Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz
(born August 13, 1926) is a Cuban
politician, one of the primary leaders of the
Cuban Revolution, the Prime Minister of Cuba
from
February 1959 to December 1976, and then the President of the Council of State of
Cuba until his resignation from the office in February
2008. He is currently the
First
Secretary of the
Communist
Party of Cuba.
Castro was born into a wealthy family and acquired a law degree.
While studying at Havana University, he began his political career
and became a recognized figure in Cuban politics.
His political career
continued with nationalist critiques of
Fulgencio Batista, and of the
United
States
' political and corporate influence in Cuba.
He gained an ardent, but limited, following and also drew the
attention of the authorities.
He eventually led the failed 1953 attack on
the Moncada
Barracks
, after which
he was captured, tried, incarcerated, and later released. He
then traveled to Mexico to organize and train for an assault on
Batista's Cuba. He and his fellow revolutionaries left Mexico for
the East of Cuba in December 1956.
Castro
came to power as a result of the Cuban
revolution that overthrew the U.S.
-backed
dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista,
and shortly thereafter became Prime Minister of Cuba. In
1965 he became
First Secretary of
the
Communist Party of Cuba
and led the transformation of Cuba into a
one-party socialist
republic. In 1976 he became President of the
Council of State as well as of the
Council of Ministers.
He also held the supreme military rank of
Comandante
en Jefe ("Commander in Chief") of the
Cuban armed forces. Castro has been
portrayed as a dictator in spite of his disapproval of
dictatorships.
Following intestinal surgery from an undisclosed digestive illness
believed to have been
diverticulitis,
Castro
transferred his
responsibilities to the First Vice-President, his younger
brother
RaĂșl Castro, on July 31,
2006. On February 19, 2008, five days before his mandate was to
expire, he announced he would neither seek nor accept a new term as
either president or commander-in-chief. On February 24, 2008, the
National Assembly elected
RaĂșl
Castro to succeed him as the President of Cuba.
Childhood and education
Fidel
Alejandro Vittore Castro Ruz was born on a sugar plantation in
BirĂĄn
, near
MayarĂ
, in the
modern-day province of HolguĂn
â then a part of the now-defunct Oriente
province. He was the third child born to Ăngel Castro y Argiz, a Galician immigrant from the impoverished
northwest of Spain
who became
relatively prosperous through work in the sugar industry and
successful investing. His mother, Lina Ruz GonzĂĄlez, was a
household servant. Angel Castro was married to another woman, Maria
Luisa Argota, until Fidel was 15, and thus Fidel as a child had to
deal both with his illegitimacy and the challenge of being raised
in various foster homes away from his father's house.
Castro has two brothers,
RamĂłn and
RaĂșl, and four sisters, Angelita,
Juanita, Enma, and Agustina, all of whom were
born out of wedlock. He also has two half siblings, Lidia and Pedro
Emilio who were raised by Ăngel Castro's first wife.
Fidel was not baptized until he was 8, also very uncommon, bringing
embarrassment and ridicule from other children. Ăngel Castro
finally dissolved his first marriage when Fidel was 15 and married
Fidelâs mother. Castro was formally recognized by his father when
he was 17, when his surname was legally changed to Castro from Ruz,
his motherâs name.
Although accounts of his education differ,
most sources agree that he was an intellectually gifted student,
more interested in sports than in academics, and spent many years
in private Catholic boarding schools, finishing high school at
El Colegio de
Belén
, a Jesuit school in Havana in
1945. While at Belén, Castro pitched on the school's
baseball team. There are persistent rumors that Castro was scouted
for variousU.S. baseball teams, but there is no evidence that this
ever actually happened.
Political beginnings
In late
1945, Castro entered law school at the University of
Havana
. He became immediately embroiled in the
political culture at the University, which was a reflection of the
volatile politics in Cuba during that era. Since the fall of
president
Gerardo Machado in the
1930s, student politics had degenerated into a form of
gangsterismo dominated by fractious action groups, and
Castro, believing that the gangs posed a physical threat to his
university aspirations, experienced what he later described as "a
great moment of decision." He returned to the university from a
brief hiatus to involve himself fully in the various violent
battles and disputes which surrounded university elections, and was
to be implicated in a number of shootings linked to
Rolando Masferrer's MSR action group. "To
not return", said Castro later, "would be to give in to bullies, to
abandon my beliefs". Rivalries were so intense that Castro
apparently collaborated in an attempt on Masferrer's life during
this period, while Masferrer, whose paramilitary group
Les
Tigres later became an instrument of state violence under
Batista, perennially hunted the younger student seeking violent
retribution.
In 1947, Castro joined the
Partido
Ortodoxo which had been newly formed by
Eduardo ChibĂĄs. A charismatic figure,
ChibĂĄs attracted many Cubans with his message of social justice,
honest government, and political freedom.. ChibĂĄs was running for
president against the incumbent
RamĂłn Grau San MartĂn who
had allowed rampant corruption to flourish during his term. The
Partido Ortodoxo publicly exposed corruption and demanded
government and social reform. It aimed to instill a strong sense of
national identity among Cubans, establish Cuban economic
independence and freedom from the United States, and dismantle the
power of the elite over Cuban politics. Though ChibĂĄs lost the
election, Castro, considering ChibĂĄs his mentor, remained committed
to his cause, working fervently on his behalf. In 1951, while
running for president again, ChibĂĄs shot himself in the stomach
during a radio broadcast. Castro was present and accompanied him to
the hospital where he died.
During 1948, Castro was twice linked to political assassinations.
He was suspected of Manolo Castro's assassination that took place
on February 22. University policeman Oscar Fernandez was killed in
front of his own home on June 6. Dying Oscar Fernandez and other
witnesses identified Castro as the assassin. The incident passed.
In 1948,
Castro joined an anti-American demonstration trip to BogotĂĄ, Colombia
, paid by Argentinean army colonel and President
Juan PerĂłn. Castro joined mob
violence and property destruction, and later sought refuge in the
Argentinean embassy.
Decision for revolution
In 1948, Castro married
Mirta DĂaz
Balart, a student from a wealthy Cuban family through which he
was exposed to the lifestyle of the Cuban elite. Mirta's father
gave tens of thousands to spend in a three-month honeymoon in New
York. Castro also received a $1,000 wedding gift from Fulgencio
Batista, the ex-President who was a friend of both families.
Although Castro considered enrolling at
Columbia University, a private
university in Manhattan, he returned to Cuba to complete his
degree.
Castro started to have money problems. He refused to go work and
others had to pay the family's bills. The relationship with his
wife was also strained.In 1950 he graduated from law school with a
Doctor of Laws degree and began practicing law in a small
partnership in Havana. By now he had become well known for his
passionately
nationalist views and his
intense opposition to the United States. Castro spoke publicly
against the United States involvement in defending South Korea in
the
Korean War.
In 1951, Fidel Castro said to Batista "I don't see an important
book here". When Batista asked which, Castro replied "Curzio
Malaparte's The Technique of the Coup d'état". According to Rafael
Diaz-Ballart, Fidel Castro realized that Batista was not a
"revolutionary" leader anymore, even though both looked at each
other with admiration.
Increasingly interested in a career in politics, Castro had become
a candidate for a seat in the Cuban
parliament in the 1952 elections when former
president, General Fulgencio Batista, ousted President
Carlos PrĂo SocarrĂĄs in a
coup d'état, cancelled the
elections and assumed government as "provisional president".
Batista was supported by establishment elements of Cuban society,
powerful Cuban agencies, and labor unions.
Castro now broke away from the Partido Ortodoxo to marshal legal
arguments based on the Constitution of 1940 formally to charge
Batista with violating the
constitution. His petition, entitled
Zarpazo, was denied by the Court of Constitutional
Guarantees and he was not allowed a hearing. This experience formed
the foundation for Castro's opposition to the Batista government
and convinced him that revolution was the only way to depose
Batista.
Cuban Revolution
Attack on Moncada Barracks
As discontent over the Batista coup grew, Castro abandoned his law
practice and formed an underground organization of supporters,
including his brother,
RaĂșl, and
Mario Chanes de Armas.
Together they actively plotted to overthrow Batista.
They collected guns
and ammunition and finalized their plans for an armed attack on
Moncada
Barracks
, Batista's
largest garrison outside Santiago de Cuba
. On the 26th of July, 1953, they attacked
Moncada
Barracks
. The
Céspedes garrison in Bayamo was also attacked as a diversion. The
attack proved disastrous and more than sixty of the one-hundred and
thirty-five
militants involved were
killed.
Castro
and other surviving members of his group managed to escape to a
part of the rugged Sierra
Maestra
mountains east of Santiago where they were
eventually discovered and captured. Although there is
disagreement over why Castro and his brother,
RaĂșl, were not executed on capture as many
of their fellow militants were, there is evidence that an officer
recognized Castro from his university days and treated the captured
rebels compassionately, despite the 'illegal' unofficial order to
have the leader executed. Others, such as Angel Prado, military
commander of the 26th of July Movement, say that on the night of
the attack Castro's driver got lost and he never reached the
barracks. That night was the night of âEl Carnaval de Santiagoâ and
the streets of Santiago de Cuba were filled with party goers.
Castro was tried in the fall of 1953 and sentenced to up to fifteen
years in prison. During his trial Castro delivered his famous
defense speech
History Will
Absolve Me, upholding his rebellious actions and boldly
declaring his political views:
While he
was being held at the prison for political activists on Isla de
Pinos
, he continued to plot Batista's overthrow, planning
upon release to reorganize and train in Mexico. After having served
less than two years, he was released in May 1955 due to a general
amnesty from Batista who was under political
pressure, and went as planned to Mexico
.
26th of July Movement
Once in Mexico, Castro reunited with other Cuban exiles and founded
the
26th of July Movement,
named after the date of the failed attack on the Moncada Barracks.
The goal remained the overthrow of
Fulgencio Batista. Castro had learned from
the Moncada experience that new tactics were needed if Batista's
forces were to be defeated. This time, the plan was to use
underground guerrilla tactics, which were used by the Cubans the
last time they attempted a populist overthrow of what they
considered an imperialistic regime. The Cuban war of Independence
against the Spanish was Cuba's introduction to guerrilla warfare,
about which they read once the Cuban campaign ended but was taken
up by
Emilio Aguinaldo in the
Philippines. Once again, it would be guerrilla warfare to bring
down a government.
In Mexico Castro met
Ernesto "Che"
Guevara, a proponent of
guerrilla
warfare. Guevara joined the group of rebels and became an
important force in shaping Castro's evolving political beliefs.
Guevara's observations of the misery of the poor in Latin America
had already convinced him that the only solution lay in violent
revolution.
Since
regular contacts with a KGB agent named Nikolai Sergeevich Leonov in Mexico City
had not resulted in the hoped for weapon supply,
they decided to go to the United States
to gather personnel and funds from Cubans living
there, including Carlos
PrĂo SocarrĂĄs, the elected Cuban president deposed by Batista
in 1952. Back in Mexico, the group trained under a
Spanish Civil War Veteran,
Cuban-born Alberto Bayo who had fled to
Mexico after Francisco Franco's
victory in Spain
.
On
November 26, 1956, Castro and his group of 81 followers, mostly
Cuban exiles, set out from Tuxpan
, Veracruz
, aboard the yacht Granma
for the
purpose of starting a rebellion in Cuba.
The
rebels landed at Playa Las Coloradas close to Los Cayuelos near the eastern city of Manzanillo
on December 2, 1956. In short order, most of
Castro's men were killed, dispersed, or taken prisoner by Batista's
forces.
While the exact number is in dispute, it is
agreed that no more than twenty of the original eighty-two men
survived the bloody encounters with the Cuban army and succeeded in
fleeing to the Sierra
Maestra
mountains. The group of survivors included
Fidel Castro,
Che Guevara,
RaĂșl Castro, and
Camilo Cienfuegos. Those who survived were
aided by people in the countryside.
They regrouped in the Sierra
Maestra
in Oriente province and organized a column under
Fidel Castro's command.
From
their encampment in the Sierra
Maestra
mountains, the 26th of July Movement waged a
guerrilla war against the Batista government. In the cities
and major towns also, resistance groups were organizing until
underground groups were everywhere. The strongest was in Santiago
formed by
Frank PaĂs.
In the summer of 1957, PaĂsâs organization merged with the 26th of
July Movement of Castro. As Castro's movement gained popular
support in the cities and countryside, it grew to over eight
hundred men. In mid-1957 Castro gave
Che
Guevara command of a second column. A
journalist,
Herbert
Matthews from the
New York
Times, came to interview him in the Sierra Maestra,
attracting interest to Castro's cause in the United States. The
New York Times front page stories by Matthews presented
Castro as a romantic and appealing revolutionary, bearded and
dressed in rumpled fatigues.Castro and Matthews were followed by
the TV crew of Andrew Saint George, said to be a
CIA contact person. Through television, Castro's
rudimentary command of the
English
language and charismatic presence enabled him to appeal
directly to a U.S. audience.
In 1957, Castro also signed the
Manifesto of the Sierra
Maestra in which he agreed to call elections under the
Electoral Code of 1943 within the
first 18 months of his time in power and to restore all of the
provisions of the
Constitution of
1940 that had been suspended under Batista. While he took steps
to implement some of the measures in the Manifesto upon coming into
power, Cuba failed to have elections, the most important part of
the program, within the allotted time.
In February 1958, Castro published in Coronet Magazine a famous
statement of the goals of the movement. He stated that "we are
fighting to do away with dictatorship in Cuba and to establish the
foundations of genuine representative government" and promised to
"prepare and conduct truly honest general elections within twelve
months" after success. He also stated, "we have no plans for the
expropriation or nationalization of foreign investments here". He
also justified his attacks on Cuba's economy as the only way to
bring down the Batista dictatorship. Despite his denouncement of
dictatorships, Castro himself has been described as a
dictator.
Operation Verano
In May 1958, Batista launched
Operation Verano aiming to crush
Castro and other anti-government groups. It was called
La
Ofensiva ("The Offensive") by the rebels (AlarcĂłn
RamĂrez,1997). Although on paper heavily outnumbered, Castro's
guerrilla forces scored a series of victories, largely aided by
mass desertions from Batista's army of poorly trained and
uncommitted young conscripts. During the
Battle of La Plata, Castro's forces
defeated an entire battalion. While pro-Castro Cuban sources later
emphasized the role of Castro's
guerrilla
forces in these battles, other groups and leaders were also
involved, such as
escopeteros (poorly
armed irregulars). During the
Battle of Las Mercedes, Castro's
small army came close to defeat but he managed to pull his troops
out by opening up negotiations with General Cantillo while secretly
slipping his soldiers out of a trap.
When
Operation Verano ended, Castro ordered three columns
commanded by Guevara, Jaime Vega and
Camilo Cienfuegos to invade central Cuba
where they were strongly supported by rebellious elements who had
long been operating in the area. One of Castro's columns moved out
onto the Cauto Plains. Here, they were supported by
Huber Matos,
RaĂșl
Castro and others who were operating in the eastern-most part
of the province. On the plains, Castro's forces first surrounded
the town of Guisa in
Granma Province
and drove out their enemies, then proceeded to take most of the
towns that had been taken by
Calixto
GarcĂa in the 1895-1898
Cuban War of Independence.
Battle of Yaguajay
In December 1958, the columns of
Che
Guevara and
Camilo Cienfuegos
continued their advance through Las Villas province.
They succeeded in
occupying several towns, and then began preparations for an
attack on Santa
Clara
, the provincial capital. Guevara's fighters
launched a fierce assault on the Cuban army surrounding Santa
Clara, and a vicious house-to-house battle ensued. They also
derailed an armored train which Batista had sent to aid his troops
in the city while Cienfuegos won the
Battle of Yaguajay. Defeated on all
sides, Batista's forces crumbled. The provincial capital was
captured after less than a day of fighting on December 31,
1958.
Collapse of the Batista regime
After the
loss at the Battle of Santa
Clara, expecting betrayal by his own army and having lost all
backup from the previously supportive US government, Batista
(accompanied by president-elect
AndrĂ©s Rivero AgĂŒero)
boarded a plane and fled to the Dominican Republic
in the early hours of January 1, 1959.
Accompanying Batista into exile was an amassed fortune of more than
$ 300,000,000 that he acquired through "graft and payoffs."
Batista left behind a junta headed by Gen. Eulogio Cantillo,
recently the commander in Oriente province, the center of the
Castro revolt. The junta immediately selected Dr.
Carlos Piedra, the oldest judge of the
Supreme Court, as provisional
President of Cuba as specified in the Constitution of 1940. Castro
refused to accept the selection of Justice Piedra as provisional
President and the Supreme Court refused to administer the oath of
office to the Justice.
The rebel forces of Fidel Castro moved swiftly to seize power
throughout the island. At the age of 32, Castro had successfully
masterminded a classic guerrilla campaign from his headquarters in
the Sierra Maestra and ousted Batista.
New government
â Fidel Castro in Cuba, January 1959
On
January 8, 1959, Castro's army rolled victoriously into Havana
. As
news of the fall of Batista's government spread through Havana,
The New York Times
described the scene as one of jubilant crowds pouring into the
streets and automobile horns honking. The black and red flag of the
26th of July Movement waved on automobiles and buildings. The
atmosphere was chaotic.Castro called a general strike in protest of
the Piedra government. He demanded that Dr. Urrutia, former judge
of the Urgency Court of Santiago de Cuba, be installed as the
provisional President instead. The Cane Planters Association of
Cuba, speaking on behalf of the island's crucial sugar industry,
issued a statement of support for Castro and his movement.
Law
professor José Miró Cardona created a new
government with himself as
prime
minister and
Manuel Urrutia
LleĂł as president on January 5. The United States officially
recognized the new government two days later. Castro himself
arrived in Havana to cheering crowds and assumed the post of
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed
Forces on January 8.
Castro consolidates power
Fidel Castro sought to oust liberals and democrats, such as José
Miró Cardona and Manuel Urrutia Lleó. In February professor José
MirĂł Cardona had to resign because of Castro's attacks. On February
16, 1959, Castro was sworn in as Prime Minister of Cuba. Professor
MirĂł soon went into exile in the United States, and would later
participate in the
Bay of Pigs
Invasion against Castro's form of government. President Manuel
Urrutia LleĂł wanted to restore elections, but Castro opposed free
elections. Castro's slogan was "Revolution first, elections later".
The new government began
expropriating
property and announced plans to base the compensation on the
artificially low property valuations that the companies themselves
had kept to a fraction of their true value so that their taxes
would be negligible. During this period Castro repeatedly denied
being a communist. For example in New York on April 25 he said,
"...[communist] influence is nothing. I don't agree with communism.
We are democracy. We are against all kinds of dictators... That is
why we oppose communism."
Between April 15 and April 26, Castro and a delegation of
industrial and international representatives visited the U.S. as
guests of the Press Club. Castro hired one of the best
public relations firms in the United States
for a charm offensive visit by Castro and his recently initiated
government. Castro answered impertinent questions jokingly and ate
hot dogs and hamburgers. His rumpled fatigues and scruffy beard cut
a popular figure easily promoted as an authentic hero. He was
refused a meeting with President
Eisenhower. After his visit to the
United States, he would go on to join forces with the Soviet
leader,
Nikita Khrushchev.
On May 17, 1959, Castro signed into law the
First Agrarian Reform, which
limited landholdings to 993 acres (4 kmÂČ) per owner and
forbade foreign land ownership.
Castro started to organize attacks on President Manuel Urrutia
LleĂł. Castro himself resigned as
Prime Minister of Cuba and later that
day appeared on television to deliver a lengthy denouncement of
Urrutia, claiming that Urrutia "complicated" government, and that
his "fevered anti-Communism" was having a detrimental effect.
Castro's sentiments received widespread support as organized crowds
surrounded the presidential palace demanding Urrutia's resignation,
which was duly received. On
July 23, Castro
resumed his position as premier and appointed
Osvaldo DorticĂłs as the new
president.
Years in power
As early as July 1959, Castro's intelligence chief
Ramiro Valdés contacted the KGB in Mexico
City. Subsequently, the USSR sent over one hundred mostly Spanish
speaking advisors, including
Enrique
LĂster ForjĂĄn, to organize the
Committees for the
Defense of the Revolution.
In February 1960, Cuba signed an agreement to buy oil from the
USSR. When the U.S.-owned refineries in Cuba refused to process the
oil, they were expropriated, and the United States broke off
diplomatic relations with the Castro government soon afterward. To
the concern of the Eisenhower administration, Cuba began to
establish closer ties with the Soviet Union. A variety of pacts
were signed between Castro and
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, allowing Cuba to
receive large amounts of economic and military aid from the USSR.
The mould was set. U.S. disappointment with their lack of power in
Cuban decision making fueled Castro's fears leading to increasing
Cuban dependence on USSR support.
On May 1, 1961, Castro declared Cuba as
socialist state and officially abolished
multiparty elections. Critics noted that Castro feared elections
would eject him from power.
In June 1960, Eisenhower reduced Cuba's sugar import quota by
7,000,000 tons, and in response, Cuba
nationalized some $850 million worth of U.S.
property and businesses. Health care and education were socialized.
Both dramatically improved. The new government took control of the
country by nationalizing industry, redistributing property,
collectivizing agriculture and creating policies that would benefit
the poor. While popular among the poor, these policies alienated
many former supporters of the revolution among the Cuban middle and
upper-classes.
Over one million Cubans later migrated to
the U.S., forming a vocal anti-Castro community in Miami
, Florida
, actively supported and funded by successive U.S.
administrations.
By the early autumn of 1960, the U.S. government was engaged in a
semi-secret campaign to remove Castro from power.
In September 1960, Castro created
Committees for the
Defense of the Revolution, which implemented neighbhorhood
spying in an effort to weed out "counter-revolutionary"
activities.
By the end of 1960, all opposition newspaper had been closed down
and all radio and television stations were in state control, run
under the
Leninist principle of
Democratic Centralism. Moderates,
teachers and professors were purged. He was accused of keeping
about 20,000 dissents held captive and tortured under inhuman
prison conditions every year.
Groups such as homosexuals were locked up in concentration camps in
the 1960s, where they were subject to medical-political "
re-education". Castro's admiring description of
rural life in Cuba ("in the country, there are no homosexuals")
reflected the idea of homosexuality as bourgeois decadence, and he
denounced "maricones" (
faggots) as
"agents of imperialism". Castro stated that "homosexuals should not
be allowed in positions where they are able to exert influence upon
young people".
Loyalty to Castro became the primary criteria for all appointments
in the island. The Communist Party strengthened its one-party rule,
with Castro as the Prime Minister.
In the 1961 New Year's Day parade, Castro exhibited Soviet tanks
and other weapons. The Soviet Union award him with the
Lenin Peace Prize later that year.
Bay of Pigs Invasion
The Bay
of Pigs Invasion (known as La Batalla de GirĂłn, or Playa GirĂłn in
Cuba), was an unsuccessful attempt by a US-trained force of
Cuban exiles to invade southern Cuba
with support
from US government armed forces, to overthrow the Cuban government
of Fidel Castro.
The plan
was launched in April 1961, less than three months after John F. Kennedy assumed the presidency in
the United
States
. The Cuban armed forces, trained and
equipped by
Eastern Bloc nations,
defeated the exile combatants in three days. Bad
Cuban-American relations were made
worse by the 1962
Cuban Missile
Crisis.
The
invasion is named after the Bay of Pigs
, which is just one possible translation of the
Spanish BahĂa de Cochinos. The main landing at the
Bay of Pigs specifically took place at the beach named Playa
GirĂłn.
On May 1, 1961, Castro announced to the hundreds of thousands in
his audience that:
In a nationally broadcast speech on December 2, 1961, Castro
declared that he was a
Marxist-Leninist and that Cuba was adopting
Communism. On February 7, 1962, the US
imposed an
embargo
against Cuba. This embargo was broadened during 1962 and 1963,
including a general travel ban for American tourists.
Cuban Missile Crisis
Tensions between Cuba and the US heightened during the 1962 missile
crisis, which nearly brought the US and the USSR into nuclear
conflict. Khrushchev conceived the idea of placing missiles in Cuba
as a deterrent to a possible U.S. invasion and justified the move
in response to US missile deployment in Turkey. After consultations
with his military advisors, he met with a Cuban delegation led by
RaĂșl Castro in July in order to work out the specifics. It was
agreed to deploy Soviet
R-12 MRBMs on Cuban soil; however, American
Lockheed U-2 reconnaissance discovered the
construction of the missile installations on October 15, 1962
before the weapons had actually been deployed.
The US government
viewed the installation of Soviet nuclear weapons south of Key West
as an aggressive act and a threat to US
security. As a result, the US publicly announced its
discovery on October 22, 1962, and implemented a
quarantine around Cuba that would actively
intercept and search any vessels heading for the island.
Nikolai Sergevich Leonov, who would become a
General in the KGB Intelligence Directorate and the Soviet KGB
deputy station chief in Warsaw, was the translator Castro used for
contact with the Russians during this period.
In a personal letter to Khrushchev dated October 27, 1962, Castro
urged him to launch a nuclear first strike against the United
States if Cuba were invaded, but Khrushchev rejected any first
strike response. Soviet field commanders in Cuba were, however,
authorized to use
tactical
nuclear weapons if attacked by the United States.
Khrushchev agreed to
remove the missiles in exchange for a US commitment not to invade
Cuba and an understanding that the US would secretly remove
American MRBMs targeting the Soviet Union
from Turkey
and Italy
, a measure
that the US implemented a few months later. The missile swap
was never publicized because the Kennedy Administration demanded
secrecy in order to preserve NATO relations and protect Democratic
Party candidates in the upcoming US elections.
Assassination attempts
Fabian Escalante, who was long tasked with protecting the life of
Castro, estimated the number of assassination schemes or attempts
by the
CIA to be 638. Some such attempts
allegedly included an
exploding
cigar, a fungal-infected scuba-diving suit, and a mafia-style
shooting. Some of these plots are depicted in a documentary
entitled
638 Ways to Kill
Castro. One of these attempts was by his ex-lover
Marita Lorenz whom he met in 1959. She
allegedly agreed to aid the CIA and attempted to smuggle a jar of
cold cream containing poison pills into
his room. When Castro realized, he reportedly gave her a gun and
told her to kill him but her nerve failed. Castro once said, in
regards to the numerous attempts on his life he believes have been
made, "If surviving assassination attempts were an
Olympic event, I would win the gold
medal."
According to the
Family Jewels
documents declassified by the CIA in 2007, one such assassination
attempt before the Bay of Pigs invasion involved
Johnny Roselli and
Al
Capone's successor in the
Chicago
Outfit,
Salvatore Giancana
and his right-hand man
Santos
Trafficante. It was personally authorized by then
US attorney general Robert Kennedy .
Giancana and Miami Syndicate leader Santos Trafficante were
contacted in September 1960 about the possibility of an
assassination attempt by a go-between from the CIA,
Robert Maheu, after Maheu had contacted Johnny
Roselli, a member of the Las Vegas Syndicate and Giancana's
number-two man. Maheu had presented himself as a representative of
numerous international business firms in Cuba that were being
expropriated by Castro. He offered $150,000 for the "removal" of
Castro through this operation (the documents suggest that neither
Roselli nor Giancana and Trafficante accepted any sort of payments
for the job). According to the files, it was Giancana who suggested
using a series of poison pills that could be used to doctor
Castro's food and drink. These pills were given by the CIA to
Giancana's nominee Juan Orta, whom Giancana presented as being an
official in the Cuban government who was also in the pay of
gambling interests, and who did have access to Castro. After a
series of six attempts to introduce the poison into Castro's food,
Orta abruptly demanded to be let out of the mission, handing over
the job to another, unnamed participant. Later, a second attempt
was mounted through Giancana and Trafficante using
Dr. Anthony Verona, the leader of the
Cuban Exile Junta, who had,
according to Trafficante, become "disaffected with the apparent
ineffectual progress of the Junta". Verona requested $10,000 in
expenses and $1,000 worth of communications equipment. However, it
is unknown how far the second attempt went, as the entire program
was cancelled shortly thereafter due to the launching of the
Bay of Pigs Invasion.
United States embargo
Jose Maria Aznar, former Spanish
Prime Minister, wrote that the embargo was Castro's greatest ally,
and that Castro would lose his presidency within three months if
the embargo was lifted. Castro retained control after Cuba became
bankrupt and isolated following the
collapse of the Soviet Union in
1991. The synergic contraction of Cuban economy resulted in
eighty-five percent of its markets disappearing, along with
subsidies and trade agreements that had supported it, causing
extended gas and water outages, severe power shortages, and
dwindling food supplies.In 1994, the island's economy plunged into
what was called the "Special Period"; teetering on the brink of
collapse. Cuba legalized the US dollar, turned to tourism, and
encouraged the transfer of remittances in US dollars from Cubans
living in the USA to their relatives on the Island.After massive
damage caused by
Hurricane
Michelle in 2001, Castro proposed a one-time cash purchase of
food from the U.S. while declining a U.S. offer of humanitarian
aid. The U.S. authorized the shipment of food in 2001, the first
since the embargo was imposed. During 2004, Castro shut down 118
factories, including steel plants, sugar mills and paper processors
to compensate for the crisis due to fuel shortages., and in 2005
directed thousands of Cuban doctors to Venezuela in exchange for
oil imports.
Foreign relations
Soviet Union
Following the establishment of diplomatic ties to the Soviet Union,
and after the Cuban Missile Crisis, Cuba became increasingly
dependent on Soviet markets and military and economic aid. Castro
was able to build a formidable military force with the help of
Soviet equipment and military advisors.
The KGB
kept in
close touch with Havana, and Castro tightened Communist Party
control over all levels of government, the media, and the
educational system, while developing a Soviet-style internal police
force.
Castro's alliance with the Soviet Union caused something of a split
between him and Guevara.
In 1966, Guevara left for Bolivia
in an ill-fated attempt to stir up revolution
against the country's government.
On August 23, 1968, Castro made a public gesture to the USSR that
caused the Soviet leadership to reaffirm their support for him.
Two days
after the Soviet
invasion of Czechoslovakia
to repress the Prague
Spring, Castro took to the airwaves and publicly denounced the
Czech rebellion. Castro warned the Cuban people about the
Czechoslovakian 'counterrevolutionaries', who "were moving
Czechoslovakia towards capitalism and into the arms of
imperialists".
He called the leaders of the rebellion
"the agents of West
Germany
and fascist reactionary
rabble." In return for his public backing of the invasion,
at a time when many Soviet allies were deeming the invasion an
infringement of Czechoslovakia's sovereignty, the Soviets bailed
out the Cuban economy with extra loans and an immediate increase in
oil exports.
In 1971,
despite an Organization of American
States
convention that no nation in the Western
Hemisphere
would have a relationship with Cuba (the only
exception being Mexico
, which had
refused to adopt that convention), Castro took a month-long visit
to Chile, following the re-establishment of diplomatic relations
with Cuba
. The
visit, in which Castro participated actively in the internal
politics of the country, holding massive rallies and giving public
advice to
Salvador Allende, was
seen by those on the political right as proof to support their view
that "The Chilean Way to Socialism" was an effort to put Chile on
the same path as Cuba.
When Soviet leader
Mikhail
Gorbachev visited Cuba in 1989, the comradely relationship
between Havana and Moscow was strained by Gorbachev's
implementation of economic and political reforms in the USSR.
"We are
witnessing sad things in other socialist countries, very sad
things," lamented Castro in November 1989, in reference to the
changes that were sweeping such communist allies as the Soviet
Union, East
Germany
, Hungary
, and Poland
. The
subsequent
collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991 had an immediate and devastating effect on
Cuba.
Other countries
On
November 4, 1975, Castro ordered the deployment of Cuban troops to
Angola
in order to
aid the Marxist MPLA-ruled
government against the South
African-backed UNITA
opposition forces. Moscow aided the Cuban initiative with
the USSR engaging in a massive airlift of Cuban forces into Angola.
On Cuba's role in Angola,
Nelson
Mandela is said to have remarked "Cuban internationalists have
done so much for African independence, freedom, and justice."
Cuban
troops were also sent to Marxist Ethiopia
to assist Ethiopian forces in the Ogaden War with
Somalia in 1977. In addition, Castro extended support to
Marxist Revolutionary movements throughout Latin America, such as
aiding the Sandinistas in overthrowing
the Somoza government in
Nicaragua
in 1979. It has been claimed by the
Carthage Foundation-funded Center for a
Free Cuba that an estimated 14,000 Cubans were killed in Cuban
military actions abroad. Castro never disclosed the amount of
casualties in Soviet African wars, but one estimate is 14,000, a
high number for the small country.
Juan Antonio RodrĂguez Mernier, a former Cuban Intelligence Major
who defected in 1987, says the regime made large amounts of money
from drug trafficking operations in the 1970s. The cash was to be
deposited in Fidel's Swiss bank accounts "in order to finance
liberation movements".
Norberto
Fuentes, a defected member of the Castro brothers' inner
circle, has provided details about these operations. According to
him, an operation conducted in cooperation with the
Democratic
Front for the Liberation of Palestine helped Cuban intelligence
to steal one billion by robbing banks in Lebanon during the 1975-76
civil war. Gold bars, jewelry, gems, and museum pieces were carried
in
diplomatic pouches via air
route Beirut-Moscow-Havana. Castro personally greeted the robbers
as heroes.
Cuba and Panama restored diplomatic ties in 2005 after breaking
them off a year prior when Panama's former president pardoned four
Cuban exiles accused of attempting to assassinate Cuban President
Fidel Castro in 2000. The foreign minister of each country
re-established official diplomatic relations in Havana by signing a
document describing a spirit of fraternity that has long linked
both nations. Cuba, once shunned by many of its Latin American
neighbours, now has full diplomatic relations with all but Costa
Rica and El Salvador.

Although the relationship between Cuba and Mexico remains strained,
each side appears to make attempts to improve it. In 1998, Fidel
Castro apologized for remarks he made about Mickey Mouse which led
Mexico to recall its ambassador from Havana. He said he intended no
offense when he said earlier that Mexican children would find it
easier to name Disney characters than to recount key figures in
Mexican history. Rather, he said, his words were meant to
underscore the cultural dominance of the US. Mexican president
Vicente Fox apologized to Fidel Castro
in 2002 over statements by Castro, who had taped their telephone
conversation, to the effect that Fox forced him to leave a United
Nations summit in Mexico so that he would not be in the presence of
President Bush, who also attended.
At a summit meeting of sixteen Caribbean countries in 1998, Castro
called for regional unity, saying that only strengthened
cooperation between Caribbean countries would prevent their
domination by rich nations in a global economy. Caribbean nations
have embraced Cuba's Fidel Castro while accusing the US of breaking
trade promises. Castro, until recently a regional outcast, has been
increasing grants and scholarships to the Caribbean countries,
while US aid has dropped 25% over the past five years.
Cuba has opened four
additional embassies in the Caribbean Community including: Antigua and
Barbuda
, Dominica
, Suriname
, Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines
. This development makes Cuba the only
country to have embassies in all independent countries of the
Caribbean Community.
North Korea
has granted Castro "the Golden Medal (Hammer and
Sickle) and the First Class Order of the National
Flag".
Libyan
de facto leader
Muammar al-Gaddafi has granted Castro a
"Libyan human rights prize". On a visit to South Africa in 1998 he
was warmly received by President Nelson Mandela. President Mandela
gave Castro South Africa's highest civilian award for foreigners,
the Order of Good Hope. Last December Castro fulfilled his promise
of sending 100 medical aid workers to Botswana, according to the
Botswana presidency. These workers play an important role in
Botswana's war against HIV/AIDS. According to Anna Vallejera,
Cuba's first-ever Ambassador to Botswana, the health workers are
part of her country's ongoing commitment to proactively assist in
the global war against HIV/AIDS,
In
Harlem
, Castro is
seen as an icon because of his historic visit with Malcolm X in 1960 at the Hotel Theresa
.
Castro
was known to be a friend of former Canadian
Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau and was an honorary
pall bearer at Trudeau's funeral in October 2000. They had
continued their friendship after Trudeau left office until his
death.
Canada
became one
of the first American allies openly to
trade with Cuba. Cuba still has a good relationship with
Canada. In 1998, Canadian Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien arrived in Cuba to meet
President Castro and highlight their close ties. He is the first
Canadian government leader to visit the island since Pierre Trudeau
was in Havana in 1976.
The European Union accuses the Castro regime of "continuing
flagrant violation of human rights and fundamental freedoms". In
December 2001,
European Union
representatives described their political dialogue with Cuba as
back on track after a weekend of talks in Havana. The EU praised
Cuba's willingness to discuss questions of human rights. Cuba is
the only Latin American country without an economic co-operation
agreement with the EU. However, trade with individual European
countries remains strong since the US
trade embargo on Cuba leaves the market free
from American rivals. In 2005, EU Development Commissioner
Louis Michel ended his visit to Cuba optimistic
that relations with the communist state will become stronger. The
EU is Cuba's largest trading partner. Cuba's imprisonment of 75
dissidents and the execution of three hijackers have strained
diplomatic relations. However, the EU commissioner was impressed
with Fidel Castro's willingness to discuss these concerns, although
he received no commitments from Castro. Cuba does not admit to
holding political prisoners, seeing them rather as mercenaries in
the pay of the United States.
Castro is seen as an icon by leaders of recent socialist
governments in Latin America.
Hugo Chavez of
Venezuela
is a long-time admirer and reached agreements with
Cuba to provide subsidized petroleum in exchange for Cuban medical
assistance. Evo Morales of
Bolivia
has described him as "the grandfather of all Latin
American revolutionaries".
Religious beliefs
Castro was raised a
Roman Catholic
as a child but did not practice as one. In
Oliver Stone's documentary
Comandante, Castro states "I have never been
a believer", and has total conviction that there is only one life.
Pope John XXIII excommunicated Castro in 1962 on the basis
of
Pope Pius XII's
Decree against Communism, a 1949
decree forbidding Catholics from supporting communist
governments.
In 1992, Castro agreed to loosen restrictions on religion and even
permitted church-going Catholics to join the Cuban Communist Party.
He began describing his country as "secular" rather than "atheist".
Pope John Paul II visited Cuba in
1998, the first visit by a reigning pontiff to the island. Castro
and the Pope appeared side by side in public on several occasions
during the visit. Castro wore a dark blue business suit (in
contrast to his fatigues) in his public meetings with the Pope and
treated him with reverence and respect.In December 1998, Castro
formally re-instated
Christmas Day as
the official celebration for the first time since its abolition by
the Communist Party in 1969. Cubans were again allowed to mark
Christmas as a holiday and to openly hold
religious processions. The Pope sent a telegram to Castro thanking
him for restoring Christmas as a public holiday.
Castro attended a Roman Catholic convent blessing in 2003. The
purpose of this unprecedented event was to help bless the newly
restored convent in Old Havana and to mark the fifth anniversary of
the Pope's visit to Cuba.
The senior spiritual leader of the
Orthodox Christian faith arrived in
Cuba in 2004, the first time any Orthodox Patriarch has visited
Latin America in the Church's history:
Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomew I consecrated a cathedral in Havana and
bestowed an honor on Fidel Castro. His aides said that he was
responding to the decision of the Cuban Government to build and
donate to the Orthodox Christians a tiny Orthodox cathedral in the
heart of old Havana.
After
Pope John Paul II's death in
April 2005, an emotional Castro attended a
mass in his honor in Havana's cathedral and
signed the Pope's condolence book at the Vatican Embassy.He had
last visited the cathedral in 1959, 46 years earlier, for the
wedding of one of his sisters. Cardinal
Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino
led the mass and welcomed Castro, who was dressed in a black suit,
expressing his gratitude for the "heartfelt way the death of our
Holy Father John Paul II was received (in Cuba)."
Succession issues
According to Article 94 of the Cuban Constitution, the First Vice
President of the Council of State assumes presidential duties upon
the illness or death of the president.
RaĂșl Castro was the person in that position
for the last 32 years of Fidel Castro's presidency.
Speculation on illness 1998-2005
Due to the issue of presidential succession and Castro's longevity,
there have long been rumors, speculation and hoaxing about Castro's
health and demise. In 1998 there were reports that he had a serious
brain disease, later discredited. In June 2001, he apparently
fainted during a seven-hour speech under the Caribbean sun. Later
that day he finished the speech, walking buoyantly into the
television studios in his military fatigues, joking with
journalists.
In
January 2004, Luis Eduardo
GarzĂłn, the mayor of BogotĂĄ
, said that
Castro "seemed very sick to me" following a meeting with him during
a vacation in Cuba. In May 2004, Castro's physician denied
that his health was failing, and speculated that he would live to
be 140 years old. Dr. Eugenio Selman Housein said that the "press
is always speculating about something, that he had a heart attack
once, that he had
cancer, some neurological
problem", but maintained that Castro was in good health.
On October 20, 2004, Castro tripped and fell following a speech he
gave at a rally, breaking his kneecap and fracturing his right arm.
He was able to recover his ability to walk and publicly
demonstrated this two months later.
In 2005, the CIA said it thought Castro had
Parkinson's disease.Castro denied such
allegations, while also citing the example of
Pope John Paul II in saying that he would
not fear the disease.
Transfer of duties, speculation on illness 2006-2007
On July 31, 2006, Castro delegated his duties as President of the
Council of state, President
of the
Council of
Ministers, First Secretary of the
Cuban Communist Party and the post of
commander in chief of the armed
forces to his brother
RaĂșl Castro.
This transfer of duties was described at the time as temporary
while Fidel recovered from surgery he underwent due to an "acute
intestinal crisis with sustained bleeding".
Fidel Castro was too
ill to attend the nationwide commemoration of the 50th anniversary
of the Granma
boat landing
on December 2, 2006, which also became his belated 80th birthday
celebrations. Castro's non-appearance fueled reports that he
had terminal
pancreatic cancer and
was refusing treatment, but on December 17, 2006 Cuban officials
stated that Castro had no terminal illness and would eventually
return to his public duties.
However, on December 24, 2006, Spanish newspaper
El PeriĂłdico
de Catalunya reported that Spanish surgeon JosĂ© Luis GarcĂa
Sabrido has been flown to Cuba on a plane charted by the Cuban
government. Dr. GarcĂa Sabrido is an intestinal expert who further
specializes in the treatment of cancer. The plane that Dr. GarcĂa
Sabrido's traveled in also was reported to be carrying a large
quantity of advanced medical equipment. On December 26, 2006,
shortly after returning to Madrid, Dr. GarcĂa Sabrido held a news
conference in which he answered questions about Castro's health. He
stated that "He does not have cancer, he has a problem with his
digestive system," and added, "His condition is stable. He is
recovering from a very serious operation. It is not planned that he
will undergo another operation for the moment." Although most
Cubans acknowledge that they are aware Castro is seriously ill,
most also seem worried about a future without Castro.
On
January 16, 2007, the Spanish newspaper, El PaĂs, citing two unnamed sources from
the Gregorio Marañón hospital âwho employs Dr. GarcĂa Sabridoâ in
Madrid
, reported
Castro was in "very grave" condition, having trouble cicatrizing, after three failed operations and
complications from an intestinal infection caused by a severe case
of diverticulitis. However,
Dr. GarcĂa Sibrido told CNN that he was not the source of the
report and that "any statement that doesn't come directly from
[Castro's] medical team is without foundation." Also, a Cuban
diplomat in Madrid said the reports were lies and declined to
comment, while White House press secretary
Tony Snow said the report appeared to be "just
sort of a roundup of previous health reports. We've got nothing
new." On January 30, 2007, Cuban television and the paper
Juventud Rebelde showed fresh video and photos from a
meeting between Castro and Hugo Chavez said to have taken place the
previous day.
In mid-February 2007, it was reported by the
Associated Press that Acting President Raul
Castro had said that Fidel Castro's health was improving and he was
taking part in all important issues facing the government. "He's
consulted on the most important questions," Raul Castro said of
Fidel. "He doesn't interfere, but he knows about everything." On
February 27, 2007,
Reuters reported that
Fidel Castro had called into
AlĂł
Presidente, a live radio talk show hosted by
Hugo ChĂĄvez, and chatted with him for
thirty minutes during which time he sounded "much healthier and
more lucid" than he had on any of the audio and video tapes
released since his surgery in July. Castro reportedly told ChĂĄvez,
"I am gaining ground. I feel I have more energy, more strength,
more time to study," adding with a chuckle, "I have become a
student again." Later in the conversation (
transcript in Spanish;
audio), he made reference to the fall of the
world stock markets that had occurred earlier in the day and
remarked that it was proof of his contention that the world
capitalist system is in crisis.
Reports of improvements in his condition continued to circulate
throughout March and early April. On April 13, 2007, ChĂĄvez was
quoted by the Associated Press as saying that Castro has "almost
totally recovered" from his illness. That same day, Cuban Foreign
Minister Felipe Roque confirmed during a press conference in
Vietnam that Castro had improved steadily and had resumed some of
his leadership responsibilities. On April 21, 2007, the official
newspaper
Granma reported that Castro had met for over an
hour with
Wu Guanzheng, a member of the
Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party who was visiting Havana.
Photographs of their meeting showed the Cuban president looking
healthier than he had in any previously released since his
surgery.
As a comment on Castroâs recovery, U.S. President
George W. Bush
said: "One day the good Lord will take Fidel Castro away," Hearing
about this, Castro, who is an atheist, ironically replied: "Now I
understand why I survived Bush's plans and the plans of other
presidents who ordered my assassination: the good Lord protected
me."
In January 2009 Castro asked Cubans not to worry about his lack of
recent news columns, his failing health, and not to be disturbed by
his future death.
At the same time pictures were released of
Castro's meeting with the Argentine
president Cristina
Fernandez on January 21, 2009.
Retirement
In a letter dated February 18, 2008, Castro announced that he would
not accept the positions of president and commander in chief at the
February 24, 2008 National Assembly meetings, saying "I will not
aspire nor acceptâI repeat I will not aspire or acceptâthe post of
President of the Council of State and Commander in Chief,"
effectively announcing his retirement from official public life.
The letter was published online by the official Communist Party
newspaper
Granma. In it,
Castro stated that his health was a primary reason for his
decision, stating that "It would betray my conscience to take up a
responsibility that requires mobility and total devotion, that I am
not in a physical condition to offer".
Succession
On February 24, 2008, the
National Assembly of
People's Power unanimously chose his brother,
RaĂșl Castro, as Fidel's successor as
President of Cuba. In his first
speech as Fidelâs successor, he proposed to the National Assembly
of People's Power that Fidel continue to be consulted on matters of
great importance, such as defence, foreign policy and "the
socioeconomic development of the country". The proposal was
immediately and unanimously approved by the 597 members of the
National Assembly. RaĂșl described Fidel as "not substitutable".
Fidel also remains the First Secretary of the Communist
Party.
Public image
By wearing military-style uniforms and leading mass demonstrations,
Castro projected an image of a perpetual revolutionary. He was
mostly seen in military attire, but his personal tailor, Merel
Van 't Wout, convinced him to
occasionally change to a business suit. Castro is often referred to
as "Comandante", but is also nicknamed "
El Caballo",
meaning "The Horse", a label that was first attributed to Cuban
entertainer
Benny Moré, who on
hearing Castro passing in the Havana night with his entourage,
shouted out "Here comes the horse!" During the revolutionary
campaign, fellow rebels knew Castro as "The Giant". Large throngs
of people gathered to cheer at Castro's fiery speeches, which
typically lasted for hours. Many details of Castro's private life,
particularly involving his family members, are scarce as the media
is forbidden to mention them. Castro's image appears frequently in
Cuban stores, classrooms, taxicabs, and national television. Castro
has stated that he does not promote a
cult of personality.
Family
By his first wife
Mirta
DĂaz-Balart, whom he married on October 11, 1948, Castro has a
son named Fidel Ăngel "Fidelito" Castro DĂaz-Balart, born on
September 1, 1949. DĂaz-Balart and Castro were divorced in 1955,
and she remarried Emilio NĂșñez Blanco.
After a spell in
Madrid
,
DĂaz-Balart reportedly returned to Havana to live with Fidelito and
his family. Fidelito grew up in Cuba
; for a time,
he ran Cuba's atomic-energy commission before being removed from
the post by his father. DĂaz-Balart's nephews are Republican
U.S. Congressmen
Lincoln
Diaz-Balart and
Mario
Diaz-Balart, vocal critics of the Castro government.
Fidel has five other sons by his second wife, Dalia Soto del Valle:
Antonio, Alejandro, Alexis, Alexander "Alex" and Ăngel Castro Soto
del Valle.
While Fidel was married to Mirta, he had an affair with Natalia
"Naty" Revuelta Clews, born in Havana in 1925 and married to
Orlando FernĂĄndez, resulting in a daughter named
Alina FernĂĄndez-Revuelta. Alina left
Cuba in 1993, disguised as a Spanish tourist, and sought asylum in
the United States. She has been a vocal critic of her father's
policies.
By an unnamed woman he had another son, Jorge Ăngel Castro. Fidel
has another daughter, Francisca Pupo (born 1953) the result of a
one night affair. Ms. Pupo and her husband now live in Miami.
His sister
Juanita Castro has been
living in the United States since the early 1960s. When she
emigrated, she said "I cannot longer remain indifferent to what is
happening in my country. My brothers Fidel and RaĂșl have made it an
enormous prison surrounded by water. The people are nailed to a
cross of torment imposed by international Communism."
Controversy and criticism
Human rights record
Many of Castro's critics refer to him as a
dictator and his rule was the longest to-date in
modern
Latin American history.
The
Human Rights Watch
organization has suggested that Castro constructed a "repressive
machinery" which "continues to deprive Cubans of their basic
rights".
Allegations of mismanagement
In their book,
Corruption in Cuba, Sergio Diaz-Briquets
and Jorge F. Pérez-López Servando state that Castro
"institutionalized" corruption and that "Castro's state-run
monopolies, cronyism, and lack of accountability have made Cuba one
of the world's most corrupt states". Servando Gonzalez, in
The
Secret Fidel Castro, calls Castro a "corrupt tyrant".
In 1959, according to Gonzalez, Castro established "Fidel's
checking account", from which he could draw funds as he pleased.
The "Comandante's reserves" were created in 1970, from which Castro
allegedly "provided gifts to many of his cronies, both home and
abroad". Gonzalez asserts that Comandante's reserves have been
linked to counterfeiting business empires and money
laundering.
As early as 1968, a once-close friend of Castro's wrote that Castro
had huge accounts in Swiss banks. Castro's secretary was allegedly
seen using Zurich banks. Gonzalez believes that Cuba's paucity of
trade with Switzerland contrasts oddly with the National Office of
Cuba's relatively large office in Zurich. Castro has denied having
a bank account abroad with even a dollar in it.
Anti-Castro activist and poet
Jorge
Valls was on record stating that Castro never knew how to love,
and that "Fidel tried a respectable marriage, which failed; he
tried respectable politics, which failed".
Allegations of wealth
A KGB officer, Alexei Novikov, stated that Castro's personal life,
like the lives of the rest of the Communist elite, is "shrouded
under an impenetrable veil of secrecy". Among other things, he
asserted that Castro has a personal guard of more than 9,700 men
and three luxurious yachts.
In 2005, American business and financial magazine
Forbes listed Castro among the world's richest
people, with an estimated net worth of $550 million. The estimates,
which the magazine admitted were "more art than science", claimed
that the Cuban leader's personal wealth was nearly double that of
Britain's Queen
Elizabeth II, despite
anecdotal evidence from
diplomats and
businessmen that the Cuban leader's personal life was notably
austere. This assessment was drawn by making economic estimates of
the net worth of Cuba's
state-owned
companies, and used the assumption that Castro had personal
economic control.
Forbes Magazine later increased the
estimates to $900 million, adding rumors of large cash stashes in
Switzerland
. The magazine offered no proof of this
information, and according to CBS news, Castro's entry on the rich
list was notably brief compared to the amount of information
provided on other figures.
Castro, who had considered suing the magazine, responded that the
claims were "lies and
slander", and that
they were part of a US campaign to discredit him. He declared: "If
they can prove that I have a bank account abroad, with $900m, with
$1m, $500,000, $100,000 or $1 in it, I will resign." President of
Cuba's Central Bank, Francisco SoberĂłn, called the claims a
"grotesque slander", asserting that money made from various state
owned companies is pumped back into the island's economy, "in
sectors including health, education, science, internal security,
national defense and solidarity projects with other
countries."
Legacy
Fidel Castro remains a very controversial figure to this day.
Whether his legacy will be interpreted in a positive or negative
light is frequently debated in political circles. Those who support
his government generally state that Cuba has one of the world's
highest literacy rates and most effective healthcare systems, low
wealth inequalities, a stable government, and record of supporting
international populist struggles in Africa. His detractors point
out Cuba's bleak human rights record, authoritarian state, stagnant
economy, and repression of political dissent.
In October 2009, Castro was named "World Hero of Solidarity" by the
United Nations General
Assembly.
Ancestors of Fidel Castro
Authored works
Fully or partially by Fidel Castro
- Capitalism in Crisis: Globalization and World Politics
Today, Ocean Press, 2000, ISBN 1876175184
- Che: A Memoir, Ocean Press, 2005, ISBN 192088825X
- Cuba at the Crossroads, Ocean Press, 1997, ISBN
187528494X
- Fidel Castro: My Life: A Spoken Autobiography,
Scribner, 2008, ISBN 1416553282
- Fidel Castro Reader, Ocean Press, 2007, ISBN
1920888888
- Fidel My Early Years, Ocean Press, 2004, ISBN
1920888098
- Fidel & Religion: Conversations with Frei Betto on
Marxism & Liberation Theology, Ocean Press, 2006, ISBN
1920888454
- Playa Giron: Bay of Pigs : Washington's First Military
Defeat in the Americas, Pathfinder Press, 2001, ISBN
087348925X
- Political Portraits: Fidel Castro reflects on famous
figures in history, Ocean Press, 2008, ISBN 1920888942
- The Declarations of Havana, Verso, 2008, ISBN
1844671569
- The Prison Letters of Fidel Castro, Nation Books,
2007, ISBN 1560259833
- War, Racism and Economic Justice: The Global Ravages of
Capitalism, Ocean Press, 2002, ISBN 1876175478
See also
References and footnotes
External links
- By Fidel Castro
- About Fidel Castro
- Castro: Early Years (1953â1961) - slideshow by
LIFE magazine
- Arthur Miller: A
Visit With Castro (The Nation) December 24,
2003
- BBC: Fidel Castro: A Life in Pictures
- BBC Video: Fidel Castro Visits Boyhood Home of Che
Guevara
- PBS American Experience Interactive site on Fidel
Castro with a teacher's guide
- Guide to the Cuban Revolution Collection,
Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library
- Deena Stryker Photographs of Cuba, 1963-1964, Duke
University Libraries Digital Collections
- New York Times --- Interactive Feature: Three Days With Fidel
- New York Times --- Slideshow: Fidel Castro Resigns as President
- NPR Audio: Cuba's Castro an Inspiration, Not a Role Model
by Tom Gjelten, September 15, 2006
- The Guardian: In Pictures - Fidel Castro
- The Guardian: "The Fidel I Think I Know" by Gabriel GarcĂa MĂĄrquez,
August 12, 2006
- Washington Post: Fidel Castro Will Always Lead Cuba, Locals Say
February 22, 2008