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Fidel Castro and the FARC: Eight Mistaken Thesis of Fidel Castro
by James Petras
I have been a supporter of the Cuban Revolution for exactly fifty years and recognize Fidel Castro as one of the great revolutionary leaders of our time. But I have never been an uncritical apologist: On several crucial occasions I have expressed my disagreements in print, in public and in discussions with Cuban leaders, writers and militants.
Fidel Castros articles and commentaries on the recent events in Colombia, namely his discussion of the Colombian regimes freeing of several FARC prisoners (including three CIA operatives and Ingrid Betancourt) and his critical comments on the politics, structure, practices, tactics and strategy of the FARC and its world-renowned leader, Manuel Marulanda, merit serious consideration.
Castros remarks demand analysis and refutation, not only because his opinions are widely read and influence millions of militants and admirers in the world, especially in Cuba and Latin America, but because he purports to provide a moral basis for opposition to imperialism today.
Equally important Castros unfortunate diatribe and critique
against the FARC, Marulanda and the entire peasant-based guerrilla
movement, has been welcomed, published and broadcast by the entire
pro-imperialist mass media on five continents. Fidel Castro, with few
caveats, has uncritically joined the chorus condemning the FARC and, as
I will demonstrate, without reason or logic.
Eight Erroneous Theses of Fidel Castro
1.
Castro claims that the liberation of the FARC political prisoners
opens a chapter for peace in Colombia, a process which Cuba has been
supporting for 20 years as the most appropriate for the unity and
liberation of the peoples of our America, utilizing new approaches in
the complex and special present day circumstances after the collapse of
the USSR
(Reflections of Fidel Castro, July 4, 2008).
What is
astonishing about this thesis (and the entire essay) is Castros total
omission of any discussion of the mass terror unleashed by Colombias
President Uribe against trade unionists, political critics, peasant
communities and documented by every human rights group in and out of
Colombia in both of his recent essays. In fact, Castro exculpates the
current Uribe regime, the most murderous regime, and puts the entire
blame on US Imperialism. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union,
and under the US-led military offensive, a multitude of armed
revolutionary movements have emerged in Lebanon, Palestine, Iraq,
Afghanistan, Nepal, and other pre-existing armed groups in Colombia and
the Philippines, have continued to engage in struggle. In Latin
America, the new approaches to revolution were anything but peaceful
massive popular uprisings overthrowing corrupt electoral politicians
in Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela
costing many hundreds of
lives.
The liberation of Betancourt has strengthened the iron
fist of the Uribe regime, increased the militarization of the
countryside, and covered up the on-going death squad murders of trade
unionists and peasants. Contrary to Fidel Castro, the US and
Colombias death squad president have used their success to buttress
their arguments in favor of joint US-Colombian military action.
Fidels celebration of the Colombian regimes action as an opening for
peace serves to deflect attention from the Colombian Supreme Court
decision claiming that the re-election of Uribe was illegal because of
the tyrants bribing Congress people to amend the constitutional
provision allowing the president a second term.
2. Fidel
Castro denigrates the recently deceased leader of the FARC, Manuel
Marulanda, as a peasant, communist militant, principle leader of the
guerrilla (Reflections). In his text of July 5, 2008 (Reflections
II), Castro condescendingly refers to Marulanda of notable natural
intelligence and leadership qualities, on the other hand never had
opportunities to study when he was an adolescent. It is said he only
finished the fifth grade. He conceived (of the revolution) as a long
and prolonged struggle, a point of view which I never shared. Castro
was the son of a plantation owner and educated in private Jesuit
colleges and trained as a lawyer. He implies that education
credentials and higher status prepares the revolutionary leadership to
lead the peasants lacking formal education, but with natural
leadership qualities apparently sufficient to allow them to follow the
intellectuals and professionals better suited to lead the revolution.
The
test of history however refutes Castros claims. Marulanda built, over
a period of 40 years, a bigger guerrilla army with a wider mass base
than any Castro-inspired guerrilla force from the 1960s to 2000.
Castro
promoted a theory of guerrilla focos between 1963-1980, in which
small groups of intellectuals would organize an armed nucleus in the
countryside, engage in combat and attract mass peasant support. Every
Castro-ite guerrilla foco was quickly defeated wiped out in Peru,
Venezuela, Brazil, Uruguay (urban focos), Bolivia and Argentina. In
contrast, Marulandas prolonged guerrilla war strategy relied on mass
grass roots organizing based on close peasant ties with guerrillas,
based on community, family and class solidarity, building slowly and
methodically a national political-military peoples army. In fact, a
serious re-examination of the Cuban revolution reveals that Castros
guerrillas were recruited from the mass of urban mass organizations,
methodically organized prior to and during the formation of the
guerrilla foco in 1956-1958.
Although reliable figures on the
FARC are available, Castro underestimated by half the number of FARC
guerrillas, relying on the propaganda of Uribes publicists.
3.
Castro condemns the cruelty of the FACR tactics of capturing and
holding prisoners in the jungle. With this logic, Castro should
condemn every revolutionary movement in the 20th century beginning with
the Russian, Chinese and Vietnamese revolutions. Revolutions are cruel
but Fidel forgets that counter-revolutions are even crueler. Uribe
established local spy networks involving local officials, as was done
in Vietnam during that war. And the Vietnamese revolutionaries
eliminated the collaborators because they were responsible for the
execution of tens of thousands of village militants. Castro fails to
comment on the fact that Ms. Betancourt, upon her celebrated
liberation embraced and thanked General Mario Montoya. According to
a declassified US embassy document, Montoya organized a clandestine
terrorist unit (American Anti-Communist Alliance), which murdered
thousands of Colombian dissidents, almost all of them ferociously
tortured beforehand. The cruelty of FACR captivity did not show up
in Betancourts medical exam: She was in good health!
4.
Fidel claims Cuba is for peace in Colombia but not US military
intervention. It is the Colombian oligarchy and Uribe regime, which
has invited and collaborated with the US military intervention in
Colombia. Castro implies that US military intervention is imposed from
the outside, rather than seeing it as part of the class struggle within
Colombia, in which Colombias rulers, landowners and narco-traffickers
play a major role in financing and training the death squads. In the
first 6 months of 2008, 24 trade union leaders have been murdered by
the Uribe regime, over 2,562 killed over the past twenty years since
what Castro describes as the new roads of complex and special
circumstances. Fidel totally ignores the continuities of death squad
murders of unarmed social movement activists, the lack of solidarity
from Cuba toward all the Colombian movements since Havana developed
diplomatic and commercial ties with the Uribe regime.
Is balancing between Cubas state interest in diplomatic and economic ties with Colombia and claiming revolutionary credentials part of the complexities of Cuban foreign policy?
5.
Castro calls for the immediate release of all FARC-held prisoners,
without the minimum consideration of the 500 guerrillas tortured and
dehumanized in Uribes and Bushs horrendous high security special
prisons. Castro boasts that Cuba released its prisoners captured
during the anti-Batista struggle and calls for the FARC to follow
Cubas example, rather than the Vietnamese and Chinese revolutionary
approach. Castros attempt to impose and universalize his tactics,
based on Cuban experience, on Colombia lacks the minimum effort to
understand, let alone analyze, the specificities of Colombia, its
military, the political context of the class struggle and the social
and political context of humanitarian negotiations in Colombia.
6.
Castro claims the FARC should end the guerrilla struggle but not give
up their arms because in the past guerrillas who disarmed were
slaughtered by the regime. Instead, he suggests they should accept
Frances offer to abandon their country or accept Chavez (Uribes
brother and friend) proposal to negotiate and secure a commission
made up Latin American notables to oversee their integration into
Colombian politics.
What are armed guerillas going to do when
thousands of Uribes soldiers and death squads ravage the countryside?
Flee to the mountains and shoot wild pigs? Going to France means
abandoning millions of starving vulnerable peasant supporters and the
class struggle.
7. Fidel Castro totally omits from his
discussion the manner in which every political leader involved in the
humanitarian mission used the celebration of Betancourts
liberation to cover up and distract from their serious political
difficulties. First and foremost, Uribes re-election was ruled
illegal by the Colombian Supreme Court because he was accused and
convicted of bribing members of Congress to vote for the constitutional
amendment allowing his running for a second term. Uribes presidency
is de facto illegal. Betancourts release and delirious embrace of
Uribe undermines the judicial verdict and eliminates the court
injunction for a new Congressional vote or national election.
Sarkozys popularity in France was in a vertical free fall, his highly
publicized intervention in the negotiations with the FARC were a total
failure, his militarist policies in the Middle East and virulent
anti-immigrant policies alienated substantial sectors of the French
public (as did rising prices and economic stagnation).
The
release of Betancourt and her effusive praise and embrace of Sarkozy
revived his tarnished image and gave him a temporary respite from the
burgeoning political and economic discontent with his domestic and
foreign policies.
Chavez used the release of Betancourt to
embrace his enemy, Uribe, and to put further distance from the FARC,
in particular, and the popular movements in Colombia, as well as to
build bridges with a post-Bush US President. Chavez also returned to
the good graces of the entire pro-imperialist mass media and favorable
comments from the right-wing US Presidential candidate, John McCain,
who hoped the FARC would follow Chavez demands to disarm.
Cuba,
or at least Fidel Castro, used the liberation of Betancourt to
display his long-term hostility to the FARC (dating at least from 1990)
for embarrassing his policy of reconciliation with the Colombian regime.
8. Striking a humanitarian and quasi-electoral posture in celebrating Betancourts release,
Castro lambasted the FARC for its cruelty and armed resistance to the
terrorist Uribe regime. Castro attacked the FARCsauthoritarian
structure and dogmatic leadership, ignoring FARCs endorsement of
electoral politics between 1984-90 (when over 5,000 disarmed activists
and political candidates were slaughtered), and the free and open
debate over policy alternative in the demilitarized zone (1999-2002)
with all sectors of Colombian society. In contrast, Castro never
permitted free and open debate and elections, even among communist
candidates in any legislative process at least until he was replaced
by Raul Castro.
The abovementioned political leaders were
serving their own personal political interests by bashing the FARC and
celebrating Betancourt at the expense of the people of Colombia.
Conclusion
Has Castro clearly thought through the disastrous consequences for
millions of impoverished Colombians or is he thinking only of Cubas
possible improvement of relations with Colombia once the FARC is
liquidated? The effect of Castros anti-FARC articles has been to
provide ammunition for the imperial mass media to discredit the FARC
and armed resistance to tyranny and to bolster the image of death squad
President Uribe. When the worlds premier revolutionary leader denies
the revolutionary history and practice of an ongoing popular movement
and its brilliant leader who built that movement, he is denying the
movements of the future a rich heritage of successful resistance and
construction. History will not absolve him.
James Petras, a
former Professor of Sociology at Binghamton University, New York, owns
a 50-year membership in the class struggle, is an adviser to the
landless and jobless in Brazil and Argentina, and is co-author of
Globalization Unmasked (Zed Books). His latest book is "The Power of
Israel in the United States" (Clarity Press, 2006). He can be reached
at: jpetras@binghamton.edu.
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