----- Original Message -----
From: Irina Malenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2001 10:38 AM
Subject: Cuba News


STATEMENT DELIVERED BY HIS EXCELLENCY
MR. FELIPE P�REZ ROQUE, MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF CUBA,
AT THE GENERAL DEBATE OF THE 56TH SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE UNITED
NATIONS
NEW YORK, 13 NOVEMBER 2001

Mr. President:
Before delivering my statement, I would like to express our condolences to
the United States, the Dominican Republic and other countries represented here
that have lost citizens among the many passengers and crew members who perished
in yesterday's tragedy of American Airlines Flight 587 - and I hereby pass on
these condolences to their families.

Mr. President:
The war in Afghanistan must be stopped. The Government of the United States
must acknowledge that it has made a mistake - and must halt its ineffective,
unjustifiable bombing campaign against that people.
As to its results, it would seem that this war has targeted children, the civilian
population and the International Red Cross hospitals and facilities as enemies.
As to its methods, no honest voice would rise in this hall to defend an endless
slaughter - with the most sophisticated weaponry - of a dispossessed, starving,
helpless people. As to its doubtful purposes, this war will never be justified
from the point of view of ethics and International Law. Those responsible for
it will one day be judged by history.
Cuba has opposed this war from the very beginning as an absurd, inefficient
method to eradicate terrorism - and reiterates that it can only bring more hatred
and ever-increasing dangers of new terrorist actions. No one has the right to
continue murdering children, aggravating the humanitarian crisis, visiting impoverishment
and death on millions of refugees.
If the United States obtained a military victory by eliminating all regular
and irregular Afghan resistance - something that is not at all easy in practice
and extremely costly at the moral level, for it would represent a real genocide
without attaining the objective that we must pursue - the world would be farther
away than ever from achieving peace, security and the eradication of terrorism.

Cuba's discourse is not founded on ill feelings against who has been our most
embittered adversary for over forty years. It is inspired by a sincere constructive
spirit and a sense of respect for and sympathy towards the people of the United
States, which sustained the unjustifiable and atrocious terrorist attack. It
is also based on the aspiration of peace and justice for all the peoples of
the world.
What Cuba expresses in this hall - with full openness - may not be to the liking
of those who run the United States today, but it will be understood one day
by the American people, whose generosity and sense of justice were proven to
the Cuban people when it had the support of 80% of the public opinion in this
country in our struggle to prevent a kidnapped Cuban child from being uprooted
from his family and subjected to ludicrous political manipulations and cruel
psychological tortures.
What Cuba says from this rostrum, we know it well, is what many people rumor
in the corridors of this building.
What international coalition are we talking about? What is its legitimacy based
on - if it has started by stridently disregarding the General Assembly of the
United Nations? The United States has not fostered international cooperation.
It has rather imposed its war on a unilateral basis and unwontedly stated that
whoever does not second them is with terrorism. How long will the precarious
support obtained last - not resulting from harmonized objectives and voluntary
agreement, but from imposition through threats and pressures?
One can be the strongest, but not necessarily right. One can cause dread, but
not sympathy and respect. Only from genuine international cooperation - in which
all countries, big and small, participate with a full understanding of everyone
s positions; with broadmindedness and tolerance in the methods used; in the
framework of the United Nations Organization and unflinchingly abiding by the
principles enshrined in its Charter - can a truly effective and lasting alliance
emerge to fight terrorism.
The world was surprised to learn of the official announcement of the United
States to the Security Council that it reserved the right to decide on an attack
against other countries in the future. What is left of the United Nations Charter
after this? Can this unprecedented threat by any chance be interpreted as an
exercise of the right to legitimate defense, enshrined in the Charter as the
right of a State to deal with acts of aggression until the Council adopts the
necessary measures and not as a vulgar excuse to unleash attacks against other
countries? Is or is it not this announcement the proclamation of the right of
a superpower to trample upon the already wobbly and incomplete standards governing
sovereignty, security and the rights of the peoples?
Cuba rejects that language with poise and steadfastness. We have not done so
out of concern for our own security - because there is no power in the world
that can subdue our spirit of independence, freedom, social justice and the
courage to defend it at any cost. We did so because we believe that it is still
possible to halt the escalation of a useless, brutal war that threatens to further
plunge the poor peoples of the planet into hopelessness, insecurity and death
- who are by no means responsible for any act of terrorism, but will be - and
already are - the main victims of this senselessness.
Only under the leadership of the United Nations will we be able to defeat terrorism.
Cooperation and not war is the way. The coordination of actions and not imposition
is the method. Our objective must be to obliterate terrorism by removing its
root causes - and not the hegemonic assertion of the strength of a superpower,
thus turning us into accomplices to its haughtiness and highhandedness.
Therefore, Cuba - that has already responded to the Secretary-General's appeal
by deciding to immediately ratify all of the international legal instruments
on terrorism - determinedly supports the adoption of a general convention on
international terrorism. Of course, this would only be possible in the context
of this General Assembly - now absolutely ignored by the promoters of the new
campaign, but which in the last ten years, with the silence and apathy of the
Security Council, has seen the effective adoption of the main resolutions and
declarations calling for an outright fight against terrorism.
That will finally allow us to define terrorism with accuracy. We have to prevent
a few people with vested interests from trying to label as such the right of
nations to fight for their self-determination or against foreign aggression.
It must be clearly established that the support, abetment, financing or concealment
of terrorist actions by a State is also an act of terrorism.
Cuba, while working to have its own anti-terrorism law in a short period of
time, unreservedly endorses the announcement of an international conference
on terrorism, under the aegis of the United Nations. This has been an old aspiration
of the Non-Aligned Movement - and must enable us, as a result of open discussions,
collective actions, respectful and non-discriminatory agreement; and not threat,
terror and force, to find the way to fully eliminate terrorism and its causes;
not only if committed against the United States, but also if undertaken against
another country, even from the territory of the United States or with the leniency
or complicity of its authorities, as has been Cuba's painful experience for
over four decades.

Mr. President:
Only four days ago, the Pakistani media attributed to a rather well- known,
very familiar character in the United States, a statement supposedly made from
Afghan territory saying that he is in possession of chemical and nuclear weapons
and threatening to use them against the United States if similar weapons are
used by that country against Afghanistan.
Everybody knows that Afghanistan does not have the slightest possibility to
produce and launch nuclear or chemical weapons. Only a terrorist organization
or leader could come up with the idea of executing an action of this kind with
nuclear or chemical weapons. That is theoretically possible as it is also one
of the consequences of the irresponsible behavior of major nuclear powers and
of the arms trade, corruption and illegal traffic in all sorts of military technology.
Several of these powers have acted as accomplices to and taken part in the traffic
in fissionable material and the transfer of nuclear technology, as it suits
their interests. However, under the concrete conditions of the war in Afghanistan,
it would be ridiculous to resort to those threats and whoever did that would
be signaling an enormous political and military ignorance. Lacking such means
would make it a dangerous bluff, and having them would be an absolute madness
to threaten to use them.
If such statements published by two Pakistani newspapers were true, they would
deserve the strongest condemnation, even if such weapons were eventually used
against Afghanistan. It would be a stupid reaction since in that scenario that
suffering, impoverished country would only have the possibility to count on
the universal rejection of the use of such weaponry. Such threats only serve
the interests of the extremist and warmongering forces within the United States,
which favor the use of the most sophisticated weapons of mass destruction against
the Afghan people. The best weapon for a country under aggression is to earn
and preserve the sympathy of the world, and not to allow anyone to violate the
ethical principle that no one has any right to kill children, not even when
others do it. There is no justice in killing innocent people to avenge the death
of other innocents.
Cuba has stated, unhesitatingly, that it is opposed to terrorism and that it
is opposed to war. Cuba, that is not under obligation to anyone, will continue
to be consistent with its positions. Truth and ethics should prevail above all
else.
The unfolding of events, and the multiplication of hatred, passions and potential
dangers have come to show that it was absolutely right to assert that the war
was not, is not and will never be the way to eradicate terrorism.

Mr. President:
The most critical socio-economic crisis that our planet has undergone, created
halfway through the last decade by the strident and irreversible failure of
neoliberalism and neoliberal globalization, has been dramatically aggravated
by this war imposed by one, but whose consequences we all have to bear.
This war must be stopped not only for its consequences to the Afghan civilian
population, but also for the dangers of destabilization in that region; not
only to save thousands of Americans - particularly the young - Afghans and other
nationals from a pointless death; not only to preserve an atmosphere of international
peace and stability, but because this conflagration renders entirely impossible
an objective proclaimed by the United Nations fifteen years ago: the right to
development for all and the equality of opportunities to attain it. Because
it renders obsolete the decision made only a year ago to work together in order
to eliminate poverty from the face of the Earth.
Will we be willing to organize a coalition against poverty, famine, ignorance,
diseases, the scourge of AIDS that is currently decimating the African continent;
a coalition in favor of sustainable development, in favor of the preservation
of the environment and against the destruction of the planet?
A coalition has been summoned to avenge the grievous death of over 4,000 innocent
people in the United States. Let us come together to seek justice against this
major crime - and let us do so without a war; let us come together to save from
death the hundreds of thousands of poor women who every year die at childbirth;
let us come together to save from death the 12 million children who die of preventable
diseases every year in the Third World before the age of 5; let us come together
to take medications against AIDS to the 25 million Africans who are hopelessly
awaiting death; let us come together to invest in development at least a portion
of the billions already spent to carpet-bomb a country where almost nothing
has been left standing.
Cuba demands that this General Assembly, the Security Council and the United
Nations Organization as a whole deal once again, as top priorities, with the
debate of these problems - which are crucial to the 4.5 billion inhabitants
of the Third World, whose rights and hopes have also been buried under the rubble
of the Twin Towers.

Mr. President:
Cuba reiterates its outright condemnation of the terrorist action committed
last 11 September. Cuba reiterates its condemnation of terrorism in all its
forms and manifestations. Cuba reiterates that it will not allow its territory
to be ever used for terrorist actions against the people of the United States
or of any other country.
Cuba has the morality to do it - because for over forty years it has suffered
from terrorist actions; because in Cuba there are still relatives of the nearly
3,500 Cubans killed as a result of aggressions and terrorist acts; because justice
is still demanded by over 2,000 Cubans rendered disabled by aggressions and
terrorist acts. Some of its sons and daughters, who have fought terrorism, have
been victims of cruel persecutions, relentless treatment and unjust and slanderous
proceedings.
The people of the United States is a victim not only of terrorism and panic,
but also of the lack of truthful information, manipulation and the questionable
limitation of their freedoms. Cuba does not nurture any hatred towards the American
people - which does not hold accountable for our terrorism-related suffering,
the aggressions and the unfair economic war that we have been compelled to withstand
almost a lifetime; and with which it shares the aspiration of one day having
relations based on respect and cooperation.
Mr. President:
If anyone here takes offense at these words, uttered on behalf of a small generous,
courageous people, I apologize. We speak in a straightforward manner. Words
exist to uphold the truth, not to conceal it. We are rebellious against injustice
and oppression. We have morality; we defend our ideas at the price of our lives.
Our support for any fair cause can be obtained, but we cannot be subdued by
force or through the imposition of absurd formulas or embarrassing adventures.

For many years now we have proclaimed that for us - Cubans - the historical
dilemma is: "Motherland or Death!" Thence our confidence and security that we
are and will continue to be a worthy, sovereign and fair people.

Thank you very much.
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