The Changing of the Guard

By Peter Kornbluh, Alberto Coll, Saul Landau, William LeoGrande, Philip Peters & Ramón Sánchez-Parodi

This article appeared in the May 14, 2007 edition of The Nation.

April 26, 2007

What has happened in Cuba since Fidel Castro yielded power to his brother Raul? How do Cuban authorities see the changing international arena, particularly the trend to the left in Latin America? And what, almost fifty years after the Cuban Revolution, does the Castro government want in its relations with the United States? To address these questions, The Nation convened a forum of veteran Cuba analysts and a longtime Cuban diplomat, moderated by guest editor Peter Kornbluh.

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The Nation: Since Fidel Castro surprised the world last July by transferring his duties to his brother, Defense Minister Raul Castro, Cuba has experienced nine months of a semi-succession of power. How do you evaluate this unprecedented period?

William LeoGrande: What's noteworthy is what has not happened. There have been no demonstrations, no rush of rafters setting sail for Miami, no noticeable difference at all in how the leadership team has governed the island. Fidel must be pleased. The succession machinery he carefully constructed over the past decade is working as planned. His illness lets him watch from the sidelines to see how well his successors manage without him, and they seem to be doing just fine. We all like to think we're indispensable, and no one has been more indispensable to the Cuban Revolution than Fidel Castro. But the last nine months have shown that people in Miami and Washington who expect the Cuban government to collapse the instant Castro dies are going to be disappointed.

Ramón Sánchez-Parodi: I agree. What we have experienced in Cuba has been a kind of rehearsal, a foreshadowing of what will take place in the event Fidel exits from political life--which could happen for biological reasons. Much to the surprise of those who predicted dire straits for Cuba--exodus, uprising, mass protests against the Revolution, infighting--life goes on as usual.

Saul Landau: And the people who started the Revolution in 1953, Fidel and Raul, still prevail.

Alberto Coll: It was as if you did a major emergency fire drill and everything functioned the way it was supposed to--even if it turns out to be only a drill instead of the real thing. Its relative success can only serve to emphasize the massive failure of the US policy of isolation, which has served only to isolate Washington and deny the United States any kind of influence over the people currently running the country.

Philip Peters: All who watch Cuba have had a question in the back of their minds: Is it a one-man show that dissolves when Fidel Castro leaves the scene, or is it a political system that carries on? These nine months have answered that question pretty clearly. This is a stable government, though one cannot minimize the challenges a successor government will eventually face.

About Peter Kornbluh

Peter Kornbluh directs the Cuba Documentation Project and the Chile Documentation Project at the National Security Archive (www.nsarchive.org), a public interest research center located at George Washington University (Washington, DC). He is co-author of The Iran-Contra Scandal: The Declassified History (New Press) and author of The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability (New Press).

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About Alberto Coll

Alberto Coll, principal deputy assistant secretary of defense from 1990 to 1993, is president of the DePaul University International Human Rights Law Institute. He came to the United States from Cuba at age 13, while his father was serving a nine-year sentence as a political prisoner. more...

About Saul Landau

Saul Landau, an Emmy-winning documentary filmmaker, writer, scholar and radio host, is a Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies. His films include Fidel, The Sixth Sun (about the peasant uprising in Chiapas), Cuba Today and We Don't Play Golf Here and Other Stories of Globalization. His latest book is A Bush and Botox World. more...

About William LeoGrande

William LeoGrande, dean of the School of Public Affairs at American University, is the author of numerous books on US-Cuban relations and US policy toward Latin America, most recently Our Own Backyard: The United States in Central America, 1977-1993. more...

About Philip Peters

Philip Peters, a State Department official in the George H.W. Bush Administration, is vice president of the Lexington Institute. He currently advises the Cuba Working Group, a bipartisan caucus in the House of Representatives. more...

About Ramón Sánchez-Parodi

Ramón Sánchez-Parodi served as Cuba's first chief of the Cuban Interest Section between 1977 and 1989; he then served as deputy foreign minister and as ambassador to Brazil. He is now chief of the Department of International Relations at Cuba's Customs Agency. He expresses his opinions here in a nonofficial capacity. more...
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