These reflections
are self-explanatory.
In that already famous Super Tuesday, a day of the week when a number of States
of the Union were selecting the candidate of their choice for the presidency
of the United States from among a group of contenders, one of the likely candidates
to replace George W. Bush was John McCain. Due to of his pre-packaged hero image,
and his alliance with strong contenders such as Rudy Giuliani, the former governor
of the state of New York, other candidates had already gladly endorsed him. The
intense propaganda of social, economic and political factors having great significance
in his country, and his personal style had turned him into the frontrunner.
Only the extreme Republican right represented by Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee,
in disagreement with some insignificant McCain concessions, was still offering
some resistance on February 5th. Subsequently, Romney would also withdraw in
favor of McCain. Huckabee is still in the contest.
On the other hand, the struggle for the Democratic Party candidate is much tougher.
Even though we are dealing, as usual, with an active part of the enfranchised
population that tends to be a minority, we are already hearing all kinds of opinions
and speculations about the consequences of the final outcome of the electoral
battle for the country and the world, if mankind escapes the warmongering adventures
of Bush.
It is not up to me to talk about the history of a candidate for the Presidency
of the United States. I have never done so, and perhaps I would never have. Why
should I be doing it at this time?
McCain has said that some of his comrades were tortured by Cuban agents in Vietnam.
His advocates and publicity experts tend to emphasize that McCain himself suffered
such torture at the hands of the Cubans.
I hope that the U.S. people will understand that I consider it my obligation
to enter into a detailed analysis of this Republican candidate and to respond
to him. I shall do so on the basis of ethical considerations.
The McCain file shows that he was a prisoner of war in Vietnam from October 26,
1967.
As he tells it himself, he was 31 years old at the time and flying his 23rd bombing
mission. His plane, an A-4E Skyhawk was shot down over Hanoi by an anti-aircraft
missile. Because of the hit, he lost control and ejected over Truc Bach Lake,
in the middle of the city, suffering fractures in both arms and one knee. A patriotic
crowd, seeing an aggressor come down, gave him a hostile reception. McCain himself
says he was relieved at that moment to see the arrival of an army squad.
The bombing of Vietnam, begun in 1965, shocked international opinion, very sensitized
to air attacks by the superpower against a small third world country which had
been turned into a French colony, thousands of miles away from distant Europe.
The Vietnamese people fought against Japanese occupation forces during World
War II and, when that war ended, France once again took control. Ho Chi Minh,
the modest leader who was much loved by all, and Nguyen Giap, his military commander,
were internationally admired figures. The famous French Foreign Legion had been
defeated. In trying to avoid that, the aggressor powers were at the point of
using a nuclear weapon at Diên Biên Phu.
The noble “anamitas”, as José
Martí affectionately called them, holders
of millenary culture and values were portrayed,
to U.S. public opinion, as a barbarian people unworthy
of existence. In terms of suspense and commercial
advertising, nobody can compete with the American
specialists. The specialty was used unrestrictedly
in the case of the POWs, and particularly in the
case of McCain.
Going along with that, McCain later said that the
fact that his father was an Admiral and commanded
the U.S. forces in the Pacific led the Vietnamese
Resistance to offer him early liberation if he
would admit that he had committed war crimes; he
refused, arguing that the Military Code provides
that prisoners be liberated in the order they were
captured, and that meant five years of prison,
beatings and torture in a prison area the Americans
called the “Hanoi Hilton.”
The final pull out from Vietnam was disastrous. An army which was half a million
strong, trained and armed to the teeth, could not hold back the thrust of the
Vietnamese patriots. Saigon, the colonial capital, today called Ho Chi Minh City,
was embarrassingly abandoned by the occupation forces and their accomplices,
some of them holding to helicopters. The United States lost more than 50 thousand
of their precious sons and daughters, not counting those that were wounded. They
had spent 500 billion dollars in that war without taxes, always distasteful in
their own right. Nixon unilaterally revoked the commitments of Bretton Woods
setting the foundations of today’s financial crisis. Their only achievement
was a Republican Presidential candidate 41 years later.
McCain, one of the many U.S. pilots shot down and wounded in the declared, or
undeclared, wars of their country, was decorated with the Silver Star, Legion
of Merit, Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star Medal and the Purple Heart.
A TV movie based on his memoirs of the experiences as a POW was broadcast on
Memorial Day of 2005 and he became famous for videos and speeches on the subject.
The worst statement he made regarding our country was that Cuban interrogators
had been regularly torturing American prisoners.
As a reaction to McCain’s incredible words, I became interested in the
matter. I wanted to know where such a strange legend had come from. I asked that
someone find information on the attribution. I was informed that there was a
highly promoted book which was the basis for the movie. This was written by McCain
and Mark Salter, his Senate administrative advisor, who continues to work and
write with him. I asked for it to be translated. This was done, as on other occasions,
very quickly by qualified staff. The title of the book: Faith of My Fathers,
349 pages, published in 1999.
His accusation against internationalist Cuban revolutionaries --using the nickname
Fidel to identify one of them who was capable of “torturing a prisoner
to death”-- is totally lacking in any ethics.
Allow me to remind you, Mr. McCain: The commandments of your religion forbid
you from lying. Your years in prison and the wounds you received as a result
of your attacks on Hanoi do not excuse you from the moral duty of truth.
Some facts must be brought to your attention. In Cuba, we had a rebellion against
a despot who was put into power by the United States on March 10, 1952, imposed
on the Cuban people, when you were just about to turn 16 years old, and the Republican
government of a celebrated soldier, Dwight D. Eisenhower
–who indeed was the first one to speak of
the industrial-military complex– immediately
recognized and supported that government. I was
a bit older than you; I would have my 26 birthday
that August, the same month when you were born.
Eisenhower had not yet completed his presidential
term that had begun in the 1950’s, some years
after he became famous for the allied landing in
the north of France, with the support of 10 thousand
planes and the most powerful naval force known
up to that time.
It was a war, formally declared by the powers fighting Hitler. The Nazis had
launched a pre-emptive attack, without warning and without any prior declaration
of war. A new style of producing great slaughters was imposed on mankind.
In 1945, two bombs of roughly 20 kilotons each were used against the civilian
populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I once visited the first of those cities.
In the 1950’s, the government of the United States came to build such nuclear
attack weapons. One of them, the MR17, came to weigh 19.05 tons and measured
7.49 meters; it would be carried in their bombers and would unleash an explosion
of 20 megatons, equivalent to a thousand bombs like the one that was dropped
over the first of those two cities on August 6,
1945. It is a fact that would infuriate Einstein who, in the midst of his contradictions,
would often express regret about the weapon that, without meaning to, he helped
to manufacture, with his scientific theories and discoveries.
When the Revolution triumphs in Cuba on January 1st, 1959, almost 15 years after
the explosion of the first nuclear weapons, and we proclaim an Agrarian Reform
Act based on the principle of national sovereignty, consecrated by the blood
of millions of combatants who died in that war, the United States response was
a program of illegal deeds and terrorist attacks against the Cuban people, signed
by the President of the United States himself, Dwight D. Eisenhower.
The attack on the Bay of Pigs followed the exact instructions of the President
of the United States and the invaders were escorted by U.S. naval units, including
an aircraft carrier. The first air assault with U.S. B-26 planes flying out of
secret bases was a pre-emptive attack using Cuban markings on the planes so that
world opinion would see this as a revolt by our national air force.
You accuse Cuban revolutionaries of being torturers. I seriously urge you to
find a single one of the more than a thousand prisoners captured during the Bay
of Pigs fighting who had been tortured. I was there, not in some protected position
at a distant general command post. I personally captured a number of prisoners
with the help of some assistants; I walked in front of armed squads who were
still lying under cover of the forest’s vegetation, paralyzed by the presence
of the Chief of the Revolution. I’m sorry that I have to mention this because
it might appear to be boasting, and that is something I honestly detest.
The prisoners were citizens born in Cuba organized by a powerful foreign power
to fight against their own people.
You have admitted that you are in favor of the death penalty for very serious
crimes. What would have you done if faced by such acts? How many would you have
sentenced for that treason? In Cuba, we tried several of the invaders who, under
Batista's orders, had previously committed horrendous crimes against Cuban revolutionaries.
I visited the mass of Bay of Pigs prisoners, --that is how you call the Girón
Beach invasion-- on more than one occasion, and I talked with them. I like to
find out man’s motives. They showed surprise and expressed their acknowledgement
of the personal respect with which they were treated.
You should know that while we were negotiating their liberation in exchange for
compensation by food and medicines for children, the U.S. government was organizing
plans to assassinate me. There is a record of this in what was written by people
taking part in the negotiation process.
I shall not go into detail about the long list of hundreds of assassination attempts
on me. None of this is made up. It has been stated in official documents circulated
by the U.S. government.
What ethics underlie such deeds, vehemently defended by you as a matter of principles?
I shall attempt to delve deeper into those matters.
Fidel Castro Ruz
February 10, 2008.
Time: 6:35 p.m. |