On 26 November Fidel Castro, one of the oldest dictators in Latin
America, died.
The announcement of his death was made by his brother
Raul Castro on state television. His death was celebrated by the
opponents of the government of Cuba in Miami in Florida, and it was also
taken as sad news by many of the Latin America Leftists and supporters
of the Cuban regime.
In 1959 Fidel Castro, Raul Castro, and Che Guevara were part of an
armed rebellion which provoked the overthrow of the dictatorship of
Fulgencio Batista, a government backed by the US for several years.
Then, part of the ruling elite of Cuba shifted toward the support of the
guerrillas who were fighting in the Sierra Maestra against the Cuban
military forces.
After their victory, Fidel Castro and the Communist Party of Cuba
initiated the nationalization of all the US holdings and assets, and all
private land was taken over by the state. The US declared an embargo on
the island.
Castro declared himself a ‘Marxist-Leninist’ and entered a
relationship with the Soviet Union, and established a form of state
capitalism like the one established by the Bolsheviks, and called it
socialism. In a country where agriculture prevailed over industrial
production, sugar was the main production that existed in the whole
country, and most of the workers were peasants and did not have any
socialist consciousness. The level of illiteracy was high in the rural
areas of the country. The economic backwardness was as in most of the
countries of Latin America
After the defeat of the invasion of the Bay of Pigs which was
financed by the US and backed by the CIA, and, at the peak of the Cold
War period after the 1962 missile crisis during the government of John F
Kennedy in the USA, and Nikita Khrushchev in the Soviet Union, an
accord of no intervention was signed between the US and the Soviet
Union.
Several social and economic reform programmes were implemented such
as state-run medical services, public transportation, and public
education. A large programme of education was initiated throughout the
country,
A long period of stagnation, poverty, and scarcity began. While the
government blamed this on the embargo imposed by the US, they never
recognized that so-called socialism in one country was an impossibility
and that despite collaboration with the Soviet Union, which also
proclaimed itself a socialist country, the economic laws of capitalism
prevailed in the country. Most of the followers of Cuban ‘socialism’ in
Latin America blamed Cuba’s problems simply on the US embargo, and never
recognized the class character of the ruling elite, and the economical
exploitation of the Cuban workers.
For many years, the Latin American left proclaimed Fidel Castro as
the leader and commander in chief of the Cuban revolution, and a bastion
of socialism in that region where many guerrilla groups were financed
by Cuba on behalf of the Soviet Union during the period of the Cold War.
Most of those groups were defeated by the military forces of several
Latin American countries.
The whole region of Latin America is a clear indication that
socialism cannot be established by a small group of armed individuals.
The great majority of the class-conscious-less workers never gave
support to any of these groups, including the guerrillas of Manolo
Tavarez Justo, and the invasion of Francisco Caamano in the Dominican
Republic, who at the end did not obtain the support of Fidel Castro and
the Cuban Government. In the same manner Che Guevara did not receive any
support from the Communist Party of Bolivia
Che Guevara was assassinated in Bolivia trying to obtain the support
of the peasants to carry out the same revolt that took place in Cuba in
1959, and the guerrillas that accompanied him were killed or imprisoned.
Within the Cuban leadership he was the only one who verbally advocated a
moneyless society but after the Fidelista guerrillas took power he
became the Minister of Commerce, and he was in charge of the Central
Bank of Cuba, which contradicted his aspiration for a socialist society
without money.
Despite their socialist and Marxist rhetoric and phraseology none of
the leaders of the Cuban revolution including Fidel Castro ever had a
real conception of what a socialist society should be. Most of the
speeches and writings of Fidel Castro show that he was an apologist of
Latin American Nationalism and later representative of the struggle of
the Latin American capitalist class to liberate themselves from the
influence of the US capitalist, like Domingo Peron in Argentina, and
Ernesto Cardenas in Mexico, and Hugo Chavez in Venezuela
The case of Cuba is a living example of what the Socialist Party and
the companion parties of the World Socialist Movement have indicated for
many years, which is that socialism cannot be established in one single
country, and that it must be established in a world scale by the vast
socialistically conscious majority of the workers, and that socialism
cannot be established in an economical backward society to be a free
access society. That is the reason why the Cuban regime had to initiate a
rationing programme with the excuse to create equality among the
workers, while the ruling elite enjoyed all kinds of privileges and
benefits.
This article is taken from the Socialist Standard Issue No. 1349 January 2017
MARCOS
Commentary and analysis to persuade people to become socialist and to act for themselves, organizing democratically and without leaders, to bring about a world of common ownership and free access. We are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for socialism. We are not reformists with a programme of policies to patch up capitalism.
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Wednesday, January 11, 2017
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