Thank You and Farewell
The Council of State
Havana, Cuba
December 2006
The
Honorable George W. Bush
The
White House
Washington, D.C.
Dear
Mr. President:
My
final battle is nearing its end.
I
have led the revolutionary struggle for so long that I have seen nine American
Presidents leave office. But now it is
certain that you will be the one who sees me give up my post in favor of my
brother Raul, whom history commands to lead our noble Revolution and pass the torch
to our next generation.
Before
I relinquish my post, I must thank you for the steadfast political support you
have provided for six years.
Mr.
President, I have had lots of time recently to think about history. I conclude after careful analysis that not
since President Kennedy has an American President done as much as you to help
sustain our revolutionary project.
When
President Kennedy decided to invade Cuba in 1961, it was not
self-evident that we would emerge strengthened from the experience. The Revolution was young and vulnerable. We were fighting to cleanse our mountains of bandits
and counterrevolutionaries. We had no
allies to help us resist a full application of American military power.
But
Mr. Kennedy chose to rely on Cuban mercenaries.
He landed them at the Bay of Pigs, separated from the rest of Cuba by vast
swamps and far from any conceivable source of support. He left them defenseless. Soon they surrendered in humiliation, and our
moment of peril was shortlived.
Victory
reaffirmed my personal leadership at home and throughout the Americas. But what mattered most was that President
Kennedy's decision allowed me henceforth to paint internal opponents of the
Revolution as instruments of U.S.
imperialism. My pledge to safeguard Cuban
independence was no longer a reference to history; it was the Revolution's
response to an immediate threat. I made
sure that this message was never lost on the Cuban people.
I
do not wish to inject myself into your country's political affairs, Mr. President,
but something else was truly remarkable about President Kennedy's conduct. After shamefully abandoning those men on the
field of battle, he went to the Orange Bowl in Miami to bask in the applause of the survivors
and their families. He accepted their
flag and promised to return it "in a free Havana." It did not matter, apparently, that his strong
intentions were paired with weak measures and terrible results. Results were not required to win the support
of those Cubans among you who live in hatred of me. I believe that you have taken this lesson to
heart.
Since
that time, other Presidents have come and gone, each doing their part to help
me.
President
Carter opened your ports to a wild flotilla that allowed me to export tens of
thousands of undesirables.
During
your father's Administration, we watched and then dismantled the CIA's entire
operation here in Havana,
and our film of your furtive agents made for a wonderful television program for
the Cuban people.
Your
father and President Clinton helpfully tightened your embargo (we call it the
blockade) just as the Soviet Union's demise made
the Cuban people suffer the worst hardships in our history. They thereby renovated the blockade as my
favorite political scapegoat.
I should
also mention President Clinton's granting 20,000 visas annually for Cubans to
emigrate to the United
States, a practice you have scrupulously continued. You assist me greatly by opening your doors to
so many dissatisfied individuals, and by giving hope to many more that a visa
might one day be theirs. When a Cuban
decides to solve his problems by emigrating, his dreams of political activism
come to an end.
So
I thank you for that, but your contribution is much greater -- like President
Kennedy's, it is of strategic proportions, and it is all the more remarkable
because you live in a different time and you have carried out your task with
great subtlety.
Let
me explain.
Like
President Kennedy, you have signaled a firm intention to bring the Revolution
to an untimely end. This is an essential
element that increases, for me, the political value of every other thing you
do. At times you have had to temper your
rhetoric because there is a limit to the number of "regime change" projects you
can present at once. I fully understand
this, Mr. President.
Yet
when you had the State Department announce that the United States "will not
accept a succession scenario" and that you seek to "hasten the end of the
dictatorship in Cuba;" when you spoke cryptically about keeping lists of
so-called human rights abusers; and when you had your top diplomat in Havana
explain that a :successful transition process has an aspect of the punitive,"
your signals came through loud and clear.
The Revolution's top leaders comprehend that this is personal; that
their loss could be personal and complete if certain plans for "democracy" come
to fruition. We have never before experienced
such cohesion.
More
than this, you have helped me to manage the difficult political task of governing
a population where so many yearn for profound change.
Your
500-page report on "assistance to a free Cuba"
presents detailed American notions on so many aspects of our national life --
who ever thought to include management of Cuba's national parks, Mr. President? -- that even my strongest opponents wondered what part of governance could
possibly be left for Cubans after a "transition to democracy" takes place. And when you named a "Cuba Transition
Coordinator" to work in the State Department, that was, as you say, icing on
the cake.
But
your report's greatest achievement was powerfully to fuel the average Cuban's fear
of change -- a sentiment that has always helped me politically, even among
Cubans who dislike my policies.
You
envisioned that in a "transition" former owners of homes might return to Cuba and evict the "tenants" of those homes. This was a
special gift, because here there is no greater generator of fear and unity than
the thought of losing one's home to a former owner returning from abroad. Also appreciated were the proposals that Cubans
might have to pay for the health care and education they now receive for free,
and retirees might have to return to work.
My comrades who manage agitation and propaganda welcomed these clear,
simple proposals, and they have used them widely in cartoons, billboards, radio
spots, and essays.
You
also tightened the blockade in useful ways.
You did nothing to threaten our economic growth, which as you know from
the CIA's estimates is now eight percent.
But
you did help me address a perennial political problem. Cubans agree with me that the blockade is
unjust, but after five decades that message often gets stale. Political scapegoats work best when they are
fresh.
In
that regard it was very helpful that your new sanctions target Cuban families directly,
limiting visits to once every three years, and banning any visits, cash, or
gift parcels to aunts, nephews, cousins, and others not deemed "immediate
family" in your regulations. Every Cuban
knows a family that is affected, and they know the reason is Washington's plan for a "transition to
democracy."
I
recognize that you paid a political price for making it almost impossible for
Americans to travel here for academic, religious, cultural, humanitarian, and
people-to-people programs. As one who
imposes travel controls of my own, I am familiar with the criticism. But it was worth it, I assure you. Our security services appreciate the reduced
workload, and from an ideological perspective we prefer to have fewer Americans
here. It has also been useful that you
have virtually stopped visits of Cuban scholars to the United States.
The
electronic sign you placed on the wall of your diplomatic mission in Havana last February was
an interesting innovation. Its moving
letters remind me of Times Square at night. Naturally, I had to treat this as a
provocation. But it was with mixed
emotions that I ordered a sea of black flags erected to block it from view
because, true to form, you filled it with messages that were truly offensive to
the Cuban people. They make their own
jokes about communism, and did not like jokes sent by the United States
government. In March, when you listed every
food item on the free breakfast menu of the Miami public schools, the people thought you
were flaunting your wealth and making fun of their hunger. Mr. President, you showed a rare skill by
turning your abundance and Cuban shortages to my political advantage. Again I express my gratitude.
Last
but not least, there is your aid to Cuba's so-called dissidents. For years, I have attempted to discredit
these individuals as agents of your government, and it has not always been easy. But then you made your aid to them a pillar
of your effort to bring a "transition" to Cuba, and you helpfully announced
that your programs have aspects that are secret for operational and security
reasons, which leads everyone's imagination to the CIA. Making my case has never been easier. Needless to say, you have done us another
favor by managing the program so loosely that some of your Miami friends have used government money to
send cashmere sweaters, Godiva chocolates, and PlayStations to these activists.
So
you can see why I place you in President Kennedy's category. Your words are fierce, your actions pose no
threat, and your policy helps both you and me politically.
Looking
ahead, Mr. President, I find myself wishing that my brother were like yours,
gracefully exiting political life just as you approach the end of your
term. This is an idle hope, of course,
considering that my brother Raul has a constitutional obligation to succeed me.
Yet
it is clear that he has his own ideas, and they are not entirely to my liking. He may lack the inclination and desire to plan
and administer the economy in every detail, as is required of a true socialist
leader. For years, he has admired the
deviationist course of our Chinese comrades.
I allowed him to carry out some reform ideas in our defense industries
the 1980's and then in the larger economy when our crisis of the 1990's left me
little choice.
In
his interim role, Raul has respectfully refrained from changing policies, but he
is busy sending signals that gain him political support at my expense. The bureaucracy already loves him because he only
works during normal business hours and never calls meetings in the middle of
the night -- a trait that I know you share, but I have found irregular hours to
be a great way to keep people on their toes.
Everyone loves his brevity; his speeches since July 31 still do not add
up to the length of one of mine. In one
speech, instead of extolling our achievements in housing and transportation, he
told the entire nation that he is sick of hearing excuses. His solution to corruption seems to involve
risky economic theories rather than more rigorous planning, control, and discipline. He is encouraging open debate, a recipe for ideological
disorder.
Yet
I trust my brother. Where I am going, I
will only be able to watch to see if indeed he undertakes a dreaded economic "opening." The theory is that he can create new jobs and
growth and become popular among misguided Cubans who want a taste of capitalism.
Whatever
course he chooses, we know that because your Helms-Burton law took away all
your diplomatic options, the United States
will be sidelined from any diplomacy involving Cuba for years to come. For Raul's sake, it was good of you not to
tinker with that law, Mr. President.
You
can see that Cuba's
future has an element of risk. After all
you have done, it would be excessive for me to ask that you do more to
safeguard our Revolution in a time of change and uncertainty. But if you choose to exercise a stabilizing
influence, you know precisely what to do, I am quite sure of that.
I
bid you farewell and remain yours,
In
deepest gratitude,
Fidel
Castro Ruz