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From: Walter Lippmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: IRL32-ACTION list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Peace Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
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Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2000 10:59 AM
Subject: [CubaNews] Fidel Castro to the Venezuelan Parliament
______________________

October 30, 2000
Our cooperation with Venezuela is inspired
by ideals which go beyond simple trade

KEY ADDRESS BY DR. FIDEL CASTRO RUZ,
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CUBA,
TO A SOLEMN SESSION OF THE NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY MEETING IN THE FEDERAL
LEGISLATIVE PALACE. VENEZUELA,
OCTOBER 27, 2000
http://www.granma.cu/ingles/no1/45discurso-i.html

His Excellency, Mister Hugo Chavez Fr�as,
President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela;

His Excellency, Mister President of the National Assembly of the
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela;

His Excellency, Mister President of the Supreme Court of Justice;

His Excellency, Mister Chairman of the Republican Moral Council
and other members;

His Excellency, Mister President of the National Electoral
Council;

His Excellencies ambassadors, honorable charg� d'affairs and
representatives of the honorable deputies to the National
Assembly;

High religious and military authorities;

Ladies and gentlemen;

Venezuelans:

I am not here for protocol reasons or because tradition would
have it that official guests visit Parliament. I do not belong to
that stock of men who run after honors, ask for privileges or
live the slaves of conceit. When visiting a country, particularly
if it is a beloved sister country such as Venezuela, I respect
the wishes of those whom I feel represent it with great dignity
and courage.

Regrettably, the very idea of my visit to the Venezuelan
Parliament, included in the itinerary by our hosts, was a source
of annoyance to some of its distinguished members. I offer my
apologies.

It is my duty to be polite but I will equally avoid an
excessively refined language, too diplomatic or reeking of
affectation. I shall rather use deliberately clear and sincerely
honest words.

It is not my first visit to the Venezuelan Parliament; the first
time was over 41 years ago. However, it would not be accurate to
say that I have returned to the same institution or that I am the
same man I was then. The closest thing to the truth is, in fact,
that this is a different man coming to a different Parliament.

Personally, I have no merits to take credit for or apologies to
offer. At that time, I was a 32-year-old inexperienced man who by
mere chance had survived many risks. I was simply lucky and that
is not something I take credit for. Usually, human beings have
plenty of dreams and ideals which very few enjoy the elusive
privilege of seeing realized but even if they do that gives them
no right to boast.

That Parliament, which I had the honor to meet with so long ago,
also had plenty of dreams and hopes. A popular uprising had
succeeded months before. Everything has changed since. Those
dreams and hopes were reduced to ashes and it is on those ashes
that new hopes and this Parliament have been built. All along the
evolution of history people have had dreams, a right that will
forever exist. The great miracle is that the hopes and dreams of
this noble and heroic people may come true.

Like many of you, I also harbor such dreams starting from the
idea that extraordinary events have occurred in Venezuela at the
end of the last four decades. For example, Venezuelans who had
fought against each other in the past have become revolutionary
allies, the same as guerrilla men have become outstanding
politicians, and soldiers have turned into daring statesmen who
are raising high the banners that once filled this nation with
glory.

It is not for me to pass judgement on those who moved from the
left to the right, or many who began as honest conservatives only
to end up plundering and deceiving the people. It is neither my
purpose, nor can I assume the right, to play judge of the
personalities involved in the dramatic experiences you have
endured.

All men are ephemeral and often erratic, even those who act in
good faith. Then, I rather abide by the right that Jos� Mart�
bequeathed every Cuban and that is to feel an enormous admiration
for Venezuela and for that man who was the greatest among
dreamers and statesmen in our hemisphere: Sim�n Bol�var. He had
the capacity to conceive a united, independent and Latin American
homeland, and to fight for it. He was never in favor of
colonialism or the monarchy, not even at a time when the
Patriotic Juntas were created as an expression of rebelliousness
against the imposition of an alien monarch in the Spanish throne,
as proven in the Oath of the Sacred Mount.

Virtually from adolescence Bol�var was resolutely on the side of
independence, that is, as early as 1805. Half of South America
was freed by his sword and, in the historic battle of Ayacucho
with his troops of victorious lowland fighters and brave soldiers
of the Great Colombia established by him and under direct command
of the immortal General Sucre, he ensured the independence of the
rest of South and Central America.

The United States of America was then, as we all know, just a
group of recently liberated British colonies enmeshed in an
expansionist process. Still, the genius of the great Venezuelan
leader allowed him to guess, at that very early stage, that
"...they seem destined by Providence to spread calamities in the
Americas in the name of freedom."

I perfectly understand the diversity of interests and criteria
that inevitably exist in Venezuela today. It has been said that
addressing his troops before the battle of the Pyramids, during
his campaign in Egypt, Napoleon Bonaparte said: "Soldiers, from
the top of these Pyramids, forty centuries are looking upon you."

As a visitor greatly honored by the invitation to address this
assembly, I would dare say with absolute modesty: Venezuelan
brothers and sisters, from this rostrum, 41 years and 10 months
of experience in the restless struggle against hostility and
aggression, by the mightiest power that has ever existed on
earth, are looking upon you in admiration sharing the hard and
strenuous battle that you are fighting today on the inspiration
of Sim�n Bol�var.

The much-touted argument that Venezuela intends to introduce Cuba
's revolutionary model has been used to describe relations
between Cuba and Venezuela. There was so much talking about that
on the eve of the referendum on the draft of the new Venezuelan
Constitution, that I found myself in the need to invite a group
of outstanding local journalists who made us the honor of
visiting in representation of major journals, radio stations and
TV networks. Actually, those who were cynically invoking Cuba as
an evil ghost --the way the imperialists depict it in their gross
lies-- made us feel entitled to hold such a press conference.

In a sleepless night as I had not lived one, not even in my
feverish youth as a student, I read and underlined the basic
concepts in that draft and compared them with those in our own
Constitution. Later, holding the Cuban Constitution in one hand
and the Venezuelan draft in the other, I pointed out the profound
differences between one and the other revolutionary concepts. And
I say revolutionary because they both are. They both intend to
provide a better life for their peoples; the wish for radical
changes; they are longing for justice; their mutual aspiration is
to attain a closer unity among the peoples of the Americas as
defined by Jos� Mart� when he said: "What else could be said when
it is not even necessary! There is only one people from the Bravo
River to the Patagonia." Both are steadily fighting for the
preservation of their sovereignty, their independence and their
cultural identities.

Our Constitution is essentially based on the social property of
the means of production and the planning of development; on the
active, organized and massive participation of all the people in
political activities and the construction of a new society; on
the close unity of all the people under the leadership of a Party
that looks after norms and principles but that does not nominate
or elects the people's representatives to the state bodies, since
this is a task carried out fully by the people through their mass
organizations and the established legal procedures.

The Venezuelan Constitution rests on a market economy scheme
where private property is extensively guaranteed. Montesquieu's
three famous powers proclaimed as the main pillars of the
traditional bourgeois democracy are complemented with new bodies
and the strength required to preserving the balance in the
political leadership of the society. The multiparty system is
also set forth as a basic element. Actually, one had to be really
ignorant to find any similarity between the two Constitutions.

At that meeting with the Venezuelan media representatives I also
denounced the first steps of the terrorist Cuban American Mafiosi
in Miami to assassinate the President of Venezuela. Those
gangsters felt, in a way, that Venezuela could be a new Cuba.

At the end of July this year, a few days before the latest
elections, another big lie began making the rounds in Venezuela
through the national and international media. The Venezuelan
connection of the Cuban American National Foundation had been
hatching a conspiracy. It was said: "A Cuban defector denounces
the presence in Venezuela of 1500 members of the Cuban
Intelligence services who have infiltrated the military and roam
the streets..." A host of other alleged details were added. This
infamous campaign was so well and timely planned to coincide with
the eve of the presidential elections that even senior government
officials spoke of the lies said by "the Cuban defector"; that
is, they were taking for granted that a Cuban intelligence
officer had defected. There was never such a defector. He was
simply a loafer who had left Cuba years before and wanted asylum
and protection. The conspirators already had five or six others
like him to repeat the story and the scandal day after day,
through the same mechanism, up until Election Day.

Once again Cuba had been involuntarily dragged into Venezuela's
electoral process; again there was the need to set the record
straight for the press of this sister nation. The swift exposure
and dismantling of the gruesome story had the effect of tearing
the slander to pieces.

On that occasion, I also described the generous flow of funds
coming from Miami to pay for the electoral campaign against
President Ch�vez. I offered accurate data and disclosed a few
indispensable names. They all denied it, of course. One of them,
a past government official reputed as well educated and
efficient, swore that he was absolutely innocent of the role
attributed to him. I avoided a reiteration of what we had
indicated although I had then, and I still do, accurate
information about where they met, the place where he received
half a million US dollars, who brought that amount to Venezuela
and who delivered the money to the final payees. I did not really
wish to go back over that murky and disgusting affair. It was not
even necessary. Those involved in the conspiracy had been crushed
by the people's vote on July 30. The information could be kept in
reserve in case it became necessary to use it any time in the
future.

Cuba is continually being used as an element in Venezuela's
domestic politics; they keep trying to use it to attack Ch�vez,
an indisputable and outstanding leader and follower of Bol�var's
ideas, whose actions and prestige exceed the boundaries of his
Homeland.

I am his friend and I take pride in it. I admire his courage, his
honesty and his clear vision of the problems in today's world as

well as of the extraordinary role that Venezuela is called to
play in Latin American unity and in the struggles of the Third
World countries. And, I am not saying this now because he is the
President of Venezuela; I could guess who he was even as he was
in prison. Only a few months after his release I invited him to
Cuba, where he was properly welcome, running the risk that the
owners of power could sever relations with the island. I
introduced him to the University students whom he addressed at
the Main Hall of the University of Havana, and he was met with
great enthusiasm.

His resounding popular victory obtained four years
later --penniless, lacking the handsome resources of the old
political clique whose campaigns were funded with large amounts
of money stolen from the people-- only with the power of his
ideas, his capacity to convey them to the masses and the support
of small organizations of Venezuela's most progressive forces
marked the end of his adversaries. Thus, a remarkable opportunity
was born not only for this country but for our hemisphere as
well.

I have never asked anything from him. I never appealed to him to
include my homeland, criminally blockaded for more than four
decades, in the San Jos� Pact. On the contrary, I always offered
Cuba's modest cooperation in any area that could be of use to
Venezuela. It was entirely his idea, and I heard it for the first
time when he publicly addressed the issue at a Summit of the
Association of Caribbean States held in the Dominican Republic on
April 1999. There, he expressed his wishes that several Caribbean
nations, which had not been part of the agreement, be included.
His profound identification with Bol�var's thought has inspired
him to act as a bridge between Latin America and the principled
Caribbean countries.

I am aware that my visit to Venezuela has been the target of all
sorts of poisonous campaigns. President Ch�vez has been accused
of wanting to give us oil for free and of using the Caracas Pact
as a simple pretext to help Cuba. If that were the case he would
deserve a monument as high as Mount Everest because Cuba was
isolated, betrayed and blockaded by every government in this
hemisphere --except Mexico-- as they were subdued to the United
States, including that of Venezuela led by its first
constitutional President after the popular uprising of January
23, 1958 and the inception of the Patriotic Junta which headed
the elections that same year.

Despite the blockades, the dirty war, the mercenary invasions and
the threats of direct attacks, our people honorably defended
their Homeland in the frontline of the Americas as Mart� had
foreseen it when, on the eve of his death in combat, he confessed
that everything he had done in his life was "...to timely prevent
with the independence of Cuba that the United States could expand
over the Antilles and fall with that additional force over our
American lands."

None of those accusing Ch�vez in Venezuela of such intents has
ever waged any battle against the efforts to kill the Cuban
people of hunger and diseases, something that can only be
qualified as genocide. They seem to forget that when the oil
prices were exceedingly low and Venezuela's economic situation
was critical, it was Ch�vez who reinvigorated and spirited the
OPEC whose actions have tripled the prices in less than two
years.

It is true that today's prices, perfectly tolerable for the
industrial and wealthy nations, are exacting a heavy toll from
over one hundred Third World countries, to a higher or lesser
degree, while Venezuela's incomes and those of the other oil
producing countries have grown considerably. This is something
that Ch�vez tried to compensate with the Caracas Pact which, as
you know, offers a group of Central American and Caribbean
nations facilities to pay part of the price on credit, with low
interest rates and on long term basis. That is a good example
that other oil exporting countries would do well to imitate.

Those contesting him on this smart and fair step, which involves
only a small portion of Venezuela's incomes obtained due to the
current high prices, are exhibiting an extremely selfish and
shortsighted reaction. They overlook the fact that without the
support of the Third World nations, the OPEC would be in no
position to withstand for long the enormous pressures of the
industrial and wealthy countries basically affected by the
increase in the price of gasoline for their billions of cars and
other motor vehicles. They certainly show no concern for the
environment and the economic difficulties of the less fortunate
nations.

On the other hand, they pretend to ignore that our country has
resisted and struggled with marked stoicism and an iron will
during ten awful years of a special period. After loosing its
markets and sources of varied supplies, our homeland performed
the exploit of not only surviving but also graduating more
medical doctors, teachers, professors, physical education and
sports trainers per capita than any other country worldwide at
the same time it raised other human and social rates higher than
those of many industrial and wealthy countries. Cuba's social
development constitutes an example for many but it is also the
focus of the hegemonic power's hatred and anger as it is an
unequivocal proof of what a united and revolutionary people can
do with little resources.

The enemies and slanderers seemingly ignore that Cuba is rapidly
increasing its oil production and that, in a relatively short
period, it will be self-reliant in oil and gas. The cooperation
that Cuba will receive from Venezuela in the area of energy, by
providing advanced technology leading to higher levels of
extraction and the use of our own petroleum, will indeed be of
invaluable assistance. On the other hand, the oil supplied under
the conditions set forth in the documents to be signed in
compliance with the Caracas Pact, will be rigorously paid for in
hard currency as well as in goods and services which will
doubtlessly prove of great value to the Venezuelan people.

Our cooperation with Venezuela is inspired in ideals much more
transcendental than trade exchanges between the two countries. We
share a mutual awareness of the need to unite the Latin American
and Caribbean nations and to struggle for a world economic order
that brings more justice to all peoples. This is no written Pact
but rather a community of objectives expressed in our common
actions at the United Nations Organization, the Group of 77, the
Non-Aligned Movement and other relevant international fora.

The community of purpose of both countries in the international
political arena is eloquently expressed in their rejection of
neoliberal policies and their willingness to strive for economic
development and social justice.

Those so fiercely bent on lying, slandering and conspiring
against the exemplary relations between our two countries, who
have tried to jeopardize the Cuban delegation's official visit
and to distort the meaning of economic cooperation between Cuba
and Venezuela, should explain to the Venezuelan people why is it
that in a country with huge economic resources and an industrious
and intelligent people poverty engulfs an incredible 80% of the
population.

I will limit myself to a few examples.

According to sources from ECLA and the Andean Community, the poor
sectors, which a decade ago already concentrated 70% of the
population, eight years later, grew to 77%, particularly absolute
poverty, which climbed from 30 to 38 percent. Meanwhile,
unemployment has reached 15.4% and precarious employment in the
informal sector involves 52% of the labor force.

Previous official data showed illiteracy rates fewer than 10%.
Presently, official sources of the Venezuelan Ministry of
Education estimate that real illiteracy is affecting 20% of the
population.

Fifty percent of students drop out from school for economic
reasons, 11% due to poor school performance and 9% for lack of
opportunities. These figures add up to 70% of affected students.

Only in the last 21 years, the capital outflow from Venezuela
amounted to 100 billion US dollars, a real drain of financial
resources indispensable for the country's economic and social
development.

Data provided by various sources, not always coincidental, are
really overwhelming. It would be impossible to cite all the
calamities inherited by the Bolivarian Revolution, although one
should inescapably be mentioned as it offers virtually
mathematical evidence of all the others: it is infant mortality,
an extremely sensitive human and social issue.

The UNICEF data indicate that in 1998 infant mortality among
children under one year of age in Venezuela was 21.4 per 1000
live births, but grew to 25 when children up to the age of five
were included. How many Venezuelan children would have survived
if following the political process initiated in 1959, almost
simultaneously with the Cuban Revolution, infant mortality had
been reduced in Venezuela at the pace and to the degree that it
was reduced in Cuba, from an estimated 60 to 6.8 for the first
year of life and from 70 to 8.3 among children under five?

The data show that in the 40 years period between 1959 and 1999,
a total of 365,510 children died in Venezuela whose lives could
have been saved. In Cuba, whose population in 1959 was hardly 7
million, the Revolution has saved the lives of hundreds of
thousands of children by reducing infant mortality rates which
today are better than those of the United States of America, the
wealthiest and most developed nation the world over. None of
these children is an illiterate by the age of seven and tens of
thousands of them are already qualified technicians or university
graduates.

Only in the year 1998, which marked the end of the nefarious
stage that preceded the Bolivarian Revolution, 7951 children,
whose lives could have been saved, died in Venezuela in their
first year of life, a figure that grows to 8833 if children under
five are also included. In all cases I have used the exact
figures as officially reported by UN agencies.

The number of Venezuelan children dead in a year is thus higher
than the soldiers from both sides fell in the battles of Boyac�,
Carabobo, Pichincha, Jun�n and Ayacucho, five of the most
important and decisive battles fought during the independence
wars waged by Bol�var, according to well known historical data
even if, for tactical reasons, the victors altered the figures in
their war reports overstating the enemy casualties and hiding
their own.

Who killed those children? Which of the culprits was sent to jail
for that? Who was accused of genocide?

The tens of billions of dollars embezzled by corrupted
politicians constitute genocide because the funds they steal from
the public coffers cause the death of an incalculable number of
children, adolescents and adults who perish from preventable and
curable diseases.

However, that political and social order --truly murderous
against the people whose protests are forcibly suppressed with
real bullets and death-- is presented to the world public as a
model of freedom and democracy.

The capital outflow is also genocide. When the financial
resources of a Third World nation are transferred to an
industrial nation, its reserves are depleted, the economy
stagnates, unemployment and poverty grow, public health and
education stand the brunt of the blow and that translates into
pain and death. I rather avoid making estimates since the toll in
material and human losses is higher than in a war. Is it fair? Is
it democratic? Is it humane?

The face of that model of a social order can be seen in the
outskirts of large cities in our hemisphere overflowing with
marginal neighborhoods where dozens of millions of families live
in subhuman conditions. None of that happens in Cuba, a blockaded
and slandered country.

If it were not taken as an interference, I would permit myself to
meditate and speak out my mind and I would say this: I have
always felt that if Venezuela had had an efficient and honest
administration in the last 40 years, it could have achieved an
economic development similar to that of Sweden. There is no
possible justification for poverty and the social calamity
reflected in official Venezuelan documents and reports and in
respected international organizations' magazines. Actually, those
who were leading this country when I first visited Parliament
created the proper conditions for the unavoidable emergence of
the current revolutionary process. Those who are longing for a
return to the lost years will never again win the people's trust
if the new generation of leaders in the country today pool their
forces, close ranks and do everything within their capabilities.
Is it possible to do it in the framework of the recently
elaborated and approved political and constitutional model? Yes,
I think it is.

The immense political and moral authority emanating from what the
Bolivarian Revolution can do for the people would politically
crush the reactionary forces while the revolutionary and
patriotic culture and values that it would create in the
Venezuelan people would render it impossible to return to the
past.

Another perfectly logical but more complex question could also be
asked: Can higher levels of justice than presently exist be
attained in a market economy? I am a convinced Marxist and a
socialist. I think that the market economy produces inequalities,
selfishness, consumerism, wastage of resources and chaos and that
a minimum planning of economic development and priorities is
indispensable. But, I also feel that in a country with the huge
resources of Venezuela, the Bolivarian Revolution can obtain, in
half the time, 75% of what Cuba --a blockaded country with
infinitely fewer resources than Venezuela-- has achieved since
the victory of the Revolution.

I mean that this government could, in a few years, totally
eradicate illiteracy and provide a first class education to all
children, adolescents and youths and a high cultural level to
most people; ensure excellent medical care to every person;
create jobs for the youths; strike out embezzlement; reduce
criminality to a minimum; and, provide decent housing to all
Venezuelans.

A rational distribution of wealth, through an adequate taxation
system, is possible in a market economy. Of course, that demands
a total devotion to work by all members of the revolutionary
forces. This is easily said but it can be an extremely hard and
strenuous task. However, in my view, on a short term basis
Venezuela would not have much choice. On the other hand, no less
than 70% of the wealth here is state owned, as neoliberalism did
not have enough time to give them all up to foreign capital, so
there is no need for nationalization.

In the period we are going through, but progressively leaving
behind, in Cuba today we have learned that a great number of
variables are possible in the development of the economy and the
solution of problems. It can be done if the state plays its role
putting first the interests of the nation and the people.

We have accumulated much experience in the practice of doing a
lot with little resources and having a strong political and
social impact. There is a solution for every problem and all
obstacles can be overcome.

Being absolutely objective I should say that there is in
Venezuela today only one man who can lead such a complex process,
and that is Hugo Ch�vez. His death, either intentional or
accidental, would terminate that possibility and bring about
chaos. By the way, since I have come to this point and as I have
come to know him somewhat, I must say that he does not contribute
to his own security since he is reluctant to even a minimum of
adequate measures. You can help him, and also his friends and his
people, persuading him to be more cooperative. You should not
have any doubts that his adversaries, both external and domestic,
will try to have him physically removed. This I say because I
have been through the peculiar experience of being the target of
over six hundreds such attempts carried through to various
degrees of completion. An Olympic record!

I know that enemy only too well; I know how they think and act.
This trip to Venezuela is no exception. I am aware that once
again they have toyed with the idea of finding a possibility to
carry to the end their so far thwarted designs. But, that is not
important. Contrary to the present situation of the Venezuelan
process, in Cuba there has always been and will forever be
somebody, actually many, who can take up my work. Furthermore, I
have lived many happy years of struggle and I have seen a good
part of my dreams come true. I am not like Ch�vez, a young lively
leader with great tasks still to undertake. He should take care
of himself.

I have honored my word. I have spoken with absolute honesty,
avoiding excessive diplomacy or affectation. I have talked to you
as a friend, as a brother, as a Cuban, as a Venezuelan.

I am deeply appreciative for your generous attention.

Ever onward to victory!




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