2. VICTOR LASKY SENT ME THE ATTACHED COPY OF A CUBAN PROPAGANDA PUBLICATION, "FAIR PLAY," PUBLISHED BY THE FAIR PLAY FOR CUBA COMMITTEE, 799 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

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06062825
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December 9, 1960
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C9m , F: "Pal r P1a For Cuba Cait1-" Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C060628254*-k*a�9*'"'m"" X: ZIA X: Lasky, Via6r)ec G 0 9 December 1960 MEMORANDUM FOR THE DIRECTOR 1. This memorandum is for information only. 2. Victor Lasky sent me the attached copy of a Cuban propaganda publi- cation, "Fair Play," published by the Fair Play for Cap. Committee, 799 Broad- way, New York 3, New York. Robert Taber is Editor. 3. There are references to the Director on Page 2 and to the Deputy Director on Page 3. This publication is conducting a ten-day airplane all- expense tour to Cuba, applications closing tomorrow, 10 December 1960. The total expense is, including plane fare each way, from Miami $1001 and from New York $220. This organization has organized Fair Play and Student Council chapters across the country, claiming 40 of the latter to date. They have arranged, as they state, student demonstrations at the United Ahtions head- quarters with the slogans "Hands Off Cuba" and "Send Federal Troops To Louisiana, Not Cuba." 4, Carleton Beals, William Worthy (of Afro-American), Izzy Stone (of Washington), and Professor C. Wright Mills are Obviously active workers with this organization. 5. I plan to forward this publication to WH after the DCI has seen it. Attach. cc: DDCI wio attach. OE.0, 19 [10.. (b)(3) -'STANLEY J. GROGANV Assikant to .the Director (.- Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 006062825 Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 Only Eight More Days To Join Xmas-in-Cuba Tour! (See Page 4) Fair Play Vol. 2 No. 7 December 2, 1960 0006 264 New York 15 cents Polishing Up the Big Stick: Another Step Toward U. S. As a nation, we suddenly found ourselves committed last month to a military adventure of appalling reck- lessness in Central America�skirting what C. Wright Mills of Columbia University calls, in all seriousness, ' "the perils of disastrous mistakes." (See Page 3) Taking time out from the inevitable golf at Augusta, Ga., President Eisenhower ordered an aircraft carrier and a destroyer squadron to Central American waters, with instructions to halt�if need be to sink�any craft carrying men or materials of war to Guatemala or Nicaragua. The pretext: a flare-up of popular insurrection in those banana and coffee republics, and with it the entirely imaginary threat of a "Communist" invasion from revolutionary Cuba�or elsewhere. (The President merely said "abroad." White House Secretary clarified: "Abroad could mean Cuba or any other place abroad.") The real object of the show of strength appeared to be (1) to intimidate the Guatemalan and Nicaraguan insurrectos and any other restless Latin Americans, while propping up those pillars of U.S.-style democracy, Guatemala's General Ydigoras and the Somoza brothers; (2) further to pave the way toward overt military intervention in Cuba itself, with or without the sanction of the Organization of American States. The logic involved is apparently to the effect that if Cuba can be branded as an aggressor in Latin America, no one will shed any tears on her behalf when the Marines storm ashore�or a UN "police" force, as the case may be. What Latin America Thinks Latin-American reaction, even in the most conserva- tive quarters, was about what Eisenhower 8s Company should have expected it to be, assuming that they were at all in touch with sentiment south of the border. But this may, of course, be too generous an assumption. Newspapers like Bogota's sober El Tiempo found themselves "profoundly disturbed." Diario Carioca in Brazil put its editorial finger on the cause of concern: "The big danger. ... is that we shall confirm the gravest precedent: that it will be enough for any Latin-Ameri- tervention tn What's Cooking? Puerto Barrios, last stronghold of the Guate- malan rebels, surrendered on Wednesday, Nov. 16, and the same day Nicaragua announced that its revolt was crushed. Why, then, the flamboyant announcement from Augusta the following day? The election is over. So is the revolt. Why, then, the marshalling of a 33,000 ton aircraft carrier and four destroyers, a huge armada against the mosquito boat fleets avail- able in the Caribbean? Is this really a tryout for the more dangerous game of throwing a barricade around Cuba? Hanson Baldwin in The New York Times last Sunday (Nov. 2 said it could be a precedent for such action.*** There is also some ground to fear that the CIA may be preparing an invasion of Cuba. The Natiortaloy. 19) said Dr. Ronald Hilton, direc or of the Instiute of Hispanic-American Affairs at Stanford, was told onwawr-ecent visit to Guatemala that the acquired a $1,000,000 trgatflarieTrAie seacoast that was being used-fetrain Cuban Counter-revoluA tionaries for anyasip rpin Guatemala City (a New York Times correspondent Nov. 20 by his army for guerrilla warfare training and that the project was not U.S. subsidized. But port and insisting that the land was being used when opposition deputies asked for an investi. Guatemalan newspaper, it was refused on the cooking up in the Caribbean?�I. F. Stone's Weekly, Nov. 28. quoted President Ydigoras as denying this re- gation after these reports were published in the grounds of military secrecy. Just what are we can government to term as Communist any movement forming against it, to count on prompt, decisive North American intervention even without the opinion of the OAS." The Uruguayan Marche underlined a fact which few (Continued on Page 2) Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 2 FAIR PLAY, December 2, 1960 U.S. Warships in the Caribbean: AnotherStep Toward Intervention (Continued from Page 1) if any U.S. newspapers had the grace to admit: "Gen- eral Eisenhower has ordered the Navy and Air Force to seek out and impede any Communist attack on Guatemala and Nicaragua.*** General Ydigoras Fuen- tes and the Somoza brothers can rest easy. The Marines are protecting their sleep.*** But in this episode neither the United States Government nor its friendly regimes have been able to produce a single concrete proof of Castro intromission to justify the patrol." By and large, the U.S. public seemed to view the proceedings unperturbed. The only public protest heard was in New York, where six hundred Fair Play pickets staged a two-hour "Hands Off Cuba" demonstration at the United Nations. (Nov. 26.) Just Call Us 'Muscles' With honorable exceptions, the press was true to form, somehow managing to suggest, in tones of sleepy self-satisfaction, that callousness to the interests of other peoples was a form of forebearance and that they ought to be grateful for our big brotherliness. To quote from Newsweek: "�the U.S. had evidently decided that the time had come to flex the Navy's muscles in public; peaceably and within the niceties of diplomatic protocol(!)�but still another reminder that Central America's Good Neighbor to the north was also a neighbor of towering strength." Still a big, bullying boob, that is. Nowhere in the commentary of the mass media or the utterances of our leaders has the obvious question been raised: what happens if the ship that gets sunk while we're flexing our muscles turns out to have been a Soviet merchantman? We hope that President-Elect Kennedy is thinking about that�but already there is much to discourage such a hope, including his confirmation of CIA chief Allan Dulles, the architect of our present disastrous Cuban policy What You Can Do If Kennedy, as president, does veer from the aggres- sive course charted by Kennedy the presidential can- didate, it will only be in response to a clamorous public opinion that does not, at the moment, exist. Fair Play has its work cut out for it. We have made a start, with chapters now established in most of the principal cities, and branches of the new Student Coun- cil on more than forty college campuses. But organiza- tional reports, pamphlets, and good intentions won't do the job, nor will an occasional demonstration. What is needed is thousands of letters to the White House, to the newspapers, to Congress; and public protest meet- ings from coast to coast that will serve notice that the American people do not support Washington's present Latin American policy. To accomplish this�to help prevent an "incident" Monroe Lived Long Ago "For what does the national freedom of a sovereign state mean if it does not mean that it has control in its own territory, over its own resources, over its own military force?*** "President Monroe was your President about 137 years ago. That is a long time; what he said is not exactly eternal. He was not a Cuban, anyway, nor a Brazilian, a Mexican, a Chilean. He was a Yankee. And this Monroe Doctrine with all the things that have been added to it and the interpretations made of it, these are not doctrines built on any consultation with any of the governments of any of the peoples of Latin America. It has been a Yankee policy, enforced militarily by the United States Ma- rines, used economically by the United States corporations, and used politically by the United States Government�to interfere in the internal and international affairs of Latin American countries."�from Listen, Yankee, by C. Wright Mills. "It is only when popular revolt breaks out that the U.S. takes a hand, and then only to spread alarm about the dangers of Communism and now of that new bugaboo, Castroism. * * * Is it any wonder that Castro is a hero in Latin America, and that we appear to be the main obstacle to aspirations for a more decent life below the border? Yankee imperialism, to our shame, is not just a propaganda slogan in Cen- tral America. It is a reality. To recognize this, and to stop blinding ourselves with nonsense about Cuban plots, is the first essential to wiser politics and better relations.�/. F. Stone's Weekly, Nov. 19. that could start a global war�the Fair Play for Cuba Committee and the Student Council urgently need funds. That means contributions and memberships. If you have not yet joined the Committee, send in your membership application and dues today. If you are already a member, pass this along to someone who hasn't heard about Fair Play. Help us to build an or- ganization that can stop that muscle-flexing in the Caribbean and avert the military miscalculation that could mean curtains for us all. SIGN UP TODAf! SUPPORT FAIR PLAY FOR CUBA! GOING TO CUBA FOR CHRISTMAS? If you are, better hurry! The closing date for appli- cations for Fair Play's Christmqs tour to Cuba is De- cember 10. If you plan to go, now is the time to send in your check and reservation. Details on Page 4. Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 FAIR PLAY, December 2, 1960 3 Listen, Yankee: Cuba Could be Last August the editor of Fair Play had the pleasure and privilege of accompanying -Columbia University sociologist C. Wright Milfs�(The Power Elite; White Collar) On a tour of Cuba, and watching him in action as he intensively interviewed the revolutionary lead- ers, from Fidel Castro on down. The end product of Mills' exhaustive survey (he is nothing if not thorough; in preparing material for White Collar, he went so far as to post stenographers in ladies' rooms to catch the off-guard chat of office girls) is a boldly controversial new book, Listen, Yankee. Mills' opinion�and he says so in the most em- phatic manner possible�that we had better listen: "No matter what you may think of it, no matter what I think of it�Cuba's voice is a voice that must be heard in the United States of America. Yet it has not been heard. It must now be heard because the United States is too powerful, its responsibilities to the world and to itself are too great, for its people not to be able to listen to every voice of the hungry world. "If we do not listen to them, if we do not hear them well, we face all the perils of ignorance�and with these, the perils of disastrous mistakes. * * * Some of the mistakes of ignorance have already been made, in our name, by the United States Govern- ment�and with disastrous consequences everywhere in the world for the image and future of the United States. But perhaps it is not too late for us to listen �and to act." Mills makes no pretense of being "objective" in the journalistic sense. He says frankly that his purpose is to present, "as clearly and as emphatically as I can," the voice of the Cuban revolutionary, the Cuban side _ of the story, which the U.S. press has so lamentably failed to present. _ . _ This view is projected in a series of imaginary let- ters from a sort of composite Cuban. The style is at times disconcerting: 'We Cubans know that you believe we are all led by a bunch of Communists, that the Rus- sians are soon going to set up a rocket base, or some- thing like that, here in Cuba, aimed at you; that we have killed thousands of people, out of hand, and are still doing it; that we have no democracy or freedom; and that we have no respect for private property. What you believe about us, after all, is your own business; we don't really care." But the content is solid and full of surprises; and the message comes across, powerfully: "Today the revolution is going on in Cuba. Tomor- row�not next year�it is going to be going on else- where. A revolution like ours does not come about just because anyone wants it.. . . We don't take satis- Our Last Chance Mills on Cuba and Communism "The first thing you must realize is that this Communist Party of Cuba has never been very large or very strong as a party. Your CIA deputy (Gen. C. P. Cabell, deputy director, CIA), at the end of 1959, estimated 17,000 Communist Party members in Cuba. Maybe so. It sounds about right. - The seco* rid' thing that's important is that this party did not play any part at all in the making of our revolution. The revolution, as we've told you, was made in the Sierra Maestra; and it is there that we really won out over the tyranny. For over five years, in fact�before we won�the Communists, when they didn't ignore us, were political rivals of our movement. We owed them nothing when we triumphed over Batista's tyranny. They didn't help. And any part Communists now have in our revolution- ary Government is because our Government gave them that part. They are there because they are now, like almost everyone else, help- ing our revolution. They didn't make any revo- lution. "The plain fact is, our revolution has outdone the Communists on every score. . . . In fact, this is the case generally with local Commu- nist parties in Latin America. In a real revolu- tion today, in Latin America, at least, the local Communists are to the right of the revolution. . . . They always arrive too late and with too little. This has been the case in Cuba and it still is the case: they lag behind our revolution."� Listen, Yankee, by C. Wright Mills, McGraw Hill and Ballantine Books, 1960. (Obtainable in paperback through Fair Play, 799 Broad- way, New York 3, N. Y.; 500.) faction in the fact that we are the center of the cold war in the Caribbean. We don't like the cold war anywhere�who does? But we are glad, we have to be glad, that finally many things that must be done are now being done in Cuba. "So what can we say to you to make you understand? "Can we say: Become aware of our agonies and our aspirations? If you do it will help you to know what is happening in the world you are living in. Take Cuba as the case; in terms of it, re-think who you are, American. "What does Cuba mean? "It means another chance for you." Recommended reading. Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825 4 � FAIR PLAY, December 2, 1960 F-P Pickets March in 'Hands Off Cuba' Protest Although Fair Play's Christmas tour to Cuba has been taking most of the attention of F-P and Student Council chapters across the country (40 of the latter to date) in recent weeks, there have also been some other noteworthy activities. In New York, some six hundred pickets from the local F-P chapter and supporting organizations put on a two-hour demonstration Saturday before the United Nations headquarters, in vigorous protest against the U.S. naval blockade established in the Caribbean to fend off a mythical "invasion" from Cuba. The slogan of the demonstration was "Hands Off Cuba!" Among others displayed on the picket line the one we liked best was "Send Federal Troops to Louisi- ana, Not to Cuba!" Security begins at home after all. A controversy of sorts erupted at the College of The City of New York when Student Council organizers there set up a speaking date on Thursday for Raul Roa, Jr., Cuban minister plenipotentiary attached to the Cuban Mission to the UN. A member of the faculty objected, and was quoted as having said that no "un- washed" Cuban would get his permission to speak at CCNY. The upshot was a protest from the aroused student body that brought an invitation from the Stu- dent Government itself, instead of just one of the on- campus clubs. Michigan State University's Professor Samuel Sha- piro, who had found himself in hot water after writing a controversial article about Cuba in the New Republic ("I thought this sort of thing only happened to Corn- Our mail-bag has been heavy with inquiries concerning the Fair Play Christmas-in-Cuba tour Dec. 23-Jan. 2 (ten days, all expenses for $100 from Miami, $220 from New York), and the telephones at F-P headquarters in Manhat- tan have been ringing constantly. Indications are that Cubana planes from Miami will be jammed with Fair Play and Student Council members coming in by air, bus, train and private car from as far away as Cali- fornia. Some students even plan to hitch-hike. Chicago is sending a plane-load to Miami by special charter. It is too early to know for sure, but chances are that the New York flight will be sold out. This is by way of a reminder. We have to know how many visitors to expect, so that Havana can make plans, at least two weeks beforehand. That means that all reservations must be made�and paid in full, by check or money order�on or before December 10. DECEMBER 10th IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SIGN UP FOR FAIR PLAY'S munists. I'm not a Commie; I'm a loyal American!"), addressed a Fair Play meeting Tuesday night in Cleve- land. And in California, Stanford U's Professor Paul Baran was heard on tv. with economist Paul Sweezey, co- author of Cuba: Anatomy of a Revolution, in a power- ful defense of the Cuban Revolution. On the Calendar of coming events: IT Author Carleton Beals (The Crime of Cuba and 30-odd others books) speaks Monday evening, Dec. 5, at the Community Church of New York, at a meeting sponsored by the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. Subject: "Is Latin-America Going the Way of Cuba?" (Editor: "I hope so." Beals: "Me, too.") Beals also has speaking dates January 22 in Philadelphia, and sometime in March in Racine, Wisc. Afro-American reporter Williarn Worthy 'and New York F-P chairman Richard Gibson speak Wednesday evening, Dec. 7, at the Royal Manor, 157th & Broad- way, in Manhattan, under the sponsorship of the Upper Manhattan Committee for Racial Equality. if I. F. Stone�who has been barnstorming without leiiiffieiloston area�speaks there again at a Fair Play meeting Saturday evening, Dec. 9. IT C. Wright Mills, author of Listen, Yankee (Get your paperback copy from Fair Play; 500), will be heard coast-to-coast on NBC at 9:30 PM, EST, in a television debate with Adolf Berle Jr., former under-secretary of state for Latin-America Affairs. Subject: Cuba. LOW COST, ALL EXPENSE CHRISTMAS- IN-CUBA TOUR. So if you have not yet sent in your reservation, DO IT TODAY! Just fill out the coupon below and send it to: FAIR PLAY TOUR 799 Broadway New York 3, N. Y. Please make reservation(s) for me on Fair Play's all-expense Christmas-in-Cuba tour. I wish to fly from New York 0 Miami fl I will be accompanied by the following members of my family: Enclosed is my check or m.o. for Price in full: $100 from Miami, including two-way transportation and all expenses in Cuba; $220 non- stop from New York. FAIR PLAY. Published by the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, 799 Broadway, New York 3, N. Y. Robert Taber, Editor. aftesmenewootEr:=0013 Approved for Release: 2024/05/09 C06062825