Havana, Sep 12 (Prensa Latina)
Cuban President Fidel Castro on Wednesday reflected on the
six long years since the painful September 11 episode in
the US, about which it is known there has been deliberate
disinformation.
The most dramatic thing is that what really happened might
be never known for certain, the leader affirmed in a new article
broadcast by the radio-TV Roundtable Discussion.
Fidel Castro said in his reflections entitled "The Empire
and Falsehood" that like the rest of the planet, "we
were deceived." "What a big difference between the
behavior of the Cuban government and that of the US! The Revolution
is based on truth, and the empire on lie!" the president
concluded.
Due to its importance, Prensa Latina integrally reproduces
reflections in sections by the Cuban president: Reflections
by the Commander in Chief THE EMPIRE AND ITS LIES It was Reagan
who created the Cuban American National Foundation, whose sinister
involvement in the blockade and in terrorist actions against
Cuba would be revealed years later, when the United States
declassified secret documents, albeit full of information that
had been shamefully crossed out. Had these documents come to
light earlier, our conduct would not have been different.
When, on March 30, 1981, we received news in Cuba that Reagan
had been shot with a low-caliber weapon in an assassination
attempt, we sent him a message condemning the act. The 22-caliber
lead bullet lodged in one of his lungs was causing him pain
and putting his life at risk. The message is contained in the
conversation that, following precise instructions, our then
minister of foreign affairs, Isidoro Malmierca, had with Wayne
Smith, former head of the US Interests Section in Havana.
What follow are excerpts, quoted verbatim, of the conversation
between the two: “ISIDORO MALMIERCA: We summoned you
to this meeting on the express request of President Fidel Castro.
He asked me to begin by expressing our appreciation for the
information on the assassination attempt on President Reagan
that you provided us with through director Joaquín Más.
On behalf of President Fidel Castro, we also wish to express
how deeply we regret this event and our sincere hope that President
Reagan will recover from this attack as quickly as possible.
“WAYNE SMITH: Thank you, very much.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: We have been receiving information
about the medical attention the President is receiving. Initially,
you had also received information that the consequences of
the attack did not appear to be that severe, but it seems the
situation is more complicated and he is undergoing surgery.
“WAYNE SMITH: Yes. Our impression is that he has been
operated on already, but over the radio they are now saying
that the operation is to begin now. It is likely to be over
in, say, an hour. A 3-hour surgery, I mean, is nothing simple,
especially for a 70-year-old man. They say there"s no
danger. My interpretation of this is that there"s no immediate
danger. But, for a 70-year-old man, a 3-hour surgery is a serious
matter. They say he is not in serious condition, that his condition
is stable. We hope everything goes well. I thank you for your
best wishes, your concern and President Fidel Castro"s
message.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: In Washington, Mr. Frechette also
approached the Cuban Interests Section and conveyed us information
on this situation. He explained that you had also received
information on this. Again, President Fidel Castro personally
asked me to meet with you and to express our sincere hope that
President Reagan recover promptly from the consequences of
the attack.
“WAYNE SMITH: Thank you, very much. My God! This is a
difficult situation. President Kennedy was assassinated in
Dallas and it looks as though the person responsible for the
assassination attempt on Reagan is from Dallas. He currently
lives in Colorado, but he"s from Dallas. I don"t
know...
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: In some cables, I read that he was
born near Denver, 30 kilometers from Denver.
“WAYNE SMITH: I don’t know. One of my consuls here
in the Interests Section told me he had heard on the radio
that it"s a guy who studied in the same school he did.
I don’t know, he may have lived a number of years in
Dallas. I don"t know what"s in the air people breath
in Dallas.
"ISIDORO MALMIERCA: They say they"re three brothers,
the sons of a man who"s in the oil business.
“WAYNE SMITH: His dad, yes. He"s 22 years old. He
was a student at Yale University, but he had recently abandoned
his studies. He may feel bitter, a young man who has failed,
who acted out of resentment. To be completely frank, I"m
glad it"s a guy like that and not, say, a Puerto Rican
or something like that, which could have political implications.
"ISIDORO MALMIERCA: You mean speculations about the political
motivations behind that.
“WAYNE SMITH: Yes, that could, undeniably, prompt, encourage
political readings. An attack by a white man from Colorado,
Texas does not lend itself easily to political interpretations.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: There have even been a number of
police reports which say that he acted alone, that he has no
ties to any groups...
“WAYNE SMITH: Yes, it must have been an insane or fanatical
person. He got so close to the President...He was captured
immediately. He took out his weapon and fired… “ISIDORO
MALMIERCA: Brady died? “WAYNE SMITH: No.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: They were saying he died.
“WAYNE SMITH: Yes. There were reports to that effect,
that he had died. But the latest news is that he didn"t,
that he"s in very serious condition, but that he hasn"t
died. I imagine that that a 45-calibre round would have been
deadly, but a 22-calibre certainly gives him possibilities...
It seems the shot hit him on the head, apparently in the head...That"s
not good news, there isn"t much hope.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: A shot to the head, no matter what
the caliber, is something very serious.
"WAYNE SMITH: Brady is in critical condition. He may survive,
but he"d be a vegetable.
“ISIDORO MALMIERCA: I do regret that we should meet because
of such an unfortunate event.
“WAYNE SMITH: I thank you for your best wishes. I will
immediately send out a cable telling my government of our conversation.
I kindly ask that you express my gratitude to President Fidel
Castro.
No comments are needed. Malmierca"s version, written immediately
after the meeting, speaks for itself. Wayne Smith is today
a staunch opponent of the blockade and aggressions against
Cuba.
But this is not the only example of our conduct towards the
President of a country which, since the days of Eisenhower,
has hatched hundreds of plots to physically eliminate me.
A highly confidential report submitted in the summer of 1984
to an agent responsible for the security of Cuban representatives
in the UN warned of a possible assassination attempt on President
Ronald Reagan by a far-right group in North Carolina. Upon
receiving it, we immediately informed US authorities. Our official
suggested that we deliver the information via Robert C. Muller,
head of security of the US mission to the United Nations, with
whom we maintained contact to ensure the protection of Cuban
delegations visiting the international organization.
The assassination was planned for an imminent date, for Reagan"s
visit to North Carolina, as part of his re-election campaign.
We had all of the information at our disposal. We had the names
of those implicated in the plot; the day, time and place where
the assassination was to take place; the types of weapons the
terrorists had and where they were being kept. In addition
to all this, we knew where the elements who were plotting this
were meeting and had a brief account of what had been said
at a meeting.
The information was given Muller at a meeting in a building
located in 37 and 3rd Avenue, two blocks away from the Cuban
mission.
We provided him with all the information, making sure the most
important details, such as the names of those involved, the
place, time and type of weapons to be used, were clear.
At the end of the conversation, our official informed Muller
he had received instructions from the Cuban government to report
the matter urgently and that we had selected him because we
knew he was an expert on security matters.
Muller read out what he had written down to ensure he had not
changed anything and that all of the important information
was there.
He asked about the source and was told it was reliable. He
said that the Secret Service would need to meet with the Cuban
officials. He was told this would not be a problem.
At around four thirty in the afternoon that day, Secret Service
agents met with the Cuban representatives.
The meeting was held in apartment 34-F, in the 34th floor of
the Ruppert Towers building located in 92, between Third and
Second Avenue, in uptown Manhattan.
The agents were two young, white men with brush haircuts wearing
suits. Their chief aim was to verify what Muller had reported,
as evidenced by the copy of the cable he had sent them they
brought with them. When the contents of the cable were read,
they were told no information was missing.
The Secret Service agents wanted to know who had provided the
information and how it had come into our possession. They were
told what Muller was told. They were also interested in knowing
if we could elaborate on the information, and they were told
that, if any new information were to arrive, they would be
immediately informed.
They left their cards and asked to be contacted directly if
any additional information was received, saying there was no
need to use Muller as an intermediary.
The following Monday, we received news that the Federal Bureau
of Investigation had detained a group of people in North Carolina,
against whom a number of charges had been brought, none, as
is logical to assume, related to the plan to assassinate President
Reagan, who traveled to that State shortly afterwards as part
of his presidential e-election campaign.
Four or five days following the arrests, at the end of the
week, Muller phoned the Cuban mission to invite the Cuban official
to lunch. They had lunch at the UN delegates’ lounge.
The first thing Muller did was ask that the official convey
the United States" gratitude to the Cuban government for
the information provided, confirming that an operation against
those involved had been carried out. A Cuban anti-terrorist
activist had saved the life of a US President! Some US press
reports mention an intimate diary, over 700 pages long, kept
by Reagan— from the time he entered office to the day
he handed the presidency over to Bush Sr.—
which tries to suggest that his G¡government was not
that aggressive towards Cuba.
However, according to some accounts, in his memoirs, Robert
McFarlane, then Undersecretary of State under Alexander Haig,
wrote that, of all the governments that had had dealings with
Fidel Castro since 1959, Reagan"s seemed the least indicated
to hold talks with Cuba"s communist regime.
Perhaps Reagan was grateful for our concern, when he was nearly
assassinated in 1981, and for the warning that saved his life
from imminent danger, and he expressed this gratitude through
Robert C. Muller.
Reagan signed the first migratory accord with Cuba, but he
could not rise above his milieu, for there were others, further
to the right than he was, who would have physically eliminated
him, as they did Kennedy after he faced the terrible risk of
a thermonuclear war. To be sure, Reagan did change his policy
towards Cuba in an electoral year, did not honor the accord
he signed which guaranteed the granting of up to 20 thousand
visas a year for safe trips by granting less than a thousand,
and kept in effect the Cuban Adjustment Act, which has cost
Cuba many lives.
On September 11, 2001, true chaos reigned in this neighboring
country. For long, planes were forbidden to land at airports.
A countless number of passenger planes were mid-flight somewhere.
These were the news spread by the media in the United States.
There were reports of thousands of victims in New York, including
Twin Tower staff, firefighters and visitors. There were also
reports of people on a passenger plane which was flown into
the Pentagon. We offered to supply the United States with clean
blood from regular donors if it was needed for any eventuality.
Blood donations have long constituted a tradition of the Revolution.
These events happened to coincide with the day in which we
had convened nearly 15,000 higher education students and university
graduates for a 6:00 pm gathering, on the occasion of the re-opening
of the Salvador Allende School, where 3,599 young people would
begin higher studies and avail themselves of new and tried
methods to become primary school teachers.
That painful incident occurred six years ago today. Today,
we know that the public was deliberately misinformed. I don"t
recall any talk, that day, of the fact that, in the basements
of those towers, whose higher floors housed the banks of multinational
corporations and other offices, lay nearly 200 tons in gold
bars. An order to shoot to death anyone who attempted to get
to the gold had been issued. The calculations with respect
to the steel structures, plane impacts, the black boxes recovered
and what they revealed do not coincide with the opinions of
mathematicians, seismologists, information, demolition experts
and others. What is most shocking is the claim that we may
never know what actually happened. It is known, however, that
a number of people en route to San Francisco from New Jersey,
had conversations with their relatives when the air vessels
were already under the control of individuals who were not
members of the crew.
An analysis of the impact of planes similar to those against
the towers, following accidental plane crashes in densely-populated
cities, concludes that no plane crashed against the Pentagon
and that only a projectile could have created the geometrically
round hole that the alleged plane created. No passenger that
perished there has turned up, either. No one in the world questioned
the news about the attack on the Pentagon building. We were
deceived, as were the rest of the planet"s inhabitants.
When I spoke at the Ciudad Deportiva sports complex that September
11th, I spoke of the tragedy that had hit the United States.
In the interests of conciseness, I am reproducing the following
excerpts from that speech: (…) We did not even consider
postponing the ceremony. It could not be postponed, despite
the international tension created by such events. I would imagine
that almost everyone knows about them, but to briefly summarize,
at approximately 9:00 this morning, a Boeing airplane, a really
big one, crashed straight into one of the two New York famous
towers which make up one of the highest buildings in the world.
Naturally, the tower caught on fire because of all the fuel
from such a big airplane, and some horrific scenes began. And
then, 18 minutes later, another plane, also from an U.S. airline,
crashed straight into the second tower.
A few minutes later, another plane crashed into the Pentagon.
News arrived, in the midst of a certain amount of confusion,
of a bomb outside the State Department, and other alarming
events, although I have mentioned the most important.
Obviously, the country had fallen victim to a violent surprise
attack, unexpected, unimaginable, something truly unheard of.
And the scenes that ensued were appalling, especially when
the two towers were burning, and foremost when they both collapsed,
all 100 floors, spilling over onto neighboring buildings, when
it was known that there were tens of thousands of people working
there, in offices representing many companies from various
countries.
It was only logical that this would be a shock for the United
States and the rest of the world. The stock markets started
to collapse, and because of the political, economic and technological
importance and the power of the United States, the whole world
was shaken up today by those events. So, we had to follow the
events throughout the day, but at the same time, we also had
to continue thinking about the conditions and circumstances
in which this ceremony would take place.
Therefore, there were two issues: the school and the extremely
important course it will offer, and the political and human
catastrophe that had taken place over there, especially in
New York.
(…) Today is a day of tragedy for the United States.
You know very well that hatred against the American people
has never been sown here. Perhaps, precisely because of its
culture, its lack of prejudice, its sense of full freedom –with
a homeland and without a master-- Cuba is the country where
Americans are treated with the greatest respect. We have never
preached any kind of national hatred, or anything similar to
fanaticism, and that is the reason for our strength, because
our conduct is based on principles and ideas. We treat all
Americans who visit us with great respect, and they have noticed
this and said so themselves.
Furthermore, we cannot forget the American people who put an
end to the Vietnam War with their overwhelming opposition to
that genocidal war. We cannot forget the American people who –in
numbers that exceeded 80% of the population-- supported the
return of Elián González to his homeland. We
cannot forget their idealism, although it is often undermined
by deception, because –as we have said often times– in
order to mislead Americans to support an unjust cause, or an
unjust war, they must first be deceived. The classic method
used by that huge country in international politics is that
of deceiving the people first, to count on their support later.
When it is the other way around, and the people realize that
something is unjust, then based on their traditional idealism
they oppose what they have been supporting. Often these are
extremely unjust causes, which they had supported convinced
that they were doing the right thing.
Therefore, although unaware of the exact number of victims
but seeing those moving scenes of suffering, we have felt profound
grief and sadness for the American people.
We do not go around flattering any government, or asking for
forgiveness or favors. We neither harbor in our hearts a single
atom of fear. The history of our Revolution has proven its
capacity to stand up to challenges, its capacity to fight and
its capacity to resist whatever it has to; that is what has
turned us into an invincible people. These are our principles.
Our Revolution is based on ideas and persuasion, and not on
the use of force.
(…)That has been our reaction, and we wanted our people
to see the scenes and watch the tragedy. We have not hesitated
to express our sentiments publicly, and right here I have a
statement, which was drafted as soon as the facts were known
and handed out to the international media around 3:00 p.m.
In the meantime, our television networks were broadcasting
news of the events. This statement was scheduled to be read
to the Cuban public tonight during the evening TV newscast.
I am going to move the time up a few minutes by reading to
you here and now the Official Statement from the Government
of Cuba on the events that took place in the United States: "The
Government of the Republic of Cuba has learned with grief and
sadness of the violent surprise attacks carried out this morning
against civilian and official facilities in the cities of New
York and Washington, which have caused numerous deaths.
(…)"It is not possible to forget that for over four
decades our country has been the target of such actions fostered
from within the United States territory.
"Both for historical reasons and ethical principles, the
Government of our country strongly repudiates and condemns
the attacks against the aforementioned facilities and hereby
expresses its most heartfelt sympathies to the American people
for the painful, unjustifiable loss of human lives resulting
from these attacks.
"In this bitter hour for all Americans, our people express
their solidarity with the American people and their full willingness
to cooperate, to the extent of their modest possibilities,
with the health care institutions and any other medical or
humanitarian organization in that country in the treatment,
care and rehabilitation of the victims of this morning’s
events." Although it is not known whether the casualties
are 5000, 10,000, 15,000 or 20,000, it is known that the planes
that crashed into the Twin Towers and into the Pentagon were
carrying hundreds of passengers, and we have offered to provide
whatever we can, if necessary.
That is a country with great scientific and medical development
and resources, but at some point in time it could need blood
of a specific type or plasma
–any other product that we could donate, we would be
most willing to give-- or medical support or paramedics. We
know many hospitals are short of specific technicians and professionals.
In other words, we want to express our disposition and readiness
to be helpful in relation to these tragic events.
(…) The hijacking of planes –a method used against
Cuba-- became a universal plague, and it was Cuba that solved
this problem when, after repeated warnings, we sent two hijackers
back to the United States. It is painful because they were
Cubans but we had issued public warnings, so they came and
we returned them. We complied with our public pledge, yet they
never again provided us with any information about them to
give to their relatives. They have their own ways of doing
things. No one knows. I know they were sentenced to 40 years
imprisonment, and that put an end to those hijackings".
(…) None of the problems affecting today’s world
can be solved with the use of force; there is no global, technological
or military power that can guarantee immunity against such
acts, because they can be organized by small groups [which
are] difficult to detect.
(...) It is very important
to know what the reaction of the U.S. Government might be.
Possibly the world will be living dangerous days, and I am
not talking about Cuba. Cuba is the most peaceful country in
the world, for several reasons: our policies, our forms of
struggle, our doctrine, our ethics, and also, comrades, and
due to an absolute absence of fear.
Nothing troubles us. Nothing intimidates us. It would be
very difficult to concoct a slanderous accusation against
Cuba; not even its inventor and the patent holder would believe
it. It would be very difficult. And Cuba means something
in the world today. It has a very high moral position, and
a very sound political position in the world.
The days to come will be tense inside the United States.
A number of people will start putting forward opinions.
(…) We would advise the leaders of that powerful empire
to remain calm, to act with a cool head, to avoid getting
carried away by a fit of rage or hatred, and not to start
trying to hunt people down by throwing bombs just anywhere.
I reiterate that none of the world’s problems, not
even terrorism, can be solved with the use of force, and
every act of force, every imprudent action that entails the
use of force anywhere, is going to seriously aggravate the
world problems.
The way is neither the use of force nor the war. I say this
with the full authority of someone who has always talked
honestly, of someone with sound convictions and the experience
of surviving the years of struggle that Cuba has lived through.
Only reason, and the intelligent policy of seeking strength
through consensus and international public opinion, can definitely
eradicate this problem. I think this unexpected episode should
be used to undertake an international effort against terrorism.
However, this international struggle against terrorism cannot
be won by eliminating a terrorist here and another one there,
by killing people here and there, using similar methods to
theirs and sacrificing innocent lives. It can only be won,
among other ways, by putting an end to State terrorism and
other repulsive forms of killing, by putting an end to genocide,
and by seriously pursuing a policy of peace and respect for
moral and legal standards. The world cannot be saved unless
a path of international peace and cooperation is pursued.
(…) We have proven that we can survive, live and make
progress, and everything seen here today is an expression
of unprecedented progress in all of human history. Progress
is not achieved only through the manufacturing of automobiles;
developing people’s minds, providing knowledge, promoting
culture, and looking after human beings the way they should
be looked after makes progress. That is the secret of the
tremendous strength of our Revolution.
The world cannot be saved in any other way, and by that I
mean the situations of violence. Let us seek peace everywhere
and protect all the people from that plague of terrorism.
There is another horrible plague today, which is called AIDS,
for instance. There is another plague, which kills tens of
millions of children, teenagers and adults in the world,
that is, hunger, disease and a lack of health care and medicines.
In the political arena, there are absolutist ideas, and attempts
to impose a single way of thinking on the world; this fosters
rebellious attitudes and irritation everywhere.
This world cannot be saved –and this does not have
anything to do with terrorism-- if this unfair economic and
social order continues to be developed and applied; an order
that is leading the world to disaster, along a path from
which there is no escape for the 6.2 billion people living
today and the future inhabitants of this planet, suffering
ever greater destruction and plunged further into poverty,
unemployment, hunger and despair. This has been proven by
the masses in places that have already gone down in history,
like Seattle, Quebec, Washington and Genoa.
The world’s most powerful economic and political leaders
now find it almost impossible to meet; everywhere we can
see that people are less and less afraid, and are rising
up. I was recently in Durban, a province in South Africa,
and there I saw thousands and thousands of people members
of non-governmental organizations; discontent is spreading
like wildfire around the globe (…).
How enormously different is the conduct of the Cuban government
from that of the government of the United States! The Revolution,
based on truth, and the empire, based on lies!
Fidel
Castro Ruz
September 11, 2007
5 :25 p.m.