Friday, 19 March 2010

Daniel Hannan

Daniel Hannan is a writer and journalist, and has been Conservative MEP for South East England since 1999. He speaks French and Spanish and loves Europe, but believes that the EU is making its constituent nations poorer, less democratic and less free. He is the winner of the Bastiat Award for online journalism.

How  the  US  and t  he   EU   sustained   the   Castro   dictatorship

 

By sheer force of personality, Castro kept the red flag flying over his muggy Caribbean island. His eyes grew rheumier, and his beard sparser, but his domination of the political machine remained total. The Americans were in no doubt that if they removed the dictator, the dictatorship would collapse. The CIA, acting on St Thomas’s dictum, is supposed to have tried to kill Castro 638 times, sometimes in ways that were pure Inspector Clouseau. On one occasion, agents are said to have persuaded Castro’s former lover to assassinate him with poisoned cold cream; on another, they tried to plant an infected wetsuit on him; on yet another, an exploding cigar. In the event, it will fall to the Almighty to achieve what the boys from Langley could not.

It will fall to the Almighty, too, to hold Castro to account for his misdeeds — he has escaped any reckoning in this world. Not for him the international court orders that were served on Ariel Sharon and Donald Rumsfeld. Not for him the obloquy heaped on his old foe, Augusto Pinochet, whom he was delighted to survive. On the contrary, Castro’s most famous bit of swanking, the claim after his first failed coup attempt that ‘history will absolve me’, seems to be coming perversely true. (I know readers of this blog are bored rigid by South American dictators, but look at what has happened in Venezuela, Ecuador, Nicaragua and Bolivia, for Heaven’s sake.)

If the US has been unwise in giving the Cuban Communists the alibi of their blockade, the EU has behaved wretchedly, refusing to deal with the pro-democracy dissidents. Between them, they have condemned Cuba to 50 years of poverty and dictatorship. History will not absolve them.