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Peace at any cost is a prelude to war!

The raid in Little Havana

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By George Will
Published April 27, 2000
WASHINGTON--Some will rush to judgment. They will say that Sen. Bob Graham,
the Florida Democrat, was lied to. Recently, he made a plea, in the Oval
Office, that if the government went to Elian's home to seize him, it should
not do so at night. "The president of the United States," says Graham, "made
that commitment to me that there would be no taking of this child at night."
But whether the president lied depends on what the definition of "night" is.

Anyway, Eric Holder, deputy attorney general, says the paramilitary operation
was "done professionally." So are a lot of burglaries, but Holder is right
about the INS agents' professionalism--why, the one agent's finger was at
least half an inch from the trigger.

One bit of intelligence that supposedly justified the assault--"dynamic
entry" is the term of art--on the house was the possibility that there might
be weapons inside. Considering that 40 percent of American households have
guns, it is notable that the assaulters managed to hit a house that did not
have any.

However, here are a few questions that should be explored in congressional
hearings about these warriors whose Omaha Beach was a bungalow in Little
Havana:

Is "dynamic entry" justified whenever the government has some business to
conduct with an American household and suspects that occupants of the
household may be exercising their Second Amendment right to own a gun? Or was
there something else that particularly alarmed authorities about Lazaro
Gonzalez' little house, which bristled with ... toys?

What was it about the behavior of the Gonzalez family over the last five
months that justified the government's conclusion that the family lives by
the Clinton standard? (Remember the defense a Clinton aide once made of him:
"He has kept the promises he meant to keep.") That is, what justified the
judgment that the family would not honor its pledge to open the door to INS
agents if they came like civilians, in daylight, and asked for Elian?

Granted, in such an event there might have been crowd control work for the
Miami police outside the house. But is one part of government justified in
making nighttime assaults on homes in order to spare another part of
government work?

Government and media did much to vilify the family before the paramilitary
assault on it. A subtext of the Elian affair has been a tendency of many
political and media people to render harsher judgments about Cuban Americans
than about the dictator who drove them to America. However, Castro has always
had fans.

When Jean-Paul Sartre, French philosopher and Stalinist, made a pilgrimage to
Cuba shortly after Castro seized power, Castro squired him around. At a
roadside stand they were served warm lemonade. Castro "growled" (Sartre's
approving description) that the warm lemonade "reveals a lack of
revolutionary consciousness." The waitress shrugged, saying the refrigerator
was broken. Castro replied, "Tell your people in charge that if they don't
take care of their problems, they will have problems with me."

Enthralled, Sartre later wrote: "This was the first time I understood--still
quite vaguely--what I called "direct democracy.' Between the waitress and
Castro, an immediate secret understanding was established. She let it be seen
by her tone, by her smiles, by a shrug of her shoulders, that she was without
illusion."

Cuba still has "direct democracy": Cubans have no real elections (although on
Sunday, during a pause in celebrating what he called the "shared victory" of
the United States and Cuba, Castro "voted"), but they still can shrug their
shoulders. And Castro still usefully causes some people to reveal their
strange political views.

The farcical National Council of Churches has played its familiar role as
friend of leftist tyrannies. And now the nation knows that there are people
in public life and the media not unlike the man whom voters in the South
Bronx have put into Congress. When Rep. Jose Serrano was asked three times on
television "Is Cuba a free country?" his three answers were: "It's a
sovereign country," "It's a country with a different system than ours," "I
don't know. ... I don't live there." Asked if Cuba allows freedom of speech,
he said: "Sure."

Castro has given America two benefits. He has caused many in public life, and
especially in the media, to reveal the extent to which they favor such
"shared victories." The other benefit America has received from Castro is the
splendid Cuban American community which, as immigrants often do, has a
livelier appreciation than many native-born Americans do of American values
and their negation.

You may write to George Will c/o Washington Post Writers Group at 1150 15th
Street N.W., Washington, D.C., 20071.



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