Castro is losing his last fight
Posted on Tue, Dec. 25, 2007
BY CARLOS ALBERTO MONTANER
www.firmaspress.com
Hurriedly, some days ago, Fidel Castro sent an enigmatic note to Round
Table, a TV program staged by his most fanatic disciples. The sentence
that sparked a furor in the international press could be interpreted as
his definitive retirement: ``My fundamental duty is not to cling to
posts, much less to obstruct the path of people younger than me, but to
contribute experiences and ideas whose modest value comes from the
exceptional era I was fated to live through.''
Still, he wasn't retiring. When he indulges in polemics with his people,
Castro always talks with his mouth twisted and his tongue tied, like the
mediums at séances. The statement meant something else. He was
expressing his displeasure at some changes that, against his heretofore
absolute will, are happening in Cuba. For example, the old dictator
disagreed with the announcement on Dec. 10 that Cuba would sign an
agreement with the United Nations in March on the subject of economic,
social, cultural and political rights.
He feared, and he so stated in writing, that the agreement might open
the door to independent labor unions. Freedom horrifies him.
And, from his perspective as Grand Warden, he was right. Several days
later, engineer Oswaldo Payá, one of the most creative and restless
brains among the democrats in the domestic opposition, dared to submit
to the National Assembly a bill that would allow Cubans to enter and
leave the country freely. After all, that's a right consecrated in the
agreement that the Havana government swears it will sign.
Within the circle of power, the struggle is between the reformers and
the hard-liners. Another way to say it (the one Fidel likes) is between
the pragmatists and the ''principleists.'' The pragmatists are willing
to promote changes that will make the disastrous Cuban system of
production more efficient. The principleists, clinging to the
revolutionary principles and convinced of the virtues of egalitarianism
(even if it makes everyone equally poor), believe that the important
thing is to be consistent with Marxist ideology and to insist on
collectivism.
The pragmatists, dazzled by the success attained by China and Vietnam,
are willing to coexist with the capitalist methods of production and to
maintain good relations with the First World nations, including the
United States. The principleists, led by Fidel Castro, believe that the
duty of revolutionaries is to fight against the hated capitalist world,
on to victory forever, Comandante, and they postulate the supremacy of
''the policy'' over ``the economy.''
On the other hand, the correlation of forces is very unequal. The
principleists are only Fidel and a small group of acolytes willing to
follow him even into hell. The pragmatists, led by Raúl Castro, account
for a huge majority in the governing cupola. However, they all
acknowledge Fidel's enormous weight and know that they cannot carry out
the reform against the opposition of the moribund Comandante.
What is, in effect, the reform that Fidel opposes? In essence, six lines
of change:
• The true decentralization of economic decisions.
• The introduction of material incentives linked to results, in the
knowledge that the incentives will generate inequalities, in exchange
for greater indices of production that will alleviate the never-ending
shortages in society.
• The authorization of the unfettered sale and purchase of homes.
• The reintroduction of small private properties in the agriculture and
cattle sectors.
• The legitimization of clandestine work activities and black-market
transactions (the creation of a sincere economy).
• The drafting of a new, less-repressive penal code that eliminates the
death penalty and alleged crimes -- such as showing disrespect for the
state -- that are unacceptable in the modern world.
Fidel is right when he maintains that these reforms, though minor and
intended to bring a minimum of material well-being to the population,
run totally counter to his model of an egalitarian communist beehive
that will be the great showcase of orthodox Marxism. Raúl is right when
he posits that, half a century after that system was imposed, it has
unquestionably become a disaster that cruelly mortifies the Cubans.
Fidel is right when he claims that by accepting those changes at the end
of his life he would be admitting that his governance has been a total
failure. Raúl is right when the states that he has neither the authority
of his brother, nor the control over the government and society that he
needs to govern amid the rubble and poverty generated by a system in
which almost no one believes.
Mass demonstrations?
Among his closest people, Raúl repeats, with great preoccupation, that
either the subhuman conditions in which Cubans live are improved or he
will soon have to call out the troops to repress mass demonstrations of
discontent.
Who will win this conflict? This time, probably the reformers. Why this
time? Because the problem is not new: It came up in the 1970s, the '80s
during the perestroika, the '90s after the disappearance of the Soviet
Union, and is coming up again. In the previous episodes, Fidel
invariably crushed the reformers. But now he is dying, can hardly move
out of his bed, and has lost the ability to impose his will. To him, all
this must be an unbearable punishment.
©2007 Firmas Press
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