Sunday, August 15, 2010

We are playing Fidel Castro's game

Posted on Saturday, 08.14.10
THE OPPENHEIMER REPORT
We are playing Fidel Castro's game
BY ANDRES OPPENHEIMER
aoppenheimer@MiamiHerald.com

Here's the question being asked by almost anybody who is following the
latest news from Cuba -- what on earth is Fidel Castro up to?

Since he made his first public appearance in four years last month,
Cuba's officially retired dictator -- who turned 84 Friday -- hasn't
stopped showing up in public, and grabbing the headlines.

Proclaiming himself ``totally'' recovered from the intestinal ailment
that forced him to turn over the presidency to his brother Gen. Raúl
Castro in 2006, Fidel Castro has made more than a dozen public
appearances since he was photographed visiting the National Center of
Scientific Investigations on July 7.

WHAT'S GOING ON?

Is he trying to undermine his brother Raúl, or is he trying to help him?
There are at least five major theories about what's motivating Fidel's
sudden return to the limelight:

• Theory No. 1: He is stepping back to send a strong message to Cubans,
including his Raúl, not to deviate from hard-line Communism, at a time
when Cuba's economic woes are driving many on the island to think about
market-oriented economic reforms.

``Castro is trying to reassert two of the main pillars of the Cuban
revolution: anti-Americanism and internationalism,'' writes Jaime
Suchlicki, head of the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and
Cuban-American Studies, in a report entitled, ``What is Fidel Castro up
to?''

• Theory No. 2: Fidel is trying to support Raúl, and to send a strong
message to the hard-line wing of Cuba's Communist Party that he stands
by his brother's limited economic reforms.

``By becoming very visible, Fidel Castro may be telling the Communist
Party's orthodox wing: `Look, I'm lucid, I'm in charge, I know what's
going on in the world, I support Raúl, and I don't want anybody to do
anything against him,'' Cuban dissident Guillermo Fariñas, who is
recovering at home after a 135-day hunger strike, told me in a telephone
interview from Santa Clara, Cuba.

• Theory No. 3: Castro is trying to grab international headlines to
eclipse the news about the death of Cuban political prisoner Orlando
Zapata Tamayo earlier this year, and that the dissidents' protests that
followed. Until his reappearance, the international news on Cuba was
focused on Zapata Tamayo's death and the dissident movement. Today, it's
focused on Fidel Castro.

• Theory No. 4: Castro is trying to grab headlines to divert world
attention from Cuba's recent agreement with the Roman Catholic Church to
free 52 political prisoners, and the subsequent release -- rather,
forced deportation -- of 21 of them.

In addition to undermining the dissidents' recent propaganda victories,
Castro may be trying to keep Cubans on the island from thinking that the
prisoners' release was a sign of weakness by the government. That, in
the mind of the Castro brothers, would entice peaceful oppositionists to
step up their anti-government marches.

``As a good politician that he is, he wants to make sure than when
people abroad talk about Cuba, they talk about him, and not about the
political prisoners,'' Fariñas told me.

PLAIN OLD EGO

• Theory No. 5: It's an ego thing. Castro -- the utmost
narcissist-Leninist -- could not stand the role of invisible foreign
affairs editorialist to which he has been confined for the past four
years. Now that he feels that his health has improved, he can't help but
to return to center stage.

My opinion: There may be some truth in all five theories, but I think
the answer to Castro's reappearance lies mostly in a combination of the
latter three.

It's no coincidence that Castro's first public showing at the National
Center for Scientific Investigations took place July 7, the same day
that Cuba's Church announced that the regime had agreed to free 52
political prisoners. And it's no coincidence that Castro's first
extended appearance on Cuban television took place on July 12, only
hours before the first group of political prisoners arrived in Spain and
started telling the world about the horrors of Cuban prisons.

Castro is trying to get the media to focus on him, rather than on what
his victims are saying about his hereditary military dictatorship. And
we are all falling into his trap by focusing our eyes on him.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/08/14/1776652/we-are-playing-fidel-castros-game.html

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