II
In 2003, Castro, eager to liquidate the opposition
movement that was growing in size, launched repression against the opposition
and independent journalism, imprisoning 75 opponents and independent
journalists. The caviar left and the banana left were silent.
From this raid, a group of women, wives and daughters of
those convicted during the Black Spring process, began to gather for the demand
for the release of political prisoners. Always dressed in white and carrying
flowers in their parades, they became known as the Ladies in White, a remnant
of the organization of Mothers and Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, during
the military dictatorship in Argentina.
After that year of 2003, and as a result of the
repression ordered by the head of the government and the official party, Fidel
Castro, enthusiasm began to decline among the opposition. With the arrival of
Raúl Castro to the government of Cuba, replacing Fidel Castro due to illness,
some timid reforms were made, among them, allowing Cuban citizens to buy a
mobile phone line; the free access of Cubans to hotels; the sale of houses and
vehicles among Cubans and; above all,
the concession to travel freely abroad, with the elimination of the
so-called "carte blanche" granted by the State to be able to travel
abroad.
This moment was taken advantage of by the ultra-right
organizations of exile, to, through a policy of clientelism, encourage certain
and chosen leaders of opposition groups to travel to the United States and
other countries and, in this way, affirm their control over internal
dissent.
The opposition, which declared itself "peaceful
opposition", began to transform itself into a "passive
opposition", without a determined will to launch the political challenge
to the regime and to promote an intelligent work of proselytism within the
popular masses, and only return to the outside and to the claim, in
international forums, to receive support for its projects and platforms, totally unknown in Cuba. The internal
opposition languished, all hopes were placed in the actions that the US
government, especially the Republican administrations, could exercise against
the regime imposed in Cuba.
Barack Obama tried unsuccessfully to nail a pike in Flanders,
however, the tiny sector of the internal opposition, closely linked to the
Republicans of the United States by their close dependence on exile
organizations, attacked the Obamist attempt.
With the arrival of Donald Trump, opposition groups were more linked,
with honorable exceptions, to pro-Trump Cuban exile organizations. A bid for
the digital space of the internet began; with calls and proposals, from that
digital space, to motivate an imaginary rebellion inside the island that never
became a reality.
Nothing was achieved. The work of political proselytism
was set aside, without concrete options in favor of a strategic activism of
nonviolent struggle to unleash a civil war without recourse to arms, but
adjusted to the nonviolent means, of reason and justice.
However, it is necessary to characterize the type of
totalitarian regime existing in Cuba that, in recent times, has become one of a
hybrid nature: the fascio-Stalinist
system, confirmed in 2003 and reaffirmed in 2021 with the repression and prison
sentence of hundreds of the participants in the demonstrations of July 11, and the promoters of the civic march of
November 15.
Since 1959, transformations have taken place within the
structures of power over several stages. First: 1959 – 1961, the failed attempt
to form a Corporate State ─ under the guise of a liberal democratic government
─, inspired by the fascist doctrine of José Antonio Primo Rivera and Benito
Mussolini, characterized by a growth of populism and the nationalist exaltation
of a late fascist system of left tendency. Second: 1961 – 1962, alliance with
the USSR and the declaration of the "socialist" character of the
regime. Third: 1962 – 1968, cooling of political relations with the USSR,
following the events of the Missile Crisis. Fourth: Total submission to Soviet
imperialism since the recognition of the "Brezhnev doctrine" in 1968;
its consolidation in 1974 after the visit to Cuba of Leonid Brezhnev; its
development from the first congress of the Communist Party of Cuba (1975) and
the promulgation of the Political Constitution of the State, elaborated by the
Soviet Constitution (1976), to conclude in 1990. Fifth. Reordering of the
totalitarian regime, and its return to the basic principles of late fascism.
Validity of the Penal Code with a marked fascist accent, since 1989. Purge
within the Ministry of the Interior in 1989, after the trial of General Arnaldo
Ochoa and Tony de la Guardia. Creation of instruments of repression in the style
of the German SA, such as the so-called Rapid Response Brigades in 1991.
Massacre of the tugboat Trece de Marzo (1994). Repression against the attempted
coalition of the internal opposition, Cuban Council and the downing of two
unarmed planes of Brothers to the Rescue over international waters (1996).
Enactment of Law 88 on the Protection of the National Independence and Economy
of Cuba in 1999.
The current political situation in Cuba raises the need
for a reconditioning of the dissident/opposition sectors of the country. It
requires that the opposition decide to launch a political challenge, as a
process of "conflict resolution", and, above all, of an acute
conflict between the principles of democracy and the hegemonic power of the
party and the totalitarian state; a conflict that, at present, cannot be
resolved by way of compromise or reformism, but through civil and political confrontation.
It is from 1973 that the sociological theories of
nonviolent struggle begin to take shape, with the publication of Gene Sharp's
book. The Politics of Nonviolent Action and, subsequently, in 1993
with the publication of the book by the same author. From Dictatorship to Democracy. A
conceptual Framework for Liberation. Two important texts for the
elaboration of a resistance movement of strategic nonviolent struggle, which
did not become known by the main drivers of the peaceful civic struggle of the
Cuban dissidence.
Some of us in exile began to worry about the little
activity in Cuba that was being promoted by opposition groups controlled by
radical right-wing exile organizations. Something had to be done, to cut off
the pernicious influence of the "patriotic
grants". We received inspiration from the works of Gene Sharp, and
Srdja Popovic's contributions on
nonviolent resistance. It was necessary to arm the opposition groups with that
theory, without pretending to set a pattern for them. From here came the idea
of this work, which we had already exposed to several friends, some of whom
recommended that it would be a good idea to publish this that, provisionally,
we had called "Commenting on the resistance in Cuba", and reproduced
on Facebook, a set of comments that was weaving in steps, partly about our
experiences in the dissident movement and what we were learning from Gene Sharp
in his From the Dictatorship to the
Democracy, but without much deepening,
The first attempt was the publication, with some editing
errors, of a 79-page booklet. in size of 7 x 10 inches, in Amazon's Kindle
editions. Some who had read the booklet in its electronic edition were
interested in its contents. I considered then that I should publish a new
expanded edition, with new chapters and already more focused on the theories of
Geme Sharp. In that edition I made a thorough revision of the original text, to
include new experiences and to specify more clearly some of the concepts that
had been treated superficially. In this new volume I try to highlight a basic
element, that the actions of strategic nonviolent struggle represent an
antagonism of the democratic opposition against the totalitarian regime, which
cannot be left to the enthusiasm of a moment, nor to improvisations.
However, on July 11, 2021, shortly after having published
the second edition of Cuba-Nonviolent Resistance, in Cuba, a country that seems
to be frozen in the ice of the Cold War, where nothing flows and nothing
changes, a phenomenon occurred that, due to its scope and magnitude, was
unusual. Hundreds and hundreds of Cubans took to the streets in numerous cities
and provinces to express their discontent with the government headed by the
Communist Party, in massive and simultaneous demonstrations of popular
protests, The world was amazed by those demonstrations that meant the cessation
of widespread fear, before the power of a regime centered and closed in on
itself, structured within the narrow
frameworks of a one-party and totalitarian system.
These events presented me with new considerations with
the contribution of the experiences drawn from the events of July 11 and the
subsequent ones of November 15, the failed attempt to promote a civic march in
favor of changes. I considered that I
should expand more in the theory of pragmatic nonviolent struggle, with new
considerations and adapting them to the characteristics of Cuba,
I recognize that some of the themes exposed in this book
can be considered controversial, such as block VI referring to the role of
exile in nonviolent resistance; block VII on "Plattism"; and block
XVIII on the experiences of 11 J; and, not necessarily accepted by some
opponents; but I consider that controversy and debate are the basic foundations
of democracy.
I have organized the whole exposition of the themes, not
in chapters, but in a structure of blocks, because each theme, in them, are
like the exposition of a summarized thesis work.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario