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Former Cuban President Fidel Castro Dies at 90
Former Cuban President Fidel Castro Dies at 90
Cuban President Fidel Castro attends a conference on
terrorism in Havana's convention centre June 3, 2005.
WASHINGTON —
Former Cuban President Fidel
Castro is dead at the age of 90, his brother, Cuban President Raul Castro
announced.
Fidel Castro’s communist
government survived a U.S.-backed invasion of Cuban exiles, a superpower
missile crisis, assassination plots and decades of U.S. economic sanctions. But
Castro lived long enough to see Washington announce the re-establishment of
full diplomatic relations with Havana and the subsequent visit by a U.S.
president to the island in March 2016.
He will be cremated Saturday.
Fidel Castro Ruz was born
August 13, 1926, and grew up to become one of the leaders of the movement
against the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista. He led a guerrilla force that
eventually routed Batista’s army and took over the island in 1959.
Fidel Castro: Through the
Years
Triumph and Communism
His victory and triumphant
entry into Havana captured the world’s attention. But he soon steered the
country toward Communism and the orbit of the Soviet Union.
“He is a man who made a lot of
promises to the Cuban people,” said Cuban democracy activist Frank Calzon.
“Cubans were going to have freedom. They were going to have honest government.
They were going to have a return to the constitution. Instead what he gave them
was a Stalinist type of government.”
The United States mounted an
invasion of Cuba by a group of Cuban exiles in 1961. But Castro’s forces
crushed the invaders at the Bay of Pigs. One year later, Cuba was at the center
of a confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union over the
placement of nuclear missiles on the island. A nuclear war was narrowly
averted.
As a close ally of Moscow,
Castro deployed Cuban troops to various Cold War hot spots, such as Angola. His
policies turned Cuba into an international player, according to Cuba expert
Wayne Smith.
“I think he will be remembered as the leader who put Cuba on the world map,” Smith said. “Before Castro, Cuba was considered something of a banana republic. It did not count for anything in world politics. Castro certainly changed all that, and suddenly Cuba was playing a major role on the world stage, in Africa as an ally of the Soviet Union, in Asia, and certainly in Latin America.”
“I think he will be remembered as the leader who put Cuba on the world map,” Smith said. “Before Castro, Cuba was considered something of a banana republic. It did not count for anything in world politics. Castro certainly changed all that, and suddenly Cuba was playing a major role on the world stage, in Africa as an ally of the Soviet Union, in Asia, and certainly in Latin America.”
FILE - U.S. President Barack
Obama attends a meeting with Cuban dissidents at the U.S. embassy in Havana, Cuba,
March 22, 2016. On the wall behind Obama is a painting, "My New
Friend," donated to the embassy by Michel Mirabal, a Cuban artist.
Democracy a casualty
At home, universal education
and health care were accomplishments that came at the cost of human rights and
democracy. Dissidents were thrown in jail and their relatives who protested
were often intimidated by pro-government mobs.
“Fidel Castro kept power
through fear, through the use of the secret police, through manipulating
political forces — just like Stalin did or just like Hitler did,” Calzon said.
Castro frequently denounced
the United States, often staging mass rallies to protest the U.S. economic
embargo against his country.
Despite decades of U.S.
pressure, he managed to stay in power until being sidelined by intestinal
surgery in July 2006. The ailing leader formally relinquished the presidency in
2008 to his younger brother Raul, in a transfer of power endorsed in a
pro-forma election by Cuba’s National Assembly.
Yet he maintained a role in public
life as Cuba’s state-run newspaper published his thoughts on various subjects,
including a critique of President Barack Obama’s historic visit to Cuba that
underscored the normalization of ties.He also occasionally received visiting
foreign dignitaries.
Cuban Leader Fidel Castro,
center, attends a gala for his 90th birthday, Aug. 13, 2016, accompanied by
Cuba's President Raul Castro, left, and Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro,
right, at the Karl Marx theater in Havana, Cuba.
Large historical figure
His continued presence on the
world stage made him unique, says Cuba specialist Phil Peters.
“I think all admit he was a
very large historical figure who won a very impressive military victory in the
Cuban revolution, who maneuvered through very difficult circumstances in the
international sphere,” Peters, of the Lexington Institute, said. “He put Cuba
on the map, in many ways, far beyond its importance in history, far beyond its
economic capabilities.”
FILE - Cubans use the internet
via public Wi-Fi in Havana, Cuba, Sept. 5, 2016. By the end of the year, Cuba
promises to bring the internet to homes in Old Havana.
But the Cuban people paid a
heavy price, Calzon, the democracy activist said.
“Whatever good he did, the
cost that the Cuban people have had to pay in lives, in suffering, in torture
far exceeds whatever positive could be said about him,” Calzon said.
Tyrant or revolutionary, Fidel
Castro remained at the center of the world’s media spotlight until the end — an
object of fascination for some and repudiation for others
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