Fidel Castro: The US Will Never Have Cuba
"The United States will never have Cuba."
That statement from Cuban leader Fidel Castro in his latest essay printed in Granma; the island's communist paper.
In the essay, titled "You will never have Cuba," Castro accuses President Bush of plotting since 2002 to send troops to Cuba and "install a direct imperial administration."
"Cuba will continue developing and perfecting the combative capacity of its people, including our modest but active and efficient arms industry, against any invader that it comes across, no matter what weapons they have," Castro wrote in the article, which was signed Sunday afternoon.
Cuba has repeatedly said its citizens are armed and prepared to beat back any U.S. attempt to take advantage of Castro's health problems and invade.
Castro has not been seen in public since last July, when he announced that illness forced him to temporarily cede power to a government headed by his brother Raul, the defense minister.
The 80-year-old's exact condition is a state secret, but life on the island has remained little changed since he fell ill. In recent weeks, Castro has signed a series of editorials. Monday's was one of just two that have focused on Cuba, noting that nearly a year had passed since July 31, 2006, when he was "between life and death."
Paraphrasing the statement in which he turned over power, Castro said, "I don't have any doubt that our people and our revolution will fight until the last drop of blood."
"You shouldn't doubt it either, Mr. Bush!" Castro added. "I can assure you, you will never have Cuba!"
Castro blamed Washington's 45-year-old trade embargo and travel ban against Cuba for widespread hunger and malnutrition over the years.
He also said that a U.S. policy of allowing most Cuban migrants who reach U.S. territory to stay was "another cause of death for Cuban citizens, including women and children" apparently because it encourages thousands to make dangerous attempts to reach Florida by boat.
Castro said that when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, it cost Cuba billions of dollars in annual subsidies and reduced the island's food supply. He writes that the U.S. embargo contributed to the island's hunger by cutting "proteins and calories" on the island by 40 percent, while also causing widespread medicine shortages.
Suffering through an era dubbed the "special period," Cuba took small steps to open the economy to some foreign investment and bolster tourism, which increased the influx of hard currency. The moves brought Cuba's economy back from the brink, but Castro wrote that foreign cash "caused much damage to social consciousness" by giving many Cubans a taste of capitalism and material wealth.
Castro's close ally, socialist Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, has recently bolstered Cuba's economy further by selling the island oil at favorable prices.
Source: CBS News
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