*- Havana Times.org - http://www.havanatimes.org -*

On Ambassadors and Dissidents

Posted By *the editor* On December 24, 2010 @ 1:10 am In *Fernando
Ravsberg,Lead Articles,Opinion* | *No
Comments<http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34971&print=1#comments_controls>
*

*Fernando Ravsberg * <http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/>
[1]

**

Sunset along the Havana Malecon seawall. Photo: Caridad

HAVANA TIMES, Dec. 23 — What an honor it was for us when Jonathan Farrar
(the highest US diplomatic representative in Cuba) supported the analysis of
BBC Mundo concerning dissidents.  This served to confirm our assessment,
because he is extremely qualified on that issue.

It’s a shame though that he wrote it in a secret cable and avoided saying
this openly because at that time we were being fiercely attacked from within
and outside of Cuba.  We had dared to break the consensus, and that always
exacts a dear price.

However WikiLeaks made a reality of the saying “justice comes slowly, but it
comes.” Cable # 202438, from April 15, 2009, signed by Farrar and marked as
“CONFIDENTIAL,” recognized that our analyses of the opposition were
objective.

However, the opinions of the chief American diplomatic [in Havana] were much
less polite.  He ended up saying that the dissidents “are more concerned
with receiving money than spreading their proposals to wider sectors of
Cuban society.”

He explained that in polls made of Cubans requesting US visas, his office
found “practically a total ignorance of the personalities in the dissident
movement and their organizations,” which caused him to conclude that they
lack “resonance among the Cuban people.”

Jonathan Farrar considered that the dissident groups were “dominated by
individuals with big egos” and he recommended that they “achieve a certain
degree of unity or to at least stop spending so much energy obstructing each
other.”

Not even the anti-Castro forces in Miami and Madrid went unscathed.  The
diplomat reported that the island’s dissidents complain that the exiles were
trying “to undermine local opposition groups so that they can take power
when the Castros are gone.”

Farrar said “it is not very probable that they will play any significant
role in any government that succeeds the Castro brothers” and he argued that
the immediate successors “will be the mid-level officials of that very same
government.”

What he reported to his superiors in the secret cable was no secret to
diplomats and journalists assigned to Cuba.  What was curious was that it
was the Americans themselves who wanted to convince us so that we would
report the opposite.

Recently a dissident leader told me that the analysis of Farrar was harsh
but accurate.  Maybe that’s true, but I find it quite unjust because the
policies of the United States government are also responsible for the
current debacle of the Cuban opposition.

As the poet Rabindranath Tagore said, if they close the door to errors, the
truth will also remain outside.  In other words, the analysis of the
dissident movement will not be complete as long as Washington doesn’t accept
its own blame.

It would help them remember that diplomat James Cason gave public
instructions to the dissidents about how to organize the struggle against
Castro.  Likewise, he converted his house into a headquarters for opposition
meetings, including “independent journalists.”

But the biggest paradox resides in the fact that Washington sends millions
of dollars to the dissidents every year and later its officials criticize
them for “fighting” over their share. It’s like a drug dealer morally
questioning the addiction of his customers.

Surely without those “remittances” from the White House, the dissident
movement would be very different.  They would be obliged to rely on the
people, which would require them doing political work and finding approaches
that are attractive to most Cubans.

Also, this would “purify” the anti-Castro movement in Miami, maintaining the
true militants of the anti-communist cause and getting rid of the parasites
that get rich off of collecting onerous “tolls” from the money earmarked for
the opponents.

Perhaps in that way Washington will have the dissident movement of its
dreams.  But for the time being, their secret messages have only confirmed
that, “normally you see defects on other people easier than in yourself.”

In any case, it’s necessary to be patient.  Maybe a self-critical stance
will be “revealed” in the next cables.  As for me, I only want to thank them
for the notoriety of appearing in Wikileaks, especially because up to now
they’ve treated me with more respect than some heads of state.

—

**

*Havana Times translation of the **Spanish
original<http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/2010/12/de_embajadores_y_disidentes.html>
[2]** authorized by BBC Mundo.*
------------------------------

Article printed from Havana Times.org: *http://www.havanatimes.org*

URL to article: *http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=34971*

URLs in this post:

[1] *Fernando Ravsberg *: *
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/*

[2] Spanish original: *
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mundo/cartas_desde_cuba/2010/12/de_embajadores_y_disidentes.html
*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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