'Castro’s main legacy: Proving it’s possible to defy US hegemony'
Fidel Castro was able to create a society where
all Cubans had access to healthcare, access to education, said Professor Joseph
S. Tulchin; former director of the Latin American Program, Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars. Cuba is mourning the death of former President Fidel Castro who
died at the age of 90 on Friday. His brother Raul announced his death on Cuban
state television.
The revolutionary leader was
revered on the island nation, where he was called the country's founding
father, and the man who freed Havana from the grip of the United States.
Left-wing politicians have paid
tribute to the longtime Cuban leader describing him as an iconic figure.
Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of the
British Labour Party, expressed his condolences, saying that “for all his flaws he will be remembered
across the globe.” Not
long after making the statement Corbyn was mocked, with some comparing the
former Cuban leader to Darth Vader, Osama bin Laden, and even Hitler.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin
Trudeau is facing a backlash after expressing “deep
sorrow” and
condolences over the death of a man he described as a “remarkable leader.”
RT: Many famous political figures
compared the former Cuban leader Fidel Castro to Darth Vader, Osama bin Laden,
and even Hitler. Do you think it was appropriate?
Joseph Tulchin: Well, certainly in South Florida
he does, on the famous 8th street, known as Calle Ocho, where the
Cuban-American community which is anti-Castro is concentrated. It seems to me
that that is a great exaggeration. Cuba is a dictatorship, and Fidel Castro was
a dictator. There is no question about that. He treated his hostile enemies at
the beginning of the revolution in a way that we can compare to the French
Revolution, the Russian Revolution, the Mexican Revolution; it was a great deal
of bloodshed in the first few years following Castro’s triumph. Don’t forget
that just two years after Castro entered Havana in power; the US backed an
invasion force by hostile anti-Castro Cubans in what was called ‘The Bay of
Pigs.’ The point is that the Cuban administration under Castro was under attack
from its very beginning until the very end of the Cold War.
The US embargo made the economy
very difficult to organize, and the Cubans turned to the Soviets in the 1960s
and 1970s for their economic support. During that time, the 60s, 70s and 80s
the Cuban regime was a dictatorship, there was no press freedom, dissidents
were not encouraged and disallowed, people were expelled, some people left the
island, people continued to leave the island today looking for better life
elsewhere. But to compare Castro to Stalin or Hitler or even to Darth Vader
seems to me to be a great exaggeration. The point to emphasize that unlike all
of those people - including Darth Vader - Fidel was able to create a society in
which all the Cubans had access to healthcare, access to education.
Cuba never became a kleptocracy in
which corruption was rampant, and members of the regime became personally
wealthy. There is no kleptocracy today; the level of corruption is remarkably
low... And most important for the US, Cuba is not a drug center, unlike other
island states in the Caribbean - Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Haiti. The drug
traffic from Cuba is non-existent. And the Cuban coast guard or navy, as it is
called, cooperates on a daily basis with the US Coast Guard. So Cuba in the
Pentagon is considered an ally in the fight against illegal drugs.
RT: What legacy, do you think, such an
iconic figure will have for the world?
JT: You can accept the fact that he
was a cruel dictator but again compared to Hitler or Stalin or other brutal
dictators he was not nearly so terrible. The Cuban population through the
entire 50 years of the revolution, with significant exceptions, lived a calm
and quiet life. They also enjoyed remarkable access to social goods and
benefits of that revolution. What these people are ignoring is that whether he
was a dictator or not is not a question. He was a dictator; that is not in
dispute. But If we focus on that, we lose sight of what the Cuban revolution
represents. The legacy in Latin America is and will remain that it is possible
to defy US hegemony. And what that lesson means for all of the countries in
Latin America is that they can achieve autonomy or agency, as I prefer to call
it, despite the pressures from a dominant power – the United States. And
Castro’s legacy will focus on that throughout the hemisphere. Being a dictator
is not Castro’s only legacy.
RT: There were mass celebrations in
Miami’s Cuban neighborhoods after the announcement of Fidel Castro’s death.
What do you think about such celebrations?
JT: For Cubans who hate Castro,
particularly people of the first generation to flee Cuba because they were
against the revolution, they are pleased and happy that he has died. They think
his death will mean a great transition and perhaps their return to their native
land. I think that hope is unrealistic. And that they enjoy someone else’s
death is something that I cannot share with them. I am not pleased that Castro
was a dictator; I opposed his censorship; I opposed his closing of academic
conversation and debate. But again, I recognize that, unlike my country, he
provided healthcare and education. He provided food for everybody, though the
level of economic support was very low. Cuba is a poor country.

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