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- Metropolitan Books - FOREIGN POLICY - [In his new book, Hegemony or Survival,
America's Quest for Global Dominance, Noam Chomsky
continues his powerful analysis of state violence and state terror, reminding us
that "terror" isn't primarily what small stateless bands of fanatics deliver to
large and powerful states. Rather, as Chomsky argues, history is, in a sense, a
history of state terror and the United States has long been a practitioner of
the form. One of the United States' favorite targets has been Cuba, which for
nearly half a century has been the victim of an unrelenting campaign of U.S.
state terrorism. The world experienced "the most dangerous moment in human
history" during the Cuban missile crisis. For Cuba, that most dangerous moment
actually began soon after Fidel Castro's guerrilla forces overthrew the Cuban
dictator Fulgencio Batista and never really ended.
Now that the Bush administration, pursuing its "war against terrorism," has once
again elevated Cuba into America's cross-hairs as a newly anointed member of the
Axis of Evil, this excerpt from Chomsky's new book which first appeared on
TomDispatch.com seems especially relevant.]
The Batista dictatorship was overthrown in January, 1959 by Castro's guerrilla
forces. In March, the National Security Council (NSC) considered means to
institute regime change. In May, the CIA began to arm guerrillas inside Cuba.
"During the Winter of 1959-1960, there was a
significant increase in CIA-supervised bombing and incendiary raids piloted by
exiled Cubans" based in the US. We need not tarry on what the US or its clients
would do under such circumstances. Cuba, however, did not respond with violent
actions within the United States for revenge or deterrence. Rather, it followed
the procedure required by international law. In July 1960, Cuba called on the UN
for help, providing the Security Council with records of some twenty bombings,
including names of pilots, plane registration numbers, unexploded bombs, and
other specific details, alleging considerable damage and casualties and calling
for resolution of the conflict through diplomatic channels. US Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge responded by giving his "assurance [that] the United States has no
aggressive purpose against Cuba." Four months before, in March 1960, his
government had made a formal decision in secret to overthrow the Castro
government, and preparations for the Bay of Pigs invasion were well advanced.
Washington was concerned that Cubans might try to defend themselves. CIA chief
Allen Dulles therefore urged Britain not to provide arms to Cuba. His "main
reason," the British ambassador reported to London, "was that this might lead
the Cubans to ask for Soviet or Soviet bloc arms," a move that "would have a
tremendous effect," Dulles pointed out, allowing Washington to portray Cuba as a
security threat to the hemisphere, following the script that had worked so well
in Guatemala. Dulles was referring to Washington's successful demolition of
Guatemala's first democratic experiment, a ten-year interlude of hope and
progress, greatly feared in Washington because of the enormous popular support
reported by US intelligence and the "demonstration effect" of social and
economic measures to benefit the large majority. The Soviet threat was routinely
invoked, abetted by Guatemala's appeal to the Soviet bloc for arms after the US
had threatened attack and cut off other sources of supply. The result was a
half-century of horror, even worse than the US-backed tyranny that came before.
For
Cuba, the schemes devised by the doves were similar
to those of CIA director Dulles. Warning President Kennedy about the "inevitable
political and diplomatic fall-out" from the planned invasion of Cuba by a proxy
army, Arthur Schlesinger suggested efforts to trap Castro in some action that
could be used as a pretext for invasion: "One can conceive a black operation in,
say, Haiti which might in time lure Castro into sending a few boatloads of men
on to a Haitian beach in what could be portrayed as an effort to overthrow the
Haitian regime, . . . then the moral issue would be clouded, and the anti-US
campaign would be hobbled from the start." Reference is to the regime of the
murderous dictator "Papa Doc" Duvalier, which was
backed by the US (with some reservations), so that an effort to help Haitians
overthrow it would be a crime.
Eisenhower's March 1960 plan called for the overthrow of Castro in favor of a
regime "more devoted to the true interests of the Cuban people and more
acceptable to the U.S.," including support for "military operation on the
island" and "development of an adequate paramilitary force outside of Cuba."
Intelligence reported that popular support for Castro was high, but the US would
determine the "true interests of the Cuban people." The regime change was to be
carried out "in such a manner as to avoid any appearance of U.S. intervention,"
because of the anticipated reaction in Latin America and the problems of
doctrinal management at home.
The Bay of Pigs invasion came a year later, in April 1961, after Kennedy had
taken office. It was authorized in an atmosphere of "hysteria" over Cuba in the
White House, Robert McNamara later testified before the Senate's Church
Committee. At the first cabinet meeting after the failed invasion, the
atmosphere was "almost savage," Chester Bowles noted privately: "there was an
almost frantic reaction for an action program." At an NSC meeting two days
later, Bowles found the atmosphere "almost as emotional" and was struck by "the
great lack of moral integrity" that prevailed. The mood was reflected in
Kennedy's public pronouncements: "The complacent, the self-indulgent,
the soft societies are about to be swept away with
the debris of history. Only the strong . . . can possibly survive," he told the
country, sounding a theme that would be used to good effect by the
Reaganites during their own terrorist wars. Kennedy
was aware that allies "think that we're slightly demented" on the subject of
Cuba, a perception that persists to the present.
Kennedy implemented a crushing embargo that could scarcely be endured by a small
country that had become a "virtual colony" of the US in the sixty years
following its "liberation" from Spain. He also ordered an intensification of the
terrorist campaign: "He asked his brother, Attorney-General Robert Kennedy, to
lead the top-level interagency group that oversaw Operation Mongoose, a program
of paramilitary operations, economic warfare, and sabotage he launched in late
1961 to visit the 'terrors of the earth' on Fidel Castro and, more prosaically,
to topple him."
The terrorist campaign was "no laughing matter," Jorge Dominguez writes in a
review of recently declassified materials on operations under Kennedy, materials
that are "heavily sanitized" and "only the tip of the iceberg,"
Piero Gleijeses adds.
Operation Mongoose was "the centerpiece of American policy toward Cuba from late
1961 until the onset of the 1962 missile crisis," Mark White reports, the
program on which the Kennedy brothers "came to pin their hopes." Robert Kennedy
informed the CIA that the Cuban problem carries "the top priority in the United
States Government -- all else is secondary -- no time, no effort, or manpower is
to be spared" in the effort to overthrow the Castro regime. The chief of
Mongoose operations, Edward Lansdale, provided a timetable leading to "open
revolt and overthrow of the Communist regime" in October 1962. The "final
definition" of the program recognized that "final success will require decisive
U.S. military intervention," after terrorism and subversion had laid the basis.
The implication is that US military intervention would take place in October
1962 -- when the missile crisis erupted.
In February 1962, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
approved a plan more extreme than Schlesinger's: to use "covert means . . . to
lure or provoke Castro, or an uncontrollable subordinate, into an overt hostile
reaction against the United States; a reaction which would in turn create the
justification for the US to not only retaliate but destroy Castro with speed,
force and determination." In March, at the request of the DOD Cuba Project, the
Joint Chiefs of Staff submitted a memorandum to Defense Secretary Robert
McNamara outlining "pretexts which they would consider would provide
justification for
US military intervention in Cuba." The plan would
be undertaken if "a credible internal revolt is impossible of attainment during
the next 9-10 months," but before Cuba could establish relations with Russia
that might "directly involve the Soviet Union."
The March plan was to construct "seemingly unrelated events to camouflage the
ultimate objective and create the necessary impression of Cuban rashness and
responsibility on a large scale, directed at other countries as well as the
United States," placing the US "in the apparent position of suffering defensible
grievances [and developing] an international image of Cuban threat to peace in
the Western Hemisphere." Proposed measures included blowing up a US ship in
Guantanamo Bay to create "a 'Remember the Maine'
incident," publishing casualty lists in US newspapers to "cause a helpful wave
of national indignation," portraying Cuban investigations as "fairly compelling
evidence that the ship was taken under attack," developing a "Communist Cuban
terror campaign [in Florida] and even in Washington," using Soviet bloc
incendiaries for cane-burning raids in neighboring countries, shooting down a
drone aircraft with a pretense that it was a charter flight carrying college
students on a holiday, and other similarly ingenious schemes -- not implemented,
but another sign of the "frantic" and "savage" atmosphere that prevailed.
On August 23 the president issued National Security Memorandum No. 181, "a
directive to engineer an internal revolt that would be followed by U.S. military
intervention," involving "significant U.S. military plans, maneuvers, and
movement of forces and equipment" that were surely known to Cuba and Russia.
Also in August, terrorist attacks were intensified, including speedboat strafing
attacks on a Cuban seaside hotel "where Soviet military technicians were known
to congregate, killing a score of Russians and Cubans"; attacks on British and
Cuban cargo ships; the contamination of sugar shipments; and other atrocities
and sabotage, mostly carried out by Cuban exile organizations permitted to
operate freely in Florida. A few weeks later came "the most dangerous moment in
human history."
Terrorist operations continued through the tensest moments of the missile
crisis. They were formally canceled on October 30, several days after the
Kennedy and Khrushchev agreement, but went on nonetheless. On November 8, "a
Cuban covert action sabotage team dispatched from the United States successfully
blew up a Cuban industrial facility," killing 400 workers, according to the
Cuban government. Raymond Garthoff writes that "the
Soviets could only see [the attack] as an effort to backpedal on what was, for
them, the key question remaining: American assurances not to attack Cuba." These
and other actions reveal again, he concludes, "that the risk and danger to both
sides could have been extreme, and catastrophe not excluded."
After the crisis ended, Kennedy renewed the terrorist campaign. Ten days before
his assassination he approved a CIA plan for "destruction operations" by US
proxy forces "against a large oil refinery and storage facilities, a large
electric plant, sugar refineries, railroad bridges, harbor facilities, and
underwater demolition of docks and ships." A plot to kill Castro was initiated
on the day of the Kennedy assassination. The campaign was called off in 1965,
but "one of Nixon's first acts in office in 1969 was to direct the CIA to
intensify covert operations against Cuba."
Of particular interest are the perceptions of the
planners. In his review of recently released documents on Kennedy-era terror,
Dominguez observes that "only once in these nearly thousand pages of
documentation did a U.S. official raise something that resembled a faint moral
objection to U.S.-government sponsored terrorism": a member of the NSC staff
suggested that it might lead to some Russian reaction, and raids that are
"haphazard and kill innocents . . . might mean a bad press in some friendly
countries." The same attitudes prevail throughout the internal discussions, as
when Robert Kennedy warned that a full-scale invasion of
Cuba would "kill an awful lot of people, and we're going to take
an awful lot of heat on it."
Terrorist activities continued under Nixon, peaking in the mid- 1970s, with
attacks on fishing boats, embassies, and Cuban offices overseas, and the bombing
of a Cubana airliner, killing all seventy-three
passengers. These and subsequent terrorist operations were carried out from US
territory, though by then they were regarded as criminal acts by the FBI.
So matters proceeded, while Castro was condemned by editors
for maintaining an "armed camp, despite the security from attack promised by
Washington in 1962."
The promise should have sufficed, despite what followed; not to speak of the
promises that preceded, by then well documented, along with information about
how well they could be trusted: e.g., the "Lodge moment" of July 1960.
On the thirtieth anniversary of the missile crisis, Cuba protested a machine-gun
attack against a Spanish-Cuban tourist hotel; responsibility was claimed by a
group in Miami. Bombings in Cuba in 1997, which killed an Italian tourist, were
traced back to Miami. The perpetrators were Salvadoran criminals operating under
the direction of Luis Posada Carriles and financed
in Miami. One of the most notorious international terrorists, Posada had escaped
from a Venezuelan prison, where he had been held for the
Cubana airliner bombing, with the aid of Jorge Mas
Canosa, a Miami businessman who was the head of the
tax-exempt Cuban-American National Foundation (CANF). Posada went from Venezuela
to El Salvador, where he was put to work at the Ilopango
military air base to help organize US terrorist attacks against Nicaragua under
Oliver North's direction.
Posada has described in detail his terrorist activities and the funding for them
from exiles and CANF in Miami, but felt secure that he would not be investigated
by the FBI. He was a Bay of Pigs veteran, and his subsequent operations in the
1960s were directed by the CIA. When he later joined Venezuelan intelligence
with CIA help, he was able to arrange for Orlando Bosch, an associate from his
CIA days who had been convicted in the US for a bomb attack on a Cuba-bound
freighter, to join him in Venezuela to organize further attacks against Cuba. An
ex-CIA official familiar with the Cubana bombing
identifies Posada and Bosch as the only suspects in the bombing, which Bosch
defended as "a legitimate act of war." Generally considered the "mastermind" of
the airline bombing, Bosch was responsible for thirty other acts of terrorism,
according to the FBI. He was granted a presidential pardon in 1989 by the
incoming Bush I administration after intense lobbying by
Jeb Bush and South Florida Cuban-American leaders, overruling the Justice
Department, which had found the conclusion "inescapable that it would be
prejudicial to the public interest for the United States to provide a safe haven
for Bosch [because] the security of this nation is affected by its ability to
urge credibly other nations to refuse aid and shelter to terrorists."
Cuban offers to cooperate in intelligence-sharing to prevent terrorist attacks
have been rejected by Washington, though some did lead to US actions. "Senior
members of the FBI visited Cuba in 1998 to meet their Cuban counterparts, who
gave [the FBI] dossiers about what they suggested was
a Miami-based terrorist network: information which had been compiled in part by
Cubans who had infiltrated exile groups." Three months later the FBI arrested
Cubans who had infiltrated the US-based terrorist groups. Five were sentenced to
long terms in prison. The national security pretext lost whatever shreds of
credibility it might have had after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
though it was not until 1998 that US intelligence officially informed the
country that Cuba no longer posed a threat to US national security. The Clinton
administration, however, insisted that the military threat posed by Cuba be
reduced to "negligible," but not completely removed. Even with this
qualification, the intelligence assessment eliminated a danger that had been
identified by the Mexican ambassador in 1961, when he rejected
JFK's attempt to organize collective action against
Cuba on the grounds that "if we publicly declare that Cuba is a threat to our
security, forty million Mexicans will die laughing."
In fairness, however, it should be recognized that
missiles in
Cuba did pose a threat. In private discussions the
Kennedy brothers expressed their fears that the presence of Russian missiles in
Cuba might deter a US invasion of Venezuela. So "the Bay of Pigs was really
right," JFK concluded.
The Bush I administration reacted to the elimination of the security pretext by
making the embargo much harsher, under pressure from Clinton, who outflanked
Bush from the right during the 1992 election campaign. Economic warfare was made
still more stringent in 1996, causing a furor even among the closest US allies.
The embargo came under considerable domestic criticism as well, on the grounds
that it harms US exporters and investors -- the embargo's only victims,
according to the standard picture in the US; Cubans are unaffected.
Investigations by US specialists tell a different story. Thus, a detailed study
by the American Association for World Health concluded that the embargo had
severe health effects, and only Cuba's remarkable health care system had
prevented a "humanitarian catastrophe"; this has received virtually no mention
in the US.
The embargo has effectively barred even food and medicine. In 1999 the Clinton
administration eased such sanctions for all countries on the official list of
"terrorist states," apart from Cuba, singled out for unique punishment.
Nevertheless, Cuba is not entirely alone in this regard. After a hurricane
devastated West Indian islands in August 1980, President Carter refused to allow
any aid unless Grenada was excluded, as punishment for some unspecified
initiatives of the reformist Maurice Bishop government. When the stricken
countries refused to agree to Grenada's exclusion, having failed to perceive the
threat to survival posed by the nutmeg capital of the world, Carter withheld all
aid. Similarly, when Nicaragua was struck by a hurricane in October 1988,
bringing starvation and causing severe ecological damage, the current incumbents
in Washington recognized that their terrorist war could benefit from the
disaster, and therefore refused aid, even to the Atlantic Coast area with close
links to the US and deep resentment against the Sandinistas. They followed suit
when a tidal wave wiped out Nicaraguan fishing villages, leaving hundreds dead
and missing in September 1992. In this case, there was a show of aid, but hidden
in the small print was the fact that apart from an impressive donation of
$25,000, the aid was deducted from assistance already scheduled. Congress was
assured, however, that the pittance of aid would not affect the administration's
suspension of over $100 million of aid because the US-backed Nicaraguan
government had failed to demonstrate a sufficient degree of subservience.
US economic warfare against Cuba has been strongly condemned in virtually every
relevant international forum, even declared illegal by the Judicial Commission
of the normally compliant Organization of American States. The European Union
called on the World Trade Organization to condemn the embargo. The response of
the Clinton administration was that "Europe is challenging 'three decades of
American Cuba policy that goes back to the Kennedy Administration,' and is aimed
entirely at forcing a change of government in Havana." The administration also
declared that the WTO has no competence to rule on US national security or to
compel the US to change its laws. Washington then withdrew from the proceedings,
rendering the matter moot.
The reasons for the international terrorist attacks against Cuba and the illegal
economic embargo are spelled out in the internal record. And no one should be
surprised to discover that they fit a familiar pattern -- that of Guatemala a
few years earlier, for example. From the timing alone, it is clear that concern
over a Russian threat could not have been a major factor. The plans for forceful
regime change were drawn up and implemented before there was any significant
Russian connection, and punishment was intensified after the Russians
disappeared from the scene. True, a Russian threat did develop, but that was
more a consequence than a cause of US terrorism and economic warfare.
In July 1961 the CIA warned that "the extensive
influence of 'Castroism' is not a function of Cuban
power. . . . Castro's shadow looms large because social and economic conditions
throughout Latin America invite opposition to ruling authority and encourage
agitation for radical change," for which Castro's Cuba provided a model.
Earlier, Arthur Schlesinger had transmitted to the incoming President Kennedy
his Latin American Mission report, which warned of the susceptibility of Latin
Americans to "the Castro idea of taking matters into one's own hands." The
report did identify a Kremlin connection: the
Soviet Union "hovers in the wings, flourishing
large development loans and presenting itself as the model for achieving
modernization in a single generation." The dangers of the "Castro idea" are
particularly grave, Schlesinger later elaborated, when "the distribution of land
and other forms of national wealth greatly favors the propertied classes" and
"the poor and underprivileged, stimulated by the example of the Cuban
revolution, are now demanding opportunities for a decent living." Kennedy feared
that Russian aid might make Cuba a "showcase" for development, giving the
Soviets the upper hand throughout Latin America.
In early 1964, the State Department Policy Planning Council expanded on these
concerns: "The primary danger we face in Castro is . . . in the impact the very
existence of his regime has upon the leftist movement in many Latin American
countries. . . . The simple fact is that Castro represents a successful defiance
of the US, a negation of our whole hemispheric policy of almost a century and a
half." To put it simply, Thomas Paterson writes, "Cuba, as symbol and reality,
challenged U.S. hegemony in Latin America." International terrorism and economic
warfare to bring about regime change are justified not by what Cuba does, but by
its "very existence," its "successful defiance" of the proper master of the
hemisphere. Defiance may justify even more violent actions, as in Serbia, as
quietly conceded after the fact; or Iraq, as also recognized when pretexts had
collapsed.
Outrage over defiance goes far back in American history. Two hundred years ago,
Thomas Jefferson bitterly condemned France for its "attitude of defiance" in
holding New Orleans, which he coveted. Jefferson warned that France's "character
[is] placed in a point of eternal friction with our character, which though
loving peace and the pursuit of wealth, is high-minded." France's "defiance
[requires us to] marry ourselves to the British fleet and nation," Jefferson
advised, reversing his earlier attitudes, which reflected France's crucial
contribution to the liberation of the colonies from British rule.
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