CUBA, ITS INSTITUTIONS AND CASTRO

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CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3
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August 11, 2003
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11
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October 1, 1974
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Cuba, Its Institutions and Castro by October 1974 State Dept. review completed Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CUBA, ITS INSTITUTIONS AND CASTRO Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CONTENTS PAGE Summary 1 Chapter One INTRODUCTION Government, Castro Style 9 Safety Valves 11 Counterproductive Exile Actions 13 Taking Cuba's Pulse 14 Guessing Wrong 15 Key Historical Factors 17 Violence an Accepted Way of Life 18 Democracy a Stranger 21 Corruption a Friend 24 Revolutionary Aspirations Denied 25 Chapter Two OLD INSTITUTIONS SCORNED Weaknesses Exploited 29 The Legislature 30 The Military 32 Political Parties 35 The Judiciary 36 The Church 39 The Press 45 Chapter Three NEW INSTITUTIONS MOLDED 54 Cuban Workers Central Organization 55 The Carrot and the Stick 60 Committees for the Defense of the Revolution 62 CDR Organization and Philosophy 67 The Federation of Cuban Women 70 The Small Farmers Association 73 Youth Organizations 80 Chapter Four THE SINGLE POLITICAL PARTY Origin 88 The "Old" Communist Party 90 The "New" Communist Party 92 The Political Bureau 94 Reorganizing the Government 97 Restructuring the Party 100 The Current Party Structure 101 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 (Cont.:_nued) PAC Chapter Five THE SECURITY FORCES (luerrilla Origins 104 After the Victory 106 A Society Militarized 108 illphasis on the Reserves 112 The Regular Forces 114 Chapter Six THE SCENE TODAY 117 - Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CUBA, ITS INSTITUTIONS AND CASTRO SUMMARY When Fidel Castro assumed power in January 1959, he had--in theory at least--one major strategic goal: to improve the lot of the Cuban masses. With this end in mind, it was simple to justify such subsequent actions as the elimination of internal opposition, the methodical destruction of Cuba's pre-revolutionary institutions, and the deliberate alienation of the US. If he was to bring about economic and social justice, he needed to ensure the consolidation and perpetuation of his own rule and it was therefore necessary to liquidate, or at least reduce to a minimum, any domestic or foreign influence that might threaten his control. Although he went about this task in a seemingly hap- hazard fashion in the early days of his rule, his actions during that period followed one steadfast political thread, that of maximizing his popular sup- port and minimizing his opposition. In his zeal to remake Cuban society, he was care- ful to proceed only as fast as circumstances would allow, making good use of his oratorical ability to sway the masses and avoiding moves so radical that they might provoke a reaction too strong for him to handle. Rather than attempting to sweep the past aside overnight, he spent the first two years of his administration in discrediting and dismembering vir- tually all of Cuba's pre-revolutionary institutions. With a few laudable but futile exceptions, they tumbled before his onslaught without resistance. Because they had served the people so poorly, their passing oc- casioned only token outcry from a population disen- chanted with its puppet legislature, powerless judi- ciary, corrupt military establishment, prostituted politicians, and alien Church. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 2rtala, key historical factors ni eiiminating or emasculating Cuba' mach easier. Cuba's democratic trao item l902--barefy halt a century of :nd was marked from the very beginni Lion, wholesale corruption, and a cc Lward extremism and an inability te Ll.cal parties, with the exception oi were shaped around an individual rat icular philosophy anu this prevented trong partisan political structures i;Landing the test of time or of pros H_lity needed for prcmoting comproma alternative to violence. ade Castro's task old institutLons _tion dated only practical experience-- 1g by US interven- sistenu tendency compromise. 1?oli- the Communist party, ler than a part- Lae growth of capable of with- ding the fiexi- e as a preferred he other hard, violence had become such an accepted way of achieving and retainng power that astro's use of it to liquidate any apposition con- i4tituted merely a continuation of normal poiiticai dfe. Moreover, Castro promised a total breaJ? with Hie evils of the past and thus reprc.sented the ful- -illment of revolutionary ambitions gLich has been ,onsistently frustrated ever since the initial strug- gle against Spanish domination broke out in 1868. history was clearly eastro's ally. Lo replace the ulscarded instiLutions and provide solid base for nis rule, Castro developed new in.- ';titutions using structures in the LSSR and Eastern .urope as his models, he created tne "organizations :if the masses" to give every segmerm of the population the opportunity to be Incorporated Lnto the Revolu- !Aon and to intimidate anyone who cLose to remain uutside. he gradually molded an enirely new admin- stracive framework for running the country and mer- ed three political groups--the pre revolutionary C:ommunist party, his own July 26 Mo.ement, and the liffuential Revolutionary Directoraie--into a single party that monopolized all politica. activity. The :scope of the reorganization he broult about was 5o uroad and its impact so pervasive .L.-ut it constituted 1 true social revolution and not meFeLy a typical ! tin American changing of the guarh. 4**4.4, 201101,41MONIMAN1104. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The most significant organizational change was the creation of the mass organizations. Prior to the Revolution, there were areas in rural Cuba where the population had little or no sense of nationality. Some pockets were so remote that they could be reached only on foot or by boat or beast of burden. The in- habitants, without electricity or means of communica- tion, were largely out of touch with any facet of national or local government and lived almost entirely outside the national economy. Castro's Revolution made them accessible through the construction of roads, exposed them to the communications media through net- works of radio and television stations, and brought them government services through the establishment of schools and medical facilities. It gave them--as it did to the poor in urban areas and the lower class in general--a sense of participation in government and political life through incorporation into the mass organizations. These were special groups formed on a nationwide basis for women, students, peasants, laborers, and the public in general. Isolation or poverty were no bars to membership and all sectors of the population were urged through propaganda cam- paigns and social pressure to join at least one of the groups. Membership became a sign of revolutionary commitment and a requirement for political, social, or financial advancement. Membership in the mass organizations had an important psychological side effect. It meant that, rather than waiting for some exterior force to turn the clock back and return Cuba to the pre-revolutionary era, the individual had made a conscious decision to participate in the revolutionary process, and that the first step had been taken toward acceptance of the changes that have so drastically reshaped Cuban society. It indicated the member had acknowledged-- at least to himself--that conditions were such that cooperation had more advantages, or at least fewer disadvantages, than either opposition or neutral ground. The mass organizations, therefore, in addi- tion to performing valuable substantive services for the Revolution, also functioned as a subtle means of preparing the people mentally for acceptance of the dramatic political and socio-economic shifts that Castro was bent on carrying out. -3- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The new institutions, particularly the mass or- ganizations, were clearly designed to complement Castro's dictatorial style of government. In general, they were loosely organized, monolithic in structure, and passive Ln nature. They concentrated authority and initiative at the uppermost level and placed only nominal restric- tions on the man at the top. They had an inherent weakness in that they tended to curb independence and innovation and to reward bureaucratic inertia at the very time when initiative at lower levels and adapt- ability were critical to the success of the widespread changes being made. bureaucrats from the provincial level on down judged it safer to implement directives trom Havana without deviation rather than accept re- sponsibility for modifying the directives to suit local conditions. The most minute decisions were often left to Castro himself, partly because he demanded it and partly because the system favored it. When Castro in his Messianic wisdom chose to challenge on technical grounds the considered judgment of foreign agricultural experts who had spent years of research before reaching their conclusions, his opinion automatically prevailed in spite of whatever damage might occur in Cuban agriculture as a result. 'de could without fear of opposition commandeer large amounts of scarce resources for utopian schemes that looked good on paper but proved highly impractical in the Cuban environment. Through vibrant oratory, he could mobilize massive moral and physical support for pie-in-the-sky projects that betrayed the best inter- ests of the population that gave so willingly and gen- erously of its time and muscle. There arose a mam- moth gap between practicality and theory, and economic pragmatism invariably fell victim to political exped- iency. Thus, the goal set in 1963 of producing ten million tons of sugar in 1970 was kept as a political target--Castro claimed that the "honer of the Revolu- tion" rested on its achievement--in the face of mounting evidence that it would be economically counter-produc- tive. That such whims at the highest level of leadership could continue for so long is a tribute not only to the resilience of the long-suffering Cuban people and the Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 strength of Castro's popular appeal but also to the patience of Moscow, which continued to pour untold millions down the Cuban rathole. Although the failure of Che Guevara in Bolivia in 1967 unquestionably sparked serious introspection and some policy realign- ment by the Castro regime, the breaking point appears to have finally been reached in 1970 when Castro An- nounced that the long-sought production goal would not be met. Popular disenchantment, criticism from pro-Castro technical experts abroad, and calamitous production statistics from other segments of the economy, backed up undoubtedly by stern pressure from Moscow, forced Castro to make a broad assessment not only of his policies but also of his manner of wield- ing the virtually unlimited power he possessed. He and his institutions were obviously not up to the task of achieving his goals. The major changes growing out of this reappraisal included a reduction in Castro's personal intervention in the application of economic policy, greater emphasis on joint leadership at the policy-making level, a strengthening of institutional frameworks, a greater delegation of authority, and increased pragmatism in problem-solving. In public appearances, particularly those involving the handling of substantive matters, Castro flanked himself increasingly with other members of the Political Bureau, the highest decision-making body in the country, to undercut charges that he was perpetuating a personality cult. He withdrew some- what from domestic economic matters and devoted much more of his time to foreign affairs. He spent lengthy periods abroad, visiting 20 countries--several of them twice--between November 1971 and October 1973. He paid much more attention to Soviet advice and permitted a significant increase in the influx of Soviet and East European technical experts and advisers. He called for a revitalization and democratiza- tion of the mass organizations and this precipitated a frenzy of activity aimed at providing channels through which the masses could communicate with the leadership and allegedly could have more of a say in determining policies and regulations that directly -5- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 tected them. A process was begun wnich in November 1972 resulted in the restructuring of the entire gov- ernmental apparatus, bringing all ministries, offices, and agencies--many of which had been totally aertonomous? under the jurisdiction of the Executive Committee of the Council of Ministers with Fidel at its head anc Paul Castro as its second-in-command. The most impor- tant reorganization involved the party and this process I 5 still in progress. It will continue until next year when the party's first congress Is to be held ahd could represent the greatest challenge to Castro's authority since the abortive attempt In 1962 by sev- eral members of the pre-Castro Communist party to wrest control of tne party from him enc. his Sierra Maestra guerrilla elite. As It is currently structured, the party is auverned by a 91-member Central Committee which is itself directed by an eight-man Political Bureau. Castro and the guerrilla elite have an overwhelming majority on the Central Committee anc?with the single exception of President Dorticos, who was hand-picked by Castro himself?ali members of the Political Bureau belong to the guerrilla elite. It was through this strong majority of unquestioning loyalty that Castro ruled supreme for so iong, and it is this majority that may be reduced significantly in favor of the "old" Communists at the party congress in The party has already undergone major changes in that the Secretariat?formerly concerned only with :arty housekeeping functions--has nos: become the organ responsible for monitoring the government's execution of all party directives. The emergence of the Sec- retariat as a ma7or force in policy implementation may have been an attempt by the Central Committee minority, basically the 'old" Communists, to undercut Lie supremacy of the Political Bureau, i.e., the supremacy of Castro himself. It so, the attempt seems to have failed, because the guerrilla elite succeeded in maintaining its origina majority by claiming four of the live new seats cn the expanded 'ecretariat. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Nevertheless, much remains to be resolved in the party and the outcome of the party congress will have an imposing effect on Cuban politics for years to come. The congress will elect a new Political Bureau and a new Central Committee and the makeup of these bodies will determine who is calling the shots in Havana. The higher the representation of "old" Communists, the more hard-pressed Castro will be to shape Cuban policies without being drawn totally into the Soviet orbit. Although his extremely heavy dependence on Soviet economic support has reduced considerably his room for maneuver, he prefers to keep the leash from Moscow taut. If he had a viable alternative, he would opt for greater independence from the USSR-- total independence, if possible--and it is the real- ization of this possibility and preference that rein- forces the "old" Communists in their efforts to gain the balance of power. This does not mean that Castro would change his form of government if Soviet economic leverage were eliminated. He has gone far beyond the point where a return to pre-revolutionary capitalism would have been possible, and his brand of socialism will remain at least as long as he and his guerrillas retain power. Even if independent, he would maintain warm relations with Moscow just to keep his options open, but he would be much less amenable to Soviet direction and manipula- tion. It is primarily this Soviet influence that is compelling him to hold the congress in the first place; he has long been against it because his guerrilla elite has the most to lose and the least to gain, but Soviet insistence apparently left him no choice but to set a date. If Castro retains his strong majority at the congress or even increases it, he will most likely continue to govern as he does now, making few ad- ditional fundamental changes unless forced to do so by the demands of the economy. The frenzy of re- organization that began in late 1970 will then have run its course. If, however, he perceives the pos- sibility of a significant loss of representation by his guerrilla elite, he may be tempted to conduct another purge of "old" Communists as he did in 1962 -7- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 and 1968, and his relations with Moscow will suffer accordingly. Such a purge would be feasible because, he still enjoys the staunch loyalty of the armed torces and state security apparatus. With his main opponents thus cowed, he could controL completely the congress actions. A reading of the situation at present indicates Lhat, because he dominates the body that presumably will be responsible for organizing the congress .e., the Secretariat), Castrb will have little hrouble retaining his grip on the party reins even if the "old" Communists do achieve a modest increase in representation_ As the congress approaches, how- ever, the pressures from Moscow and the maneuverings of the "old" Communists are bound to Increase with Lhe expectation that significant gains can be engine- ered at the expense of the guerrilla elite. Until the congress actually convenes, therefore, Castro may be much more willing than he has Leen in the past Lie take advantage of opportunities to decrease his reliance on Soviet support and expand his contacts with the West. He has given no sign that he would willingly pass the baton of leadership, on to someone else, and it is safe to assume that if he believed his position to be threatened he would seize an opportunity to strengthen it. The Soviet-sponsored process of institutionalization that is gradually building limits ail around Castro may already have convinced him that such a threat indeed exists. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION Government, Castro Style In a democracy, domestic politics is basically a matter of give and take, whether it be the "ins" striving to remain in, or the "outs" endeavoring to unseat the incumbents. Both the incumbents and the opposition are subject to pressures from a multitude of sources that must be obliged to some extent if valuable support is to be preserved. In many countries of Latin America, for example, the Roman Catholic Church is a key element in political life. Student and youth organizations, labor unions, the press, cultural and consumer organizations, the military establishment, large industrial corporations, chambers of commerce, political parties, the legislature, and the judiciary are other examples of institutions that must be taken into consideration by political leaders responsible for the complex process of government. In a democratic system, these institutions and pressure groups theoretically are given the widest opportunity, within reason, to express their desires and make their opinions known so that the conduct of government can reflect as much as possible the will of the people. In Cuba, however, the "de facto" chief executive, Prime Minister Fidel Castro, over the past 15 years has systematically destroyed, emasculated, or forced under his control all domestic pressure groups. As a result, his dictatorship is one of the "purest" in a hemisphere long known for its totalitarian govern- ments. Although Castro has wisely recognized that the will of the masses, now that they have been poli- ticized, cannot be totally or perpetually ignored, he has removed the give-and-take from his country's domestic politics and up until recent years indulged in the luxury of government by whim. With the country suffering from an extremely serious housing shortage, for example, Castro spent millions on prize cattle flown in from Canada and housed them and their off- spring in expensive "show-case" barns equipped with air conditioning and piped-in music. For years, he frittered away other millions on schemes to subvert -9- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 screign governments, while his own peeple were sub- cted to stringent rationing of consumer goods and comestibles. He squandered untold misSions more on spur-of-the-moment experimental agricustural projects that provided meager returns in spite or the large investments and the high priority accerded them. That Castro was aple to do this :or so long with- out serious damage to his political position is a tribute to his ability to deflect popular dissatis- _action away from his own stewardship to such scape- goats as militant exile groups, counterrevolutionary worms," the "microfaction," streetcorner vendors =d other remnants of privately-owned Pusinesses, afd, course, that old standby and most cependable of oi.1 bugbears--the "imperialist" Unitec States. Those Cubans who might have validly questioned his actions or decisions on technical grounds--or on any grounds, for that matter--for tne most part kept their own counsei--and thus their heads--much te the detriment oL the national economy. Castro does not take kindiy criticism even when it is constructive and offered with the best of intentions. His dis:avor is apparent Ci the arbitrary treatment of those woo have dared to speak up. Major Huber Matos, who had shared the hard- shtps and dangers of guerrilla warfare with Castro in the Sierra Maestra in 1958, was denounced as a coward, traitor, and counterrevolutionary and was given a A-year prison sentence in 1959 for resigning as mili- tary commander of Camaguey Province to protest in- creasing Communist influence in the government. For- mer Sugar Industry Minister Orlando Borrego, one of eeveral top government figures who have been relegated to obscurity in the past decade, allehedly owed his demotion in 1969 to his temerity in saggesting, cor- rectly as it turned out, that the 197) sugar harvest target of ten million tons would not ae met. Even the French journalist K. S. Karol and toe internation- ally respected agricultural planner and economist Rene Dumont, despite their admitted pro-Castro bias, were publicly denounced as 'agents of the CI after they had published painstaking analyses of Castro's economic policies. Punitive reactions like these discouraged constructive criticism at all levels of government. .040.0.10.104. Approve or e eare"Millin ? 05463R00 100100011- offilifigcoopo,4tIlgrook, Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Safety Valves To guard against a backlash to the repression of freedom, Castro introduced several safety valves. In September 1965 he promised that anyone who so desired could leave Cuba. This purged from the popula- tion, in a much more humane fashion than was employed in the Soviet Union and Communist China, those elements most likely to develop into significant opposition; provided the government with a gratuitous income (all real and personal property of emigres was confiscated); and forced those waiting to depart to conduct themselves in an exemplary manner in order to protect their status as prospective emigres. The refugee exodus, consisting of ten flights a week to Miami with from 70 to 80 passengers on each flight, continued for over six years. Many more Cubans departed than Castro had estimated, but at least he was relieved of many potential trouble makers. Aware that people are inclined to shoulder greater burdens during times of national stress, Castro worked unceasingly to create an aura of siege, to depict Cuba as a beleaguered bastion fighting desperately to keep one step ahead of the voracious imperialist monster. In speech after speech, year after year, he laid the blame for Cuba's economic problems on the "imperialist blockade," despite the fact that the nations of Western Europe made a shambles of US efforts to restrict their Cuban trade. Many Latin American countries honored the trade restrictions placed on Cuba by the Organization of American States at US urging, but, with the notable exceptions of Argentina and Venezuela, they are trade competitors of Havana. They do not produce what Cuba needs and had no signi- ficant trade with Havana even prior to Castro's rule. The so-called "US blockade" unquestionably impaired the Cuban economy years ago when the economic denial program was initiated, but its effectiveness has waned over the years as US technology in Cuba has been re- placed by that of the Soviet Union, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Great Britain, and other countries. -11- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The average Cuban, oi course, is either unaware or unimpressed by any objective assessment of the Impact of the "blockade;" he believes only that it is an aggressive policy designed specifically to destroy his economy and his government. It is quite natural that he views the policy as an affront to his country's sovereignty and a threat to him persoLaily. In enter- taining such sentiments he is extremely vulnerable to Castro's "beleaguered bastion" thesis and to claims that "imperialism" is responsible for whatever goes wrong in his life. More dramatic than the blockade ste the terrorist raids and bombings carried out by military exile groups against the island itself and against Cuban diplomatic and commercial offices abroad. These attacks, which sometimes result in the killing or maiming of innocent people, contribute absolutely nothing to Castro's demise; on the contrary, they give him further evidence to support his "beleaguered bastion" theme. As is to be expected, these foolhardy ventures are invariably blamed on the US. When small bands or exiles infiltrate in the naive hope of initiating another guerrilla war, Castro ex- ploits the propaganda potential to the maximum by deliberately mobilizing military reserves far beyond those actually needed to combat the exiles. The reservist is hastily summoned from home, factory, field, or mill to join his unit. Then, amid under- standable tension and excitement, he is rushed off to the general area of the incursion. Wien the opera- tion is over, usually within ten days Or two weeks, the reservist, even though he may never have seen a single one of the enemy, has become convinced of the threat of imperialist aggressions. Le returns feeling that he has made an important contribution to the defense of his country, that he is needed and important, and no longer a faceless nonentity existing outside the political and social life of the nation. More- over, the field experience is valuabe military train- jing for reservists and keeps the mobilization system itself in good running order. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Although the activation of reserve units--even for short periods--probably reduces local productivity, the benefits to the armed forces more than compensate. Counterproductive Exile Actions The primary and immediate beneficiary of the incursions is Castro himself. He is able to divert attention from his economic troubles, to embellish on his "beleaguered bastion" melodrama, and to siphon off potentially dangerous frustrations. Perhaps the most outstanding example of his exploitation of the exiles' antics occurred in April and May 1970, when the politically crucial sugar harvest was entering its final stages embarrassingly short of its goal. When a team of 13 heavily armed exiles was discovered minutes after landing on a beach in eastern Cuba near midnight on April 16, units of the army, reserve militia, Border Guard, and Frontier Brigade were rushed to the northeastern area of Oriente Province and de- ployed in concentric defense rings around the point of infiltration. By April 26, all the members of the infiltration team had been killed or captured. Blanket press coverage was devoted to the incident, and Fidel himself presided at the memorial service held for five members of the defense forces who had been killed in the fighting. To secure the release of the captured infiltra- tors, an action unit of Alpha 66 (an exile organiza- tion which has claimed authorship of numerous attacks on Cuban facilities) captured and sank two Cuban fish- ing boats on May 10 and held the 11 crewmembers hostage in expectation of negotiating an exchange. Reaction in Cuba was carefully orchestrated by the government. On May 15 hostile crowds, which at one time reportedly numbered 200,000, began gathering around the US Embassy building in Havana, then held in caretaker status by the Swiss Embassy. They remained there until May 19, when Castro arrived to host a reception for the returning hostages who had, in the meantime, been abandoned on a small island in the Bahamas by Alpha 66, and had returned to Havana via Nassau. -13- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 iti the huge building serving as a giqantic, visible, ]:1Aci tangible symbol of US "imperialisr," Castro de- Livered a bombastic adcress vilifying the US, prais- hq the courage of the fishermen and ocngratulating f Cuban people on their "great victory' over "im- perialism.' Almost as an afterthought, he announced Jot the sugar harvest target, on which he had staked "honor of the Revoaution," would rot be met. The timing of the exile incidents was so bene- l;.2ial to Castro?allowing him to blunt the keen popular disappointment he knew would fcllow the public ,i,jmission that the harvest would not r-ach the coveted -en million ton mark?that it is difficult to avoid hpeculating that his intelligence agents, who seem -a; have penetratea thoroughly all important exile (rganizations, may have suggested the cperations to exile leaders and assisted in the planning and execu- :ion. Although there as no evidence ta support this conspiracy" theory, it is clear that fastro de- herately overreacted to shift the focus away from :he harvest shortfall. Had the ten million tons been within reach, he would have done nothing that would Live jeopardized the harvest. The hfiltration-kianaping arfaii served Castro but it did not completely negate the impact F the failure to achieve the harvest Over- )ed though they were at the sate return of the hermen, the Cuban people found the harvest pro- tion totals a bitter pill to swallo,,; after their long, almost superhuman efforts in the oanefields. aL-itro was aware of the state or public morale and Dr1 July 26, durina the traditional speech on the an- niversary of the outbreak of his revolution, he hinted in an oblique fashion Lhat he might step down if the ople so desired. This probably marked the nadir uh his popularity since he came to power in 1959. 'raying uba's Pulse Castro monitors has popularity tr-s. his direct aantacts with the people and by public opinion polls acnducted by an olfice at the Revolutionary Orientation A** 4*tv n4 Approved ^**** **1 , **I, #4110000000004,, ow* iriovoi 2. Approved For Release 003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T 0353R0001001*00""0111134"1"4'. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Department of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party. Scorning the "representative democracy" of the Western nations with their congresses, house of parliament, etc., Castro claims to be operat- ing a "true democracy" which, in his view, is ex- emplified by the conversations he conducts with all strata of the Cuban people. He not only frequently visits the University of Havana to engage in spon- taneous "bull" sessions with the students, but often chats at great length with kitchen workers at the Habana Libre Hotel or at other places where he might be dining. When he tires of the monotony of the day-to-day business of governing, he visits factories and mills to talk with the workers or he leaves Havana for the rural areas, visiting with people in small towns and state farms. Many a surprised peasant has found himself in his home discussing local problems with Castro over a hospitable cup of coffee. Castro may need direct contact with the masses for psychological reasons, but in any case, these conversations perform a valuable public relations function. They are the only bridge between the masses and the top level of government. By personal contacts, Castro learns how government proposals will be re- ceived, what proposals should be reshaped or shelved and what segments of the population need attention in terms of political education and indoctrination. If he tried to assay public opinion through formal channels, such as the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDRs), he probably would be told not what the masses are thinking, but what the municipal and provincial CDR leaders think he wants to hear. Guessing Wrong This system is not infallible, however. When on September 28, 1965 he offered to permit unrestricted emigration to the US, he miscalculated grievously. The thousands upon thousands of Cubans who "voted with their feet" by applying for permission to leave their homeland became such an embarrassment that the government stopped accepting applications on May 31, 1966. By that time so many people had registered to emigrate that the exodus continued for over six years -15- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 a rate of about 4,0uO per month. his outpouring refugees did contain certain benefits for Castro, but it gave the regime a political black eye and more Lmuortant, led to a "brain drain" that cost Cuba, al- ready weakened by the toss of upwards ot half a mil- lion upper and middle class citizens in exile, many cL the people it needed most: professionals, ex- perienced management personnel, and skilled technicians Another miscalculation occurred n November 1965 when the Military Units for Aid to Production (UMAP) was established. UMAP was advertised as a system to uend the unemployed to work in the fitlds under military supervision, but in reality it createe a network of forced labor camps populated by common criminals, homosexuals, school dropouts, clergymen, persecuted religious lay leaders, and anyone who nappened to be without visible proof of employment when stopped in ihe street by "recruiters." Life in the camps was difficult enough what with the strenueus physical labor that had to be performed, but the criminals and sex perverts made it tnat much harder for those un- used to a prison-like existence. Thaae whose religious beliefs forbade the wearing of uniforms had a part- icularly difficult time. Within six ronths, UMAP had aroused so much public antipathy that "recruit- ment" was halted and the system was permitted to die Li natural death. By mLd-1968, those who had not al- ready been released were transferred to regular mili- eary units to finish their three-year military obligation. Castro had apparently believed that most of the pcople would be willin4 to accept some -iorm of com- pulsory labor service )or those laggards who, in spite of a scarcity of labor, steadfaatly avoided work. Guido Garcia Inclan, a radio commentator who ometimes acts as a kind of government-sanctioned ombudsman by airing general complaint from the public denounced in his broadcasts those who dressed like cane-cutters, carried a machete, bragged of fictional exploits in the harvest, but never actually cut. a ..angle stalk of cane. The same commer_tator also complained of ion-haired youths in tight-fitting pants who lolled about the streetcorners of Havana at the height of the harvest when therr presence in *wow 1r3r3roVe or e ease Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 the canefields was needed. The public was unprepared, however, for the harsh treatment, strict regimentation, unsanitary conditions, and degenerate environment that the UMAP quickly came to represent. The highly un- favorable reaction from the families and friends of the luckless UMAP "recruits" resulted in prompt re- forms and, eventually, elimination of the system al- together. In spite of popular disapproval, there is no question that Castro could have continued the UMAP if he had so desired, but he was not prepared to accept the price of greater repression, particularly in view of the UMAP's minimum effectiveness. In- stead, he sought to achieve the same ends by different means. As the UMAP was being phased out in 1968, the youth arm of the Cuban Communist Party was forming an agricultural labor force of some 50,000 young people (UMAP strength probably never exceeded 45,000) called the Centennial Youth Column. This organiza- tion also met with some popular resistance because of strong-arm recruiting tactics in its initial stages, but in general the Column was accepted by the people. In fact, it served as a model for similar but smaller groups such as the Youth Column of the Sea, the Textile Youth Column, and the Steel Youth Column and others which were organized to channel young people into those expanding economic sectors in need of labor. In August 1973, the Centennial Youth Column and its adjunct units were merged with the Permanent Infantry Division, military units in which armed forces personnel were used as common laborers in agriculture and industry, to form the Youth Labor Army, a militarized work force of about 100,000 people. Key Historical Factors The ease with which Castro has been able to minimize the give and take in domestic politics is in large part a result of Cuban history. The high incidence of violence in Cuba's political affairs, the absence of a strong democratic tradition, the acceptance of corruption as a way of life by those political leaders who preceded Castro, the weakness -17- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 both governmental and non-governmeutai institutions i. the time of Castro's accession to Rower, and many 'ears of frustrated revolutionary amhLtions all con- Cributed to a politico-economic situacion that was ripe for exploitation. Castro was merely continuing Cuba's traditional means of seeking political change when he attacked the Moncada barracks in July 1953 jud when he took to the Sierra Maestri mountains in eastern Cuba at the head of a guerriiia column in December 1956. His guerrilla force, as well as many others that appeared in eastern Cuba during the first alf of this century, was patterned arter the roving oands of irregulars that had waged thc War of Inde- pendence in 1895-98 and that were reoarded as heroic ymbols of Cuban nationalism. The violence and selective terrorism to which Castro's urban resistance apparatus resorted in 1957-58 drew little popular criticism not only because the kidnaprngs, bombings, and assassinations were directed against hated in- dividuals and institutions but also Lecause violence per se was considered neither evil nor improper. (The indiscriminate counterterrorism co which the atista government resorted, however, redounded to astro's advantage and served to dri a wedge be- tween the government and the people L(acause it was applied against the population as a vnole rather than against specific resistance leaoers.) in tact, the high incidence of violence that permeated Cuban politics ever since the Ten Years War a century ago Las so conditioned the population that its use as a political tool was looked upon not wlth disfavor but with a degree of hope. Atter ail, ir was violence that had gained Cuba Its freedom in _898, violence that had ousted the hated Machado from the presidency hi 1933, and violence that had eventually brought about the collapse of the detested Batista dictator- :ehip on January i, 1959. Iioience an Accepted Way ot i e Much of the Western press severly criticized (stro in early i959, labeling his w]despread use the execution wall a 'bloodbath." But very few (ulbans, even those who later turned against Castro 0 0 ig3 WIRIPPONN40014 fiiitittkiiMPONNOW VOP OW. 000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 and went into exile, sided with the critics. Such outstanding public figures as Auxiliary Archbishop of Havana Eduardo Boza Masvidal, later expelled by Castro, and Roberto Agramonte, former Orthodox Party presidential candidate whose integrity was acclaimed by US Ambassador Phillip Bonsal, spoke out in defense of the executions. The Cuban people found it dif- ficult to understand why foreign observers, particularly those in the US, failed to muster much enthusiasm for the elimination of what they considered heinous criminals. Likewise, Castro's use of strong-arm methods to purge the University of Havana of "un- reliable" professors and teachers created little stir. Some public outcry was heard when teams of young thugs invaded churches and disrupted services in a deliber- ate program of harassment of religious institutions, but the population in general was unimpressed. These and similar actions were carried out in the name of the Revolution and thus were automatically justified. In these early days, the emotional pitch of the population was so high that it was enough for Castro to accuse some group of opposition to his policies to bring out howling mobs bent on violence in his defense. Even in more recent times, after it was no longer a necessary tool for the consolidation of his power, Castro has used violence or the threat of violence as a basic political weapon. In 1968, for example, he had all the means to take over peace- fully shops, stores, and other remnants of private enterprise that still existed. He chose, instead, to unleash the "Revolutionary Offensive." Not only were 58,000 small businesses confiscated, but those people who were becoming disillusioned with the regime's inability to satisfy basic needs were thoroughly intimidated. Later the same year, he claimed that "counterrevolutionaries" were conduct- ing a campaign of "economic sabotage" to undermine the government, and, to the prolonged applause of his audience, he warned: ...Revolutionary laws are severe. But if they are not severe enough yet, the Revolution can enact still more severe ones. Let them -19- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 the counterrevolutionaries) not say later that they had not been forewarned nor that they did not know, because if we know any- Laing, this revolution is a hare struggle, a death struggle aaainst the powerful imperialist enemy which encourages and will always encour- age these acts (of sabotage). This is a strug- gle to the death. The people ir their wisdom and instinct reaiize this. This is a struggle for survival of the Revolution er the counter- revolution, and when things stack. up thusly, halfway terms are ruled out and the measures must be extreme... Before this revolution can cease to exist, no head of a single re- volutionary will remain on his shoulders in this country. Before they can destroy this revolution, the heads of all whc: may want to destroy it will roil. As if to emphasize Castro's threat, shortly after his speech a "saboteur" who allegedly had burned down a clothing warehouse was executed. Ln May 1970, at the time of the incident of the kidnaped fishermen, two members ot the Swiss diplomatic mission were physically restrained by a mob of demonstrators organized by the government from leaving the former US Embassy building and were without food for three and a half days. A year later the Cuban intellectual community was shocked by what came to be known as the Padilla affair. The well known poet Herberto Padilla, who had in- curred the enmity of old guard Communists as early as 1961, had permitted some veiled criticism of the Revolution to infiltrate his works, a lapse for which he had already been called to account twice. Padilla and his wife, Belkis Cuza Male, were taken into custody by officials of the Interior Ministry on March 20, 1971. His wife was released after a few days of questioning, but Padilla was kept in- communicado for over live weeks. During his de- tention he signed a 4,000 word "confession" admit- mg to involvement in counter-revolutionary activities. He was released some three weeks after the date of his "confession," and a day later, in front of his Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 colleagues assembled at the Union of Writers and Artists in Havana, he delivered a lengthy and debas- ing self-criticism. Following his lead, several others, including his wife, abjectly admitted counter- revolutionary shortcomings of their own. Although Padilla denied that his "confession" was the result of torture, the manner in which his case was handled arouses strong suspicion. Less fortunate than Padilla was a French press photographer, Pierre Golondorf, who allegedly was caught trying to smuggle a manuscript of Padilla's to a publisher in Spain. Golondorf received a long prison sentence after being held incommunicado several months, and authorities in Havana let it be known that "other intellectuals could be arrested on charges of counterrevolutionary activities." The message was not lost on Cuba's intellectuals. Unfavorable domestic reaction, as far as can be determined, was nil, al- though a fierce battle of words raged between Castro and European and Latin American intellectuals. Democracy a Stranger Violence was a traditional phenomenon in Cuba; practical democracy was not. Except for Panama, Cuba was the last of the Latin American republics to gain its freedom; at the time of Batista's overthrow in 1959 it had been independent from Spain for barely 60 years. In that relatively brief period, violence and corruption became stronger institutions than did democratic ideals. The first years of in- dependence from Spain, 1898 to 1902, were spent under US occupation which, according to Secretary of War Elihu Root, "should not be, and of course will not be, continued any longer than is necessary to enable the people to establish a suitable government to which control shall be transferred, a government which shall really represent the people of Cuba, maintain order, and comply with international obligations." General John R. Brooks (January 1, 1899 - December 20, 1899) and General Leonard Wood (December 20, 1899- May 20, 1902) were appointed by the President of the US as Cuba's first and second governors. -21- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 tne general elections held on December 31, 1901 under General Wood's supervision, Cuban democracy tarted off on the wrong foot and never fully re- overed. General Bartolome Maso, piqued because he board supervising the elections tncluded none of his representatives, withdrew from the race in ts final stages and the Moderate Party's Tomas ,strada Palma won unopposed. There was no improve- went in the offing. the first election in a free Puba, held in February 1904 to select members of Longress, became a farce when the Liperal Party re- used to concede the Republican Party's victory. Hy boycotting the opening session of Congress in April, it denied a quorum to the legislature, thus ureventing the Congress from?conveninq. The next presidential election, on December 1, 905, was a repetition of the first. Tomas Estrada Palma again won without opposition; this time the Liberal Party decided to withdraw after one of its popular leaders was murdered during a brawl with Lae Santa Clara chief of police. As it turned out, it's abstention made no difference. ine Moderate Party had contrived to win in any eventuality by erpetrating gross fraud in voter reaistrations. is not really surprising that the 17,1bera1s turned Lo violence to redress the wrongs they had suffered. Their armed uprising brought back the US marines n October 1906, and President Theodore Roosevelt named Charles E. Magoon provisional aovernor of Cuba. Under Magoon, reasonably honest elections were and General Jose Miguel Gomez of the Liberal arty was the victor. In 1912, howeuer, Gomez's iywn party spurned him and tapped Vice President Alfredo Zayas as its presidential candidate. Gomez nnd his followers, who controlled the ballot boxes Li Havana and Oriente (the two provinces with the 'Ireatest population), proceeded to throw the election L() General Mario Garcia Menocal of the Conservative Party. Four years later. Menocal sought to reverse 'die election results by declaring himself re-elected in spite of a disclaimer--supported later by the ,upreme Court--from the Central Election Board. A4ain the cheated Liberals took up arms, and again the [J3 sent marines to the scene. Am00.04.00. Approved ?or e eaintin/Mrseirtrtinrit Allratritrittrfil"."4" Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Amid the usual violence and fraud, Alfredo Zayas was elected on November 1, 1920 to succeed Menocal, his former opponent but now his mentor. Although still another US intervention brought about the in- validation of the results in 20 percent of the electoral districts and led to supplemental elections in March 1921, further sporadic violence caused the Liberals to avoid the polls and Zayas officially gained the presidency. In 1924, Zayas, the former Liberal now turned Conservative, found it opportune to change his party once more. In return for the promise of lucrative spoils, he gave his support--mostly armed muscle at the polling places--to the Liberal Party candidate Gerardo Machado. Machado won handily and, when his four-year term was drawing to a close, he contrived through blatantly illegal means to gain a second term of six years. This was too much even for Cubans to bear. Resistance developed, and finally, in August 1933, Machado resigned and flew to Nassau, allegedly taking with him seven bags of gold. In the extended period of chaos that followed Machado's departure, the presidency was filled in rapid succession by General Alberto Herrera, Carlos Manuel de Cespedes, a pentarchy, Dr. Ramon Grau San Martin, Carlos Hevia, Manuel Marques Sterling, Colonel Carlos Mendieta, Jose Antonio Barnet, Miguel Mariano Gomez, and Federico Laredo Bru. Some were president for a day; some did not even have time to take the oath of office before they were overtaken by events. The only man to gain the presidency through elections, Miguel Mariano Gomez, was impeached and ousted after barely seven months in office for vetoing a bill that was designed to enrich Fulgencio Batista. Batista, a former army sergeant, had succeeded in seizing control of the army in 1933, and as army chief of staff quickly emerged as the most powerful man in Cuban politics. He made presidents and, as in the case of Miguel Mariano Gomez, he broke them. He finally decided to come out from behind the scenes and rule in public. He ran for president in 1940 and, in what was probably one of the cleanest elections -23- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Cuban history, won. When his car didate was de- ..eated by Dr. Ramon Grau San Martin n the election --once against honest?in 1944, he turned the gov- ernment over to his successor peacefully. Grau step- ped down in 1948 for his own hand-picked candidate, Dr. Carlos Prio Socarras. When it Yecame clear, how- ever, that Dr. Roberto Agramonte of the Orthodox Party (a splinter from Grau's and Prio's Autentico Party) would win in 1992, Batista staged a coup d' etat, ruling first as prime minister and then as president until he was able to hold 9 controlled election that would give him the appaarance of legi- timacy. To run legally in the race, he yielded the presidency to his minister of state, Dr. Andres Domingo. His only opponent, Dr. Grau, withdrew a Few days before the votes were cast, and the way was clear for Batista to rule for another four years. The elections of 1958 were as much a. farce as those tri 1954, with Batista's candidate, Dr. Andres River? Aguero, claiming 62 percent of the ballots. Castro's revolt prevented River() from ever taing office. currupllion a Friend Widespread corruption, as well as the unsavory methods employed in elections during Cuba's republican era, tarnished the democratic ideals that were, in theory at least, supposed to be the guiding lines cf the country's political life. HiFtorian Hubert Herring described the first president, Tomas Estrada Palma, as "incorruptible and devoted," hut his suc- cessors were a different matter. Of the second presi- dent, Herring wrote: "With a smile, Pomez emptied the treasury and allowed Cuban and Argrican cronies Lu fatten on concessions." President. Mario Garcia Menocal "succumbed to the infection of easy money tor himself and his friends," and the next (Alfredo, Zayas) "president's rule by plunder offered no hope for the citizens." Then came Machado who "rewarded his inner circle with handsome incomes from concessions and contracts." Batista. "grew rich from commissions on contracts, kickbacks on customs, and percentages of the National Lottery. When he retired in favor ofi Gran. in 1944 and went to live in Forida, he was 1100110WINIKOMItitfm Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 able to settle a fortune upon his divorced wife. Cautious observers said that he had other millions invested in Florida apartment houses and like ventures." Dr. Ramon Grau San Martin "could not control the grafters who surrounded him... There was a steady deterioration in public services and increased cor- ruption in high places and in low." Things were to get even worse. Under Grau's successor, Dr. Carlos Prio Socarras, "thievery reached new heights, and the President himself was able to build a remarkable house in nearby La Chata at a cost of some two or three million dollars--on his salary of $25,000." Thus, when Castro took over in 1959 and ignored his pledge of free elections within a year, there was no strong outcry (other than from the exile community) from a population long denied the right to choose its own leaders. The democratic tradition was far too weak to withstand the pressure of cau- dillismo that Castro represented. Revolutionary Aspirations Denied Another historical factor also helped pave the way for the people's acceptance of Castro as their 20th century Moses. Cuban revolutionary aspirations had been frustrated for many years. Even when victory seemed tantalizingly close, revolutionary aims were thwarted. The tragic and inhuman Ten Years War (1868-78), for example, ended on a hopeful note with the signing of the Pact of Zanjon. This treaty, which had been purchased at great cost in blood and human misery, appeared to grant important concessions to the rebellious island. The pact, however, was honored only partially, temporarily, and half-heartedly by Spain, and before long Cubans again took up arms in search of freedom. Then, during the War of Independence (1895-98), the United States intervened just when--according to contemporary and present day Cuban historians-- the revolutionaries had Spain "on the ropes." Whether this nationalistic interpretation is true is academic; the important point is that many poli- tically conscious Cubans believed it and believed -25- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 lhaL the Cuban people were thus deniel the fruits ut victory after 30 long years of bitter struggle. This group looked upon the US intervention as a mere change of tutelage, with the US replacing Spain as master of Cuba's fate. life in the republican era seemea to bring the country no closer to tie achievement of revolutionary goals. US influence, embodied in steadily increasing economic involvement, frequent military interventions, And the hated Platt Amendment, pervaded all important aspects of national life until the mid-30s and made A mockery of the nation's alleged independence. At the same time, the so-called democrati.c institutions pressed upon Cuba by a paternalistic JS functioned la such a manner as to perpetuate corruption and poli- tical intrigue and to confound any effort by the mass- ea to improve their lot. A ray of hope gleamed briefly following the fall 4)); Gerardo Machado, but it was quickly extinguished when the US, fearful of the "red menace" and appalled by the continuing chaos., refused to recognize the revolutionary government of Ramon Grau San Martin. (His power base was relatively narrow and he did not enjoy support across tne political spectrum or throughout the country at large.) Washington waited for the emergence of a leader (Fulgencio Batista) who could restore order before granting the recogni- tion so vital to any Cuban government wishing to remain in power. While Batista charted a course in close con- junction with US interests over the next ten years, Grau retained leadership of the revolutionary ele- ments and organized his followers into the Cuban Revolutionary (Autentico) Party, which succeeded gaining wide appeal among the masses. Grau had to wait until 1944 before gaining the presidency, however, and by then the seeds of corruption had taken firm root in his political organization. Op- portunism replaced whatever revolutionary ideals remained from the previous decade. Although Grau's hand-picked successor, Carlos Prio Socarras, won Lhe presidency in the elections in 1948, the Autenticos Approved For Re ease rrillirtir-MIMPTIleratiftrirfflifttrurrir""*" Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 had to face the electorate without the support of many party members who, disillusioned by the unbridled graft and other forms of corruption that permeated all levels of government, had broken away in 1947 to form a splinter group called the Cuban People's (Ortodoxo) Party. This party, to which Fidel Castro and many of his followers belonged, became the repository of revolu- tionary ideals and "the refuge of yet another rootless younger generation." Batista reappeared in 1952 to thwart the nation's revolutionary ambitions once again by conducting a coup just prior to the elections that would have vaulted the Ortodoxos into power. With peaceful means denied them, the revolutionaries looked to the rifle as their only salvation. Many unsuccessful attempts were made to depose Batista; the Moncada barracks assault in July 1953, Colonel Ramon Barquin's mili- tary conspiracy in April 1956, the Goicuria barracks assault later in the same month, the attack on the Presidential Palace in March 1957, and the Cienfuegos naval conspiracy in September 1957 were the most important. Victory came to the man who captured the imagination of the people by literally retracing the steps of such national heroes as Jose Marti, General Maximo Gomez, and General Antonio Maceo. Whereas most revolutionary efforts to overthrow Batista were short-lived coup attempts, Castro's guerrilla campaign was long and drawn out (December 1956 to January 1959). This gave him the time to develop an image the public could accept, support, and cherish, and Batista did much to make Castro's task an easy one. On January 1, 1959 most Cubans viewed Castro as the best opportunity since at least the mid-30s to achieve the political, social, and economic goals they had fruitlessly sought for so long. His revolu- tion had ended its military phase and was about to enter its social phase, with promises of a clean break with the past and an honest government subject to the will of the people. He and his insurgent band seemed almost a reincarnation of the legendary heroes of the War of Independence, and his guerrilla campaign against Batista was similar in many ways to the irregular war which the revolutionaries of the most dramatic period -27- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 ii Cuban history waged against Spain. It was almost is if the nation were reliving the glorious moment at its independence, and it was Castro who was re- sponsible for the miraculous rebirth. Such was the euphoria of the people that they gave Castro a free hand to reshape the country's institutions as he saw Fit. The Cuban people, except for those with vested rlterests, were ready to try anything new so long as this new-found messiah led the way. Tney did not have long to wait. Approved For Re ease Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CHAPTER TWO: OLD INSTITUTIONS SCORNED Weaknesses Exploited When Castro and his victorious guerrillas entered Havana in January 1959, the country's fundamental institutions were already seriously weakened. It is impossible to determine just when in his drive to un- seat Batista Castro convinced himself that the whole structure of Cuban society would have to be demolished and rebuilt from the ground up. It seems most likely, however, that the decision was a gradual one, based on a series of reactions to specific problems that confronted the revolutionaries over a long period of time. Castro's "No Election Decree" of October 10, 1958, for example, was a response to Batista's announcement that national elections would be held on November 3 of the same year. The rebels had to take a public stand before elections were held if they were to avoid the possibility that the Revolution might find itself opposing a new government that to all appearances had been honestly chosen and that was at least nomi- nally free from the illegality, corruption, and brutual repression that had characterized the Batista admin- istration since 1952. Although some candidates abstained or withdrew, many were obliged--by pressure or connection--to participate in the race. Thus, because the rebels' decree barred from public office for 30 years anyone taking part in the elections, many politicians and their parties were effectively excluded from post-revolution political activity. Another example was the elimination--despite earlier disclaimers of any such action--of foreign- owned (and ultimately all) private enterprise in Cuba. Batista's hurried departure early on New Year's Day 1959 left Fidel without a windmill to fight. He needed a threat so that he could defend the Cuban people, a threat that would unite the masses behind him while he introduced the radical measures necessary to consolidate his position. The -29- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 *04 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 enmity of the US, with its distastefut reputation of naked intervention in Latin American Politics, would serve this purpose and would--based on Previous Cuban experience--be relatively easy to pro7e, the US being the'iargest investor in Cuba. Thstro set out on a course of deliberate provocation, forcing a series of reactions from the US, which he countered by confiscating and expropriating Ameuican property. ,nus driving ever deeper the wedge beuween the two countries. Although Cuba unquestionably paid the greater price economically, the cost was calculated Lo be bearable in view of the political gains. The casualty in this process of planned alienation was private enterprise. Private business nad provided much of the money that had financed Costro's guerrilla ,ar, but Castro realized that it could now contribute the same manner to nis overthrow. he was, there- fore, quite willing to do away with the private sector despite the serious economic problems that could in- evitably result. J,c isiature Other institutions, rather than JeLng system- ically destroyed, collapsed of their own weight. The legislature, dissolved permanentiv shortly after the rebels entered the capital, had rarely in its 57-year history served as an effective counter- balance to the executive branch of government. The bnly time the Congress successfully cl.allenged the presidency was in 1936 when, at the direction of the army chief of staff, Fulgencio Batista at the time Cuba's de facto chief executive), Prestdent Miguel Mariano Gomez was impeached for refusing to sign into Ualw a bill-legalizing craft for Batista, Corruption had been a trademark cf the legisla- t:.ure ever since it was formed in 1902. According tc Hugh Thomas, Cuba's first-Congress: ?.embarked upon democracy with a scandal fit to discredit it. Having first passed a bill Jiving lavish salaries to public office holders, another was introduced to give extra payments ...twoo***AaRasavoaloa.arowaimpopaa a Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 to the army of liberation: one dollar was prom- ised to privates for each day of service, and lavish sums to officers. This opened the way to a sensational speculation on the part of a number of politicians, who let it be understood that the delays in settling this question would be endless, and persuaded half the soldiers with claims to sell these at half their proper price. Afterwards, when the bill had been in the event quickly passed, the new politicians.. .drew in the profit without shame." Involvement of high-ranking Congressmen such as Orestes Ferrara, president of the House of Representa- tives, in the multi-million dollar scandals of the Gomez administration (1909-1913) further tarnished the reputation of the Congress. During the Gomez administration the national lottery (outlawed in 1898) was restored, providing a source of wealth that con- tinued to corrupt the legislature up until the time of Batista's fall in 1959. The president of the Senate in 1909, who 18 years earlier had found it politically expedient to denounce the system of bet- ting as "social gangrene," offered a bill to reinsti- tute the lottery and met with no opposition. The law provided that the lottery tickets would be sold by widows and families of veterans of the War of Independence and that these people could retain a per- centage of the face value of the tickets. In practice, however, the lucrative ticket distributorships were apportioned among congressmen and political cronies, who proceeded to multiply their take simply by in- creasing the sale price of the tickets to as much as five times their face value. Thomas claims that "within a few years of Gomez' law, the lottery was known to be the most efficient method of illegal en- richment, and above all for buying the silence or support of the legislature or press." Over the years, the legislature either permitted itself to be corrupted into supporting the president or, at the least sign of recalcitrance, was suspended. The period of Batista's second administration (1952- 1959) is typical. Following his coup d'etat on March 10, 1952, Batista ruled without a legislature until -31-- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 anuarv i955, wnen, flfter a carefull- -ontrelled ..iection in which he ran unchallengr L, he was assured docile and compliant Congress. Altl-ough members the opposition in the House and S-rate--some pre- :iimaoly driven by self-interest and ethers by the ope that by working within the syst-m (albeit a -orrupt one) they could act as a kin of legislative Tonscience and possibly influence fa-mrably some of __e Legislation brought up for discussion--their -resence served only to give the appearance of lecal- Ly to a body that functioned as a rihPer stamp for he presidency. curing the 34 months in which Congress under Ratista was suspended, legislative ,--)7Y4ers were in- vested in the Council of Ministers. Pis is the %/stem in use today under Castro. AThing through 7esident Manuel Urrutia Lleo ( Janur..7 1 - july 17, 959), Castro dissolved Batista's lecjalature in. jonaury 1.959 and a month later promulgated the Funda- mental Law which, in Article 119, granted all legis- aLive powers to the Council of Mlnistors. In this shion, Cuba's Congress was permanert-y laid to rest ./en betbre Castro 'became prime minister. Its pass- q went unnoticed and unregretted tri the masses it was supposed to represent. etc Military ;01.lowing his accession to power. Castro handled zitista's military establishment in n-:ch the same manner as he had handled the legislature; he simply iiguidated it. Its duties were transferred to the ebel Army. Some of the officers and men who had enved honorably and who were willing to submit to Llie discipline were incorporated (as individuals rnther than as whole units) into the Pebel Army, but most were released outright. The military had had oil the men and equipment necessary tn iestroy Castro's guerrillas in combat durinq the war in the flLenra. Maestra, but it was devoid of fighting spirit and lacked a sense of nurpose. Piddled with corrup- tion and burdened with a venal hierar-717 incapable oh effective leadership, it collapsed aa much from own internal decay as from military pressures in tie field- Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Rear-echelon officers sold guns and ammunition to the rebels' intermediaries, front-line commanders, unable to nail down their elusive adversaries, rounded up groups of local peasants, slaughtered them, and reported the bodies to headquarters as "rebel casual- ties." The treatment frequently accorded captured rebels was enough to alienate any decent military man, and the indiscriminate bombing of peasant villages in the Sierra Maestra so sickened air force pilots and bomber crews that they sometimes jettisoned their ordnance out over the ocean. A few were so appalled by the bestiality that they deserted and went into exile. Field commanders came to realize that if the fortunes of combat turned against them, they could not count on reinforcements. Still worse, it was not unusual for units to be ordered into combat with- out being forewarned of ambushes that the General Staff knew had been set up by the rebels. Under these conditions, it is no wonder that over 400 army soldiers had surrendered to the rebels by mid-1957 and that many more had deserted to join the rebel ranks. This is not to imply that the rebels inflicted no defeats on Batista's forces. The guerrillas won far more encounters than they lost, and their skill in overcoming platoon and company-sized units in isolated outposts in Oriente Province finally com- pelled the army to evacuate these positions and with- draw its troops to larger garrisons in the cities. Although many of the battles--particularly those in 1957 and the first half of 1958--involved fewer than a hundred men on either side, the guerrillas' ability to come out consistently on top helped keep rebel morale as high as army morale was low. The seeds of the disease that brought about the collapse of the Cuban military establishment had been sown many years before Fidel Castro ever became inter- ested in politics. The foundation for the army was laid in 1907 during the second US military intervention (the Army of Liberation having been disbanded in 1899 during the first intervention). Although the army had dabbled in politics from time to time in its early years it had not played a major role until the early 1930s. -33-- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 was President Machado who pcliticized the Jrmy. He promoted to choice positicns those officers open to corruption and assigned to 1-arious military Hmtboes those whose Integrity interfered with his 4mbitions. To sao the influence of the younger and Loss tractable officers, he saw to it that they were overruled whenever they attempted tc, censure enlisted ilen for breaches of discipline. This latter actio backfired. During the hectic summer of 1933, these officers, shocked by the chaos that the general strike iuhd widespread terrorism had brought, forced Machado Lc leave the country. In the turmoil following his departure, however, army enlisted mer., led by Sergeant Fulgencio Batista and other non-commissioned officers, mutinied throughout the entire country and seized power. About 300 of the young professional officers Look over the National Hotel in Havana, apparently hoping that a show of unity and possible US backina could restore their control over the army. Their ITailure to act decisively, however, ioomed their ef- rts almost from the start. After more than three weeks of tense waiting, the soldiers attacked the hotel with everything from rifles to naval and field drtillery. Following a furious battle, the surviving ntficers were sent off to jail. Thus, the Cuban of- icer corps lost most of its dedicated and well-trained professionals; their olaces were takhn by corporals ;Ind sergeants quickly elevated to lieutenants, cap- iains, majors, and colonels. The new armed forces dominated :'Llinan domestic politics from 1933 until late 1944, when newly elected Bresident Grau began an extensive shnke-uP that was ,o rid the military of most of the officers who sub- ported Batista. But again the tide was reversed. Batista staged a successful coup on March 10, 1952, Jamiediately purged those officers not personally d6-,- voted to him, and restored his old c-onies to top- Lwel positions. By these actions, he removed the very individuals who might have destroyed Castro's querrillas and replaced them with incompetents more tnterested in amassine great fortunes. than in fight- _1.(a rebels. In effect, Batista underwrote hs own downfall. 4 Approved For Re ease Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Political Parties Just as discredited as the military in the eyes of the Cuban people were the political parties. None had evolved as a consistently strong contender in national or local elections, and none had developed a clear ideology of its own. Conservatives of one day would run on the ticket of the Liberals the fol- lowing day. Democrats were not always democrats, and the Cuban Revolutionary Party did not represent the revolutionary ideals that gave the party its name. After Eddy Chibas' suicide in August 1951, even the Ortodoxo Party split wide open. Without Chibas' demagogic voice and impetuous leadership, the Ortodoxos broke up into factions, some favoring the radical path that Castro chose and others seeking a more conventional, less militant means of solving Cuba's problems. Opportunism was the trademark of Cuban politics. Batista was just as willing to work with the Communists as to work against them; and the Communists, in turn, could do a quick about-face when they realized that Castro's rebel forces were gaining the upper hand in the fight against Batista. Parties were not tied rigidly to a narrow ideology, and therefore new parties could be created and old ones discarded without damage to the politicians or the political system. It was a candidate's personal charm and rhetorical skill, not the party he represented, that were important factors in an election. The people attached their loyalties at the ballot box to the individuals of their choice rather than to a particular party. In the elections in 1944, for example, Grau won the presidency in a landslide but his party was unable to gain a majority in either the House or the Senate. Cuba's political parties proved useful for half a century, but were never vital. In 1959, Castro did not have to destroy them; they quietly disinte- grated from lack of interest. -35-- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The .Judiciary The judiciary suffered a somewh t different fate. Atter initial purges removed persons who might prove independent or otherwise embarrassing to Castro's Revolutionary Government, the judiciary was largely l4nored. This was possible because A system of courts was instituted to handle actions that ander the new .revolutionary ethics were considered to be crimes. i-ae "old" judiciary inherited from Batista was quite unused to neglect. Previous administrations had .reated the judiciary in cavalier fasaion, accepting _nose juridical decisions that were nonvenient and -aypassing or disregarding altogether those that were disliked. In addition, judges were -requently bribed, and in many cases they owed their apoointments to political rather than juridical skil - These factors, cilus the fact that in the more remote areas justice s dispensed from the mouth of a pistol by a member the Rural Guard, did little to foster a tradition respect for tne courts. Justice ?-las often looked upon as a luxury that only the rich sould afford. Some improvements in the judiciA system were qade after the Constit_ution of 1940 was adopted, but, as in the case of the legislature, tAe judiciary never evolved to the point that it could roresent a seri- ous challenge to the presidency. Law was still con- ndered a tool of convenience, a wea non to be employed only when one's opponent broke it ane not a code of ,nduct for one's self. Even in the 'period from 1940 1952, when Cuba made its closest upproach to democ- racy, contempt for the courts was evIdent in the highest places. Thus, in 1952 Presdent Prio, ap- parently in exchange :or several valeiable tracts of land outside Havana, granted a full eardon to a wealthy Cuban who seven years earlie- had been tried and convicted of chill molestation, -enat who, because or numerous appeals, nad never serve e any portion cf is six-year prison sentence. The fortunes of the judiciary fEL1 to new laws alter Batista's ouster of Prin. Altiough the Court or Constitutional Guarantees--bresumdbly in a sage ')1) .414 ,A POININPMS111410POW4040.14100141140.41WWINOPMAVUMANIEli.0000MANA.MS, Approved For Release 20 '71 inst s Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 spirit of self-preservation--ruled that Batista's government was not unconstitutional because "revolu- tion is the source of the law," many honest magis- trates found themselves torn between their duty to uphold the law and the increasing lawlessness of the government they represented. Havana Criminal Court Judge Jose Francisco Alabau Trelles, appointed as magistrate and special judge to investigate six mur- ders and several other crimes, felt such pangs of conscience that he decided he had to act. On March 11, 1958, he indicted Lieutenant Colonel Esteban Ventura, chief of the police department's Division of Subversive Activities, and Lieutenant Julio Laurent, chief of Naval Intelligence--both notorious killers --for two of the murders and ordered them held with- out bail. Within 24 hours, President Batista had out- maneuvered Alabau by suspending civil rights and re- moving the indictments from civilian courts to mili- tary tribunals, where they were immediately quashed. The enraged Ventura, accompanied by two police ser- geants, went with gun drawn to the courthouse in an effort to find and kill Judge Alabau. The judge had fortunately gone into hiding and later made his way safely into exile. Thirteen other judges--two of them presidents of divisions of the Havana Court of Appeals--took a more cautious approach. On March 6, just a week before Alabau's indictments, they addressed an appeal for relief to the Chamber of Administration of the Havana Court of Appeals, stating: The administration of justice in Cuba has never been so mocked, ridiculed, and abused as it has been recently. Upon reviewing our hazard- ous past history, we cannot find any record of two sons of a judge having been killed by a soldier, or the homes of two magistrates having been bombed, or of a magistrate acting as an electoral inspector having been arrested by a member of the armed forces, and his having been kept incommunicado and deprived of food. Nor can we find any record of judicial procedure having been prevented by national police patrol -37- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 cars, or the traditional institution of habeas corpus mocked and Ignored after toe criminal division of the Supreme Court ordered prisoners Lo be freed, prisoners who were later found shot to death, or after the Court of 1oueals of this district had ordered that they be presented be- fore the court under the appeals procedure. h the otner hand, it is notorious that .des like gambling and prostitution are exploit- c.d by those called upon to prosecute them and that the list of deaths and murders anong prisoners grows daily, even including younc people and women, without the authors of such crimes being discovered, owing to the lack of police cooperation. There hardly remains any Court of Appeals where, for lack or proper vigilance, a fire has not broken out or a bomb has not exploded. A few steps from the Supreme Court puilding a man has been found shot to death, ane the police have neither been able to prevent it nor to trace the assassins. judge, aopointed as special_ prosecutor to Laves-tic:fate the facts, is publicly subjected to threats and insults with complete impunity. J.nally, in the municipalities of Santiago, de Cuba, Guantanamo, Palma Soriano, Bayamo, El Cobre, Manzanillo. and Niguero, ft is a notorious fact that cases of violent death by gunshot, torture, and hanging) are daily events, while the judges are prevented by officers of the armed forces from doing their duty and are deprived of the indispensable means to do it. Tilis state 01 affairs makes ::he judiciary of J'ac Republic appear as a weak and oppressed body in the eyes of the nation... As could only be expected, nothing came of the lidges' appeal, and the situation they described so accurately continued without change for another nine ,ind a halt months. Xj31576'NiTtir871krerair / 0/2 015 ..104000041000.0t,444104V-04W Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 If the judges themselves were so distressed as to acknowledge publicly that their inability to function was due to government lawlessness, it is hardly surprising that the people whom the courts were supposed to serve found no solace or refuge in their judicial system. The judges' description of the situation existing during most of Batista's second administration goes far toward explaining why the people were so willing to accept the revolution- ary tribunals, established by Castro in early 1959 to handle major crimes, and the people's courts, set up in later years for minor offenses. The new courts, despite their many shortcomings, did much in the early stages of the Revolution to assuage the people's thirst for justice that the old system had failed to quench. Much of the old judicial system remained in ex- istence until 1973 but was rarely used. The revolu- tionary tribunals and the people's courts handled the great volume of juridical business. This dual system of courts was replaced in 1973 by a new judi- cial structure patterned on the court systems of the countries of East Europe, and the laws by which it operates are based on "socialist legality," rather than the Napoleonic code which heretofore had been the foundation of Cuba's legal procedures. The Church The judiciary could be bypassed by creating a new court system, but to subjugate Cuba's major reli- gious institution, the Roman Catholic Church, required different tactics. Castro had one big advantage. Ever since the country's independence, the influence of the Church in Cuba had been only moderate. In the colonial period, relations between the Church and the mother country, Spain, were very close. Not only was all of the Church hierarchy Spanish, but favored Spain when the revolutionaries were struggling for Cuban inde- pendence. There were notable exceptions to the pro- Spanish sentiments among most of the clergy, of course, but they were viewed as just that--exceptions. -39- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Although most Cubans were nomina_ Catholics, they identified the Church--both durit4 and after Lie rebellion--with colonialism- Thus, when Spain was forced to withdraw in 1899, the Caurch not only Lost much of the property that it had acquired but also experienced considerable difficulty in recruit Lag native clergy. The result was a refatively weak religious institution that remained under a cloud of suspicion and sufferea from a chronic shortage of priests, especially in the rural area . The Church tried to establish it5elf as a posi- tive social force, particularly after the 1930s, but Lt was unable to recover what influence and prestige IL had enjoyed before Cuba's independtnce. In addition, the conservative bent of its largely Spanish (and pro- Franco) clergy acted as a restraint a4ainst those in the religious life who pressed for a more liberal posture_ Far from taking the lead in the fight for social justice, the Church was frequently on the de- tensive in the '40s and '50s, fendinc off attempts by the Popular Socialist (Communist) Party to pass laws that would have emasculated the parochial school system and explaining politically embarrassiag incidents, such as the friendly welcome accorded Fulciencio Batista by Archbishop of Havana Cardinal Arteaga in 1952 following Batista's successful coup d'etat. The Church's inability to compet with the radical elements in answering the critical need of the masses For leadership championing their cause eventually re- sulted once again in the identification of the Church with the status quo. Despite the willingness of priests like Father Guillermo Sardinas to join Castro's guer- rilla band in the Sierra Maestra, the Church's denun- ciation of government atrocities, anc its attempts to settle the nation's political'problens through negotia- tion, the notion that the hierarchy was insensitive to the plight of the masses prevailed. The very fact that Lie Church was singularly ineffective in its attempts to change the status cuo and was unsuccessful in its confrontations with the government served to discredit Li as an institution too weak to bencfit the oppressed. -40- """"TP-ISIM-671 or e ease Son A-0 itok IR 1 0 0' Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The activist priests provided Castro with a con- venient political tool which he submitted as "proof" that the rebels were not the radicals they were rumored to be, but there is no evidence that any of the clergy- men, Father Sardinas included, exerted significant in- fluence over him or over other members of the rebel leadership. Castro was willing to use them as long as they were willing to be used. They functioned primarily as chaplains, as confessors to people executed by the rebels, and as dispensers of the sacraments to peasants living in areas "liberated" by the Rebel Army. The few priests who cheerfully suffered the rigors of guerrilla life could not, however, counter the popular belief that the Church, dominated as it was by Spanish clergy, was allied with the upper class, which was also made up largely of families with strong personal and political ties to Spain, and even that it was an agent of foreign interests. Also damaging to the Church's position was the permanent departure from Cuba, in gradually increasing numbers, of hordes of its most faithful financial supporters, once the radical nature of the Castro regime became apparent. The Roman Catholic Church, without substantial economic resources, widespread popular support, or influence among rebel leaders, could do little to change the course of events once Castro had assumed power. For the Church, the post-Batista period opened auspiciously enough. Archbishop of Santiago Enrique Perez Serantes was one of those who entered Havana with Fidel on January 8, 1959. He had presumably earned this honor in 1957 when, in several pastoral letters, he denounced the crimes of the government and pleaded for peace. The summary executions of former government officials drew criticism from abroad, but representatives of the Church defended the new admin- istration's right to eliminate those guilty of heinous crimes. Perez Serantes, however, in an action reminis- cent of his plea in 1953 for the lives of those who had attacked Moncada, asked Castro to reduce the sanctions as much as possible "because the new tree of liberty and justice does not need to be watered with more blood." -41- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The close relationship between 'the Church and regime was short-lived. The Churqa's power was Tradually reduced until finally it disappeared entirely. Oritial friction appeared in late Jaanary 1959 when all academic credits and degrees awarded bv Catholic and other private advanced educational institutions after November 30, 1956 were declared null and void. Al- though this measure seems to have been intended pri- marily as a sop to students at the Uriversities of Havana and Santiago (which had been closed since November 30, 1956 by government order and not as an opening salvo against the Church, tor Church officials requested clarification, of the status of private education in mid-February. Perez Serantes, perhaps because he knew the Revolution's leaCers better than ethers in the Church hierarchy, was particularly wor- ried. He asked: 'Could it be said that to be a student of a Catholic school is a danger for society? Perhaps there is fear that our youth, for having passed through a Catholic school, will be less cultured or less manly? ?Lt Dr, Fidel Castro, alumnus of Dolores (a Jesuit high school in Santiago attended briefly by -Fidel) and of )3elen (a Jesuit high school in Havana which Fidel at- bended from 1942 to 1949), answer for us." Perez Serantes was more skeptical than his fellow prelates about the impact of the radi7.al Agrarian Reform Law which Castro promulgated in May 1)59. Some of the clergy welcomed the law as an importalt and necessary facet of social austice, but, after originally endorsing the measure, Perez Serantes reversed ni-riself and warned of increasing Communist influence at the highest levels of the government. As the Revolution ground on, des- iroying the free Press, private entercrise, independent Labor unions, and any other potential threat to unfet- tered executive power, the rest of the Church hierarchy )oined Perez Serantes in opposing the regime. The increasing contacts of the new government with the Soviet Union confirmed the clergy's fears. A pastoral letter from Perez Serantes in May 1961 warned that "the enemy is within the gates;" three months later, the opiscopate released a Pastoral condemring "the qrowing advances of Communism in our cnnntry" and ,wwwww,,,mmw Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 declaring that the Cuban people "could only be led to a Communist regime by deception." Castro respond- ed on August 11, 1960. He accused the Church of "systematic provocations" and charged that as a re- sult of prodding from the US Embassy and Franco's Spain, the Church had mobilized "as many Fascist priests as can be found to fight against the Revolution." The final stages of the Church-State conflict had arrived. Church services were disrupted by government- organized mobs of young toughs, Church property was confiscated under various pretexts, religious proces- sions were broken up and finally banned altogether, priests found it impossible to obtain supplies with which to repair their churches and other buildings, Church-sponsored programs on radio and television were silenced, and the government-controlled press conducted a campaign of slander and denigration of the clergy which could not be refuted for want of a vehicle though which to reply. Following a speech in which Castro threatened the Catholic school system, the Church fired one last barrage before falling silent. In an open letter directed to Castro, on December 4, 1960, Church leaders vigorously protested the constant harassment to which it had been subjected by the regime. Castro replied by making another speech in which he bitterly denounced the Church and linked it once again to the enemies of the Revolution. The Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961 provided the setting for the rounding up of some 300 members of the clergy (mostly non-Cuban priests) who, along with many thousands of suspected or potential "counter- revolutionaries," were then herded into Havana's base- ball stadium, the moat at Cabana fortress, and other make-shift prisons by Castro's security forces. When the priests were eventually released, their residency permits were revoked by the government and many left the island. In June, the Church's schools were nation- alized, "eliminating the discrimination and privileges that fostered the division of social classes and clashed with the cardinal principles of socialism." In August, two priests and the nephew of a bishop were sentenced to 20 years in prison for "activities against the power -43- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 ot the State." The following month, _36 priests, in- cLuding Auxiliary Archbishop of Havana Monsignor Fduardo Boza Masvidal, were arrested and deported after the Interior Ministry had made a gen(,ral denunciation the Church. With its schools gone, its staff of nuns decimated, its priests reduced to a quarter of their original aumber, much of its property confiscEted, its services banned outdoors and tightly controlle indoors, and most of its active members and financal supporters in exile, the Church was shorn of its prier and influence. J a tacit admission of its impotence. the Church in recent years has chosen the path of ae!commodation. Members of the clergy have voluntarily assisted in cane- cutting at harvest time and have supported the government and Castro specifically) in the press and on the radio. r)f'. key importance in establishing the new relationship was a pastoral letter dated April 10, 1969. In the Letter the eight bishops, acting on tr_e experiences of he Second Vatican Council, the pasto-al constitution on The Church in the Modern World," ri.d the papal encyclical "Populorum Progressio," ur7ed a halt to the US "economic blockade" of Cuba. Altheligh one of the bishops had serious reservations abou- signing the fetter and many parish priests refuse to read it to their congregations, cooperation is clearly the main theme in the Church's present policy -oward the govern- ment. The government remains unimpressed by the Church's turn-around. It permits the Church te continue to exist only because its total destruction would scuttle Lhe myth of freedom of religion that Castro finds so attractive and undercut. Castro's relations with the many Church officials in Latin Americ, who have adopted radical politico-economic positions ir the past decade. faving challenged the Church, and won Castro can af- I:ord to deal with it from a position of olympian supe- riority. Other religious groups in Cuba, ling far weaker than the Roman Catholic Church, escape.t a similar con- rontation with the regime. With few exceptions, they Approved For Release 200/10 Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 also reacted more flexibly and were thus able to re- bound more quickly after the initial years of the Revolution when any organization having connections abroad (as most of these groups did) was suspect. For the most part, they are now coexisting with the government in much the same fashion as the Catholic Church. Some evangelical sects such as the Jehovah's Witnesses, however, have drawn down upon themselves the government's full wrath for resisting service in the armed forces, insistence on maintaining the sab- bath, and vigorous proselytizing. Their adamant at- titude has brought them persistent persecution. In the Jewish community, (which in pre-Castro days numbered about 10,000), nine out of every ten members have chosen exile rather than accommodation. Despite this massive emigration, all five of the congregations existing in 1958 are still functioning, and the re- lations of the Jewish community with the government are considered satisfactory by both sides. The Press The subjugation of the Church occurred at the same time the free press was being liquidated. The term "free press," of course, must be qualified. Under Batista, and in fact even as far back as the mid-thirties, most newspapers were able to survive only because of government "subsidies" which took the form of outright bribes, government advertising, gen- erous payments for publication of official notices, and direct financial support to under-paid reporters. In spite of these subsidies, so many newspapers dared to exhibit a degree of independence that Batista felt compelled to resort to frequent censorship. The subsidies which for so long had constituted the very life's blood of a large segment of the press, may have served Batista poorly, but they proved extremely useful to his suc- cessor; they gave Castro the ammunition he needed to embarrass and discredit key figures in the news media and to throw open to serious question the ethics and credibility of the entire pre-revolutionary institution of journalism. -45- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Castro's suppression of the free press was ac- omplished in several stages over a two-year period. In early January 1959, the Batista-owned daily Pueblo dnd the weekly Gente were confiscate. Also confis- ated were Batista's Circuito Nacionul Cuban? (CNC) ?a chain of radio broadcasting stations that spanned he island?another Eatista-owned radio station (La /oz del Indio), the pro-Batista daily Alerta, the uantiago de Cuba dailies Prensa Universal and Diana Nacional, and three other Havana dai7_ies Ataja, Mariana, and Tiempo en Cuba, A second nationwide radio network, Union Radio, which belonged to the pro-Batista national uonfederation of trade unions, was taken over by members of the July 26 Movement. In addition to tie confiscations, which many Cubans believed were justified in light of the involvement of Iiatista and other hated officials of h*s administration, more than 50 newsmen were purged fron the College of Journalists because of alleged connections with the previous administration. Moreover, the July 26 Movement's oficial newspaper Re'ciolucion, ceased its clandestine operation and took over the plant and presses of the de- funct Alerta. In its January 29, 1959 edition, it pub- li_shed.i-a-full list of the most prominent journalists and the amount of the bribes they had regularly received from the Batista government. That Revolucion was speaking for Fidel rather than s.ome disgruntled jourraJists intent on settling old 3,2ores could not be mistaken. Castro kept in close ::ouch with the newspaper's operation and appointed as ,dlitor an old Communist Party drop-out and comrade-in- arms from the Cayo Corfites expedition of 1947, Carlos rangui Mesa. Frangui, a former typesetter for the Communist Party's daily Hoy and one-tine editor of the Party's weekly newsletter Carta Semanal, had joined the July 26 Movement in mi1-1955 shortly after it was stablished. At that time, he had founded Revolucion weekly spokesman for the Movement. Later, he joined Cstro in the Sierra Muestra and was &ssistant to Luis uriando Rodriguez, chief of the Rebel Army's press and bropaganda section. 16 - Approve or e Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Castro assured himself a second friendly repre- sentative in the press by giving another of the con- fiscated dailies to Rodriguez, whose daily La Calle, had been closed down as "incendiary" by Batista in June 1955. Rodriguez took over the plant formerly used by Pueblo and resumed publication of La Calle; he later re-christened a confiscated radio station in Havana as Radioperiodico La Calle (La Calle Radio Newspaper). Another of the confiscated newspapers went to a group of Comiuunists who proceeded to re- surrect the old Party daily Noticias de Hoy, more commonly known as Hoy, which had been proscribed by Batista in July 1953. A fourth went to the Revolu- tionary Directorate, a student-based group that main- tained a guerrilla column in Las Villas Province through most of 1958, presumably as spoils of war: the Directorate used the facilities to publish Combate. The fifth confiscated newspaper became the pro-Castro Diario Libre, a daily of so little consequence that it was donated to the Marques Sterling School of Journalism as a workshop in March 1960. Not satisfied with a predominance in the press, Castro did not hesitate to condemn publicly any jour- nalist or newspaper that did not give him wholehearted support. In February 1959, barely a month after Batista's ouster, Castro threatened to suppress the well-known weekly humor magazine ZigZag for printing a cartoon that mildly poked fun at him. The following month, a series of editorials in the Havana daily Prensa Libre calling for elections and warning of Communist infil- tration led Castro to accuse its publisher of "under- mining the prestige of the Revolution," a charge that moved his audience to call for the publisher's execu- tion. In the same month, Castro's fulminations against another Havana daily, El Crisol, persuaded its owner to adopt a neutral policy regarding the Revolutionary Government. Castro's verbal attacks were supplemented by both official and unofficial pressures to keep the independ- ent press in line. Government advertising was denied those newspapers that were not spokesmen for the regime, and private advertisers were intimidated into following suit. To block circulation of these papers, distributors -47- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 and dealers were threatened, delivery :rucks were srned, and mobs were Incited to sack newspaper of- fices, Favored newspapers, such as Revolucion and itoy, were given exclusive access to key news stories and were permitted to send newsmen to cabinet meetings closed to the rest of the press. The favored few were ,aso allowed to distribute their papers in the prov? inces and provided military aircraft to make deliveries. ine competition was to) much for most independent papers The Havana daily Diario,Nacional susp nded Publication La June 1959 and was taken over by the government. Publication under government control ns continued until March 1960 when this newspaper's facisities, also, were given to the Imprenta Nacional. To counter tfte influence of US newsreels, films, arid press agencies in Cuba, Castro crated the Cuban .11stitute of Motion Picture Art and Industry (ICAIC March 1959 and the Prensa Latina press agency in May the same year. Alfredo Guevara, a Communist Parry member of long standing who had trave_ed to Venezuela, Panama, and Colombia with Fidel in 1948 to represent i:fte students of the University of Havana at the Latin American Students Congress in Bogota, was aPPointea head of ICAIC. He was given an initiJ1 budget of $5,000,000 to get the Institute on its feet. In ad- dition to making documentaries, feature-length arid newsreels with suitable propaganda for domestic )udiences, ICAIC was tasked with reviewing and class- ifying all imported films. It performed its censorship function with vigor. By the end of 16.0 it had Panned LCO foreign films from Cuba, 87 of them US. The in- creasing censorship, lack of access tni first-run theaters, increased import duties, and foreign currency reguiations that prevented US distributors from removing profits from Cuba finally, in September 1960, brought a complete halt L3 the supply of US films. The folloing May the US motion picture distributing companies were nationalized. 1 4,0,0FOWAO. 110010WWW,WW: To direct Prensa Latina, Castro ..Jhose Jorge kicardo Masetti, an Argentine nationai whose previous ournalistic experience included a tw.-year stint with Agencia Latina, Argentine ex-President. Juan Peron's press agency. As a reporter for the Luenos Aires daily Mundt), and a radio station of the sime name, Masetti Crid made two trips to the Sierra Maestra in the 00- 111. p roVg8 or e ease fiO/T!0353R0001 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 spring-summer of 1958. During these visits, he spent time in both Fidel's and Che Guevara's camps, and late that year he published an account of his experi- ences highly favorable to Castro. Although Prensa Latina was originally envisaged as primarily a vehicle to channel Cuban propaganda and Havana's version of the news to the press, radio, and television of other Latin American countries, it eventually became the primary source of news for all Cuban radio and tele- vision stations, newspapers, and magazines. Despite these strong moves by the government to control the field of public information, there were still a few opposing voices in the press as 1959 drew to a close. Castro acted again. In union elections late in 1959, at Castro's behest, old-time Communist Dagoberto Ponce became secretary general of the Graphic Arts Union to which the newspaper printers be- longed. On January 11, 1960, Castro in effect author- ized this union to censor newspaper content by order- ing the union to "classify" press material not reflect- ing the "truth" about the Revolution. All editorials and articles that placed Castro or his administration in a bad light were to be accompanied by "explanatory" notes provided by the union. Thus were born the "coletillas," or "little tails," that were added to news items that criticized or embarrassed the govern- ment. A week later Jorge Zayas, editor of the Havana daily Avance, was confronted by his printers who re- fused to set an editorial he had sent them. Zayas had been harassed by the government since the previous November when he, along with 14 other Latin American journalists, had visited the US State Department while he was in the United States to attend a seminar on journalism. In December, the head of the national federation of unions, David Salvador, had demanded that he be shot and his newspaper confiscated- Castro him- self denounced Zayas as a counterrevolutionary and labelled Avance "dangerous." The confrontation with the printers on January 18 was the final shot! Dagoberto Ponce, leading a gang of union toughs, took over the plant, and Zayas prudently sought asylum in the Ecuadorean Embassy. The government continued to publish the newspaper under the name Avance Revolucionario until December 1960, when it disappeared. -49-- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Four days after the seizure of Avance, the gov- ernment confiscated the holdings of Amadeo Barletta, an Italian national and a multimillionaire whose ex- tensive holdings included Ambar Motors (a General Motors distributorship), the Havana daily El Mundo, Radio El Mundo, the Tele-Mundo television network, and numerous other businesses. The government said it had taken this action because Barletta had done business with Batista, but did not explain why it had waited over a year before making the move. El Mundo continued to appear, first under Levi Marrero Artiles as editor, and then, after October 1960, under Luis Gomez Wanguemert; it was finally turned over to the University of Havana School of Journalism as a workshop and ceased publication in the late 1960s. Barletta found safety in the Italian Embassy. Next to be swallowed up were El Pais and Excelsior; they were confiscated in March 1960. The editor of both papers, Dr. Guillermo Martinez Marques, had resigned in February after refusing to print a coletilla in El Pais, and the joint owners of the two had long since fled the island. All equipment and personnel of the two newspapers were transferred to the Imprenta Nacional. Also in March, a running feud between the Com- munists and Luis Conte Aguero, popular radio and tele- vision commentator and long-time friend of Fidel, finally came to a head. A government-organized mob physically prevented Conte Aguero from making his usual broadcast on the CMQ-TV network on Friday, March 25, and that week-end Fidel and Raul Castro denounced him publicly. At that point, Conte Aguero fled to the Argentine Embassy. When Goar and Abel Mestre, the brothers who owned Radio Reloj and the CMQ radio and television networks, attempted to de- fend Conte Aguero and his anti-Communist stand, the government confiscated their properties, thus ac- quiring what were probably the most respected and technically efficient radio and television chains in Cuba. On May 11, 1960, the prestigious, conservative, Catholic-oriented Havana daily Diario de la Marina, -50- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 founded in 1832, went the way of Avance. Dagoberto Ponce of the printers union and another Communist, Tirso Martinez from the journalists guild, led a gang of armed men who seized the plant and smashed the plates that were to be used to print an open letter from 300 of the newspaper's 450 employees sup- porting the publisher in his running battle with the government. The publisher, Jorge Ignacio Rivera, fled to the Peruvian Embassy on May 13. The take-over by armed force was vigorously denounced in Prensa Libre, and on May 16 this paper suffered the same fate. An armed mob seized control, and publisher Sergio Carbo went into exile via the Panamanian Embassy. Of the passing of Diario de la Marina and Prensa Libre, US Ambassador Philip Bonsai wrote: "The owners, editors, and top people of the papers in question behaved as bravely as one could ask. The reader reaction to this deprivation of unofficial news and comment was practi- cally nil. So far as one could judge from the attitude of the public they had served, Diario de la Marina and Prensa Libre sank amid only the gentlest of rip- ples." Revolucion took advantage of the opportunity to secure better technical facilities and moved into the Prensa Libre plant. Revolucion's old presses were turned over the Communists' Hoy. And still the seizures continued. The popular weekly magazine Bohemia, which had a significant circulation outside as well as inside Cuba and had been Castro's ardent and consistent supporter even during the years of Batista's rule, was seized after its owner, Miguel Angel Quevedo, requested asylum in the Venezuelan Embassy on July 18, 1960. Carteles, a weekly magazine resembling Bohemia and also owned by Quevedo, was likewise confiscated and turned over to Raul Castro's weekly military journal Verde Olivo. Carteles ceased publication but Bohemia, under govern- ment auspices, continued to appear, first under the editorship of Enrique de la Osa and later under Angel Guerra, its present editor. The English-language daily Havana Post discontinued publication on September 8, 1960, and the independent Times of Havana, published thrice weekly, was taken over by its workers on November 10 of the same year and ceased publication. -51- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 he conservative Havana daily Inforlacion managed to avoid confiscation, but could not s-irvive financially. ft went out of business on December 23, 1960, January 1961, Castro had co-oleted his take- ewer ot all Cuban public information 'media. All of Lhe press, radio, television, and f lm industry was Ander his control. The number of (Lities throughout Lhe entire country was eventually reduced to seven: officiat organ of the Cuban Communist Party central Committee (wnich was formed in late 1965 by the merger of Pevolucion and Hoy): Thventud Pebelde, official organ of thi, Communist Par-v's youth arm! and one newspaper in each of the fiee provinces out- -5ide Havana. The number of radio s-ations has been eut to about 100, but the transmitter power of many has been increased and transmission frequencies have been shifted to ensure that the regme's propaganda :an be heard throughout the island and that the people's access to foreign radio stations has been made much more difficult. Although the number of rational television networks has been cut from three to two, facilities have been expandcH so that thi media of government propaganda is reaching more of the people. For example, a provincial network based on Santiago de Cuba is now operatinc in populous and previously neglected Oriente Province, The basic source of news, whether it be disseTnated by news- paper, magazine, radio, television, or film, is pro- vided by Prensa Latina, the governmeat's Press agency. How could so many fundamental ilstitutions be Lotally destroyed in such a short pe-iod of time? ;,rie answer is the uncanny ability of Fidel Castro to !inape public opinion and to apply a earefullv measured amount of force with precise timing. 3ut just as important is the attitude of the peonle. By late 1958, tho Cuban masses od been subject- el to so much terror and had been so g-osslv abused La so many ways for so long that the were ready to make a clean break with the past. rr'-e sterile "democratic" system of elections, tAT unbelievably corrupt executive officials, the suloe,-vient legis- J3ture, the inefficient and powerles' iudiciary, the Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 self-seeking business community, the aloof Church directed by foreigners, the opportunistic political parties, the venal military establishment, and the puppet press had all failed them. They did not de- mand radical changes in their system of government: indeed, Castro had led them to believe that the new governmental apparatus would be directed by honest, elected officials whose authority and tenure would be limited by the resurrected Constitution of 1940. On the other hand, they did not insist that their new leaders honor their earlier promises. They did not mourn the destruction or emasculation of the old institutions that had served them so poorly. Instead, they looked to the future with an emotional faith in their new messiah, willing to experiment, willing to be led, willing to follow the only force that had not yet discredited itself in their eyes--Fidel Castro and his Rebel Army. In effect, they permitted Castro to write his own ticket, and he did so with enthusiasm. -53- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 C.0APTER THREE: New lnstituti( as Molded rh the process of denouncing, ntscreditinq, id destroying Cuba's old institutions, Castro did not forget that he had to establish nis own power base. He proceeded cautiously to create new, ..00seiy organized institutions rooted in the masses that were so vulnerable to hls manipulation. 0e rejected rigid structures, apparently because he feared they might eventually be converted into ,:enters of opposition. He was supremely confident f his ability to sway the Cuban pecoie so long as He nad access to the mass media, but he was sus- idcious of any forma organization tnat could Possibly switch its allegiance to someone else. Yhese rnisqrvinqs explain why it took Castro x years to create a political part,: and why, After L years of his rule, the first party congress has yet to be held (one is scheduled for 1975). It nlso explains wny he refused to honor his promise ho relnstate the Constitution of 1940 and why the rountry's basic lega_L document is the hastily boncocted and much-amended Fundamental Law of ,ebruary 7, 1959, a set of statutes that was lever intended to be permanent and that, in any ,-ase, is frequently ignored. Nevertheless, Castro recognizeo Chat some nstitutions were needed to cnannel the energy of he masses and to give them a sense of participa- bion--and thus a degree of responsaility (or even !ialpability)--in the revolutionary process. Aore- over, by involving the Cuban people in the revolu- bionary struggle, Castro would be ahle to cast an lura of democratic authenticity ovei his rigid personal dictatorship. He, therefore, established wide range of organizations that could embrace the entire population. For the peasants, there was the National Small Farmers Assoclation (ANAP): Lor women, the Federation of Cuban Vomen (FMC); for l'he youth, the Rebel Youth Association (AJR) and _Later the Young Communists League (L:c!), the e.deration of University Students (FEU), the High IiiT373Vain 12 0 Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 School Students Union (UES), and the Pioneers (UPC); workers had the Cuban Workers Central Organization (CTU); and adults had the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR). All of these were created by the Castro regime except for the FEU and the CTC, which were inherited from pre- revolutionary days and were reshaped to serve the new administration. Cuban Workers Central Organization Although it had earlier origins, organized labor in Cuba made its most significant strides toward maturity and power in the late 1930s. This was due largely to the coincidence of several key economic and political factors. Over the years, Cuban farmers and rural workers had grad- ually developed a sense of class consciousness and were able to identify with each other because from year to year the fate of each had become much more closely related to the mercurial fluctuations of the sugar economy. With both groups in the same economic boat, and given the great size of the sugar industry, there existed a large mass of people extremely vulnerable to exploitation by union organizers during times of financial stress. Into this atmosphere were thrust hundreds of urban revolutionaries and political activists who, as a result of the depression, had joined the ranks of the professional organizers in the budding labor union movement. Their organizational work was made easier by a ban on immigration from Haiti and Jamaica that had stabilized the labor force and by a concentration of capital in cane farming that tended to centralize labor in large units. The chaotic political situation in the years following the overthrow of President Machado in 1933 also stimulated organizational work. Labor leaders who could deliver the support of a large bloc of people to any of the vying political factions enjoyed a good deal of bargaining power. -55- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The most powerful single labor group at this time--and the only national confederation in the country--was the Communist-led Cuban National Labor Confederation (CNOC). Conflicts wit. the govern- ment led to the dissolution of the CNOC in 1935, but three years later Batista. Cuba's de facto chief executive, negotiated an understanding with Communist leaders. Tn return for giving them a free hand to reorganize the labor movement, the Communists promised their political support. In January 1939, a new national labor organization, the Cuban Workers Confederation (CTC',, was estab- lished, with Communist Lazar() Pena Gonzalez as its secretary general. So agreeable was the working relationship be- tween the Communists and Batista than- much of Cuba's social legislation was written into the Constitution of 1940 at the Communists' suggestion (with the support, of course, of the Autenticos and other political parties and groups). The rew constitu- tion recognized the state's obligation to provide work for all who desired it, the rignt of workers to organize, and the right of unions to strike and boycott. It also provided for written collective contracts, enforceable by law; minimum wages, an eight-hour work day and a 48-hour work week; social security; and abolition of child. labor. This co- operation also brought two top Communists, Juan Marinello and Carlos Rafael Rodriguez into Batista 's cabinet as ministers without portfolio after Batista was elected to the presidency in 1940. 1?ena and the Communists continued to dominate she labor movement until 1947, when President Grau's Labor minister (and successor) Carlos Prio Socarras granted official recognition not to Penn's CTC, but to a new CTC organized by Grau's and '3rio's utentico Party. Gradually, most of the member unions of Pena's CTC, pressured by the legal right of the Labor Ministry to grant or withhold recogni- tion and registration of unions, defefied to the now CTC headed by ex-Communist Angel ,Lofino. In Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 an internal power struggle, politically independent Cofino was replaced by Autentico Eusebio Mujal (also an ex-Communist) in April 1949. When Batista oust- ed Prio in 1952, Mujal tried to support Prio with a general strike. When this failed, he una- bashedly transferred his loyalties to the new chief of state, and he remained at the head of the CTC until Batista was routed by Castro in 1959. During Batista's corrupt and repressive reigns, union leaders abandoned their ideological goals and be- came isolated from the workers. Not only the CTC, but some unaffilliated Communist-led unions reached working agreements with Batista. When Fidel Castro, from his guerrilla bastion in the Sierra Maestra, called for a general strike to topple Batista in April 1958, both Mujal and the Communists refused to cooperate. For Castro, this was a serious political defeat. In October 1958, however, the Communist union leadership, hoping to be in a position to assist in the take-over of the CTC by July 26 Movement officials, joined Castro's underground labor front, the National Worker Front (FON). But the labor leaders of the July 26 Movement could see little reason for sharing the victor's spoils with a group so late in climbing aboard the revolutionary band- wagon. As a result, the Communists suffered a crushing defeat in late May 1959 at the congress of the largest trade union federation in the CTC, the National Federation of Sugar Workers. In elections in the other 32 federations, the Commun- ists were left in full control of only three feder- ations and in partial control of only another three. To all appearances, they had little chance of regaining control of the CTC when that body held its tenth congress in mid-November 1959. Some time in the summer of 1959, however, Castro reached a working agreement with the Commu- nists and three of the 13 Executive Committee nominees placed before the congress for its con- sideration were Communist Party members. The July 26 Movement labor leaders were furious, and the -57- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 congress degenerated into a brawl. Al though Castro intervened personally to restore order, the delegates ignored him and CTC Secretary General David Salvador, who also supported the Communists, cod voted overwhelmingly to reject the trio. Castro then ignored the results of the election and had Salvador offer a new slate that excluded both known Communists and anti-Communists. This group was composed of individuals who could pe easily controlled by the regime, and, under strong pressure from Castro, the delegates approved the List in the name of "unity." The congress also approved the witndrawal of the CTC from the interamerican Regional Organiza- ion Workers and, more important, the creation a CTC purge committee ostensibly to weed out '3atistianos from union leadership. Many of 3atista's supporters had, in fact, fled the island Ln the last days of 1938, and almost none of those remaining held union offices. Thus, from the cinning the purge committee was aimed at ellminating the anti-Communists who, at the congress, had given Castro his first defeat since coming to power. The committee accomplished its mission iXL the last two months of 1959 and the early months of the following year. Even David Salvador, Lice secretary general who had presideG over the suicide of the free CTC, was sacked and later thrown into jail, where he apparently remains Loday. Although resistance to the new gcvernment con- nued within some of the individual union federa- Lions, notably the electrical workers, the CTC-- declawed and defanged--never again was a real or even a potential threat to the government. Instead of functioning as a medium for the workers to convey their grievances to the government, the CTC quickly became a government tool to press for greater Productivity, longer working hours, and "voluntary" Tcontributions to finance industrialization. It. succeeded in the latter two tasks in varying de- t_jrces but has never been able to promote the pro- ductivity increase that the governmenc . nas sought. ../,...,,.. ........- 7137573748477:71ferelir o d' 4.410,4010*'4114* Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 In his search for the magic organizational formula that would raise productivity as well as ensure that the CTC could not become a power base for opposition to the government, Castro has conducted periodic shake-ups of the entire CTC structure. At its 11th Congress in November 1960, the CTC's 33 federations were replaced by 25 national unions, and at the 12th Congress in August 1966 the number of national unions was reduced from 25 to 14. Still another reorganization began in late 1970 as a result of Castro's call on July 26 of that year for a campaign to revitalize all of the country's mass organizations, The process was still in progress in November 1973 when the CTC-- with a total of 22 unions--held its 13th Congress. Additional unions will probably be formed as more of the work force is brought under union juris- diction. The call to revitalize the mass organizations stemmed from the politico-economic situation re- sulting from the failure to meet the sugar harvest goal of 10 million tons, and also from critics abroad such as Karol and Dumont, who complained that the Cuban people had no say in decisions directly affecting their lives. In response, the union hierarchy, along with the leaders of the other mass organizations, quickly developed a fiery passion for popular elections within their respective structures. It is doubtful, however, that anyone was fooled by the election gambit. Cuban Communist Party officials were in control of the candidate selection process, and the new union officials--at least those in the upper levels --were bound to be, as in the past, representatives of the government, not the workers. But there were some positive results. At the lower levels, the unions undoubtedly received an infusion of new blood if for no other reason than that the larger number of unions required a cor- responding increase in the number of officials. -59- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Moreover, one facet of the reorganizaion involved the, initiation of a trend away from professional cadres, which caused a reduction in tne number of permanent officials, and an increase in part-time anion leaders. The presence of these newcomers-- who must fulfill their union responsibilities in addition to holding down a full-time lob-- may to a degree resolve Castro's complaint that the old union structure had failed to serve as a channel for informing the national leadership of the problems of the masses. But it iT difficult to believe that the revised union offcialdom will be more willing than its predecessors to pass bad news up the organizational ladder. The Cubans have demonstrated a decided predilectfon for bur- eaucracy?revolution or no revolution?and bureau- crats seem to have an aversion to passing potent- ially unpleasant news to their superiors?presum- ably out of fear that it will be interpreted as an admission of an inability to handle problems. The Carrot and the Stick The departure in Late 1970 from a strict adher- ence to the principle of moral incentjyes, and the enactment in early 1971 of the so-called Vagrancy .1:aw were acknowledgements that organized labor had tailed in one of its most important missions-- the elimination of absenteeism. To strengthen the unions hand in enforcing worker discipline, Castro allowed them to distribute consumer goods no the workers. Only those who maintained good job attendance records and who met or exceeded pro- duction goals could expect the privilege of pur- chasing whatever goods were available. This novel method of dispensing goods may give the unions a small amount of leverage over the workers, but it is unlikely to improve labor discipline signifi- cantly until the supply of goods is considerably creased. A worker can be forgiven fsr not put- ting forth his best effort if he is competing with 300 other workers at his factory for permission to 60- wing,..04,A4mo Approved For Release2661/111727:"CrratIPMITY 357a7tfirrtraltivesiwriffirwimi* Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 purchase from a stock of goods that includes, for example, only one refrigerator, two bicycles, and ten alarm clocks. A further drawback to this method of distribution is that "exemplary" workers may become a privileged class whose access to much sought after consumer goods may act, not as a stimulant to increase production, but as a divisive force that convinces the average worker that there is no use putting great effort into his job because the stiff competition places the so-called fruits of labor beyond his reach. To offset the inherent structural weaknesses which arise from the staffing of the majority of positions in the new union system with non-pro- fessional, part-time personnel, the unions have been organized as much as possible along lines parallel to the government's own administrative framework rather than on a functional basis. Thus, the Ministry of Education has a corresponding National Union of Workers in Education and the Sciences; the Ministry of Light Industry has a National Union of Light Industry Workers; the Ministry of Basic Industry, a National Union of Basic Industry Workers; and so on through the governmental bureaucracy. Even Raul Castro's Armed Forces Ministry got in step and formed the National Union of Revolutionary Armed Forces Civilian Workers. After all this revamping, the CTC is little more than a paper organization. Its only re- maining function is to serve as a channel for communications between the leadership and the workers, but then this is apparently all the Castro regime expects of it. As Raul Castro said: "In socialism, a principal function of the unions is to serve as a vehicle for the guidelines, dir- ections, and goals which the revolutionary admin- istration, the administration of the working class must take to the heart of the working masses to convert these masses into the physical force that will carry out and further these goals at every moment. The Party is the vanguard that exists, -61- 1 Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 ,4(41p '1404 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 'hides, and fulfi]is it_s real role tee the same ex:tent that it is projected into the masses. The uions are the most powerful link between the Surty and the working masses. This is one of the iain functions they fulfill within the socialist senciety... The unions are essential elements the construction of socialism, not only because rouah them the Party guidelines reach all the working masses, but because through them the 2elings, concerns, and initiatives of all the aiasses must reach the Party." He said that "union sections must pay attention to livinc and working cenditions," but identified productivity and labor i.scipline as the "main tasks confronting the ?turking class of our ':-Iountry." auk specified that the sections, the lowest _evel in the union structure, were tc be the quardians of the workers. He said the sections were responsible for "gathering the workers' con- cerns, problems and needs, analyzing them with the heads of the units and contributina in that y, to the extent of our possibilities, toward 3oiving them." Thus, workers' grievances go hat through the union structure, but through the ,f=iministrative apparatus of the government ministry ci agency in charge ot their particular work center. The labor movement in Cuba has indeed come upon rd times, 'ommLttees for the Defense - Revolution ri September 1960, Castro went tee the United Nations in New York to denounce the United States Hr preparing to invade Cuba. On returning home, he delivered an address in which he expanded on Lhe invasion theme and called for the organiza- in of a vast, nationwide network of neighborhood eimmittees for the Defense of the Reolution" DRs) to buttress the country's weak security upparatus and combat an alien-inspired fifth Approve r e eas Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 column. His speech, before hundreds of thousands of Cubans gathered in front of the Presidential Palace in Havana, was frequently punctuated by the sound of exploding noise bombs, presumably set off by the government to underscore the sub- versive threat to the regime. CDR units were immediately organized in almost every block and in almost all work centers in the cities and towns throughout Cuba. By the end of 1960, a total of 5,581 committees had been formed. Their prime task was to uncover spies and counter- revolutionaries by notifying the police at the first sign of unusual activities or the unexplained appearance of new people in the neighborhood. This mandate was often very broadly interpreted by CDR members. A broad range of activity, from grumbling about the government to making purchases on the black market, constituted sufficient grounds for denunciation, depending on the revolutionary fervor or personal bias of the CDR observer. At the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961, the CDRs were instrumental in rounding up in quick order tens of thousands of suspected counterrevolutionaries, most of whom were not released until after weeks or months of incarcera- tion under the most primitive conditions. After the invaders had been defeated, the CDR National Directorate was ordered to expand the organization to 100,000 committees, and by the end of the year it had enrolled 798,703 members in 107,000 com- mittees, handily surpassing the goal. Moreover, the CDRs no longer centered their organizational efforts in urban areas. In response to increasing counterrevolutionary activity in the rural areas of Oriente, Camaguey, Las Villas, and Pinar del Rio provinces, they advanced into the countryside (by 1963, 38,718 of the organization's 104,425 base committees were located in rural areas: 25,943 in peasant areas, 8,949 in People's Farms, and 3,826 in mountainous regions). At the same time, the role of the CDRs -63- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 panded. The organisation was tasked with the utter Census"--qathering statistics on the amounts of edible fats and oils on hend as a 0elude to rationing. The CDRs quid: .v provided ne government with tee data and thus assisted Lhe regulation of consumer commod3ties in the face of growing srortages and price speculation. This success opened un a whole new feid of nos- eibilities and converted an organizaeion that was essentially political into one that ceuld also erform valuable administrative and economic tasks. The government Was Quick to exp_olt this ca ability and in 196i gave the CDRs the resconsi- aT.1.ity for distributira ration cards to the 'copula- Dn. The organizatien also performed valuable services in the field of public heals. It con- acted the country's first vaccinatien campaian, eollected over 8,000 donations in a htood drive, d held more than 100,000 meetings to educate the Jilic in basic sanitation measures. Its primary oission, however, was still politica_ It established and operated Study Circice and Revolu- eonary instruction Circles to discuss revolution- aiy theory and the writings and speecees of the eIntry's political leaders. To keep these "cir- eies" supplied with study materials, she CDR National Directorate heaan publishine a monthly magazine Con Ia Guardia en Alto (with the Guard Up) in October 1961 and periodically prireed and stributed political tracts, such as Elas Poca's One Fundamentals of Secialism in Cuba and collec- ons of shorter political works by verious authors. the CDRs also served as government cliaues by :ending telegrams of support to the eemmunica- Lions media when a new government pree:ram or _icy was announced, and if a receptIve audience were needed for Fidel or some other t-)r official, One CDRs could always be counted on ti provide on short notice a sea of faces that cheered and whistled at all the right places. La succeeding years, however, th- increasing isoability of the regular security forces to detect -,?mirmwmompla,. Approved e ease .h 4 - Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 and suppress counterrevolutionary guerrilla bands in the countryside and to infiltrate and liquidate groups of anti-Castro plotters in the cities permitted the CDRs to devote more attention to less pressing matters, and the government, anxious to exploit the CDRs' ability to act quickly in situations requiring a mass response, gradually assigned more and more administrative duties to the "cederistas." Its monolithic structure and extremely broad base made the CDR organization ideal for such tasks as supervising the operation of local grocery stores and butcher shops to guard against black market sales and ration card abuses, organizing scrap drives to recover metals to be melted down and reused, repairing washouts and potholes in roads, collect- ing books to start or improve local libraries, constructing thatched-roof schoolhouses in rural areas, distributing doses of anti-polio vaccine to children, organizing campaigns for conducting cytological tests for women, collecting used jars and bottles to ease the country's glass shortage, enrolling poorly educated workers in educational improvement classes, conducting campaigns to improve the appearance of public places, assisting in registration of young men for the draft, and managing blood donor drives among its members. Any problem that required rapid mobilization of the masses or that involved contact with the en- tire population was passed on to the CDRs. Event- ually, the CDRs became so involved in these admin- istrative tasks that they assumed many of the responsibilities of local government in cities and towns across the country. In the fall of 1967, CDR members were elected to virtually all local government posts in Cuba's urban areas. By 1967, membership was reported to be 2,237,652, but many members were apparently counted more than once. Some seem to have demonstrated their revolutionary commitment by joining the local CDR where they lived and another CDR where they worked. After the committees in the work centers had been abolished later in the year, the organi- -65- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 ation's membership dropped to 1,704,,J89. By 1968, -cwever, over halt a nillion new memla2rs were enrolled, and in the spring of that year the CDRs received one of their most important economic assignments?the operation of the 58,000 small businesses that had been confiscated ey the govern- ment in March, April and May. In 1969, they also were charged with assisting in tJe rehabili- Lation of ex-convicts and juvenile delinquents. n7,,r this purpose, the 'Social Prevention Front" was formed. Members of the new front visited aarents of juvenile delinquents and problem children and urged them to guarantee that the offending child would mend his ways ana attend school regularly. People recently released from orison were also visited and counselleu on how they could return smoothly into society. The families of recently convicted criminals also .not attention to ensure that the loss of a bread- winner would not create insurmountable problems 'sr those at home. The following year the CDRs received another assignment; to build a bridge between tne people and the military. Again a -front was formed, this Lime the CDR-FAR (Revolutionary Armed Forces) Front. Young men waiting to he drafted were oriefed on what to expect in the service and were given send- - ceremonies by the local CDR, whion then publicized whatever honors the draftees might earn during their military careers. The aim, presumably, was to reduce the number of young men who tailed to register tor the draft, failed to report when rafted, or deserted after being inducted. The CDRs participated in many Leavy con- struction projects in 1971 and 1972. They mobil- -ized large numbers of 'cederistas' to serve as laborers in constructing an addition to the Latin merican Sports Stadium in Havana, if expanding the power plant at Regla in the outskirts of Unvana, and in many other construction projects across the country. -othing seems to be too diffi- cult, too complex, or too big for the CDRs. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CDR Organization and Philosophy The fundamental unit of the CDR organization is the base or block committee, which is called a Committee for the Defense of the Revolution. Most have from ten to fifty members, although some are larger. Each committee is responsible for a specific territory, such as an apartment house, a portion of a city block, or a section of a small town, and is staffed by a president, an organizer, an officer for vigilance, another for public health, and others for whatever types of work the committee may be performing such as the Social Prevention and CDR-FAR Fronts. All are volunteers. The next organizational unit is the zone, which is made up of a number of base com- mittees, also staffed by volunteers. Ten to fifteen zones make up a sectional or municipal committee; several sectional or municipal com- mittees, a region; and a number of regions, a pro- vince. The highest level is the national direct- orate, which oversees the six provincial direct- orates. The professional staffing of the CDRs begins at the sectional municipal level, the section being the urban equivalent of the municipality. The chief of a sectional directorate is called the coordinator, and he (or she) and the direct- orate's organizer are full-time, paid officials. If the directorate is a particularly large one, it may have an additional one or two professionals. Officers at the base level are elected by the members of the local CDR and any member can be put up as a candidate; at the zone level, however, a slate of acceptable candidates is drawn up by the sectional or municipal directorate and sub- mitted to the members of the CDRs of the zone. Similarly, the regional directorate selects a slate of candidates for the sectional or municipal level. Officers at higher levels are sent to the National School of Vigilance, which was established to train CDR cadres. Special courses are also -67- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 rod to CDR members by various government nizations, particularly the Intertor Ministry. The present chief of the organization, CDR National Coordinator ,:lorcre Lezcano Perez, replaced Lads Gonzalez Marturelos on October 2b, 1973. (,,unzalez Marturelos had held the posi:ion since July 27, 1966. He succeeded the firs: CDR National Coordinator, Jose Matar, a member of :he "old' e!emmunist Party, who was caught up in the "micro? e?ction purge in January 1968 and ousted from his seat on the pxesent Cuoan Communist Party Central (ommittee. According to Gonzalez Marturelos, 2,re were 67,000 CDRs with a total membership 3,222,147 in September 1970, but a: that tine he expressed disappointment with the auality of many of the cederistas. Undoubtedly reflecting he soul-searching, self critical moci that Castro [ad displayed in previous months, Gonalez Marture- Les admitted that not all members parcicipated actively in the tasks assigned the CEs and lam- ented that at times we have not been able to turn aver responsibilities to a majority c: the members the organization. Nevertheless, rIly two years later, Castro claimed that the CDRs hug some 4,236,000 members, or about 70 percent of the entire adult population. cm the intervening biennium, lit :le had been done to change the CIDEs, despite Castro's call fer a revitalization cf the mass organizations. A CDR National Assembly in December 1971. had made minor changes in the structure of the provincial directorates and an attempt had been made to L11 some of the vacant positions by shifting personnel, but no action had been taken to purge 1:ne committees of the nordes of opportunists who enjoyed the benefits of membershiP but shouldered few of the CDRs' burdens. Indeed, no ouch action is likely. To reduce the membership by including only activists would transform the ODRs into an elitist rather than a mass organiza- on and would deny the very reason tar their existence--the incorporation of the misses into one Revolution. - NIONOMIMMOIN1410104040,04011040 011.311001441W WIARHISIMI106 000,0400100,, alik***06WAIN, 4*, ,1004.100**41104 4410k4110.6, UMW, CA101044001010114i 001g, 040. Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-R1DP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 In establishing the CDRs, Castro created a political mechanism by which he could control the extremism that he encouraged in his speeches. The original CDRs by their very nature constituted a negative organization that appealed primarily to proponents, rather than opponents, of change, and to individuals that tended toward radicalism rather than moderation. Conservatives and moder- ates might join the base CDR to prove their patriotism and forestall criticism of their rev- olutionary fervor, but they could hardly expect to assume leadership positions higher up in the organization. These positions were reserved for those whose basic qualification for leadership was an exemplary revolutionary attitude, i.e., a total commitment to Castro and to whatever policies he might promote. The nature of the organization and the character of its leadership led inevitably to an oversimplification of political definitions and to a polarization in which issues were cast in terms of black and white with no middle ground. Those not indiscriminately for the Revolution were judged to be against it and only two categories of political persuasion existed: revolutionary and counterrevolutionary. Castro, of course, deliberately fostered this situation, not so much to uncover 'imperialist' spies as to intimidate those among his own people who might oppose his methods of remaking the country's social structure. As Castro became firmly entrenched and the need for intimidation diminished, the role of the CDRs changed. Although the primary mission has remained the same, i.e., vigilance against the counter- revolution, its orientation has shifted from' nega- tive to positive and celebrations of CDR anniver- saries in recent years have emphasized the con- structive contributions the organization has made in addition to its successes in vigilance. CDR members still fill many positions in local govern- ment, and membership in the CDRs is a key pre- requisite to any form of personal advancement -69-- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 .;ause iu indicates that the individuau, rather than observing the Revolution as an uncommitted bystander, has deliberately chosen to become involved and to take an active part in helping o achieve the Revolution's goals. Although he motivation behind this choice on rrequent occasion may be _less than ideal, the individual -Is nevertheless made a conscious decision to participate in the revolutionary process and has rejected both non-participation and outright opposition. This is important psychologically be- cause it indicates that the individual, despite a possible reluctance to cooperate fully, has acknowledged that conditions are such that cooper- ation has more advantages, or at least fewer ,..cept for the previously mentioned reduction the membership of the Central CO= ttee, the first anae in the personnel of the Central Committee or Ls attendant bodies--as established En October 1965-- was announced in Havana on February 7 1973, when ;7eur new members were added to the Seeretariat- Labor Minister Jorge Risquet, Armed Forces Vice Minister ehr Political Work Major Antonio Pere-. Herrera, dep aty director of the National Fishing -nstitute Isidorn Malmierca Peoli, and Ambassador to Moecow Raul Garcia 'elaez. All are Central Committee menbers. Both '1.squet and Perez Herrero served unde- Raul Castro Lhe war against Batista! Malmierca Penli was a :itember of the pre-Castro Communist party: and Garcia P-alaez fought in Fidel's guerrilla co'umn during L:le revolution. Still another additi-n to the ';ecretariat--Vice Prima Minister for flaeic Industry Miret Prieto--was announced in -anuary 1974, ')ringing its membershio to 11, its present total. MIret, a member of the Central Commit'ee, has been :i'osely associated wita Castro ever sihde their ;a.dent days at Havana University. The expansion of he Secretariat was orohablv quired by the increased workload the n)arty reor- Ization placed on ins original memLers. President t ?m pproved Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Dorticos and Carlos Rafael Rodriguez, for example had been given major duties in the Executive Com- mittee of the Council of Ministers in November 1972. Faure Chomon moved on to political tasks deep in eastern Cuba some time ago, and Bias Roca has been preoccupied for more than three years with the re- organization of Cuba's legal system. Furthermore, the party's first congress has been scheduled for 1975 and the Secretariat, as the party's housekeeping body, must bear much of the responsibility of pre- paring for it. Of the five new Secretariat appointees, only one was a member of the pre-Castro Communist party. Castro undoubtedly had the congress in mind when making the selections. He had no intention of letting the "old" Communists gain significant strength in any branch of the party that might have major influence during the critical period of political maneuvering prior to the congress. The Secretariat is now made up of Fidel, Raul, and four men loyal to them; three "old" Communists; one former member of the Revolutionary Directorate; and one--President Dorticos--who held membership in both the pre-Castro Communist party and the pro-Castro 26-JM. Castro, therefore, has as much of an edge in the Secretariat as he has in the Central Committee itself. -103- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 HAPTER FIVE: THE SECURITY POPCES Ori gins The Cuban Revolutionary Armed F-res of today -e the outgrowth of the Rebel Army that was formed the mountains of Oriente Province ..from December 1959. The nucleus of this army censisted of the 22 men of the Granma Fxpedition which after the dis- astrous ambush by Batista's forces at Alegria de Pio an December 5, 1956?only three days after the force returned secretly to Cuba--was almost destroyed. Those of the 82 not killed or captured during the ambush, or summarily executed after captured, dis- persed in a dozen or more small parties of three or tour men. They wandered through the mountains until chance brought some of them together aaain. In the regrouped force were about 15 or 20 ren, although Castro likes to say there were only 12. The ragged group took the "offensive" on January 1957, descending from the mountal7is to attack a. small military most at the isolated village of La elata on Oriente's southern coast. Despite stubborn resistance, the guerrillas managed tc overrun the -ost. Following this modest victory, the nascent Rebel Army continued its hit-and-run tactics, grad- ually growing in strength by recruitina peasants and assimilating groups of youths from the cities. July 1957, the Rebel Army had grown to some 20 to 100 men, a large enough group far Castro to create a second guerrilla unit, dubbel Column Number our to confuse the enemy. He placed the new unit under the command of Che Guevara. The Rebel Army continued to grow. By February 1958, it numbered about 350, or enough for Castro to establish two acre units, Column NumPer Six "Frank eats" and Column Number Three "Mario Munoz." The latter was 3ent to operate near El Cobre west of Santiago de Cuba under the command of Major Juan lmeida. The former, under Raul's cpmmand, was disatched to the lortheast to open up a second front and carry the war to the eastern half of the provin-e 04- mow osepoiwom*04.***Awlegolior,f110Pror*IW /r$ two*. Approved For Release Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Once on his own, Raul demonstrated a remarkable ability to organize; despite his youthful appearance, he was able to earn the respect and close cooperation of other guerrilla groups which had been operating independently in the area. By the time Batista fled ten months later, Raul was commanding six rebel col- umns and an air force of 12 aircraft, and was in control of approximately 12,000 square kilometers of territory. His forces inflicted 1,979 casualties on the Batista forces, while suffering only a little more than 160 dead of its own, captured 1,216 weapons, shot down three planes, and destroyed or captured 31 posts and garrisons. During the same period, Raul had created a civil administration that included Departments of Education (under Asela de los Santos), Propaganda (Jorge Serguera Riveri), Public Works (Oriente Fernandez), Public Health (Jose Ramon Machado Ventura), Justice (Augusto Martinez Sanchez), Personnel (Senen Casas Regueiro), Supplies (Julio Casas Regueiro), a Central Treasury, a public force, an Agrarian Bureau (Antonio Perez Herrero), and an organization of over 100 Peasants' Associations (with "old" Communist Jose "Pepe" Ramirez Cruz as secretary general). Haul's Department of Propaganda published 12 issues of a semi-monthly news- paper, Surco, and maintained two mobile and 12 fixed radios for broadcasting and for point-to-point contact with Fidel in the Sierra Maestra and with Miami, Mexico, and Venezuela. More than 200 schools and 40 hospitals were established in the ten months of the Second Front's existence. A bomb factory was set up to ser- vice the guerrilla air force, and arms plants, tailor shops for making uniforms, and shoe factories were created. When the war ended, Raul was operating a veritable state within a state and was providing more services to the people of the area than Batista ever had. In the Sierra Maestra, following the departure of Raul and Almeida, Fidel called for a general strike throughout the nation, but because of poor coordination, lack of popular support, and barbaric counter-measures by the Batista regime, it was a disastrous failure. Batista countered with a massive -105- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 :illensive against Castro's mountain hnadquarters, but _ government troops lacked the will to fight and Lne operation failed. By mid-summer _938, Castro was on the offensive himself, sending two Taerrilla col- umns led by Camilo Cienfuegos and Che Guevara across Camaguey and into Las Villas Province where, joined by local forces, they out the coup de grace to the iatista era at year's and by capturinn Santa Clara and an armored train tnat the President had sent to relieve the city. Two columns left the Sierra Maestra set up a fourth front in northwest Oriente, and by Ida time Batista fled from Cuba early on New Year's Day 1959, almost all of Oriente and Las Villas Proy- f_nces was in rebel hands. In addition, a small quer- La force under Major Dermedio EscaLona was operating Pinar del Rio Province in the name of the 26-JM. iter The Victory Tho January victory was followed by land reform in May, and many of the Rebel Army's nfficers cuickly ound themselves in charge of large sn._41ments of agri- cfulture or cattle raising acreage witnout the slightest knowledge of how to use it. A number of other offi- eers of the Rebel Army disappeared frnm the scene one way or another. Major Paco Cabrera lived nnrough the guerrilla war only to die in an accident while accompanying Fidel on a brief trio to Venezuela Lu late January 19597 Major Felix Penn, a guerrilla noMbatant for 22 months who had presided on the court which tried and acquitted 22 Batista nirmen in early 1959, committed suicide shortly after Fidel overturned the court's verdict, retried the airmen, and gave them long prison sentences7 Major Dello GOreZ Ochoa, who irose in the guerrilla ranks to head tne rebels' fourth ont in the final days of the struggle, fell into disfavor and as punishment was ordered to accompany t_ mixed Cuban-Dominican guerrilla fdrce on its in- vasion of the Dominican Republic, where he was captured Lii June 19597 Major Pedro Diaz Lanz, 7aief of the Rebel Air Force, quickly became disenchanted with the new regime and went into exile in mid-1959: Major Huber Matos, as upset as Diaz Lanz with the direction the devolution was taking, tendered his resignation but, 'thong with his entire staff, was tried and convicted ii 0 - .40,44.0.4w wow eltroft Approved or Re ent*Mt/ttiVirelifte-111515/?Tri .345Mtilreolitteirrrire"*"." Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 of counterrevolutionary activity; one of Matos' sub- ordinates, upon hearing of Matos' arrest, committed suicide; Major Camilo Cienfuegos, the army chief of staff who arrested Matos, disappeared on October 28, 1959, while returning to Havana by air from Matos' headquarters in Camaguey. These and other losses to a small army already stretched dangerously thin moved the new regime to enter more than 100 cadets in the military school at Managua in June 1959 and a smaller number at the Mariel Naval Academy three months later in an effort to bolster its over-taxed officer corps through the training of cadres untainted by service to Batista. To institutionalize the regime's military, the National Revolutionary Militia (MNR) was founded, and the De- fense Ministry was replaced by the Revolutionary Armed Forces Ministry (MINFAR) in October 1959. Raul Castro was named to head the new ministry, and Rogelio Acevedo, a young member of Che's guerrilla column during the rebellion, was appointed chief of the MNR in January 1960. Later the same year, in September, a school was set up in Matanzas to train militia cadres, and the following month the class of cadets at Managua was graduated early in expectation of an invasion by US sponsored exiles. The MNR was mobilized on December 31, 1960, to await the invasion and remained in a state of alert until January 20, inauguration day in the US. The MNR was then directed against counterrevolutionary bands that had taken to the mountains in southern Las Villas Province and, under the command of Major Diocles Torralba Gonzalez, conducted a counterin- surgency campaign in the Escambray region. During the invasion in April 1960, the MNR was sent to repulse the landing at Playa Giron. The students at the Matanzas militia cadre school was dispatched to the scene of battle, and many were killed. The decisive action of the minuscule Revolutionary Air Force in sinking the invaders' supply and support ships isolated the attacking force and permitted the militia to over- whelm it within 72 hours of the disembarkation. -107- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 The MNR returned to the strugal, against the nelerrilla bands until it was replacer by new units, called the Anti-Bandit Brigades (LCBf-') , that had been ,stablfshed on July 3 1962. While the T,C,Bs conduct- Jd a mop-up of the stubborn guerrill; forces, the teaular military units were expanded as rapidly as [iew men could be trained, Large amonnts of military -euipment and weapons arrived from Eastern Europe in steady flow, and following the missile crisis of tober 1962, much of the materiel nt-wided by the ,viet forces was turned over to the 'nbans as fast they could assimilate the technolcay. Motor tor- endo boats, submarine chasers, and fat, launches 11ring surface-to-surface missiles were turned over ra the Cuban Revolutienary Navy on Aulust 3, 1963, and by 1965 the Cubans had assumed responsibility for all weapon systems left by the departed Soviet troops. Also in 1963, several cadet schools were established provide a steady flow of officers or service in Lank, infantry, artillery, and communications units, And the General Maximo Gomez Advanced Basic School was founded to prepare armed forces c)mmand cadres ar high-level assignments in a militirv establish- 'aunt rapidly become mere and more comPlex. In Nov- Raul proposed a law of obligat)ry military service and in December the work of c-eating party cells in the armed forces was begun i unit in ::,stern Cuba, 7 )cie 7y Militarized The first draft call came in Apr 1 1964, and as Hcosult of the influx of recruits, new military units were created. Three new units in the Havana area were formed in the first half of 1965--the Armored vision, the Independent Army Corps Gf the East, -d the Independent Army Corps of the West--and specialist schools were established bv the various services to meet the need for trained technicians at Lie enlisted level, Tr 1966, the Armered Division :)ecame the Armored Corps and another row unit, the ,I,avana Defense Troops Group, was formed. Also in 966, the Military Technological Inst,t1,.t for train- ,g officers and technicians was open e;_ using Approved or e ease *4016,11010ow Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 facilities of the old Colegio Belen, Fidel's alma mater; the Carlos Ulloa Aviation Cadets School was founded at San Julian in western Pinar del Rio Province; and the first of seven Camilo Cienfuegos Military Schools was established at Playa Baracoa, near Havana, to provide boys between the ages of 11 and 19 with an education at the junior and senior high school levels. The Camilo Cienfuegos Military Schools, which teach children who intend to make a career of military service, are operated by the MINFAR vice ministry for training and are the responsibility of Captain Asela de los Santos, the same woman who served as head of Raul Castro's Department of Education in Oriente during the guerrilla war in 1958. The schools are now co-educational; the first girls were admitted in the fall of 1969. The schools are the source of most of the students who enter the various cadet schools and the Military Technological Institute. As the years passed, the military's influence began to be felt more and more throughout the country. Military men appeared in increasing numbers in the sugar harvest management, in industry, in education, in autonomous agencies, in the Council of Ministers, and in top party positions. In 1968, for example, the Political Bureau delegate system appeared. It apparently was designed to be a supermanagement system in which delegates named by the Political Bureau as- sumed supreme authority in a geographical area or, in one case, a particular industry. In all, seven Political Bureau delegates were appointed--for Oriente, Camaguey, Matanzas, and Pinar del Rio provinces, for the Isle of Pines and the Holguin regions, and for the Construction Industry. All seven posts were filled by majors. Eight of the ten changes that took place in the Council of Ministers between 1967 and mid-1972 in- volved military men. In five cases, a military man replaced a civilian: in one, a military man replaced another military man; and in two, a civilian was re- placed by another civilian. In no case was a mili- tary man replaced by a civilian. The trend was the same in autonomous agencies. The director of the Cuban Broadcasting Institute, Aurelio Martinez, who -109- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 s in charge of all radio and teievis.:on broadcast- ing in Cuba, was replaced in May 1967 uy Major Jorge Serguera Riveri, who 'headed Raul Castrs Department of Propaganda in Oriente in 1958. UnUpl the govern- ment reorganization announced in Novemoer 1972, the heads of all five of the new economic .rectors dis- cussed earlier were also majors. The :he Guevara ,nd Clearing Brigade, formed in late i967, was led hy army personnel and had a military structure, with rigid military discipline. When the 1tional Agri- cultural and Livestock Development Agency (DAP) was Formed In mid-1968, it was patterned giong the same lines as the Che Guevara Brigade, whidu it later albsorbed. Chief of DAP is another officer, Major Mario Oliva Perez. Militarization also hit the sugar industry and hit it hard. The jMAP units already discussed were a product of MINFAR's effort to ex- pand its role in the national economy, and when the UMAP system tell Into disrepute and hal to be re- )aced during the early stages of the 1968 sugar rvest, it was MiNFAR that filled in with thousands ,)F troops In what was called Operatiap Mambi. Operu- U ion lasted from early 1968 until August of he same year, when the first units ot the newly formed Centennial Youtn Column (CJC) ,rrived in Camaguey Province to relieve the solders. in keep- ing with the trend of the times, this -.aew organiza- Limn too was formed along military lites; it in- cluded military training in its activities, was staffed in part by officers, and depended heavily on military discipline. CJC members who served in the column for a full three years were cr dited with Culfillment of their military draft r guirement. The entire narvest in Oriente Province was turned over to military management in 1968 io what was announced as a test plan. it the military establish- ment could succeed in Oriente, the pian was to be adopted in Oriente, Camaguey, and Las Villas provinces i:or the 1969 harvest and in all six pefovinces for e 1970 harvest. There were many mtdifications following the 1968 harvest and the plan was not fully Implemented throughout Cuba, but many of its features, such as complex 'agricultural command posts" and Large-scale participacion by tne 0-- trocps, were continued te* '072 ftiOT5 000100100011 -3 *$"'""4""4"4"' Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 in the later harvests. Much of the harvest remains in military hands today, with primary responsibility resting with the chief of the Sugar Harvest Sector, Major Diocles Torralba Gonzalez. Massive military participation became so necessary for the harvests that to avoid any further impairment of combat readi- ness, new military units, called Permanent Infantry Divisions (DIP), were established in 1971 to serve as a permanent agricultural labor force. The men of these units received basic infantry training, but spent most of their time in agricultural work 7 most were involved in the sugar harvest, but many worked with rice, coffee, viands, or in construction. The DIP system was so large that its chief, Major Oscar Fernandez Mell, ranked as a vice minister of MINFAR. The men under his control doubled in August 1973 when the CJC and DIP merged and became the Youth Labor Army. Education too was a major target to militari- zation. All technological institutes and senior high schools were taken over by a new MINFAR office (first made public in late 1968), called the Vice Ministry for Military Technological Education. At its head was Major Belarmino Castilla Mas, the former MINFAR vice minister and chief of the General Staff, who had served as chief of one of Raul's six guer- rilla columns in 1958. Apparently as a result of considerable international criticism by K.S. Karol and Rene Dumont, among others, Castro tried to dis- guise the growing influence of the military by shift- ing Castilla Mas from MINFAR to the Education Ministry, appointing him to replace Education Minister Jose Llanusa in July 1970. Far from reducing military in- fluence, the move completed the militarization of the Education Ministry. Castilla Mas brought with him his MINFAR staff and installed MINFAR's vice minister for training, Major Jose Ramon Fernandez Alvarez, as first deputy education minister, replacing Eduardo Muzio. Furthermore, he removed Muzio from his second responsibility, that of chief of the Education Minis- try's adjunct body, the National Cultural Council, and replaced him with another officer, First Lieutenant Luis Pavon Tamayo, who had been editor of the mili- tary weekly Verde Olivo when that magazine had engaged -111- Approved For Release 2003/10/22: CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 a iengtny and biter denunciatic of certain Cuban etellectuals whose literary works centained veiled :riticism of the regime, This move inded ill for "Htbals intellectaal community and indeed the next Year ehe of those whc had been attacked b- verde Oliva, aberto Padilla, was arrested and sueaected to stremg essures until ne made an agonizing and debasing self- criticism admitting hs 'counterrevo'utionary" faults ,a front of an assembly of the natio-al professional erganization for writers and artists 'dot surPrisingiy. orinqing the tlitarv into the ducatIon Ministry resulted in furth - stress on milt- -try training within the educational system. All eenior high school and technological institute students, th male and female, received milit-lev trainind at eehool in addition to their academic subjects and there- fulfilted theer three-year militaeer service ()loll- eetion Wine in schoo], So that the addition of mill- _ -y subjects to the senior high schcol and technologi- eet institute curricula would not be detrimental to students' academic education, an additional year aJs added to junior high school. The students who re- ceived miiitary trainina were formed orimarilv into Anti-tank and anti-aircraft artillerv dun crews and fere destined to serve in that capac]tv in the evert cF a military alert. lImphasis on the Reserve-F- One of the aims of this student ready-reserve was to enable the regime to reduce the size of its regular force anc permit the release df manpower badly needed in the labor force. Thie suggests that Lee size of the military establishmen has peaked and that military manpower has been cit to a much Tore reasonable tigure. Some of the .egative effects the reduction are being offset by amproved tech- eology, which can be assimilated because of the good etuality of the technical education system established within MINFAR. over the years. Severa Years ago, aeiul Castro complained that in the redime's early lys the average Rebel Army officer bad only three veers of formal education, but he claamed that this storm* *mew tow Approve or e se Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 had since been raised to about six years. The edu- cational level has risen higher since then, and, as the Camilo Cienfuegos Military Schools feed more and better trained students into the cadet schools, thus enabling them to raise their standards, it is bound to go higher yet. One indication that the armed forces have fewer permanent personnel appeared in May 1971, when the General Ignacio Agramonte Officers School in Matanzas closed. The closure, it was announced, was made be- cause the armed forces were now better organized, re- sulting in an increased capability for modern combat that "has provided us with the chance to reduce the use of human and material resources which are so needed to support the country's economic plans." Shortly there- after, MINFAR's Osvaldo Sanchez Cabrera School for Political Instructors was also closed. The responsi- bilities of both institutions were shifted to the General Antonio Maceo Interservice Cadets School at Ceiba del Agua. Some idea of the size of the reduction in the military that the Cubans had in mind can be gained from figures given by then-deputy chief of the Revolutionary Armed Forces General Staff Major Oscar Fernandez Mell in early 1970. He claimed that one to two percent of the total population is the proper range for the size of a peacetime army, and that 30 to 35 percent of that army should consist of regular forces with the rest reserves. Using the 1970 census figure of 8.5 million as Cuba's total population, Fernandez Mell's lower estimates would mean that Cuba's regular armed forces strength could be as low as 25,500 of a total force, regular and reserve, of 85,000. Fernandez Mell's high estimates would bring the strength of the regular army to as high as 59,500 with a total force of 170,000. Even the higher--and probably more accurate--figures are a reduction of somewhere in the neighborhood of 50 percent, if there is truth to Castro's claim that 100,000 Military men could be used in the 1970 sugar harvest with enough left over to maintain the nation's defenses. This explains, of course, why the militarization of education was necessary. If the country's 15,700 -113- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 or nigh school students, using .19 1 statistics, added to the 29,700 students in technological titutes and to the 30,000 university students ho are formed ineo reserve units, the total eligible student population is /5,400. If those engagea in ocher training are included, as was most likely - case, the number ct potential student reservists ses to 102,700. The militarization was even extended to the ithfor high schools. In April 19J2, some 465 stu- dents, male and female, at the Ana Beancourt Junior gh School in Camaguey were organized into six companies of student militia under the auspices of the MINFAR, MININT, and Civil Defense. Plans called hr members to spend one session a week plus one h;nday per month In tiaining. This co-ed teenagers' ie.litia was established in March 1971 and apparently IIS expected to spreau spontaneously to other junior (11-1 schools. Military reserve in Cuba are ncenIng new. The LdB units used against the counterrevDlutionary bands from mid-1962 until the total elimination of the anti- hstro guerrillas three years lacer evbived into a hNAT irregular-type unit, called the Mountain Troops. These were kept in a .eserve status until enemy filtrations or otner threats required their mobifi- tion. The Mountain Troops Enen evcd.ved into the --sent 'territorial" (i.e., reserve) units--ready reserves that can be called up on ve)y short notice '7.ey are Invariably tile ones activated for the en- circlement or infiltration teams or focal counter- volutionaries, and are an importanL segment of he Cuban defense establishment. le Rcrular Forces rhe major eiemenes of Cuba's arned forces are , Revolutionary Navy (MGR), the Air and Air De- fense Force (DAAFAR), and the ground torces. The ''1::(41., commanded by Major Aldo Sahtamaria, in early 073 received two OSA-class guided-mrssile fast atroi boats from tne USSR to supplenent the 18 A -iatpprervethforRefeas fteregymme .101ROPAPANOW Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 KOMAR-class guided missile fast patrol boats, 12 SO-1 class submarine chasers, 6 Kronstadt-class submarine chasers, 12 P-6 class fast patrol boats, and 12 P-4 class fast patrol boats that make up the MGR's surface fleet. The DAAFAR, commanded by Major Francisco Cabrera, is made up of the Revolutionary Air Force and the Air Defense. The former, which is equipped primarily with MIG-21 jet aircraft, operates out of three main airfields: San Antonio de los Banos Air Base south of Havana; Camilo Cienfuegos Air Base near Santa Clara in central Cuba; and Frank Pais Air Base at Holguin in eastern Cuba. The Air Defense is composed of the previously mentioned surface-to-air missile units and an unspecified number of anti-air- craft artillery pieces. The ground forces are made up of three armies (Eastern, Central, and Havana); two independent army corps (Camaguey and Pinar del Rio); two subordinated army corps (the Central Army's Las Villas Army Corps of ready reservists and the Eastern Army's Holguin Army Corps); and many smaller units. Although the Youth Labor Army discussed earlier is alleged to be on a par with the other three armies, it apparently has no matching combat capability and is primarily a labor force. A considerable amount of information on the Cuban Armed Forces can be gleaned from overt publi- cations, such as the armed forces weekly journal Verde Olivo and the party daily newspaper Granma, but corresponding data on the forces at the dis- posal of the Interior Ministry are almost non-existent. It is known that these forces include the border guards responsible for protecting Cuba's coastline, the National Revolutionary Police, which handles normal police functions such as traffic control and apprehension of criminals; the State Security troops used mainly in a counterespionage capacity; an Intelligence Directorate for collecting foreign intelligence and carrying out clandestine operations: and other units reponsible for such matters as im- migration and population control. Although details are lacking, it is clear that the Interior Ministry and its hierarchy have much in common with the Armed -115- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 worces Ministry and its staff, and here appear tc oe no major polItical differences bctween the two )rganizations. MINIT, of course, is much the 'unior nt MTNFAR and would be no mach for the lat-- _er if ever there were a confrontat-nn. The like--- 1hnod of such a cnn-lict is even lcss likely since ,c.tui Castro, as chairman of the Central Committee's ''alned Forces and State Security Comrission, is the ,verridinq influence in both ministries. mu/ Approved For For e ease Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 CHAPTER SIX: THE SCENE TODAY Of Cuba's pre-revolutionary institutions, the legislature is dead; the last stale remnants of the judiciary have been swept away; private industry has been reduced to a few privately owned fishing boats and a steadily diminishing number of small farms; the old military establishment and the political parties have passed into oblivion; the national fed- eration of labor unions, the unions themselves, and the few professional organizations that have managed to survive are obedient tools of the regime; the press is completely subservient to the government; and the Church, its clergy decimated and its members cowed, has chosen the path of accommodation as the only means of self-preservation. Those few pre- revolutionary institutions still in existence are barely able to keep alive, let alone oppose the regime. Of the institutions created since 1959, only the security establishment, headed by Fidel and Raul Castro, and the PCC, of which Raul is second secre- tary, have the organizational strength to exert pressure on the Revolution's "maximum leader," Fidel Castro. Neither has given evidence that it has of- fered anything but unquestioning and wholehearted support to Fidel, even when his fortunes were at their lowest. The extended trips Fidel has made since his last serious domestic crisis, the harvest of 1970, are a tribute to his confidence in these two institutions as well as a testimonial to the faith he places in Raul. If formal institutions either lack the capa- city to influence Castro, or are unwilling to ex- ercise power they possess, what about the informal institutions? It would appear that here too the potential for opposition is minimal. First let us examine the masses. Most of those people who wanted to leave the island have done so or, failing in that, have reconciled themselves to their plight. When the Varadero-Miami "freedom" flights came to an end, there was no great hue and cry; neither was there any great upsurge in illegal departures. In earlier -117- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 ,Jiys, such was the passion for escape that would-be -efugees frequently plunged into Cuha's coastal waters nothing more than a flimsy raft of timbers and irpty oil drums or a few inner tubes sandwiched in piece of canvas folded over and sewn together. Ly their actions, these people gave :.1:astro a dramatic vote of no confidence. But that era is over and when ended Castro reached an important milestone. The ;hiban people, with few exceptions, had finally gotten rown to the business of making the bast of the situa- tion. The exile invasion had failed; guerrilla up- risings had failed; and the security forces seem cimnipotent. Passive resistance still is a probler tor the regime, but there is no indication that more ihan a handful of Cubans are working against the goy- irnment. Most are apathetic, despite the regime's iitforts to motivate the workers to "daily heroism" at their place of work. .sfen the few exceptions who had refused to iocept the Revolution have come around. Some were triteliectuais who found the atmosphere suffocating ond oppressive, but they now seem tc have submitted Ho the lesson of the Padilla affair in 1971. With Che surrender of Padilla, there appear to be no new igures in the Cuban intellectual world with either the stature or the inclination to spark significant (Jdposition to Castro. Neither are there any who night substantially influence policy other than that Hirectly affecting the intellectual community. In act, Castro has succeeded in capturing as his own he intellectual greats of Cuban history and has dentified his regime with them so completely that iLlestioning Fidel or his policies is tantamount to itlestioning Cuban history and tradition. To his Laithful, Castro's Cuba is the Cuba of Jose Marti, -intonio Maceo, Maximo Gomez, Carlos Manuel de Cespedes, ftnd other heroes of the wars against Spain. Even the Indian chief Hatuey, who died at the inquisitor's itake early in the sixteenth century rather than !iubmit to the Spanish "imperialists, is hailed as precursor of today's revolutionaries, notwithstand- ing the fact that he invaded Cuba from Santo Domingo ihaly a step ahead of the Spaniards. The importance r Castro's success in linking his Pevolution to 18- -Artiraiir te 0 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Cuba's historical greats and to the Cuban historical process is difficult to overemphasize. He has suc- ceeded in creating an awareness of Cuban nationality that will be almost an insurmountable obstacle to anyone, Cuban or foreigner, who comes to the island with the idea of "saving" the people from Castro or of trying to turn back the clock. Students in the pre-Castro days were a privileged class with no real responsibilities. They were members of an elite group to whom the leadership of the country would be eventually entrusted. Now the prospects for joining an economically privileged class upon graduat- ing have been diluted or have evaporated altogether. Students can no longer get away with political "hell raising" as they did prior to the Castro era--and as Castro himself did at the University of Havana. In the early days of the Revolution, students were given special privileges: they did not suffer as severely as did the rest of the population from shortages of food, clothing, medical and dental care, or housing; they were exempted from military service; they were given modest sums of spending money; and they were granted recreational facilities and other amenities unheard of elsewhere in the country. But now the life of students has become much more onerous and has lost much of its glamour. All political activity is barred unless it is in support of the government, and political reliability has become the determining factor in admission to centers of advanced education. Work and study are being integrated, and classes are no excuse for failing to help with the harvest or planting or weeding or whatever other agricultural task needs doing. Soon all junior high schools will be boardingschools in the countryside, and half of the student's time will be spent cultivating the acreage given to the school for raising its own food. In senior high schools a student can look forward to three years of military discipline, hardly a pleasing prospect, and after graduation he may have to go to some remote corner of the island, away from the ameni- ties of life, to place his knowledge at the service of the Revolution. -119- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 As bleak ar,, this may seem, the students have iot crystallized their frustrations and resentments ?nto activity against_ the regime. individual acts ').f vandalism may occar and even with some frequency, todav's students have been raised in an atmosphere ,lifferent from that existing prior to the Revolution. They do not look upon serious plotting and political ,Activity as an inherent right; they are too young to -La.ve remembered pre-revolutionary times and, since their first day of school, they have been subjected TAD political indoctrination that has developed a way thinking far removed from that oi their parents. They may make formal protests, but the protests are [made in harmony with the Revolution, not against it. he Revolution's leaders complain semetimes that the ;tudents are more revolutionary than the Revolutionaries, )1it this is not the type of situation that represents genuine opposition to the government. Although the students, like the rest of the popueation, may not be entirely happy with their lot, ti ey do not want risk worsening their positions. in addition, they hecognize that the Revolution has brought some genuine Lmprovements to the masses and instead of wanting to reverse or halt this process they wculd rather speed up. If there is opposition to Casteo in Cuba today, Lt is not voiced openly nor is it likely to be dan- 4erous. The security forces have snown themselves '[to be effective in descouraging the traditional forms uf plotting, and no tales of assassination attempts nave been heard for 4uite some time. Castro's ,4reatest threat seems to come from the slow but steady institutionalization that is taking place. idel is instinctively wary of anytning such as a constitution or a rigid party or governmental structure that might tend to inhibit his freedom of action. ,de much prefers to govern by communicating directly with the people. Economic reality has made this more and more a luxury that Cuba can ill afford, however, and Fidel has had to weigh his distrust of institu- tionalization against his country's need for it. He was able to control the process for over a decade but the trend of events, particulariy in the past three years, is clearly against him. He has learned 20- o NOMPITZTOCOTIT Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 that although old and discredited institutions can easily be destroyed by a torrent of rhetoric from the mouth of a gifted and appealing demagogue, the complex business of government requires that the consequent vacuum be filled with new institutions capable of satisfying a people awakened to greater possibilities and characterized by increased ex- pectations. Moreover, he seems to have come to realize that the flamboyant and freewheeling style of rule that so endeared him to the masses in the early years of his social revolution and enabled him to bury the remnants of the previous government in a morass of words became outdated long ago and, as a result, he has acquiesced in a de-emphasis of his personalistic manner of government in favor of the trappings of a collective leadership. Since 1970, in particular, Fidel has opted for a more sober definition of his role in Cuban politics. He learned through bitter experience that he cannot master all facets of economic life, that the advice of technical experts must be heeded, and that the business of running a government cannot be left to one man, especially one who often lets whim or wish- ful thinking determine his actions. He seems to have reconciled himself to less active participation in domestic economic matters and to greater concentra- tion on strengthening and expanding contacts abroad. He has chosen to stifle his ingrained antipathy to- ward the Soviets as the price of the economic under- pinning vital to the preservation of his regime, and he has tailored some of the more abrasive of his domestic and foreign policies so as to reduce friction with Moscow to an acceptable minimum. He continues to depend heavily on his "guerrilla elite" as the basis for his control over the political apparatus, and this is likely to be a constant factor throughout the life of his regime. He has enough con- fidence in his ability to command the loyalty of this group that he perceives no threat from one of its key members, his younger brother. Thus he has permitted Raul to accumulate an inordinate amount of power and to assume an ever-expanding leadership role in the hierarchy. While Fidel's impact on Cuban affairs -121- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 as diminished?albeit ever so slightiv?Raul's has Increased markedly. Fidel unquestionably maintains his position as the Revolution's "maximum leader," hut Raul is becoming more and more tae individual to watch when analyzing Cuban developments. was Raul who was the archite_t of the mili- tarization of Cuban society, and it was through this militarization that Raul's influence spread so per- vasively. With the militarization came the elevation of many of Raul's friends and former comrades-in-arms La key positions throughout the government and the party. In the top level of the Armed Forces Ministry, tor example, First Vice Minister and chief of the General Staff Senen Casas Regueiro and his brother, Vice Minister for Services Julio Cass Requeiro, huld corresponding positions--chief of the personnel ,iepartment and chief of supplies, reepectively?on Raul's taff on the Second Eastern Front in 1958, and two other MINFAR Vice Ministers, Abelardo Colome ibarra and Rogelio Acevedo Gonzalez, have been linked closely with Raul for years. Also fighting under Raul's command in 1958 were: Vice Prime Minister for the Sugar Harvest Sector Diocles Torralba Gonzalez; Vice Prime Minister for the ,:lucation, Culture, and Sciences Sector Belarmino stilla Mas, who headed one of Raul's six guerrilla columns; Minister of Transport Antonio Lusson Bathe, Another of Raul's guerrilla column ciefs; Eastern Army chief Raul Menendez Tomassevich. vet another juerrilia column commander; Artemisa Territorial Division commander Filiberto Olivera Maya, chief of a Tierrilla company; former Armed Forces Vice Minister r Political Work Antonio Perez Herrero, assigned the Party Secretariat; Labor Minister Jorge Risauet, appointed to the Secretariat with Perez Herrero; First Vice Minister of the Interior Ministry Manuel Pineiro Losada; Interior Ministry General Staff officer Joaquin Mendez Cominches; and Havana Provincial Party Iirst Secretary Jose Ramon Machado Ventura, who aeaded Raul's old Department of Public Health. Moreover, "old" Communist and long-time ANAP !resident Jose Ramirez Cruz served if 1958 as secretary 4.1 11111.01010,014011,9**.14401.0tWallik0.111,P,M 41411 W1,404 Approved or e ease ittr221TIRVItreTh Stliktrirterf Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 general of Raul's Peasant Associations and acted as Raul's liaison with the pre-Revolutionary Communist party, and another "old" Communist, Vice Prime Min- ister for Consumption and Services Major Flavio Bravo Pardo, has had a close association with Raul ever since their student days together at Havana University. In addition, several pre-revolutionary professional military men have risen quickly in the post-revolu- tionary Armed Forces Ministry and owe their rapid advancement and successful careers to Raul--Education Minister Jose Ramon Fernandez Alvarez is a good ex- ample. Raul himself, of course, is Armed Forces Min- ister, First Vice Prime Minister, Party Second Secre- tary, and second ranking member (behind Fidel) on the Political Bureau and the Secretariat. In sum, Raul seems to be creating a "guerrilla elite" of his own, possibly in preparation for the day when the reins of power slip from Fidel's hands into his own. Association with Raul in the guerrilla war, of course, does not necessarily mean that an individual is automatically a "Raulista." Neither is there any evidence that Raul is involved in a "power struggle" in any sense of that term. It is, after all, reasonable to assume that in a developing country short of skilled personnel in all categories, Raul should seek out and promote those people who he personally knows are capable. Nevertheless, the trend toward greater authority for Raul deserves watching. Should this trend continue unchecked until the first party congress is held next year, Raul, and-- by association--Fidel, will be assured of the back- ing necessary to weather the congress without sur- rendering significant control of Cuba's political apparatus to those among the leadership--the "old" Communists--who prefer a closer association with Moscow. Because of its Soviet ties, this group has enjoyed a degree of influence out of all proportion to its size. Its fortunes have risen and fallen in unison with the fluctuations in Cuban-Soviet rela- tions. It has never been satisfied, however, with only minority participation in the elements of power and has consistently sought to improve its position-- -123- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 as in the Escalante aitair in 1962?and reduce Fidel tu a figurehead. The congress, therefore, gives the "old" Communists a unique opportunity to reverse the pro-Castro bias in the composition ot the Central Committee and other top organs of the party and thus open the way to the assumption of conpiete control of 1:10. government. Prior to the convening of the congress, there is sure to be considerable activity as the competing groups jockey for a position of advantage in hopes or entering the congress with as much leverage as possible. For example, the recent removal of Jorge Serguera Riven, who headed Raul's old Propaganda Dpartment in the guerrilla days, from his post as czar of all radio and television broadcasting in Cuba raises the suspicion that behind-the-scenes maneuver- Hg by the "old" Communists may have been responsible for his ouster and that others of Raui's entourage may soon suffer the same fate. This is an unlikely scenario, however, and it is highly improbable that such a key personnel change would have been accom- plished without the approval of both Raul and Fidel. still controls the Political Bureau--the en- tity responsible for top personnel appointments?and he would not make changes against his better judg- ment unless unusual pressure were brought to bear, ahd the only source on the Cuban scene capable of ,exerting that amount of pressure at present is Moscow. The affinity between Moscow and the 'old" Communists notwithstanding, the Soviets would hardly go to such extremes for what are relatively low stakes. It would take far more than the elimination of a radio and television czar to give the "old" Communists--and Moscow--a leg up on the guerrilla elite when the congress convenes. The ability of the "old" Communists to exploit any decline in Fidel's popularity among the masses aver the past four years, and the success they have in undermining the influence of the guerrilla elite -in the party Secretariat?which presumably will be He office responsible for organizing the congress-- will determine to a large degree their ability to Golate the Castro clique and, with the support of pproi?or R?? Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 technocrats and opportunists, to emerge as the dominant factor or at least with a much improved standing in the new party structure. There is no strong evidence, however, that Fidel has suffered a dangerous drop in popularity that could be exploited profitably by the "old" Communists. Neither are there indications that any member of the guerrilla elite on the Secretariat is willing to change his political affiliation, so from all appearances it will be largely up to the Soviets to earn for them whatever gains the "old" Communists achieve. Castro, thus, is presently the figure on the domestic scene who will enter the congress in the strongest position. If Castro retains his strong majority at the congress or even increases it, he will most likely continue to govern as he does now, making few addi- tional fundamental changes unless forced to do so by the demands of the economy. The frenzy of re- organization that began in late 1970 will then have run its course, and Castro, who never wanted the congress in the first place--he has little to gain from it and everything to lose--will presumably have satisfied the demands of his Soviet mentors to place his crown on the line. If, however, Castro perceives the possibility of a significant loss of representa- tion by his guerrilla elite, he may be tempted to conduct another purge of "old" Communists as he did in 1962 and 1968, and his relations with Moscow will suffer accordingly. Such a purge would be feasible because he still enjoys the staunch loyalty of the armed forces and state security apparatus. With his main opponents thus cowed, he could control completely the congress' actions. A reading of the situation at present indicates that Castro will have little trouble retaining his grip on the reins even if the "old" Communists do make modest gains. As the congress approaches, how- ever, the pressures from Moscow and the maneuverings of the "old" Communists are bound to increase with the expectation that significant gains can be engi- neered at the expense of the guerrilla elite. Until the congress actually takes place, therefore, Castro may be much more willing than he has been in the past -125- Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/22 : CIA-RDP85T00353R000100100011-3 o take advantage of opportunities tLJ decrease his reliance on Soviet support and expand nis contacts with the West. He has given no sign tnat he would willingly pass the baton of leadership on to someone else and it is safe to assume that it ne believed his position to be threatened he wou_d seize the opportunity to strengthen it. The Soviet-sponsored process of institutionalization that is gradually building limits all around Castro may already have convinced him that such a threat indeed exists. 1 26