
(Fidel Castro in the US in 1959. source: Library of Congress via Wikipedia)
Fidel Castro is stepping down as el presidente de Cuba, the mass media is widely reporting:
The end of Castro’s rule — the longest in the world for a head of government — frees his 76-year-old brother Raul to implement reforms he has hinted at since taking over as acting president when Fidel Castro fell ill in July 2006. President Bush said he hopes the resignation signals the beginning of a democratic transition.
“My wishes have always been to discharge my duties to my last breath,” Castro wrote in a letter published Tuesday in the online edition of the Communist Party daily Granma. But, he wrote, “it would be a betrayal to my conscience to accept a responsibility requiring more mobility and dedication than I am physically able to offer.”
While this really actually changes very little in Cuba, it is prompting low-key celebrations in Miami and other Cuban strongholds. Worse, it signals no change at all in the wrongheaded nearly five-decade old US policy of embargo toward the island nation that once was an economic brother for Tampa:
[President George W.] Bush, traveling in Rwanda, pledged to “help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty.”
“The international community should work with the Cuban people to begin to build institutions that are necessary for democracy,” he said. “Eventually, this transition ought to lead to free and fair elections — and I mean free, and I mean fair — not these kind of staged elections that the Castro brothers try to foist off as true democracy.”
The United States built a detailed plan in 2005 for American assistance to ensure a democratic transition on the island of 11.2 million people after Castro’s death. But Cuban officials have insisted that the island’s socialist political and economic systems will outlive Castro.
“The adversary to be defeated is extremely strong,” Castro wrote Tuesday. “However, we have been able to keep it at bay for half a century.”
Realize the blessings of liberty? How about trading with them?!? Never in the history of this nation has a foreign policy directive been so wildly unsuccessful or poorly thought out. The idea was to isolate Castro and drive him from office. Instead, Castro became popular throughout Latin America and the longest-serving head of a nation in the world. And who suffered? The people of Cuba and the families that were split up via immigration to the United States.
The Republican Party of Florida weighed in by the afternoon with a predictable statement from Chairman Jim Greer:
“Today we see a faint light at the end of the tunnel as Cuban dictator Fidel Castro officially steps aside. However, with his brother Raul remaining in power, the oppression and lack of respect for human rights continues in Cuba.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with the Cuban people, and the many Floridians with family and friends still living under the rule of the Castro family regime. We look forward to the end of this horrendous dictatorship, and the day when the Cuban people see Democratic elections and know the freedoms we as Americans are privileged to enjoy each and every day.â€
My thoughts and prayers, to the contrary, are going to finding enough time to smoke a Cuban cigar this afternoon and hope that we as a nation come to our senses and restore full relations with Cuba immediately.