January 2008

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January’s The Lattell Report has been published:

Former New York mayor Ed Koch was fond of hovering at busy subway station entrances and startling commuters by asking, with a big smile and a handshake, “How am I doing?” There is no Cuban equivalent of course, not even remotely so, yet in his own diffident way Raul Castro must be wondering how his “provisional” administration has done.

Fair to say, the record of his interregnum is mixed. Nothing truly transformational has occurred, and may never as long as this innately cautious career military officer is in charge. He may ultimately decide against any real economic decentralization, fearing it could ignite instability. Most of his brother’s calamitous legacies may be just too difficult for him to repudiate. And perhaps, even now as the need to decide is urgently upon him, Raul may not be able to assure that Fidel vacates the Cuban presidency. That will be the most critical test of how Raul is doing.

He is likely under considerable pressure to finalize the transfer of power soon. It has been eighteen months since Fidel has been out of sight, and increasingly too, out of mind. A particularly insightful Cuban recently observed that the populace has moved on beyond Fidel, without fear or cognizance of him, and with an abiding sense of relief that he is no longer able to impose on them. This person observed that “Fidel has been forgotten as absolutely by the Cuban people as all of those boring Russian movies they had no choice but to watch for so many years.”

It’s not clear to what extent Raul has taken a lead in engineering Fidel’s evanescence. But he is nonetheless its principal beneficiary and it may actually be his most important accomplishment thus far. He has in other ways too begun to stimulate and lift the popular mood on the island, even if he can claim no credit yet for providing significant improvements in the mostly miserable lot of the Cuban people.

Yet, anecdotal accounts suggest they have a better image of Raul now than in the past. To their relief he has delivered only a few speeches since taking over, and, unlike Fidel’s interminable and desultory oratory, when Raul speaks, he is succinct, precise, and on subject. He mostly avoids the front pages of Cuba’s newspapers, is known to delegate and share power, and has made sure to convey the image of himself as a family man. He has communicated through the leadership ranks that he prefers to work a normal day and does not want to be disturbed after hours. Unlike his brother, he permits no self imagery of heroic accomplishments or extraordinary personal capabilities.

He is not known to have traveled abroad since Fidel’s confinement, and has had neither the time nor interest in mounting mass demonstrations against the United States. For Fidel, problems at home were always less important than internationalist posturing, but Raul communicates the impression of concentrating almost exclusively on domestic problem solving. Notably, he has almost entirely ignored the non-aligned movement that Cuba has led since September 2006. All of this is surely calculated to contrast his personal and leadership styles with Fidel’s and to demonstrate that his priorities are more attuned to the real needs of the populace.

Raul and those speaking for him have admitted that Cuba’s many grave problems are systemic. In their disarmingly truthful view, it is not the American economic embargo or “imperialism” that are the cause of all problems on the island, as Fidel always insisted, but rather their own mistakes and mindsets. In turn, Raul has called on Cubans, especially the younger generation, to “debate fearlessly” and help devise solutions for the failures. Brutally candid discussions at the grass roots level have proliferated. Not long ago all this would have been considered counter-revolutionary blasphemy.

There have been no reports of the death penalty being invoked, even in the cases of young hoodlums guilty of killing a military officer. Despite continuing brutal repression of the country’s human rights and dissident groups, Raul has allowed some limited social decompression. Intellectuals, artists, and previously oppressed homosexuals have been given more space. Juventud Rebelde, the newspaper intended for Cuban youth has been innovatively reconfigured, publishing investigative stories that could never have been aired while Fidel was in charge. Even the previously sacrosanct public health system has come under critical scrutiny in its pages.

The Lives of Others, an Oscar winning film about the amorality of communist East Germany’s repressive secret services was shown recently in Havana. At least one independent and often irreverent internet site intended for Cuba’s disenchanted youth has been allowed to function. Without fanfare, police in Havana have stopped ticketing illegal taxis and more buses are on the streets.

In a major address last July dedicated primarily to massive failures in agriculture, Raul called for “structural and conceptual” change. Given his past sympathetic references to the laws of supply and demand, his advocacy of liberalizing economic reforms in the 1990s, and the many for-profit enterprises his military officers have been encouraged to run, he probably plans to introduce market incentives in the countryside. Private farmers are being paid more by the government for their produce and are receiving tracts of land so that food crops will be more available in markets. More dramatic innovations in agriculture are likely to be announced this year.

With his own powerful base of support in the military he has run since 1959, the security services he has controlled since 1989, and the communist party he manages, Raul has led from a position of undisputed strength. He has no intention of opening or liberalizing the political system or permitting a flowering of dissident activity. But as he approaches his seventy-seventh birthday in June, he gives every indication of wanting to leave a legacy of his own, one quite distinct from that of his brother.

I wish to acknowledge the valuable assistance provided by Vanessa Lopez, my University of Miami student research assistant, in the preparation of this report.

Dr. Brian Latell, distinguished Cuba analyst and recent author of the book, After Fidel: The Inside Story of Castro’s Regime and Cuba’s Next Leader, is a Senior Research Associate at ICCAS. He has informed American and foreign presidents, cabinet members, and legislators about Cuba and Fidel Castro in a number of capacities. He served in the early 1990s as National Intelligence Officer for Latin America at the Central Intelligence Agency and taught at Georgetown University for a quarter century. Dr. Latell has written, lectured, and consulted extensively.

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Cuba’s Eastern Army (Ejército Oriental) began its 2008 Defense Preparation in a military review and political ceremony held at the Mayor General Ignacio Agramonte y Loynaz Revolution Plaza (Plaza de la Revolución Mayor General Ignacio Agramonte y Loynaz) in Camagüey.

The ceremony was presided by Commander of the Revolution Guillermo García Frías, Army Corps General Álvaro López Miera (Vice-Minister of the General Staff, Revolutionary Armed Forces–FAR), Army Corps General Ramón Espinosa Martín (Chief, Eastern Army and member of the Politburo), presidents of the six provincial Defense Councils, other generals, chiefs and officials of the FAR and Ministry of Interior (MININT), and political leadership of mass organizations from Camagüey.

Source: Granma

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Miscellany…

  • Mexico’s center-right president to improve relations with Cuba and shun Cuba’s opposition.
  • US hegemony over the Western hemisphere, a thing of the past?
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Piecing together the Dark Legacy

Wired Magazine has published an article that addresses the painstakingly process of reconstructing torn surveillance files by hand of the Stasi (East Germany’s State Security Service), which had an influence over its tropical version–Cuba’s Ministry of Interior (MININT).

Will the MININT follow suit in tearing up files once the Castro regime is no longer in power?

A snippet of the article is as follows:

Because before it was disbanded, the Stasi shredded or ripped up about 5 percent of its files. That might not sound like much, but the agency had generated perhaps more paper than any other bureaucracy in history — possibly a billion pages of surveillance records, informant accounting, reports on espionage, analyses of foreign press, personnel records, and useless minutiae. There’s a record for every time anyone drove across the border.

[…]

In the chaos of the days leading up to the actual destruction of the wall and the fall of East Germany’s communist government, frantic Stasi agents sent trucks full of documents to the Papierwolfs and Reisswolfs — literally “paper-wolves” and “rip-wolves,” German for shredders. As pressure mounted, agents turned to office shredders, and when the motors burned out, they started tearing pages by hand — 45 million of them, ripped into approximately 600 million scraps of paper.

[…]

The machine-shredded stuff is confetti, largely unrecoverable. But in May 2007, a team of German computer scientists in Berlin announced that after four years of work, they had completed a system to digitally tape together the torn fragments. Engineers hope their software and scanners can do the job in less than five years — even taking into account the varying textures and durability of paper, the different sizes and shapes of the fragments, the assortment of printing (from handwriting to dot matrix) and the range of edges (from razor sharp to ragged and handmade.) “The numbers are tremendous. If you imagine putting together a jigsaw puzzle at home, you have maybe 1,000 pieces and a picture of what it should look like at the end,” project manager Jan Schneider says. “We have many millions of pieces and no idea what they should look like when we’re done.”

[Photo: Wired]

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Cuban intel expands

 

Cuba’s intelligence gathering capabilities has expanded well beyond its sphere of historical concentration: the US and Latin America.  According to a former counterintelligence officer at the Defense Intelligence Agency, Chris Simmons, Cuba has concentrated “to places where vital U.S. interests are at stake — like Iran, Turkey, India and Pakistan.” 

The Miami Herald further reports:

Simmons said a series of intelligence setbacks for Cuba between 1995 and 2003 — such as the dismantling of a network of spies in Miami, the closure of an intellingece center in Canada and the arrest of former DIA Cuba analyst Ana Montes in 2001 — forced Cuba to tighten its intelligence operations.  Today Cuba puts trusted top intelligence operatives in charge of key embassy postings and operates more with allies like Iran and Venezuela, Simmons said in a briefing organized by Miami Republican Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.  Cuba’s intelligence apparatus, considered one of the world’s most formidable, numbers more than 11,500 agents, he said, of whom about 3,500 are focused on international operations.  Cuba has resorted to employing more of what he called ”ambassador-spies” — top intelligence chiefs who have become diplomatic envoys.  Before, Cuba placed such persons in the United States and with a few of Cuba’s closest allies, like the Sandinista government in Nicaragua in the 1980s.

Mr. Simmons has created the Cuban Intelligence Research Center based in Leesburg VA.  Click here to visit the Center’s web site.

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Marc Frank of the Financial Times summarizes the current state of Cuba’s “electroral” politics and speculation on Fidel Castro’s future.

In an indication that it is not yet time to count Fidel Castro out of Cuban politics, the increasingly frail 81-year-old leader of the Cuban revolution will contest for a seat in the National Assembly in the parliamentary election this weekend.

The election - in which Cubans vote on candidates who have been selected by the ruling Communist party - kicks off a two-month process that will eventually lead to the selection of a president, vice-president and executive bodies for new five-year terms.

It is expected to clarify the future role of Mr Castro, who temporarily handed over his executive responsibilities to his younger brother Raúl after undergoing abdominal surgery 17 months ago.

Mr Castro, who has undergone at least three major operations and has only been seen in edited videos and pictures since July 2006, needs to win a seat if he is to continue playing a senior role in Cuba’s government. The assembly of 614 parliamentarians chooses a 31-member council of state, as well as a vice-president and president from among its own number.

Mr Castro recently contributed to speculation that he may be preparing to formally abandon posts. In a letter sent to a Cuban television programme at the end of last year, he said that “my primary duty is not to cling to any position, and even less to obstruct the rise of younger persons”.

But just days later, Raúl Castro appeared to suggest his older brother may still be able to play an important executive role. “Fidel has . . . full use of his mental faculties with some small physical limitations,” the country’s acting president said as he toured the electoral district in the eastern city of Santiago where Mr Castro is a candidate to become a deputy.

Raúl said his brother was consulted on major decisions and exercised two hours a day. “He has recovered quite a lot of weight and muscular mass . . . for this, all party delegates support him running again (for the national assembly),” he said.

Mr Castro’s convalescence and activities since he temporarily ceded power to Raúl have been shrouded in extraordinary secrecy.

“They are in guerrilla mode and anything is possible,” a western diplomat said. “Do not expect an answer to the retirement question until the last moment,” he added.

Even veteran Communist party members are uncertain what will happen. “I think Fidel will step down and continue to guide us from another position. We have gotten through these difficult moments remarkably well, why would we now go backward?” Yolanda Rodriguez, a former member of the national assembly, said.

Another veteran of the revolution’s early days, who does not want to be named, said Mr Castro would never be replaced as head of state as long as the United States demanded it.

Speculation as to who might replace Mr Castro centres on Raúl, 76, though there are some people who believe both Castros might step aside, with vice-president Carlos Lage, 56, who already functions much like a prime minister, the apparent favourite to assume the presidency or to become first vice-president behind Raúl.

Even if Mr Castro does step down as president, few believe he’ll go off and meditate in the mountains. “Will he really be announcing his retirement? Of course not,” says Domingo Amuchastegui, a former Cuban intelligence officer who defected in the 1990s and now lives in Florida.

He said: “Any serious approach to his personality confirms that he is a man ready to die with his boots on, until the limits of his physical and intellectual abilities.”

Other analysts suggest even a formal relinquishing of power will be a watershed in Cuba history.

“For the first time in 50 years, Cuba would have a new head of state,” said Julia Sweig, director of Latin America studies at the Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations.

She said: “It would signal in Cuba a new era might be dawning and be huge news in Washington. Until the real funeral it will be as close as we will come to an opportunity to move the policy debate forward.”

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O Estado De S.Paulo reports Brazil’s President Lula da Silva will offer Cuba $1 billion dollars in credits to finance the purchase of aliments, housing construction, and exploration of nickel as well as other projects, affirm Brazilian diplomats. 

[Photo: Reuters — Cuban interim-President Raul Castro and Brazilian President Lula da Silva review FAR Honor Guards.]

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News round up

Brazil plans to offer $500 million in financing to Cuba.  Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva will be in Havana today, reports Valor Economico.  Lula is expected to announce agreements allowing Petroleo Brasileiro SA to explore oil in areas in the Gulf of Mexico that are controlled by Cuba, where Petrobras will build a lubricant factory.

Commentary on a new No. 2 in Cuba.

Carlos Lage, who has gained importance as a political actor in Cuba’s hierachy, evaluates housing construction in Villa Clara.

Cuban Government further lowers housing construction goals.

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