The
Empire And The Independent Island
By Fidel Castro
08/20/07 "CNA"-
- -The history of Cuba during the last 140 years
is one of struggle to preserve national identity and
independence, and the history of the evolution of
the American empire, its constant craving to
appropriate Cuba and of the horrendous methods that
it uses today to hold on to world domination.
Prominent
Cuban historians have dealt in depth with these
subjects in different periods and in various
excellent books which deserve to be readily
available to our compatriots. These reflections are
addressed especially to the new generations with the
aim of helping them learn about very important and
decisive events in the destiny of our homeland.
Part
I: The Imposition of the Platt Amendment as an
appendix to the Neocolonial Cuban Constitution of
1901.
The “ripe
fruit doctrine” was formulated in 1823 by Secretary
of State and later President John Quincy Adams. The
United States would inevitably achieve taking over
our country, by the law of political influence, once
colonial subordination to Spain had ended.
Under the
pretext of blowing up the “Maine” –a still unraveled
event of which it took advantage to wage war against
Spain, like the Gulf of Tonkin incident, an event
which was demonstrably prefabricated in order to
attack North Vietnam –President William McKinley
signed the Joint Resolution of April 20, 1898,
stating “…that the people on the island of Cuba are
and by right ought to be free and independent”, “…
that the United States herewith declare that they
have no desire or intention to exercise sovereignty,
jurisdiction or control over said island, except for
pacification thereof, and they affirm their
determination, after this has been accomplished, to
leave the government and control of the island to
its people.” The Joint Resolution entitled the
President to use force to remove the Spanish
government from Cuba.
Colonel
Leonard Wood, chief commander of the Rough Riders,
and Theodore Roosevelt, second in command of the
expansionist volunteers who landed in our country on
the beaches close to Santiago de Cuba, after the
brave but poorly utilized Spanish squadron and their
Marine infantry on board had been destroyed by the
American battleships, requested the support of Cuban
insurrectionists who had weakened and defeated the
Spanish Colonial Army after enormous sacrifices. The
Rough Riders had landed without horses.
Following
the defeat of Spain, representatives of the Queen
Regent of Spain and of the President of the United
States signed the Treaty of Paris on December 10,
1898 and, without consulting of the Cuban people,
agreed that Spain should relinquish all claim of
sovereignty over and title to the island and would
evacuate it. Cuba would then be occupied by the
United States on a temporary basis.
Already
appointed U.S. military governor, Army Major General
Leonard Wood, issued Military Order 301 of July 25,
1900, which called for a general election to choose
delegates to a Constitutional Assembly that would be
held in the city of Havana at twelve noon on the
first Monday of November in 1900, with the purpose
of drafting and adopting a Constitution for the
people of Cuba.
On
September 15, 1900, elections took place and 31
delegates from the National, Republican and
Democratic Union parties were elected. On November
5, 1900, the Constitutional Convention held its
opening session at the Irijoa Theatre of Havana
which on that occasion received the name of Martí
Theatre.
General
Wood, representing the President of the United
States, declared the Assembly officially installed.
Wood advanced the intention of the United States
government: “After you have drawn up the relations
which, in your opinion, ought to exist between Cuba
and the United States, the government of the United
States will undoubtedly adopt the measures conducive
to a final and authorized treaty between the peoples
of both nations, aimed at promoting the growth of
their common interests.” The 1901 Constitution
provided in its Article 2 that “the territory of the
Republic is composed of the Island of Cuba, as well
as the islands and neighboring keys which together
were under Spanish sovereignty until the
ratification of the Treaty of Paris on December 10,
1898”.
Once the
Constitution was drafted, the time had come to
define political relations between Cuba and the
United States. To that end, on February 12, 1901, a
committee of five members was appointed and charged
with studying and proposing a procedure that would
lead to the stated goal.
On
February 15, Governor Wood invited the members of
the committee to go fishing and hosted a banquet in
Batabanó, the main access route to the Isle of
Pines, as it was known then, also occupied at that
time by the U.S. troops which had intervened in the
Cuban War of Independence. It was there in Batabanó
that he revealed to them a letter from the Secretary
of War, Elihu Root, containing the basic aspects of
the future Platt Amendment. According to
instructions from Washington, relations between Cuba
and the United States were to abide by several
aspects. The fifth of these was that, in order to
make it easier for the United States to fulfill such
tasks as were placed under its responsibility by the
above mentioned provisions, and for its own defense,
the United States could acquire title, and preserve
it, for lands to be used for naval bases and
maintain these in certain specific points.
Upon
learning of the conditions demanded by the U.S.
government, the Cuban Constitutional Assembly, on
February 27, 1901, passed a position that was
opposed to that of the U.S. Executive, eliminating
therein the establishment of naval bases.
The U.S.
government made an agreement with Orville H. Platt,
Republican Senator from Connecticut, to present an
amendment to the proposed Army Appropriations Bill
which would make the establishment of American naval
bases on Cuban soil a fait accompli.
In the
Amendment, passed by the U.S. Senate on February 27,
1901 and by the House of Representatives on March 1,
and sanctioned by President McKinley the following
day, as a rider attached to the “Bill granting
credit to the Army for the fiscal year ending on
June 30, 1902,” the article mentioning the naval
bases was drafted as follows:
“Art.
VII.- That to enable the United States to maintain
the independence of Cuba, and to protect the people
thereof, as well as for its own defense, the
government of Cuba will sell or lease to the United
States lands necessary for coaling or naval stations
at certain specified points to be agreed upon with
the President of the United States.”
Article
VIII adds: “…the government of Cuba will embody the
foregoing provisions in a permanent treaty with the
United States.”
The
speedy passage of the Amendment by the U.S. Congress
was due to the circumstance of it coming close to
the conclusion of the legislative term and to the
fact that President McKinley had a clear majority in
both Houses so that the Amendment could be passed
without any problem. It became a United States Law
when, on March 4, McKinley was sworn in for his
second presidential term in office.
Some
members of the Constitutional Convention maintained
the view that they were not empowered to adopt the
Amendment requested by the United States since this
implied limitations on the independence and
sovereignty of the Republic of Cuba. Thus, the
military governor Leonard Wood hastened to issue a
new Military Order on March 12, 1901 where it was
declared that the Convention was empowered to adopt
the measures whose constitutionality was in
question.
Other
Convention members, such as Manuel Sanguily, held
the opinion that the Assembly should be dissolved
rather than adopt measures that so drastically
offended the dignity and sovereignty of the people
of Cuba. But during the session of March 7, 1901, a
committee was appointed yet again in order to draft
an answer to Governor Wood; the presentation of this
was entrusted to Juan Gualberto Gómez who
recommended, among other things, rejecting the
clause concerning the leasing of coaling or naval
stations.
Juan
Gualberto Gómez maintained the most severe criticism
of the Platt Amendment. On April 1, he tabled a
debate of the presentation where he challenged the
document on the grounds that it contravened the
principles of the Treaty of Paris and of the Joint
Resolution. But the Convention suspended the debate
on Juan Gualberto Gómez’s presentation and decided
to send another committee "to ascertain the motives
and intentions of the government of the United
States about any and all details referring to the
establishment of a definitive order to relations,
both political and economic, between Cuba and the
United States, and to negotiate with the government
itself, the bases for agreement on those extremes
that would be proposed to the Convention for a final
solution.”
Subsequently, a committee was elected that would
travel to Washington, made up of Domingo Méndez
Capote, Diego Tamayo, Pedro González Llorente,
Rafael Portuondo Tamayo and Pedro Betancourt; they
arrived in the United States on April 24, 1901. The
next day, they met with Root and Wood who had
earlier traveled back to his country for this
purpose.
The
American government hastened to publicly declare
that the committee would be visiting Washington on
their own initiative, with no invitation or official
status.
Root,
Secretary of War, met with the committee on April 25
and 26, 1901 and categorically informed them that
“the United States’ right to impose the much debated
clauses had been proclaimed for three-quarters of a
century in the face of the American and European
world and they were not willing to give it up to the
point of putting their own safety in jeopardy.”
United
States officials reiterated that none of the Platt
Amendment clauses undermined the sovereignty and
independence of Cuba; on the contrary, they would
preserve them, and it was clarified that
intervention would only occur in the case of severe
disturbances, and only with the objective of
maintaining order and internal peace.
The
committee presented its report in a secret session
on May 7, 1901. Within the committee there were
severe discrepancies about the Platt Amendment.
On May
28, a paper drafted by Villuendas, Tamayo and
Quesada was tabled for debate; it accepted the
Amendment with some clarifications and recommended
the signing of a treaty on trade reciprocity.
This
paper was approved by a vote of 15 to 14, but the
United States government didn’t accept that
solution. It informed through Governor Wood that it
would only accept the Amendment without qualifiers,
and warned the Convention with an ultimatum that,
since the Platt Amendment was “a statute passed by
the Legislature of the United States, the President
is obliged to carry it out as it is. He cannot
change or alter it, add or take anything out. The
executive action demanded by the statute is the
withdrawal of the American Army from Cuba, and the
statute authorizes this action when, and only when,
a Constitutional government has been established
which contains, either in its body or in appendices,
certain categorical provisions, specified in the
statute (...) Then if these provisions are found in
the Constitution, the President will be authorized
to withdraw the Army; if he does not find them
there, then he will not be authorized to withdraw
the Army…” The United States Secretary of War sent a
letter to the Cuban Constitutional Assembly where he
stated that the Platt Amendment should be passed in
its entirety with no clarifications, because in that
way it would appear as a rider to the Army
Appropriations Bill; he indicated that, otherwise,
his country's military forces would not be pulled
out of Cuba.
On June
12, 1901, during another secret session of the
Constitutional Assembly, the incorporation of the
Platt Amendment as an appendix to the Constitution
of the Republic passed on February 21 was put to the
vote: 16 delegates voted aye and 11 voted nay.
Bravo Correoso, Robau, Gener and Rius Rivera were
absent from the session, abstaining from voting in
favor of such a monstrosity.
The worst
thing about the Amendment was the hypocrisy, the
deceit, the Machiavellianism and the cynicism with
which they concocted the plan to take over Cuba, to
the lengths of publicly proclaiming the same
arguments made by John Quincy Adams in 1823, about
the apple which would fall because of gravity. This
apple finally did fall, but it was rotten, just as
many Cuban intellectuals had foreseen for almost
half a century, from José Martí in the 1880’s right
up to Julio Antonio Mella, assassinated in January
of 1929.
Nobody
better than Leonard Wood himself to describe what
the Platt Amendment would mean for Cuba in two
sections of a confidential letter to his fellow in
the adventure, Theodore Roosevelt, dated on October
28, 1901:
“There
is, of course, little or no independence left Cuba
under the Platt Amendment. (…) the only consistent
thing to do now is to seek annexation. This,
however, will take some time, and during the period
which Cuba maintains her own government, it is most
desirable that she should be able to maintain such a
one as will tend to her advancement and betterment.
She cannot make certain treaties without our consent
(…) and must maintain certain sanitary conditions
(…), from all of which it is quite apparent that she
is absolutely in our hands, and I believe that no
European government for a moment considers that she
is otherwise than a practical dependency of the
United States, and as such is certainly entitled to
our consideration. (…) With the control which we
have over Cuba, a control which will soon
undoubtedly become possession, (…) we shall soon
practically control the sugar trade of the world.
(…) the island will (…) gradually become
Americanized and we shall have in time one of the
richest and most desirable possessions in the
world.”
Part
II: The Application of the Platt Amendment and the
Establishing of the Guantanamo Naval Base as a
Framework for Relations between Cuba and the United
States.
By the
end of 1901, the electoral process which resulted in
the triumph of Tomás Estrada Palma, without
opposition and with the support of 47 percent of the
electorate, had begun. On April 17, 1902, the
President-elect in absentia left the United
States for Cuba where he arrived three days later.
The inauguration of the new President took place on
May 20, 1902 at 12 noon. The Congress of the
Republic had already been constituted. Leonard Wood
set sail for his country in the battleship
“Brooklyn”. In 1902, shortly before the
proclamation of the Republic, the United States
government informed the newly elected President of
the Island about the four sites selected for the
establishing of naval bases -Cienfuegos, Bahía
Honda, Guantanamo and Nipe – as provided by the
Platt Amendment. Not even the Port of Havana
escaped consideration since it was contemplated as
“the most favorable for the fourth naval base”.
From the
beginning, despite its spurious origins, the
Government of Cuba, in which many of those who
fought for independence participated, was opposed to
the concession of four naval bases since it
considered two to be more than enough. The
situation grew tenser when the Cuban government
toughened its stand and demanded the final drafting
of the Permanent Agreement on Relations, with the
goal of “determining at the same time and not in
parts, all the details that were the object of the
Platt Amendment and setting the range of their
precepts”. President McKinley had died in
September 14, 1901 as a result of gunshot wounds he
had sustained on the 6th of that month.
Theodore Roosevelt had advanced to such a degree in
his political career that he was already Vice
President of the United States and so he had assumed
the presidency after the shooting of his
predecessor. Roosevelt, at that time did not deem
it to be convenient to specify the scope of the
Platt Amendment, so as not to delay the military
installation of the Guantanamo Base, given what that
would mean for the defense of the Canal whose
construction France had begun and later abandoned in
the Central American Isthmus, and which the
voracious government of the empire intended to
complete at all costs. Nor was he interested in
defining the legal status of the Isle of Pines.
Therefore, he abruptly reduced the number of naval
bases under discussion, removed the Port of Havana
suggestion and finally agreed to the concession of
two bases: Guantanamo and Bahía Honda.
Subsequently, in compliance with Article VII of the
constitutional appendix imposed on the
Constitutional Convention, the Agreement was signed
by the Presidents of Cuba and the United States on
February 16 and 23, 1903, respectively:
“Article
I. - The Republic of Cuba hereby leases to the
United States, for the time required for the
purposes of coaling and naval stations, the
following described areas of land and water situated
in the Island of Cuba:
“1st.
In Guantanamo”…(A complete description of the bay
and neighboring territory is made.)
“2nd.
In Bahia Honda…” (Another similar description is
made.)
This
Agreement establishes:
“Article
III. –While on the one hand the United States
recognizes the continuance of the ultimate
sovereignty of the Republic of Cuba over the above
described areas of land and water, on the other hand
the Republic of Cuba consents that during the period
of the occupation by the United States of said areas
under the terms of this agreement the United States
shall exercise complete jurisdiction and control
over and within said areas with the right to acquire
for the public purposes of the United States any
land or other property therein by purchase or by
exercise of eminent domain with full compensation to
the owners thereof.”
On May
28, 1903, surveying began to establish the
boundaries of the Guantanamo Naval Station. In the
Agreement of July 2, 1903, dealing with the same
subject, the “Regulations for the Lease of Naval and
Coaling Stations” was passed:
“Article
I.- The United States of America agrees and
covenants to pay the Republic of Cuba the annual sum
of two thousand dollars, in gold coin of the United
States, as long as the former shall occupy and use
said areas of land by virtue of said agreement.”
“All
private lands and other real property within said
areas shall be acquired forthwith by the Republic of
Cuba.”
“The
United States of America agrees to furnish to the
Republic of Cuba the sums necessary for the purchase
of said private lands and properties and such sums
shall be accepted by the Republic of Cuba as advance
payment on account of rental due by virtue of said
Agreement.”
The
Agreement which governed this lease, signed in
Havana by representatives of the Presidents of Cuba
and the United States respectively, was passed by
the Cuban Senate on July 16, 1903, ratified by the
President of Cuba a month later on August 16, and by
the President of the United States on October 2, and
after exchanging ratifications in Washington on
October 6, it was published in the Gazette of Cuba
on the 12th of the same month and year.
Dated on
December 14, 1903, it was informed that four days
earlier on the 10th of the same month,
the United States had been given possession of the
areas of water and land for the establishing of a
naval station in Guantanamo. For the United States
Government and Navy, the transfer of part of the
territory of the largest island in the Antilles was
a source of great rejoicing and they intended to
celebrate the event. Vessels belonging to the
Caribbean Squadron and some battleships from the
North Atlantic Fleet converged on Guantanamo.
The Cuban
government appointed the Head of Public Works of
Santiago de Cuba to deliver that part of the
territory over which it technically exercised
sovereignty on December 10, 1903, the date chosen by
the United States. He would be the only Cuban
present at the ceremony and just for a brief time
since, once his mission was accomplished, without
any toasts or handshakes, he left for the
neighboring town of Caimanera.
The Head
of Public Works had boarded the battleship
“Kearsage”, which was the U.S. flagship, where he
met Rear Admiral Barker. At 12:00 hours a
21-gun-salute was given and along with the notes of
the Cuban National Anthem, the Cuban flag which had
been flying on board that vessel was lowered, and
immediately the United States flag was hoisted on
land, at the point called Playa del Este, with an
equal number of salvos, thus concluding the
ceremony.
According
to the articles of the Agreement, the United States
was to dedicate the leased lands exclusively for
public use, not being able to establish any type of
business or industry. The U.S. authorities in
said territories and the Cuban authorities mutually
agreed to surrender fugitives from justice charged
with crimes or misdemeanors subject to the laws of
each party, as long as it was required by the
authorities who would be judging them.
Materials
imported into the areas belonging to said naval
stations for their own use and consumption would be
exempt from customs duties, or any other kind of
fees, to the Republic of Cuba.
The lease
of these naval stations included the right to use
and occupy the waters adjacent to said areas of land
and water, to improve and deepen the entrances to
them and their anchorages and for anything else that
would be necessary for the exclusive use to which
they were dedicated.
Even
though the United States acknowledged the
continuation of Cuba’s definitive sovereignty over
those areas of water and land, it would exercise,
with Cuba's consent, “complete jurisdiction and
domain” over said areas while they occupied them
according to the other already quoted stipulations.
In the
so-called Permanent Treaty of May 22, 1903, signed
by the governments of the Republic of Cuba and the
United States, future relations between both nations
were detailed: in other words, what Manuel Márquez
Sterling would call “the intolerable yoke of the
Platt Amendment” was thus put firmly in place.
The
Permanent Treaty, signed by both countries, was
approved by the United States Senate on March 22,
1904 and by the Cuban Senate on June 8 of that year,
and the ratifications were exchanged in Washington
on June 1st, 1904. Therefore, the Platt
Amendment is an amendment to an American law, an
appendix to the Cuban Constitution of 1901 and a
permanent treaty between both countries.
The
experiences acquired with the Guantanamo Naval Base
were useful to apply measures in Panama that were
equal or worse, in the case of the Canal. In
the United States Congress, it is customary to
introduce amendments, whenever a law which is of
urgent necessity for its content and importance is
being debated. This frequently obliges legislators
to put aside or sacrifice any conflicting criteria.
Such amendments have more than once affected the
sovereignty for which our people tirelessly
struggle.
In 1912,
the Cuban Secretary of State, Manuel Sanguily,
negotiated a new treaty with the U.S. State
Department whereby the United States would
relinquish its rights over Bahia Honda in exchange
for enlarging the boundaries of the Guantanamo
station.
That same
year, when the uprising of the Partido de los
Independientes de Color (Independent Colored Party)
took place, which the Liberal Party government of
President José Miguel Gómez brutally repressed,
American troops came out of the Guantanamo Naval
Base and occupied several towns in the former
Oriente Province, near the cities of Guantanamo and
Santiago de Cuba, with the pretext of “protecting
the lives and properties of U.S. citizens”. In 1917,
because of the uprising known as “La Chambelona”
carried out by the elements of the Liberal Party in
Oriente who were opposed to the electoral fraud that
had re-elected President Mario García Menocal of the
Conservative Party, Yankee regiments from the Base
headed for various points in that province of Cuba,
under the pretext of “protecting the Base water
supply”.
Part
III: The Formal Repeal of the Platt Amendment and
Continued Presence of the Guantanamo Naval Base.
The
advent of the Democratic administration of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt in the United States in 1933 opened
the way to a necessary accommodation of the
relationship of domination that the U.S. exercised
over Cuba. The fall of the Gerardo Machado’s
tyranny under the pressure of a powerful popular
movement, and the subsequent installation of a
provisional government headed by the university
professor of physiology, Ramón Grau San Martin, were
a serious obstacle to the achievement of the program
demanded by the people.
On
November 24, 1933, U.S. President Roosevelt issued
an official statement encouraging the intrigues of
Batista and Sumner Welles, the Ambassador to Havana,
against Grau’s government. These included the offer
to sign a new commercial treaty and repeal the Platt
Amendment. Roosevelt explained that “…any
Provisional Government in Cuba in which the Cuban
people show their confidence would be welcome”. The
impatience of the U.S, administration to get rid of
Grau was growing, as from mid-November the influence
of a young anti-imperialist, Antonio Guiteras, was
increasing in the government, which would take many
of its more radical steps in the weeks to come. It
was necessary to swiftly overthrow that government.
On
December 13, 1933, Ambassador Sumner Welles returned
definitively to Washington and was substituted five
days later by Jefferson Caffery.
On
January 13-14, 1934, Batista convened and presided
over a military meeting at Columbia, where he
proposed to oust Grau and appoint Colonel Carlos
Mendieta y Montefur, which was agreed to by the
so-called Columbia Military Junta. Grau San Martin
presented his resignation at dawn on January 15,
1934 and left for exile in Mexico on the 20th
of the same month. Thus, on January 18, 1934,
Mendieta was installed as President after the coup
d’état. Although the Mendieta administration had
been recognized by the United States on January 23rd
of that year, actually the fate of the country was
in the hands of Ambassador Caffery and Batista.
The
overthrow of the Grau San Martin provisional
government in January 1934, as a result of internal
contradictions and a whole series of pressures,
maneuvers and aggressions wielded against it by
imperialism and its local allies, meant a first and
indispensable step towards the imposition of an
oligarchic-imperialistic alternative to solve the
Cuban national crisis.
The
government headed by Mendieta would take on the task
of adjusting the bonds of the country’s neo-colonial
dependency.
Neither
the oligarchy reinstated in power, nor the
Washington government, were in position to ignore
the feelings of the Cuban people towards
neocolonialism and its instruments. Nor was the
United States unaware of the importance of the
support of Latin American governments –Cuba among
them– in the already foreseeable confrontation with
other emerging imperialist powers such as Germany
and Japan. The new process would include formulae
to ensure the renewed functioning of the neocolonial
system. The “Good Neighbor” policy was very mindful
of Latin American opposition to Washington’s open
interventionism in the hemisphere. The aim of
Roosevelt’s policy was to portray a new image in its
hemispheric relations through the "good neighbor"
diplomatic formula.
As one of
the adjustment measures, on May 29, 1934 a new
U.S.-Cuba Relations Treaty, modifying the one of May
22, 1903, was signed by the other Roosevelt, perhaps
a distant relative of he who had landed in Cuba with
the Rough Riders.
Two days
earlier, on May 27, at 10:30 a.m., when United
States Ambassador Jefferson Caffery was getting
ready, as was his custom, to leave his residence in
the Alturas de Almendares, he was the target of an
assassination attempt; three shots were fired by
several unidentified individuals from a car. The
next day, May 28th, at noon, as it was
driving along Quinta Avenida in the Miramar
district, the car assigned to the First Secretary of
the United States Embassy, H. Freeman Matthews,
after having dropped off the diplomat at the
Embassy, was attacked by several individuals
traveling in a car and armed with machine guns. One
of them approached the chauffeur and told him that
he should let Matthews know that he was giving him
one week to get out of Cuba: then he smashed the
windshield of the car and sped off.
These
acts that revealed a general climate of anti-United
States hostility could have precipitated the signing
of the new Relations Treaty that proposed the
alleged end of the unpopular Platt Amendment.
The new
Relations Treaty provided for the suppression of the
right of the United States to intervene in Cuba and
that:
“The
United States of America and the Republic of Cuba,
being animated by the desire to fortify the
relations of friendship between the two countries
and to modify, with this purpose, the relations
established between them by the Treaty of Relations
signed in Havana, May 22, 1903, (…) have agreed upon
the following articles:
(…)
“Article
3.- Until the two contracting parties agree to the
modifications or abrogation of the stipulations of
the agreement in regard to the lease to the United
States of America of lands in Cuba for coaling and
naval stations signed by the President of the
Republic of Cuba on February 16, 1903, and by the
President of the United States of America on the 23rd
day of the same month and year, the stipulations of
that agreement with regard to the naval stations of
Guantanamo shall continue in effect in the same form
and conditions with respect to the naval station at
Guantanamo. So long as the United States of America
shall not abandon the said naval station of
Guantanamo or the two Governments shall not agree to
a modification of its present limits, the station
shall continue to have territorial area that it now
has, with the limits that it has on the date of the
signature of the present Treaty.”
The
United States Senate ratified the new Relations
Treaty on June 1, 1934, and Cuba on June 4. Five
days later, on June 9, ratifications of the
Relations Treaty of May 29th of the same
year were exchanged, and with that the Platt
Amendment was formally repealed, but the Guantanamo
Naval Base remained.
The new
Treaty legalized the de facto situation of
the Guantanamo naval station, thus rescinding the
part of the agreements of February 16 and 23 and
July 2 of 1903 between the two countries relating to
the lands and waters in Bahia Honda, and the part
that referred to the waters and lands of the
Guantanamo station was amended, in the sense that
they were enlarged.
The
United States maintained its naval station in
Guantanamo as a strategic surveillance and control
site, in order to ensure its political and economic
predominance in the Caribbean and Central America
and to defend the Panama Canal.
Part
IV: The Guantanamo Naval Base from the formal end
of the Platt Amendment until the Triumph of the
Revolution.
After the
signing of the Treaty of Relations of 1934, the
territory of the “naval station” underwent a gradual
fortifying and equipping process until, in the
spring of 1941, the Base became established as an
operational naval station with the following
structure: naval station, air naval station and
Marines Corps Base and warehouse facilities.
On June
6, 1934 the United States Senate had passed a bill
which would authorize the Secretary of the Navy to
sign a long-term contract with a company that would
undertake to supply adequate water to the Naval Base
in Guantanamo; however, prior to this, American
plans already existed for the construction of an
aqueduct which would bring in water from the Yateras
River.
Expansion
continued, and by 1943 other facilities were
constructed by contracting the Frederick Snare
Company. This hired 9,000 civilian workers, many of
them Cubans.
Another
year of tremendous expansion of the military and
civilian facilities on the Base was 1951. In 1952,
the United States Secretary of the Navy decided to
change the name of the U.S. Naval Operating Base to
“U.S. Naval Base”; by that time its structure
already included a Training Center.
The
Constitution of 1940, the Revolutionary Struggle and
Guantanamo Naval Base until December 1958.
The
period between the end of 1937 and 1940 was
characterized, from a political point of view, by
the adoption of measures that allowed for elections
for the Constitutional Assembly to be called and for
them to take place. The reason why Batista agreed
to these democratizing measures was that it was in
his interest to move towards the establishment of
formulae that would allow him to remain at the
center of political decisions, and thus ensure the
continuity of his power within the new order arising
under the formulae that he had implemented. At the
beginning of 1938 the agreement between Batista and
Grau to install a Constitutional Assembly was made
public. The Constitutional Convention, inaugurated
on February 9, 1940, concluded its sessions on June
8 of that same year.
The
Constitution was signed on July 1st, 1940
and promulgated on July 5 that same year. The new
Law of Laws established that “the territory of the
Republic consists of the Island of Cuba, the Isle of
Pines and other adjacent islands and keys, which
were under the sovereignty of Spain until the
ratification of the Treaty of Paris on December 10,
1898. The Republic of Cuba shall not conclude or
ratify pacts or treaties that in any form limit or
undermine national sovereignty or the integrity of
the territory”.
The
oligarchy would strive to prevent the
materialization of the more advanced principles in
this Constitution or at least to restrict their
application to a maximum.
Part
V: The Guantanamo Naval Base since the Triumph of
the Revolution.
Since the
triumph of the Revolution, the Revolutionary
Government has denounced the illegal occupation of
that portion of our territory.
On the
other hand, since January 1st, 1959, the United
States turned the usurped territory of the
Guantanamo Naval Base into a permanent source of
threats, provocation and violation of Cuba’s
sovereignty, with the aim of creating trouble for
the victorious revolutionary process. Said Base has
always been present in the plans and operations
conceived by Washington to overthrow the
Revolutionary Government.
All kinds
of aggressions have come from the Naval Base:
Dropping of inflammable materials over free
territory from planes flying out of the Base.
Provocations by American soldiers, including
insults, the throwing of stones and cans filled with
inflammable materials and the firing of pistols and
automatic weapons. Violations of Cuban
jurisdictional waters and Cuban territory by
American military vessels and aircraft from the
Base. Plans for self-aggression on the Base that
would provoke a large-scale armed struggle between
Cuba and the United States. Registering the radio
frequencies used at the Base in the International
Frequency Registry in the space corresponding to
Cuba.
On
January 12, 1961, the worker Manuel Prieto Gómez who
had been employed at the Base for more than 3 years
was savagely tortured by Yankee soldiers on the
Guantanamo Naval Base, for the “crime” of being a
revolutionary.
On
October 15 of that same year, the Cuban worker Rubén
López Sabariego was tortured and subsequently
murdered.
On June
24, 1962, Rodolfo Rosell Salas, a fisherman from
Caimanera, was murdered by soldiers at the Base.
Likewise, the devious intent of fabricating a
self-provocation and deploying American troops in a
“justified” punitive invasion of Cuba has always
been a volatile element at Guantanamo Base. We can
find an example of this in one of the actions
included in the so-called “Operation Mongoose”, when
on September 3, 1962 American soldiers stationed in
Guantanamo would shoot at Cuban sentries.
During
the Missile Crisis, the Base was reinforced in terms
of military technology and troops; manpower grew to
more than 16,000 Marines. Given the decision of
Soviet Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev to withdraw
the nuclear missiles stationed in Cuba without
previously either consulting or informing the
Revolutionary Government, Cuba defined the
unshakeable position of the Revolution in what came
to be known as the “Five Points”. The fifth point
demanded withdrawal from the Guantanamo Naval Base.
We were on the brink of a thermonuclear war, where
we would be the prime target as a consequence of the
imperial policy of taking over Cuba.
On
February 11, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson
reduced the number of Cuban personnel working at the
Base by approximately 700 workers. They also
confiscated the accumulated retirement funds of
hundreds of Cuban workers who had been employed on
the Base and illegally suspended payments of
pensions to retired Cuban workers.
On July
19, 1964, in a blatant provocation made by American
border guards against the Cuban border patrol
sentries, Ramón López Peña, a young 17-year-old
soldier, was murdered at close range while he was on
guard in the sentry-box. On May 21, 1966, and in
similar circumstances, soldier Luis Ramírez López
was murdered by shots from the Base.
In
hardly three weeks of the month of May in 1980, more
than 80,000 men, 24 vessels and some 350 combat
aircraft took part in Solid Shield-80 exercises; as
part of its dynamic, this included the landing of
2,000 Marines at the Naval Base and the
reinforcement of the facility with an additional
1200 troops.
In
October 1991, during the 4th Communist Party
Congress in Santiago de Cuba, planes and helicopters
from the Base violated Cuban air space over the
city.
In 1994,
the Base served as a support station for the
invasion of Haiti: American air force planes used
Base airports for this. More than 45,000 Haitian
emigrants were kept on the Base until mid-1995.
Also
in 1994, the well-known migration crisis was
produced as a result of the tightening up of the
blockade and the tough years of the Special Period,
the non-compliance with the Migratory Agreement of
1984 signed with the Reagan Administration, the
considerable reduction in the number of visas
granted and the encouragement of illegal emigration,
including the Cuban Adjustment Act signed by
President Johnson more than four decades ago.
As a
result of the crisis created,
a
declaration made by President Clinton on August 19,
1994 transformed the Base into a migratory
concentration camp for the Cuban rafters, in numbers
close to 30,000.
Finally,
on September 9, 1994 a Joint Communiqué was signed
by the Clinton administration and the Cuban
government. This saw the United States committing
to prevent the entry into its territory of
intercepted illegal emigrants and to issue a minimum
of 20,000 annual visas for safety travel to the
United States.
On
May 2, 1995, as part of the migratory negotiations,
the governments of Cuba and the United States also
agreed what on this occasion was called a Joint
Declaration establishing the procedure for returning
to Cuba all those who continued trying to illegally
migrate to the United States and were intercepted by
the U.S. Coast Guard. Notice the specific
reference to the illegal emigrants intercepted by
the Coast Guards. Thus the basis had been laid of a
sinister business: the traffic of persons. The
Murderous Act was maintained, thus turning Cuba into
the only country in the world subjected to such
harassment. While approximately 250 thousand people
have safely traveled to that country, an
incalculable number of women, children and people of
all ages have lost their lives as a result of the
prosperous traffic of emigrants.
Following
an agreement by the two governments, as from the
migratory crisis of 1994, regular meetings between
the military commands of each side were initiated.
A strip of mined territory would sometimes be
flooded by tropical rainstorms and overflowing
rivers. On many occasions our sappers had put their
lives in danger to save persons who were crossing
the restricted military zone in that area, even
with children.
The
Guantanamo Naval Base since the enactment of the
Helms-Burton Act.
This Act,
signed by President William Clinton on March 12,
1996, in its Title II about “Assistance to a Free
and Independent Cuba”, Section 201 related to the
“policy toward a transition government and a
democratically elected government in Cuba”,
establishes in its Point 12 that the United States
must “be prepared to enter into negotiations with a
democratically elected government in Cuba either to
return the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo to
Cuba or to renegotiate the present agreement under
mutually agreeable terms”. Something worse than what
was planned by military governor Leonard Wood, who
had landed on foot along with Theodore Roosevelt in
the proximity of Santiago de Cuba: the idea of
having an annexationist of Cuban descent
administrating our country.
The War
in Kosovo in 1999 resulted in a great number of
Kosovar refugees. The Clinton government, embroiled
in that NATO war against Serbia, made the decision
to use the Base to accommodate a number of them, and
on this occasion, for the first time, with no
previous consultation whatsoever as usual, it
informed Cuba of the decision made. Our answer was
constructive. Even though we were opposed to the
unjust and illegal conflict, we had no grounds on
which to oppose the humanitarian aid needed by the
Kosovar refugees. We even offered our country’s
cooperation, if it should be needed, in terms of
medical care or any other service they might need.
Finally, the Kosovar refugees were never sent to the
Guantanamo Naval Base.
The
manifesto called “The Oath of Baraguá” of February
19, 2000 expressed that “in due time, since it no
longer constitutes a prioritized objective at this
moment even though the right of our people is very
just and cannot be waived; the illegally occupied
territory of Guantanamo must be returned to Cuba.”
At that time, we were involved in the struggle for
the return of the kidnapped boy and the economic
consequences of the brutal blockade.
The
Guantanamo Naval Base since September 11.
On
September 18, 2001, President Bush signed United
States Congress legislation authorizing the use of
force as a response to the September 11 attacks.
Bush used this legislation as a basis to sign a
Military Order on November 13 of that same year
which would establish the legal bases for arrests
and trials by military tribunals of individuals who
didn't hold U.S. citizenship, as part of the “war on
terrorism”.
On
January 8, 2002 the United States officially
informed Cuba that they would be using the
Guantanamo Naval Base as a detention center for
Afghan war prisoners.
Three
days later, on January 11, 2002, the first 20
detainees arrived, and the figure reached the number
of 776 prisoners coming from 48 countries. Of
course none of these data were mentioned. We
assumed they were Afghan war prisoners. The first
planes were landing full of prisoners, and many more
guards than prisoners. On the same day, the
government of Cuba issued a public declaration
indicating its willingness to cooperate with medical
assistance services as required, clean-up programs
and a fight against mosquitoes and pests in the area
surrounding the base which is under our control, or
any other useful, constructive and humane measure
that might come up. I remember the data because I
was personally involved in details concerning the
Note presented by the MINREX in response to the
United States Note. We were very far from imagining
at that moment that the U.S. government was getting
ready to create a horrendous torture center at that
base. The Socialist Constitution proclaimed on
February 24, 1976 had set forth in its Article 11,
section c) that “the Republic of Cuba repudiates and
considers as null and illegal those treaties, pacts
or concessions concerted under conditions of
inequality or which disregard or diminish her
sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
On June
10, 2002, the people of Cuba, in an unprecedented
process of popular referendum, ratified the
socialist content of that Constitution of 1976 as a
response to the meddling and offensive expressions
of the President of the United States. Likewise, it
mandated the National People’s Power Assembly to
amend it so that it would expressly state, inter
alia, the irrevocable principle which must govern
the economic, diplomatic and political relations of
our country with other states, by adding to the same
Article 11, section c): “Economic, diplomatic and
political relations with any other State may never
be negotiated under aggression, threat or coercion
by a foreign power.”
After the
Proclamation to the People of Cuba was
made public on July 31, 2006, the U.S. authorities
have declared that they do not hope for a migration
crisis but that they are pre-emptively preparing to
face one, with the use of the Guantanamo Naval Base
as a concentration camp for illegal migrants
intercepted in the high seas being a consideration.
In public declarations, information reveals that the
United States is expanding its civilian buildings on
the Base with the aim of increasing their capacity
to receive the illegal emigrants. Cuba, for her
part, has taken all possible measures to avoid
incidents between the armed forces of both
countries, and has declared that she is abiding by
the commitments contained in the Joint Declaration
on migratory issues signed with the Clinton
administration. Why is there so much talking,
threats and brouhaha?
The
symbolic annual payment of $3,386.25 for the lease
of the territory occupied by the Guantanamo Naval
Base was maintained until 1972 when the Americans
adjusted it themselves to $3,676. In 1973, a new
adjustment was made for the value of the old U.S.
Gold dollar, and for that reason the cheque issued
by the Treasury Department was since then increased
to $4,085.00 each year. That cheque is charged to
the United States Navy, the party responsible for
operations at the Naval Base. The cheques issued
by the government of the United States, as payment
for the lease, are in the name of the “Treasurer
General of the Republic of Cuba”, an institution and
official who, many years ago, have ceased to
function within the structure of the Government of
Cuba. This cheque is sent on a yearly basis,
through diplomatic channels. The one for 1959, due
to a mere confusion, was entered into the national
budget. Since 1960 until today these cheques have
not been cashed and they are proof of the lease that
has been imposed for more than 107 years. I would
imagine, conservatively, that this is ten times less
than what the United States government spends on the
salary of a schoolteacher each year.
Both the
Platt Amendment and the Guantanamo Naval Base were
unnecessary. History has shown that in a great
number of countries in this hemisphere where there
has not been a revolution, their entire territory,
governed by the multinationals and the oligarchies,
needs neither one nor the other. Advertising took
care of their mostly ill-trained and
poverty-stricken populations by creating reflexes.
From the
military point of view, a nuclear aircraft carrier,
with so many fast fighter-bombers and escort ships
supported by technology and satellites, is several
times more powerful and can move to any point on the
globe, wherever the empire needs it the most.
The Base
is needed to humiliate and to carry out the filthy
deeds that take place there. If we must await the
downfall of the system, we shall wait. The
suffering and danger for all humanity shall be
great, like today's stock market crisis, and a
growing number of people forecast it. Cuba shall
always be waiting in a state of combat readiness.
Fidel
Castro Ruz August 14, 2007. 6:00 p.m.