http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\06\08\story_8-6-2012_pg3_3

Friday, June 08, 2012

VIEW: El Che and Sheikh Osama — Saad Hafiz

 Unlike bin Laden, Che was a daring and courageous commander who led from the 
front

It has been reported from the interrogation of the bin Laden widows in Pakistan 
that Osama Bin Laden admired Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara. Che Guevara was the 
charismatic Argentine-Cuban revolutionary and close confidante of Fidel Castro, 
who was executed in Bolivia in 1967. It is worth exploring bin Laden’s 
admiration for Che beyond just as a fellow political outlaw and rebel against 
US domination.

There are definitely some eerie similarities in the story of the life and death 
of Che and bin Laden, the most conspicuous being that both men had ‘declared 
war’ on the United States and also suffered violent death in actions that 
smacked of US frontier justice. However, their respective legacies seem vastly 
different as Che’s ideas of an independent, united Latin America, with social 
justice continue to resonate nearly 50 years after his death, while the 
murderous and divisive al Qaeda ideology is generally discredited after bin 
Laden’s demise.

Unlike bin Laden, Che was a daring and courageous commander who led from the 
front, but can hardly be considered an outstanding military tactician and 
guerrilla fighter like the Vietnamese General Giáp whose forces thrashed French 
and American forces in Indo-China. From his Cuban experience in the overthrow 
of the detested American-supported Batista dictatorship, Che argued that small 
groups of determined armed fighters (called focos) could take to the mountains 
and use armed actions to rally other forces, triggering the crisis and collapse 
of hated governments. In the early 1960s, several attempts at armed focos were 
made in Peru, Argentina, Venezuela and other countries. None of them succeeded 
including the one in Bolivia that ultimately led to Che’s own death.

In his fight against US imperialism, Che sought and failed to create ‘one, two, 
three, many Vietnams’ to draw in the US military, sap its strength, and 
ultimately bring about a new, socialist world order. After 9/11, in a strange 
unintended way and aided by colossal US stupidity, bin Laden and al Qaeda had 
been far more successful when compared to Che in drawing in and sapping the 
strength of the US military through the twin wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Many fellow luminaries such as Nelson Mandela, Jean-Paul Sartre and Gabriel 
Garcia Marquez admired Che for his idealism and for serving as an inspirational 
symbol of hope for the struggling masses around the globe. Fidel Castro said of 
Che: “A man of profound ideals, a man in whose mind stirred the dream of 
struggle.” The larger than life image of Che, emblazoned on tee shirts and 
trinkets sold all over the world, is that of a poster child and highly romantic 
martyr of the people’s cause, a revolutionary leader, strategic thinker and 
action figure of the 20th century.

To his detractors, mostly Cuban exiles who fled to the US after being on the 
losing side of the Cuban revolution in 1958, Che was a blood-thirsty 
narcissistic murderer, a Latin Beria who enjoyed executing enemy prisoners at 
close range and who helped to establish and operate ‘gulags’ for opponents of 
the Cuban revolution. There is no evidence, however, that Che ever condoned 
targeting of civilian non-combatants during his guerilla operations, in 
contrast to bin Laden who had the blood of over 3,000 innocent Americans on his 
hands.

Latin America in particular has passionately debated Che’s mixed legacy since 
his death. On the one hand, Cuba has consolidated as an independent nation in 
the face of an adversarial relationship and a punitive 50-year old US economic 
embargo and can rightly boast about offering universal healthcare and education 
for all citizens, but on the other hand, free elections have not been allowed 
in the country since the Revolution. 

Ironically, unlike Cuba, a new scenario has been developing on the South 
American continent for the past two decades and for the first time in history, 
in which elected officials have come to power with the interests of their 
citizens at heart to an unprecedented degree. These leaders are not always 
Marxists or revolutionaries in the Che mould, just like those non-Marxist 
patriots who chose armed struggle in the 60s, but they share a common and 
explicit belief in their national independence and reject the hegemony of the 
United States, which is pretty much the cause for which Che started his 
original struggle. While bin Laden quite rightly belongs in the dustbin of 
history, El Che despite his imperfections remains a potent symbol of hope and 
struggle, reflected in a saying about his legacy written on many walls 
throughout Latin America: “You may cut the flowers, but it will not stop the 
spring.”

The writer can be reached at [email protected]



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