Begin forwarded message:

From: "Bill Gallagher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: July 3, 2006 7:02:08 PM PDT
Subject: gee i wonder what this means

horhay loves haysoos

heh heh hehhhhhhhh...

Bush urged to intervene after Castro's death

03 July 2006
By David Usborne in New York

A new high-level report due for publication later this week urges the
United States government to begin preparations to intervene in Cuba in
the event President Fidel Castro's death. The goal is to help spawn a
speedy transition on the island towards "democracy and political
freedom".

The recommendations, which include the creation of an $80m (£43m) fund
to promote democracy in Cuba, are contained in the latest report
compiled by the Commission for Assitance to a Free Cuba, created by
President George Bush three years ago. The group is co-chaired by the
US Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice, and by the US Commerce
Secretary, Carlos Gutierrez, a Cuban-American.

A classified annexe to the document lists future measures the US
should consider further to undermine the regime of Mr Castro, who has
led the island since 1959. The report's release, probably this
Wednesday, is certain further to aggravate already tense relations
between the two governments.

The president of the Cuban parliament, Ricardo Alarcon, condemned the
report over the weekend, describing its publication as an act of war.
"What's most important is that they admit to a secret plan to
overthrow another government," Mr Alarcon told reporters. "What on
earth could the secret part say when the public part violates all
kinds of international law?"

Speculation as to the future of Cuba has been building for months with
Mr Castro preparing to celebrate his 80th birthday in August. There is
no evidence of the Cuban leader suffering from serious ill health,
however, and he has already signalled his intention to pass power to
his brother, Raul.

The report focuses on the possibility that the death of Mr Castro will
nonetheless mark the beginning of a process of transition towards
democracy, however gradual. It argues that the US should be ready to
give a transitional government any assistance it requests, for
instance in maintaining health care or power supplies, or training
judges and police.

"The US government will need to be prepared well in advance to help in
the event assistance is requested by the Cuban transition government,"
it says, noting that the US should "provide technical assistance in
the first two weeks after a determination that a Cuban transition is
under way".

In addition to the two-year $80m fund, the US should also be ready to
spend $20m a year on pro-democracy programmes, the panel said.

To what degree the US can expect to influence events is open to
question given its efforts over the past four decades to isolate and
punish Cuba's leaders. In recent years, Mr Bush has moved to tighten a
US embargo, for instance by limiting the amount of money Cuban exiles
can send to family back home.

The US Coast Guard is reporting a dramatic rise in would-be Cuban
asylum-seekers taking a perilous new route to American soil. It
involves Cubans flying to the Dominican Republic - a journey that can
only be undertaken with permission from the Cuban government - and
then boarding boats for tiny Mona Island, between the Republic and
Puerto Rico. The island belongs to Puerto Rico and so is considered
American soil.

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OM





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