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Joanne98 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Mar-25-07 12:21 PM
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The Decline of the US, the Rise of Latin America
The Decline of the US, the Rise of Latin America

Thursday, Mar 22, 2007
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1999

By: Philip Agee

Anyone following the news in recent times cannot be unaware of the wave of progressive change sweeping Latin America and the Caribbean. For many lonely years Cuba held high the torch through its exemplary programs to provide universal health care and education, both gratis, along with world class cultural, sports and scientific achievements. Although you won’t find a Cuban today who says things are perfect, far from it, probably all would agree that compared with pre-revolutionary Cuba there is a world of improvement. All this they did against every effort by the United States to isolate them as an unacceptable example of independence and self-determination, using every dirty method including infiltration, sabotage, terrorism, assassination, economic and biological warfare and incessant lies in the cooperating media of many countries. I know these methods too well, having been a CIA officer in Latin America in the 1960´s. Altogether nearly 3500 Cubans have died from terrorist acts, and more than 2000 are permanently disabled. No country has suffered terrorism as long and consistently as Cuba.

All through the years, beginning even before taking power in 1959, the Cuban revolution has needed to have intelligence collection capabilities in the U.S. for defensive purposes. Such was the fully justified mission of the Cuban Five, jailed since 1998 with long sentences after conviction for various crimes in Miami where they had no chance for a fair trial. Convictions were for conspiracy to commit espionage to murder. Nevertheless their sights were exclusively set on criminal terrorist planning in Miami for operations against Cuba, activities ignored by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies. They neither sought nor received any classified U.S. government information. Their cases are still on appeal, and will be for years to come, but their completely biased convictions rank with the legal lynching in the 1920’s of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, the anarchist immigrants, as among the most shameful injustices in U.S. history. Freedom for the Cuban Five should be the cause of everyone for whom fairness, human rights and justice are important, both in the United States and around the world, joining in the activities of the 300 Free the Five solidarity committees in 90 countries.

Current U.S. policy with its means and goals can be found in the nearly 500-page 2004 report of the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba together with an update published in 2006 that has a secret annex. A fundamental goal, the same in 2007 as I remember it was in 1959, is isolation of Cuba to keep this bad example from spreading, and the current policy, if successful, would mean no less than Cuban annexation to the U.S. and complete dependence, in fact if not in law, as Cubans rightfully claim. Other fundamental goals from 1959 are still, nearly 50 years later, to foment an internal political opposition and to cause economic hardship in Cuba leading to desperation, hunger and despair. It is no exaggeration to call these goals genocidal.

Yet, U.S. economic warfare of nearly 50 years against Cuba hasn’t worked even though the Cubans who keep book estimate its cost at more than $80 billion. After the Cuban economy’s free fall in the early 1990’s, with the collapse of the Soviet Union, it began to recover in 1995. By 2005 growth was 11.8% and in 2006 it was 12.5%, the highest in Latin America. Some sectors have surpassed their development levels of the late 80’s, before the collapse, and others are nearly back. Cuba’s exports of services, nickel, pharmaceutical and other products are booming, and try as it may, the U.S. has not been able to stop this.

In the end U.S. efforts to isolate Cuba have also totally failed. In September 2006 Cuba was elected, for the second time, to lead the Non-Aligned Movement of 118 countries, and two months later, for the 15th consecutive year, the United Nations General Assembly voted to condemn the U.S. economic embargo of Cuba, this time 183 to 4. In 2007 Cuba has diplomatic or consular relations with 182 countries. Havana meanwhile is the site of seemingly endless international conferences on every imaginable theme with thousands of people from around the world attending. And not least, Cuba in recent years has been hosting more than 2 million foreign tourists annually at its world-class resorts. Far from isolating Cuba, the U.S. has isolated itself.

More than 30,000 Cuban doctors and health workers are saving lives and preventing disease in 69 countries, many in the most remote and difficult areas where few or no local doctors will go. Meanwhile 30,000 young foreigners from dozens of countries are studying medicine in Cuba on full scholarships. All were selected from areas lacking doctors, and all are committed to return to these areas in their home countries to practice.

In education the Cuban literacy program known as “Yes I can” has been adopted in nearly 30 countries on five continents where thousands more Cuban volunteers are teaching. Through this program, in Spanish, Portuguese, English, Creole, Quechua and Aymara, some 2 million people have learned to read and write, most of whom continue their education afterwards through a variety of other programs.

Thanks to these international assistance programs, Cuban prestige and influence, and international solidarity with Cuba, have never been greater. It was to defend these worthy programs that the five Cubans, unjustly convicted, went to Miami in the 1990’s.

Then in 1999 came Hugo Chavez, the U.S.’s latest worst nightmare in the region, admittedly following
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/articles.php?artno=1999
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Vidar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 12:47 AM
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1. Wonderful, inspirational article about real progressives, Joanne. Thanks.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 05:53 AM
Response to Original message
2. Anything Philip Agee writes is more than worth anyone's attention.
Edited on Mon Mar-26-07 05:55 AM by Judi Lynn
There are some hysterical right-wing people who have desperately attempted to discredit him, but he is a man of deep conviction who has been telling the truth for years. He has earned respect through his committment to a a more honorable principle.

He created a huge stir with his first book, after working for the CIA. Too damned bad there have not been far, far more people like him.

Tremendous article. Thanks, Joanne98. This is a keeper.
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Greyhound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 06:19 AM
Response to Original message
3. K & R
If they only knew what has been done in their names...

Would they care?
:kick:

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eridani Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 06:49 AM
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4. K&R n/t
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rman Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 10:09 AM
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5. k&r
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twiceshy Donating Member (259 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 01:49 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. Ahhhhh Yessssss.....
Cuba that beacon of freedom. So great is the freedom that people are willing to leave it behind in cobbled together rafts to travel 90 mile through shark infested water to slavery in the USA. Gimme a break.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 03:59 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. You're not fooling any one here.
We are all very aware that Latin Americans die in THE HUNDREDS ANNUALLY, OFFICIALLY trying to cross the border from Mexico to the U.S., from California to Texas. This is a fact.

In the Caribbean, they come from as far away as Haiti, making trips as long as 700 MILES in very small boats.

All immigrants OTHER than Cubans WILL be rounded up and deported the moment they are located. They are NOT offered any inducements, unlike Cubans, who, through the beneficence of the Cuban Adjustment Act, are awarded instant legal status (no one EVER chases them down, beats them to a pulp and deports them), instant work visa, social security, food stamps, US taxpayer-financed, government subsidized Section 8 housing, medical treatment, financial assistance for education, etc., etc., etc.

Go peddle your propaganda elsewhere.

Even the coporate media, always faithful servants to the goverment, have started referring to Cuban immigrants as "immigrants," rather than poor little "refugees" in their articles.

Since they are so desperate to "escape," then explain to DU'ers why they are so anxious to have their freedom to travel to Cuba rights restored by the Bush administration which strippped them down to one visit every three years?

You don't go right back to a place where your life is endangered. Start using your brain. No one buys that crap in the normal world.
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twiceshy Donating Member (259 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 04:44 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. So are you saying....
Edited on Mon Mar-26-07 04:45 PM by twiceshy
Cubans don't escape to the USA via cobbled together rafts? I guess I should not believe my own lying eyes, because that is what I see. I don't see any traffic going the other way, but you get working on that cuba-bound raft. Good luck.
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Judi Lynn Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-26-07 07:24 PM
Response to Reply #8
9. Apparently you didn't see a recent post by a DU'er who has been to Cuba personally,
and knows TWO Americans who moved there, live there now who are NOT Cuban Americans.

As for your snotty cuba-bound raft gibberish, it's completely out of place here.

Concerning Cubans who go back to Cuba, this was discussed in former New York Times journalist, and book author, Ann Louise Bardach, in a book she published in 2002:
In Cuba, one used to b either a revolucionario or a contrarevolucionario, while those who decided to leave were gusanos (worms) or escoria (scum). In Miami, the rhetoric has also been harsh. Exiless who do not endorse a confrontational policy with Cuba, seeking instead a negotiated settlement, have often been excoriated as traidores (traitors) and sometimes espías (spies). Cubans, notably cultural stars, who visit Miami but chooses to return to their homeland have been routinely denounced. One either defects or is repudiated.

But there has been a slow but steady shift in the last decade-a not to the clear majority of Cubans en exilio and on the island who crave family reunification. Since 1978, more than one million airline tickets have been sold for flights from Miami to Havana. Faced with the brisk and continuous traffic between Miami and Havana, hard-liners on both sides have opted to deny the new reality. Anomalies such as the phenomenon of reverse balseros, Cubans who, unable to adapt to the pressures and bustle of entrepreneurial Miami, return to the island, or gusañeros, expatriots who send a portion of their earnings home in exchange for unfettered travel back and forth to Cuba (the term is a curious Cuban hybrid of gusano and compañero, or comrade), are unacknowledged by both sides, as are those who live in semi-exilio, returning home to Cuba for long holidays.


Page XVIII
Preface
Cuba Confidential
Love and Vengeance
In Miami and Havana

Copyright© 2002 by Ann Louise Bardach
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