I confess
that many times I have meditated on the dramatic
story of John F. Kennedy. It was my fate to live
through the era when he was the greatest and most
dangerous adversary of the Revolution. It was
something that didn’t play a part in his
calculations. He saw himself as the representative
of a new generation of Americans who were
confronting the old-style, dirty politics of men of
the sort of Nixon whom he had defeated with a
tremendous display of political talent.
He had
behind him his history as a combatant in the Pacific
and of his adroit pen.
Because he
was over-confident, he was dragged into the Bay of
Pigs adventure by his predecessors, since he had no
doubts about the experience and professional
capacity of all those men. His failure was bitter
and unexpected, a scant three months after his
inauguration. Even though he was on the point of
attacking the Island with his country’s powerful and
sophisticated weaponry, on that occasion he didn’t
do what Nixon would have done: use the
fighter-bombers and land the Marines. Rivers of
blood would have flowed in our Homeland where
hundreds of thousands of combatants were ready to
die. He controlled himself and came up with a
categorical phrase that is hard to forget: “Victory
has a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan.”
His life
continued to be dramatic, like a shadow that
accompanied him at all times. On the strength of
wounded pride, he again succumbed to the idea of
invading us. This brought on the October [Missile]
Crisis and the most serious risks of thermonuclear
warfare that the world has ever known until the
present day. He emerged from this test as an
authority thanks to the mistakes of his chief
adversary. He seriously wanted to talk with Cuba
and that’s what he decided to do. He sent Jean
Daniel to talk with me and return to Washington.
His mission was being carried out at that moment
when the news of President Kennedy’s assassination
arrived. His death and the strange way in which it
was orchestrated and carried out, was truly sad.
Later I met
close family members who visited Cuba. I never
mentioned the unpleasant aspects of his policy
against our country, nor did I refer at all to the
attempts to eliminate me. I met his son when he was
an adult, who had been a young child when his father
had been the president of the United States. We got
together as friends. His own brother Robert was
also assassinated, multiplying the drama shadowing
that family.
At the
distance of so many years, information arrived about
a gesture that impressed me.
These days,
while so much was being said about the lengthy and
unfair blockade of Cuba in the upper echelons of the
continent’s countries, I read a news item in
Mexico’s La Jornada: “At the end of 1963, the then
Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy sought to
overturn the ban on travel to Cuba and today his
daughter, Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, wrote that
President Barack Obama ought to take this into
account and support legislative initiatives that
would allow all Americans to travel to the island.
“In official
documents declassified by the National Security
Archive research centre it is recorded that on
December 12, 1963, less than one month after the
assassination of John F. Kennedy, Attorney General
Robert F. Kennedy sent a communication to Secretary
of State Dean Rusk, urging the removal of
regulations prohibiting Americans from traveling to
Cuba…
“Robert
Kennedy claimed that the prohibition violated
American freedoms. According to the document, he
affirmed that the current restrictions on travel are
inconsistent with traditional American freedoms.
“…That
position was unsuccessful inside the Lyndon B.
Johnson administration and the State Department
decided that to suspend the restrictions would be
perceived as a softening of the Cuban policy and
that they were part of the joint effort made by the
United States and other American republics to
isolate Cuba.
“In an
editorial article by Kathleen Kennedy printed today
in The Washington Post, Robert’s daughter expresses
her wish that her father’s position be adopted by
the Barack Obama government, and that this should be
the position promoted by Attorney General Eric H.
Holder Jr. while the Obama government weighs the
next step it will take with Cuba, one that should be
pushing for allowing more than just Cuban-Americans
to travel freely to the island and dealing with the
rights of all Americans, most of whom are not free
to go.
“Kathleen
Kennedy writes that just as Obama found out at the
summit meeting last week-end, Latin American leaders
have adopted a coordinated message on Cuba: the time
is here to normalize relations with Havana…By
keeping on trying to isolate Cuba, they essentially
told Obama, Washington has only succeeded in
isolating itself.
“Thus, the
niece of the president who attempted to invade and
overthrow the Cuban Revolutionary government and
impose the blockade, adds her voice now to the
ever-growing chorus in favor of reversing these
policies which were put in place half a century
ago.”
A worthy
article by Kathleen Kennedy!
Fidel Castro
Ruz
April 24, 2009
1:17 p.m.