The entire Castro period, that between the first of
January 1959 and July 31, 2006, was represented in the figure of the commander
in chief, the maximum leader of the "revolution", of Fidel Castro, a
charismatic orator and expert political agitator, who knew how to capture the
almost religious enthusiasm of the crowds. Energetic, virile, he was the
champion of all campaigns. His government was made in his image, in his
likeness it was made. Fidel Castro was the revolution; it was the party, it was
the very embodiment of the homeland, and even "Martian offspring",
because what Martí promised, "Fidel fulfilled it for you". His power
resided, not only in his rebel army, but in the power of the masses.
The masses fervently acclaimed him to the cry of Fidel,
Fidel! that resounded like the Nazi salute of Sieg Heil or the
spontaneous cry of "Fidel, tell us what else we have to do!"; but
time is relentless, and myths, for being what they are, lie fade with the
passing of the years. Aged and sick, he ceased to be the manly image of the
revolution, and the enthusiasm cooled... Then came the brother, Raul
Castro, without the characters that adorned the older brother. He could
mobilize crowds, but only under peremptory compromises, but he did not drag
masses... Castroism is dead, now there is only what Fidel left in his path
through life, an intolerant regime, unable to achieve progress, stuck in the
past, retrograde and repressive, a totalitarian state.
The new figures do not have the magic of the precursor.
They lack the fascinating charm of the charismatic gift. There is no longer
emotion among the masses, only reluctance, tiredness and apathy. The regime
that controls the Communist Party today is just the fossil of what it once was.
It only takes one bolt for his skeleton to disarm; and that push can only be
made possible when the internal opposition generates a nonviolent resistance
movement capable of shaking what may remain of Castroism.
In order to develop a resistance movement using the
methods of nonviolent struggle, it is necessary to form, previously, an
organized operational body adjusted to the principles of the decentralization
of tasks and horizontal leadership. This topic I deal with in Block IX in an
attempt to lay out a theory about the organization of the nonviolent resistance
movement.
The strategic nonviolent struggle requires organization,
systematic work of proselytism, commitment, conviction; a deep analysis is
required on which are the weak points of the opponent, which are those of the
resistance movement; to, on the basis of these conditions, elaborate a draft
strategy of flexible and readjustable action at each stage of the
confrontation, an issue that I deal with in blocks XI and XII; it is required
that there be a horizontal leadership, based on the creation of special
structures or sections with broad autonomy of decision, so that the repressive
organs of the dictatorship cannot have a clear idea of who are the drivers of
nonviolent resistance,
An important issue within all the paraphernalia of
nonviolent civil resistance is the role that the Cuban exile should assume in
terms of supporting internal resistance. I develop this theme in block VI; in
this highlighting as a priority requirement, the disengagement, of the exile
and its organizations, from the internal politics of the United States. To
break definitively with all kinds of Platista manifestation, that is, to
believe that all the great solutions for Cuba must necessarily come from the
hand of a US government, Republican or Democrat. The exile, the entire Cuban
diaspora of emigrants and political exiles, must reach a political and
democratic culture so as not to allow itself to be manipulated by opportunist
leaders.
A detail that must be taken into consideration: the
methods for the realization of the nonviolent struggle are not precisely
recipes that can or should be taken, without considerations about the
particularities of each country. You cannot fall into the mechanics of manuals;
one must be objective and conditioned to factual reality; or as some authors
have proposed, rationality, originality and creativity.
It should be noted that gene Sharp's scientific
contributions on the nonviolent struggle are based on the experiences of civic
struggles without the use of violence carried out since the last twentieth
century, in both democratic societies (United States, struggle for Civil
Rights), as well as authoritarian, autocratic regimes (Serbia, the opposition movement
promoted by Otpor) and military dictatorships,
where there is a civil society with a certain degree of political
action, opposition parties and news media, although they are often subjected to
official censorship. In Cuba, a totalitarian dictatorship rules. There is
little experience of nonviolent civil resistance struggle in regimes of
totalitarian dictatorships. The fall of the camp of real socialism was due more
to specific political conditions, such as the thawing of criticism of
Stalinism, after the Twentieth Congress of CPSU, and the emergence of the
policy of perestroika and glasnost in the now defunct Soviet Union.
In the Cuban case, the opposition movement must face a
closed and intransigent totalitarian regime, which, with the imposition of a
single ideology, destroys the limits that, as Hannah Arendt believes, separate
the space of the private from that of the public, and before any hint of
dissent immediately resorts to repressive practices. For this reason, I have
adapted, as far as possible, the considerations and proposals of Gene Sharp to
the characteristics of the bureaucratic-militarist regime that, under the
dictates of the only recognized political party, the Communist Party of Cuba
(PCC) prevails in Cuba.
Civil resistance based on the principles of strategic
nonviolent struggle can bring about the downfall of both a government and a
political system; provided that the appropriate methodology of this form of
struggle is put into practice. First, organization, leaving nothing to spontaneity.
The apparent spontaneity that, at any given moment, may occur within a protest
demonstration, with positive results, is due to a meticulous prior preparation.
More than enthusiasm, it requires careful calculation, training, discipline and
clarity of objectives to achieve. The mobilizations of protests initiated in
Nicaragua, on April 18 and 19, 2018, in rejection of the Ortega-Murillo
dictatorship, leaving a trail of 481 dead, 3,962 injured and 1,215 arbitrary
detentions, constitute a clear experience of the non-observance of the
guidelines listed above of careful calculation, training, discipline and
clarity of objectives to be achieved.
Cuba is subject to the power of a totalitarian state,
based on the hegemony of a single legal political party, and on the prohibition
and criminalization of any dissenting opinion or that might seem so. When
launching a movement of nonviolent struggle aimed at the rescue of democracy,
it is necessary to consider the reality of totalitarianism and thus be able to
adapt the methods proposed for the impulse of a nonviolent struggle movement,
without falling into manualism. It is required to apply all the scientifically
proven methodology of nonviolence to these conditions.
The enemy that must be defeated is not an incompetent and
dictatorial government, but the system, the political regime imposed by the
Communist Party of Cuba (PCC).
When considering the sources of power of a Totalitarian
State, along with the six defined by Gener Sharp, Authority, Human
Resources, Intangible Factors, Skills
and Knowledge, Material Resources, and Sanctions,
the source of power that determines the fundamental characteristic of the
monolithic power of totalitarianism, the Political Hegemony, should be
included. ; that is, the predominance of a political party placed above the
State and Society, such as the Italian Fascist Party, the National Socialist
Party of Germany and, in Cuba, the Communist Party (PCC) In block XIII I make a
brief analysis by which I try to define this concept.
This monograph is not intended to set standards in
opposition work in Cuba; its purpose is to provide criteria that, in some way,
could serve as a basis for organizing a true nonviolent resistance movement in
Cuba.
The Author
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