people who trained him and ordered him to destroy a Cuban passenger plane in
midair, with 73 athletes, students and other Cuban and foreign travelers on
board, together with its dedicated crew; those who bought his freedom while the
terrorist was held in prison in Venezuela, so that he could supply and
practically conduct a dirty war against the people of Nicaragua, resulting in
the loss of thousands of lives and the devastation of a country for decades to
come; those who empowered him to smuggle with drugs and weapons making a mockery
of the laws of Congress; those who collaborated with him to create the terrible
Operation Condor and to internationalize terror; the same who brought torture,
death and often the physical disappearance of hundreds of thousands of Latin
Americans, could not possibly act any different.
Even though Bush’s decision was to be expected, it is
certainly no less humiliating for our people. Thanks to the revelations of "Por
Esto!" a Mexican publication from the state of Quintana Roo later complemented
by our own sources, Cuba knew with absolute precision how Posada Carriles
entered from Central America, via Cancun, to the Isla Mujeres departing from
there on board the Santrina, after the ship was inspected by the Mexican federal
authorities, heading with other terrorists straight to Miami.
Denounced and publicly challenged with exact
information on the matter, since April 15, 2005, it took the government of that
country more than a month to arrest the terrorist, and a year and two months to
admit that Luis Posada Carriles had entered through the Florida coast illegally
on board the Santrina, a presumed school-ship licensed in the United States.
Not a single word is said of his countless victims,
of the bombs he set off in tourist facilities in recent years, of his dozens of
plans financed by the government of the United States to physically eliminate
me.
It was not enough for Bush to offend the name of Cuba
by installing a horrible torture center similar to Abu Ghraib on the territory
illegally occupied in Guantánamo, horrifying the world with this procedure. The
cruel actions of his predecessors seemed not enough for him. It was not enough
to force a poor and underdeveloped country like Cuba to spend 100 billion
dollars. To accuse Posada Carriles was tantamount to accusing himself.
Throughout almost half a century, everything was fair
game against our small island lying 90 miles away from its coast, wanting to be
independent. Florida saw the installation of the largest station for
intelligence and subversion that ever existed on this planet.
It was not enough to send a mercenary invasion on the
Bay of Pigs, costing us 176 dead and more than 300 wounded at a time when the
few medical specialists they left us had no experience treating war wounds.
Earlier still, the French ship La Coubre carrying
Belgian weapons and grenades for Cuba had exploded on the docks of Havana
Harbor. The two well synchronized explosions caused the deaths of more than 100
workers and wounded others as many of them tool part in the rescue attempts.
It was not enough to have the Missile Crisis of 1962,
which brought the world to the brink of an all-consuming thermonuclear war, at a
time when there were bombs 50 times more powerful than the ones dropped on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
It was not enough to introduce in our country
viruses, bacteria and fungi to attack plantations and flocks; and incredible as
it may seem, to attack human beings. Some of these pathogens came out of
American laboratories and were brought to Cuba by well-known terrorists in the
service of the United States government.
Add to all this the enormous injustice of keeping
five heroic patriots imprisoned for supplying information about terrorist
activities; they were condemned in a fraudulent manner to sentences that include
two life sentences and they stoically withstand cruel mistreatment, each of them
in a different prison.
Time and again the Cuban people have fearlessly faced
the threat of death. They have demonstrated that with intelligence, using
appropriate tactics and strategies, and especially preserving unity around their
political and social vanguard, there can be no force on this earth capable of
defeating them.
I think that the coming May Day celebration would be
the ideal day for our people, --using the minimum of fuel and transportation--
to show their feelings to the workers and the poor of the world.
Fidel Castro Ruz
April 10, 2007