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Algorem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-31-06 12:23 AM
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Bosch boasts of his terrorist deeds in Miami
http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2006/agosto/mier30/36bosch-i.html

BY GABRIEL MOLINA

ORLANDO Bosch, the mastermind behind of the sabotage of the Cuban airplane off of Barbados, confessed that in 1971 he counted on the active complicity of General Manuel Contreras, Pinochet’s intelligence chief, in an assassination attempt on President Fidel Castro in Chile.

On August 16, the sinister pediatrician, accomplice of Luis Posada Carriles, recounted some of his exploits – although "the word terrorist has become a bad one" – to the Barcelona daily La Vanguardia

"We went to Buenos Aires and the journalist Manuel Fuentes put me in contact with Triple A, the most powerful anti-communist organization of the time, and we attacked the Cuban embassy. After that we did thousands of things…

"Under the presidency of Salvador Allende, Fidel spent a month in Chile. Two men from our group went to this country carrying journalist credentials from the Venezuelan television channel Venevision," Bosch revealed. "They were carrying a .45 caliber pistol inside a photographic camera. The plan was backed by the Chilean intelligence chief, Manuel Contreras. His agents told our men that they would throw them to the ground after they fired and simulate arresting them. They were two meters from Castro."...





Cuba Under Fidel Castro
A review article

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=LEN20060828&articleId=3084

by Stephen Lendman

August 28, 2006
GlobalResearch.ca

Having just turned 80 on August 13 and undergone major surgery for what may have been stomach cancer at the end of July, a transitional time may be near in Cuba with Fidel Castro Ruz beginning to hand over power to his brother Raul and/or others in the months ahead. It passed without irony or mention of imperial arrogance in a brief front page comment in the August 19th issue of the Wall Street Journal that the US won't invade Cuba but a "dynastic succession" is not acceptable. It would have been too much to expect the Journal to have noted that same type succession happened in the US in 2000 and 2004 and in elections exposed and documented as badly tainted at least and likely stolen at worst on top of five arrogant Supreme Court Justices refusing to allow a proper recount of the disputed vote and, in effect, annulling the voice of the people and replacing it with their choice for president. It's called "democracy, American style." It also would have been too much to expect the WSJ to challenge the language it quoted asking what right does anyone in the Bush administration have to tell another nation what type succession policy is or is not acceptable.

No one can know for sure what lies ahead for Cuba or if Castro will even survive. But now beginning his ninth decade and clearly facing a long and difficult recovery, the Cuban leader may have no other choice than to step aside in handling the country's day to day affairs although his influence will always be felt as long as he's alive and lucid. When, not if, the time of transition arrives, an historic era will have passed for the Cuban people and the region. And, while it won't be easy for a successor replacing a 'legend," the history of just Israel and the US alone shows it can happen successfully. It likely will in Cuba as well because the great majority of people there won't tolerate a return to the ugly, repressive pre-Castro past even though most of them never lived through it.

Looking back, one thing for sure can be said about Fidel Castro. He's the longest serving political leader in the world having first gained power on January 1, 1959. For him and Cuba it marked the successful culmination of his quest to do so that began with his unsuccessful attack on the Moncada army post in Santiago de Cuba in July, 1953 for which he stood trial and was sentenced in October that year to serve 15 years in the Isle of Pines penitentiary. For his efforts and while in prison Castro fast became a legend which may or may not have helped him win amnesty and release in May, 1955 after which he first became a non-violent agitator against the US backed oppressive and corrupted Fulgencio Batista dictatorship. Because he was censored and banned from speaking publicly, that strategy got him nowhere and he was forced to leave Cuba for Mexico to plan what became his 26th of July Movement that would be the means to take by force what no opposition in Batista's Cuba could achieve politically. With few resources and little support, Castro and 82 of his followers returned to the Sierra Maestra Mountains in his country in December, 1956 to begin the revolution that would finally succeed when he and what grew to 800 loyal followers entered Havana on January 1, 1959. His small band of determined resistance guerilla fighters had defeated Batista's army of thousands and forced the Cuban dictator to flee the country. From that time forward, the rest, as they say, is history.

The "Liberation" of Cuba, US-Style

From the earliest days of Cuba under Castro, the US imposed harsh conditions on the island state and waged an unending undeclared war against it. It wanted to destabilize the government, kill Fidel Castro or at the least make life so intolerable for the Cuban people, they'd willingly allow themselves to be ruled again by the interests of capital and the dictates of so-called "free market" forces. That many-decade campaign of state-directed terror never worked and likely never will convince the great majority of the Cuban people to favor giving up the essential social gains they now have for a return to what they surely know was a repressive past. They understand if it ever happened, it would be a throwback not just to the days and ways of the hated Batista regime but also to the time US President McKinley "liberated" the island from Spain in an earlier war based on a lie. From that time forward until the Castro-led revolution, the US effectively ruled Cuba as a de facto colony and used it to serve the interests of wealth and power at the expense of the welfare of the people. In his time, McKinley promised to let the Cubans govern themselves after the Spanish-American war, but the dominant Republicans in the Congress had other ideas and were only willing to go along with the island's self-rule if under it the US was allowed "to veto any decision (the Cuban government) made."...

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grasswire Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Aug-31-06 01:07 AM
Response to Original message
1. George Herbert Walker Bush paroled Bosch
...in return for votes of Cuban-Americans. It's true. Over the wishes of the INS, Bush paroled Bosch, a man accused of hundreds of violent crimes.
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