http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2009/julio/vier24/Reflections-23july.html

      Havana.  July 24, 2009
     

     
      Reflections of Fidel
      A Nobel Prize for Mrs. Clinton
      (Taken from CubaDebate)

      THE interminable document read out yesterday by Nobel laureate Oscar 
Arias is far worse than the seven points of the act of rendition that he 
proposed on July 18. He did not communicate with international opinion via a 
Morse code. He spoke before TV cameras that were broadcasting his image and all 
the details of the human face, which generally has as many variables as a 
person's fingerprints. Any intention of lying can be easily discovered. I was 
observing him closely.


      Among television viewers, the vast majority knew that a coup d'état had 
taken place in Honduras. Via that medium they were informed of the speeches 
made in the OAS, the UN, the SICA, the Non-Aligned [Movement] Summit and other 
forums; they had seen the outrages, and the abuse and repression of the people 
in activities that have brought together hundreds of thousands of people to 
protest against the coup d'état.


      The strangest thing is that, when Arias was expounding on his new peace 
proposal, he wasn't delirious; he believed in what he was saying.
      Although very few people in Honduras were able to see the footage, many 
people in the rest of the world did see it and likewise, had seen when he 
proposed the famous seven points of July 18. They knew that the first of them 
stated textually: "The legitimate restitution of José Manuel Zelaya Rosales in 
the Presidency of the Republic until the end of the constitutional period for 
which he was elected."
      Everybody wanted to know what the mediator would say yesterday afternoon. 
The recognition of the rights of the constitutional president of Honduras, with 
his powers reduced almost to zero in the first proposal, was relegated to sixth 
place in Arias' second project, in which not even the phrase "legitimize the 
restitution" is employed.


      Many upstanding people were shocked, and they possibly attribute what he 
said yesterday to his own shady maneuvers. Maybe I am one of the few people in 
the world to understand that there was an auto-suggestion more than a 
deliberate intention in the words of the Nobel Peace laureate. I particularly 
noticed that when Arias, with a special emphasis, his words choked with 
emotion, spoke of the multitude of messages that presidents and world leaders, 
moved by his initiative, had sent him. That is what passes through one's mind; 
he doesn't even realize that other honest and modest Nobel Peace laureates like 
Rigoberto Menchú and Adolfo Pérez Esquivel are indignant at what has taken 
place in Honduras.


      Without any doubt whatsoever, a large number of Latin American 
governments, those which knew that Zelaya had approved of Arias' initial 
project and that he trusted in the good sense of the coup leaders and their 
yanki allies, breathed a sigh of relief, which only lasted 72 hours.


      Seen from another angle and returning to things prevailing in the real 
world, where the dominant empire exists and close to 200 sovereign states are 
having to battle with all kinds of conflicts and political, economic, 
environmental, religious and other interests, it only remains to give a prize 
to the brilliant yanki idea of thinking of Oscar Arias in order to gain time, 
consolidate the coup and demoralize the international agencies that supported 
Zelaya.


      At the event commemorating the 30th anniversary of the triumph of the 
Sandinista Revolution, Daniel Ortega, recalling with bitterness the role of 
Arias in the first Esquipulas Agreement, stated before a huge crowd of 
Nicaraguan patriots: "The yankis know him very well, that's why they chose him 
as a mediator in Honduras." An that same event, Rigoberto Menchú, of indigenous 
descent, condemned the coup.


      If the measures approved in the foreign ministers' meeting in Washington 
had simply been implemented, the coup d'état could not have survived the 
peaceful resistance of the Honduran people.


      Now the coup leaders are already moving within Latin America's oligarchic 
circles, some of which, in their high state positions, no longer blush when 
speaking of their sympathies toward the coup, and imperialism is fishing in the 
troubled waters of Latin America. Exactly what the United States wanted with 
the peace initiative, while it accelerated negotiations to surround the 
homeland of Bolívar with military bases. One must be fair, and while we are 
waiting for the last word of the people of Honduras, we should demand a Nobel 
Prize for Mrs. Clinton.



      Fidel Castro Ruz
      July 23, 2009
      2:30 p.m. 

      Translated by Granma International 
     

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