Speech made by Commander in Chief Fidel Castro Ruz, President of the Republic of Cuba, 
at the ceremony for the 51st anniversary of the attack on the Moncada and Carlos 
Manuel de Cespedes fortresses. Ernesto Che Guevara Square, Santa Clara, July 26, 2004.


Dear fellow Cubans;
Distinguished guests:

On this 51st anniversary of the attack on the Moncada fortress on July 26, 1953 I 
shall address a sinister character that keeps threatening, insulting and slandering 
us. This is not a whim or an agreeable option; it is a necessity and a duty.

On June 21, at the Anti-imperialist Forum I read Epistle Number Two to the president 
of the United States, responding to an infamous State Department report on trafficking 
in human beings, one of those reports the government of that country usually issues, 
as if it were the supreme moral judge of the world. In that document Cuba is accused 
of being one of the countries that promotes sexual tourism and child pornography.

Hardly two weeks went by, and instead of keeping a decent silence about the 
irrefutable truth contained in the Epistle, the wire services brought news of an 
election speech by Bush in Tampa, Florida containing new, more perfidious accusations 
and insults, the clearly aimed at slandering Cuba and justifying the threats of 
aggression and the brutal measures that they had just taken against our people.

The French press agency AFP reported the following from Tampa on July 16:

President George Bush launched a harsh attack on Cuba when he defined it as a major 
destination for sex tourism and said that the United States has a special duty to lead 
a world struggle against human trafficking for forced labour or sexual purposes. 

Cuba is one of the 10 countries cited by the State Department in a report issued in 
June in which it lists the governments which tolerate human trafficking or fail to 
fight this crime. 

The regime of Fidel Castro has turned Cuba into a major destination for sex tourism 
replacing Southeast Asia as a destination for pedophiles and sex tourists from the 
United Sates and Canada," Bush claimed.

At a conference in Tampa, Florida, the president pointed to Cuba as one of the worst 
offenders in this area. 
Sex tourism is a vital source of hard currency to keep his corrupt government afloat, 
he claimed.
Bush said that putting an end to human trafficking will be an essential part of his 
foreign policy. 
The traffic in human beings brings shame and suffering to our country and we shall 
lead the fight against it, he promised.
You are in a fight against evil, and the American people are grateful for your 
dedication and service, he told those at the conference.
Human life is the gift of our Creator and it should never be for sale. 
A dispatch from the Spanish press agency EFE indicated:
We also face a problem only 90 miles off our shores, Bush said in Florida. 
He quoted a study which found that Cuba has "replaced Southeast Asia as a destination 
for pedophiles and sex tourists."
As restrictions on travel to Cuba were eased during the 1990s, the study found an 
influx of American and Canadian tourists contributed to a sharp increase in child 
prostitution in Cuba." 
My administration is working toward a comprehensive solution of this problem: The 
rapid, peaceful transition to democracy in Cuba. 
We have put a strategy in place to hasten the day when no Cuban child is exploited to 
finance a failed revolution and every Cuban citizen will live in freedom. 
Bush said that Human life is the gift of our Creator and it should never be for sale. 
It takes a special kind of depravity to exploit and hurt the most vulnerable members 
of society. Human traffickers rob children of their innocence; they expose them to the 
worst of life before they have seen much of life. Traffickers tear families apart. 
They treat their victims as nothing more than goods and commodities for sale to the 
highest bidder. 
And to top off this odd news, the same press dispatch added some words spoken by John 
Ashcroft in his speech introducing Bush to the National Training Conference on Human 
Trafficking:

In the 19th Century President Abraham Lincoln held firm to a vision of freedom for all 
and was rightly called the great emancipator. 

In the 21st Century we have a great leader who has made us see that liberty is not a 
gift from the United States to the world but a gift to humanity from the Almighty. 

Another wire report from the English news agency Reuters read:

Friday, the US president accused the Cuban president of having turned his Caribbean 
island into a sex tourism destination and of contributing to the world problem of 
human trafficking .

The Italian press agency ANSA reported:

The regime in Havana is adding to its crimes: it welcomes sex tourism , said Bush who 
even repeated a supposed quote by Castro, Cuba has the cleanest and most educated 
prostitutes in the world. " 

Later, wire services have reported that the quotation of something I supposedly said 
on this subject, which the US President used in the Tampa speech I just mentioned to 
back up his serious accusations, was taken from a paper on Cuba written by Charles 
Turnbull a law student from Vanderbilt University in the United States who has 
emphatically stated that Bush s speech misconstrued the real meaning of a sentence 
included in his work, and clarified this and other matters in the following way:

Prostitution boomed in the Caribbean nation after the collapse of the Soviet Union& 

Castro, who had outlawed prostitution when he took power in 1959, initially had few 
resources to combat it. But beginning in 1996, Cuban authorities began to crack down 
on the practice. 

Although it still exists, it is far less visible and it would be inaccurate to say the 
government promotes it .

On Monday, July 19, Bush administration officials admitted they had no other source 
for the quote except the paper written by the aforementioned student.

Given the fact that it was shown that the US President had launched an extremely grave 
accusation based on a sentence found in a paper written by an American student, who 
himself refuted the deliberate way Bush misconstrued it, it s hard to imagine a more 
bizarre response than that given by a Whitehouse spokesperson when told about this 
refutation.

According to the news agency report, the spokesperson simply, &defended the inclusion 
[of the sentence] arguing that it expressed an essential truth about Cuba , in other 
words, for the White House the essential truth about Cuba is anything that the 
president conjures up in his mind whether it has anything to do with reality or not.

This is exactly the kind of fundamentalist approach that the President constantly 
resorts to when there are more than enough data, arguments, truth, reasons, and facts 
on a particular subject but the only determining factor is the idea he has in his mind 
or the idea that suits him: anything becomes the absolute and irrefutable truth simply 
because Mr. Bush imagines it to be so.

Many people in the world who know very little about the Cuban Revolution might fall 
victim to the lies and tricks the US government spreads through the huge media 
available to it.

But there are many others, especially in poor countries who are aware of what the 
Cuban revolution is about, of its marked dedication, from the very beginning, to 
provide education and healthcare services to all its children and the whole 
population; its spirit of solidarity that has led it to cooperate selflessly with 
dozens of Third World countries; its strict adherence to the highest moral values, its 
ethical principles, its lofty concept of the dignity and honour of its homeland and 
its people for which Cuban revolutionaries have always been willing to give up their 
lives. There is no doubt that these many friends, all over the world, will be 
wondering how it is possible that such unspeakable, foul slander is hurled against 
Cuba.

This obliges me to give a most serious and honest explanation of the causes, which in 
my view, give rise to these inconceivable, irresponsible statements by the President 
of the most powerful nation on the planet, the same who is threatening to wipe the 
Cuban revolution from the face of the Earth.

I shall do this as objectively as possible, making no arbitrary statements or 
shamelessly misconstruing other people s words, sentences and concepts. I shall avoid 
any petty sentiment of vengeance or personal dislike.

A theme that has been widely documented in several books by outstanding American 
scientific authors and other personalities is the current US President s alcoholism 
which lasted two decades when he was between 20 and 40 years old. This feature has 
been rigorously and impressively dealt with, from a psychiatric point of view and 
using scientific criteria, by Dr. Justin A. Frank in a now famous book called Bush on 
the Couch .

Dr. Frank begins by saying that it is important to scientifically define whether Bush 
was an alcoholic, or if he still is one. He has literally said:

& the more pressing question involves the influence his years of heavy drinking and 
subsequent abstinence still have on him and those around him . (p.39)

He goes on to explain and I quote verbatim:

Alcoholism is a potentially fatal, lifelong disease that is notoriously difficult to 
arrest permanently (p. 40)

Later, referring to the man who is now President of the United States, he says:

Bush has said publicly that he quit drinking without the help of AA (an organization 
dedicated to helping alcoholics) or any substance abuse programme, claiming that he 
stopped forever with the assistance of such spiritual tools as bible study and 
conversations with the evangelist Billy Graham .

On page 40 of the book he recounts that, according to ex-presidential speech writer 
David Frum, when Bush took over the Oval office he summoned a group of religious 
leaders, asked for their prayers and told them: 

There is only one reason that I am in the Oval Office and not a bar& I found faith, I 
found God. I am here because of the power of prayer .

Dr. Frank thinks that this statement might be true and goes on to say the following:

&surely all Americans would like to believe that the president no longer drinks, even 
if we have no way of knowing for certain. If so, he fits the profile of a former 
drinker whose alcoholism has been arrested but not treated .

He then adds:

Former drinkers who abstain without the benefit of the AA program are often referred 
to as dry drunks , a label that has been bandied about on the Internet and elsewhere 
in reference to Bush. Dry drunk isn t a medical term, and not one I use in a clinical 
setting. But even without labelling Bush as such, it s hard to ignore the many 
troubling elements of his character among the traits that the recovery literature 
associates with the condition, including grandiosity, judgmentalism, intolerance, 
detachment, denial of responsibility, a tendency toward over-reaction and an aversion 
to introspection. (p. 41)

Dr. Frank insists that he personally has treated alcoholics who held their addiction 
in check without proper treatment but that they are generally not very successful in 
learning to control the anxiety that they once tried to suppress by drinking and he 
explains that:

Their rigid attempts to manage anxiety make any psychological insight hard-won. Some 
can t even face the anxiety of admitting their alcoholism. 

Dr. Frank then goes on to say:

Without that admission, I have found, even former drinkers cannot truly change, or 
learn from their own experience .

And then referring to Bush specifically he argues the following:

The pattern of blame and denial, which recovering alcoholics work so hard to break, 
seems to be ingrained in the alcoholic personality; it s rarely limited to his or her 
drinking. The habit of placing blame and denying responsibility is so prevalent in 
George W. Bush s personal history that it is apparently triggered by even the mildest 
threat 

& The rigidity of Bush s behaviour is perhaps most readily apparent in his 
well-documented reliance on his daily routines the famously short meetings, sacrosanct 
exercise schedule, daily Bible readings, and limited office hours. A healthy person is 
able to alter his routine; a rigid one cannot . (p.43)

Of course the eminent US doctor goes on, and I quote we all need rest and relaxation, 
time to regroup, but Bush appears to need it more than most. And this is hardly a 
surprise among other reasons, because the anxiety of being president might pose a real 
risk of leading him back to drinking. (p. 43)

Along with rigid routines go rigid thought processes another hallmark of the Bush 
presidency. We see it in the stubborn, almost obsessive way in which he holds on to 
ideas and plans after they have been discredited, from his image of himself as a 
uniter, not a divider to his conviction that Iraq held weapons of mass destruction 
(or, in absence of such weapons, that somehow America did the right thing in Iraq 
nevertheless). Such rigidity of thought is not motivated by simple stubbornness; the 
untreated alcoholic, consumed with the task of managing the anxieties that might make 
him reach for a drink, simply can t tolerate any threat to his status quo .

And Dr. Frank adds that such intolerance generally leads to responses that are out of 
proportion to the magnitude of the actual threat.

This may help to explain the dramatic contrast between George W s response to Saddam 
Hussein and that of his father, who carefully built a coalition, took action only 
after Kuwait had been invaded, and then proceeded with prudence and caution once the 
fighting was underway the behaviour of a seasoned leader who knew he was responsible 
for countless others lives, not an alcoholic accustomed to taking dramatic measures to 
protect his own. 

Continuing his analysis, Dr. Frank indicates:

Two questions that the press seems particularly determined to ignore have hung 
silently in the air since before Bush took office: Is he still drinking? And if not, 
is he impaired by all the years he did spend drinking? Both questions need to be 
addressed in any serious assessment of his psychological state . (p.48)

With regard to the first question, he points out the possibility that Bush is managing 
his anxiety with medication to keep him off alcohol and he makes special reference to 
his strange behaviour at press conferences. On this point he says: 

In writing about Bush s halting appearance in a press conference just before the start 
of the Iraq War, Washington Post media critic Tom Shales speculated that the president 
may have been ever so slightly medicated .

More troubling though, are the appearances that arouse suspicion not because of how he 
talks but what he says. He has repeatedly engaged in confabulation, filling in gaps in 
his memory with what he believes are facts most notably on July 14, 2003, when he 
stood next to Kofi Annan and made up the idea that America had given Saddam a chance 
to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn t let them in . (As the Washington Post 
noted, Hussein had, in fact, admitted the inspectors and Bush had opposed extending 
their work because he did not believe them effective . Confabulation is a common 
phenomenon among drinkers, as is perseveration, which is evident in Bush s tendency to 
repeat key words and phrases, as if the repetition helps him remain calm and stay on 
track. (p. 49)

And Dr. Frank concludes his analysis of these two questions with the following words:

Even if we assume, moreover, that George W. Bush s drinking days are behind him, the 
question remains how much lasting damage may have been done before he stopped beyond 
the considerable impact on his personality that we can trace to his untreated 
abstinence. Any comprehensive psychological or psychoanalytical study of President 
Bush would have to explore how much the brain and its functions are changed by more 
than twenty years of heavy drinking. In a recent study out of the University of 
California/San Francisco Medical Centre, researchers found that heavy drinkers who do 
not call themselves alcoholics reveal that their level of drinking constitutes a 
problem that warrants treatment . The study found that the heavy drinkers in its 
sample were significantly impaired on measures of working memory, processing speed, 
attention, executive function and balance. Serious research about long-term recovery 
from alcohol abuse is still underway. Science has established that alcohol itself is 
toxic to the brain, both to its anatomy (as the brain gets smaller and fissures 
between and around the hemisphere get larger) and to its neurophysiology. But recovery 
does occur with continued sobriety, extending over a five-year period for many 
alcoholics. Bush claims to have been sober for more that fifteen years, and very well 
may have improved to pre-alcohol levels. However, even chronic alcoholics who recover 
their compromised mental functions often suffer lingering damage to their ability to 
process new information. Important neuropsychological functions are impaired: The new 
information is essentially put into a file that is lost in the brain.

Former heavy drinkers often have trouble distinguishing between relevant and 
inconsequential information. They also may lose some of their ability to maintain 
concentration. All one has to do to observe Bush s inattention is watch him listening 
to a speech given by someone else, watch his behaviour at times on the campaign trail, 
or consider the obviously desperate effort he makes to retain focus in every speech he 
gives. (p.50)

Finally, Dr. Frank points out that Bush would reduce the fear of many Americans by 
submitting himself to psychological tests that could scientifically measure the 
effects of alcoholism on his brain function and warns:

Otherwise, we are left to suspect with reason that our president may be impaired in 
his ability to make sense of complex ideas and briefings (p. 51)

And he ends up by saying:

We all may be a little afraid to find out: after all, he has already held office for 
three years and has led our nation into war. But if we fail to do so, the consequences 
may indict every one of us . (p. 51)

Another aspect discussed in depth and in detail by Dr. Justin A. Frank in this book, 
Bush on the Couch , is that of President Bush s religious fundamentalism.

Dr. Frank explains how, in trying to find relief from the internal chaos that drink 
sometimes appeased but eventually intensified, Bush may have found in religion a 
source of peace, not totally different from that given by alcohol, as well as a set of 
rules which help him to manage both the external world and his inner spiritual world.

He suggests that an analysis of the role of fundamentalism in Bush s life would show 
that one of the many ways that Bush employs religion as a defence mechanism is by 
using it as a substitute for illegal substances and says that Bush uses religion to 
simplify and even replace thought so that, to a certain extent, he does not even need 
to think. He adds that Bush, by putting himself on the side of good on God s side 
places himself above mundane discussion and debate. Religion serves as a shield to 
protect him from challenges, including those that he himself would otherwise create.

Dr. Frank wonders how Bush reached this point and then explains that, the Bush family 
tradition has long been fuelled by faith, by the belief in a God linked closely to 
moral rectitude but he makes this distinction:

Yet President Bush s religious orientation represents an important departure from his 
family. Though certain aspects of the family tradition have been maintained notably 
the formality of religious participation his mid-life conversion to a more 
fundamentalist approach stands in dramatic contrast to the spiritual life of his 
father& (p.56)

And a review of the events leading up to Bush s conscious embrace of fundamentalism 
shows that it clearly occurred at a moment when he was reaching for solutions, in a 
time of almost desperate need. 

Dr Frank goes on to explain that fundamentalist religions narrow the universe of 
opportunities and divide the world into good and bad, in absolute terms that leave no 
space for questioning and on this point he argues:

The view of the self is similarly simplified. Just as fundamentalist creationist 
teachings deny history, the fundamentalist notion of conversion or rebirth encourages 
the believer to see himself as disconnected from history. George W. Bush s evasive, 
self-serving defence of his life before he was born again displays just this tendency. 
It doesn t do any good to inventory the mistakes I made when I was young , he has 
insisted. I think the way & to answer questions about specific behaviour is to remind 
people that when I was young and irresponsible, I was young and irresponsible. I 
changed& To the believer, the power of spiritual absolution not only erases the sins 
of the past, but divorces the current self from the historical sinner . (p.60)

Dr. Frank makes it clear that there is nothing inherently unnatural in the fact that 
Bush seeks protection from his faith and that, even when this makes him stronger, the 
rigidity of his thought and speech patterns and of his agenda point to a considerable 
fragility. He explains that Bush s fear of everything from disagreement to terrorist 
attacks are sometimes painfully visible, even (or especially) through his denials and 
that he is a man desperately seeking protection. Dr. Frank wonders: But what is George 
W. Bush so eager to protect himself against? and he answers the question with the 
following analysis:

His tightly held belief system shields him from challenges to his ideas from critics 
and opponents, but, more important, from himself. Just beneath the surface, it s hard 
not to believe that he suffers from an innate fear of falling apart, a fear too 
terrifying for him to confront. (p.64)

For someone so desperate not to lose his way, clinging to a belief (or even a few key 
phrases), and sticking to them, is yet another way to protect against falling apart. 
President Bush s press conferences have offered disturbing evidence of this ongoing 
anxiety evidence so unmistakable that it s little wonder that the White House has 
proven so hesitant to schedule such events at all. After one particularly disastrous 
performance in July 2003, the Slate political columnist Timothy Noah noted that: Bush 
seemed jangled ; in a damning editorial the following day, the New York Times noted 
that the president s answers were vague and sometimes nearly incoherent suggesting, 
perceptively, that Bush was bedazzled by his administration s own mythmaking 

He gives some examples of phrases Bush used repeatedly during that press conference:

And so we re making progress. It s slowly but surely making progress of bringing the 
those who terrorize their fellow citizens to justice, and making progress about 
convincing the Iraqi people that freedom is real. And as they become more convinced 
that freedom is real, they ll begin to assume more responsibilities that are required 
in a free society&

And the threat is a real threat. It s a threat that where we obviously don t have 
specific data, we don t know when, where, what. But we do know a couple of 
things&obviously, we re talking to foreign governments and foreign airlines to 
indicate to them the reality of the threat&

I don t know how close we are to getting Saddam Hussein. You know it s closer that we 
were yesterday, I guess. All I know is we re on the hunt. It s like if you had asked 
me right before we got his sons how close we were to get his sons, I d say, I don t 
know, but we re on the hunt.

Well first of all, the war on terror goes on, as I continually remind people& The 
threat that you asked about, Steve, reminds us that we need to be on the hunt, because 
the war on terror goes on&

I just described to you that there is a threat to the United States. There is no doubt 
in my mind, Campbell, that Saddam Hussein was a threat to the United States security, 
and a threat to peace in the region& 

Saddam Hussein was a threat. The United Nations viewed him as a threat. That s why 
they passed twelve resolutions. Predecessors of mine viewed him as a threat. We 
gathered a lot of intelligence. That intelligence was good, sound intelligence on 
which I made a decision& (pp. 65-66)

And Dr. Frank goes on to say:

So powerful are his fears that he can t even face them. His infamous early advice to 
Americans less than two weeks after 9/11 when he told Americans to continue to shop 
and travel as before, in apparent denial of the radical measures he was at the same 
time taking in response to the nation s newfound vulnerability suggests just how 
simplistically he viewed the situation, closing himself off to worry and anxiety. 
Compare his response to that of New York s mayor, Rudolph Giuliani, who faced his 
fears, rolled up his sleeves and got to work making people feel far safer than Bush s 
stilted denial ever did.

Bush has continued to cite divine instruction to explain his actions since assuming 
office. As reported in Israel s Haaretz News, Bush said, God told me to strike at al 
Qaida and I struck them, and then he instructed me to strike at Saddam, which I did .

Finally, Dr. Frank offers these thoughts:

The Biblical struggle of good and evil has resonated throughout his discourse since 
9/11, from his repeated use of the term crusade to his characterisation of the 
terrorists as evildoers and grouping of Iraq, Iran and North Korea as the Axis of Evil 
. At the same time, he presents the United States as nothing more that a nation of 
wholly innocent victims.

In externalizing evil in this way, while absolving America of responsibility, Bush has 
transformed his unintegrated infantile worldview into a starkly combative (and 
primitive) foreign policy.

Bush s rhetoric Dr. Frank concludes highlights how he identifies the concepts of 
himself as president with both God and America: for him these three appear to have 
become somewhat interchangeable. Unable to mourn the dead of 9/11 enough to allow for 
a full investigation of how it happened and what responsibility we might have had he 
blindly attacks the enemy he perceives to be everywhere, a terrorist suddenly hiding 
under rock .

In his book Stupid White Men , Michael Moore points out that Bush exhibits obvious 
symptoms of not being able to read at an adult level and writes the following as part 
of an open letter to Bush:

1. George, are you able to read and write on an adult level?

It appears to me and many others that, sadly, you may be a functional illiterate. This 
is nothing to be ashamed of& Millions of Americans cannot read and write above a 
fourth grade level. 

But let me ask you this: if you have trouble comprehending the complex position papers 
you are handed as the Leader of the Mostly-Free World, how can we entrust something 
like our nuclear secrets to you?

All the signs of illiteracy area there and apparently no one has challenged you about 
them. The first clue was what you named as your favourite childhood book, The Very 
Hungry Caterpillar , you said.

Unfortunately, that book wasn t even published until a year after you graduated from 
college. 

One thing is clear to everyone you can t speak the English language in sentences we 
can comprehend.

If you are going to be Commander-in-Chief, you have to be able to communicate your 
orders. What if these little slip-ups keep happening? Do you know how easy it would be 
to turn a little faux pas into a national-security nightmare?

Your aides say that you don t (can t?) read the briefing papers they give you, and 
that you ask them to read them for you or to you. 

Please , don t take any of this personally. Perhaps it s a learning disability. Some 
sixty million Americans have learning disabilities .

In his book Against All Enemies , Richard Clarke writes that when Bush got to the 
White House, Early on we were told that the president is not a big reader .

Bob Woodward s book Bush at War tells that, in a National Security Council meeting 
during the Afghanistan war, Bush said: I don t read the editorial pages. I don t --the 
hyperventilation that tends to take place around those cables, every expert and every 
former colonel and all that, is just background noise .

Thus far I have given a very brief summary of what has been said on some points by 
outstanding Americans, things which help to explain the strange behaviour and 
aggressiveness of the US President.

I do not want to elaborate now on more sensitive issues like those whose exposure cost 
his life to J.H. Hatfield, author of the book Fortunate Son , and others of great 
interest analyzed by truly brilliant, brave, eminent authors.

Mr. Bush s lies and slanders and those of his closest advisors were fabricated in a 
hurry to justify the atrocious measures taken against Cuban-born people living in the 
United States who have close family ties in Cuba.

This outrage, as we warned on June 21, might have adverse political consequences in 
Florida which could play a decisive role in this year s elections. The idea of a 
punishment vote is gaining ground among thousands of Cuban-Americans, many of whom 
would normally have voted for Bush.

Hatred and blindness have lead this administration to take a stupid, immoral action 
under pressure from the terrorist mob which gave Bush a fraudulent victory when he had 
a million votes less than his rival nationwide, and a narrow majority of 537 votes in 
Florida where thousands of black Americans were prevented from exercising their right 
to vote whereas many dead people exercised theirs. Fifteen or twenty thousand voters 
could sink his hopes of re-election. These brutal measures have also been criticized 
all over the country. 

The overwhelming majority of those who are members of or run that terrorist mob which 
decided no less a thing than the election of the President of the United States are 
former Batista supporters and their descendents; or they are groups who for years have 
been involved in the terrorist actions, pirate attacks, assassination plots against 
Cuban revolutionary leaders and all kinds of armed aggressions against our country; or 
they were big landowners and relatives of the upper middle classes who were affected 
by revolutionary laws and who previously had all kinds of privileges and many of whom 
have amassed huge fortunes and have gained influence in important power circles in the 
US governments.

Over 90 percent of those who have emigrated from Cuba since the triumph of the 
revolution have done so through normal channels and for economic reasons, their 
leaving authorized by the Revolution that placed no obstacles. But Cuban immigrants 
were forced to go under the Caudine Forks of that powerful mafia whose influence they 
could not easily ignore. 

Unlike many millions of Latin Americans, including Haitians and other Caribbeans, that 
emigrate legally and illegally to the United States and are called immigrants, Cubans, 
with no exception whatsoever, are called exiles.

On the other hand, the absurd Cuban Adjustment Act has caused the loss of countless 
Cuban lives by rewarding and encouraging illegal emigration and giving Cubans 
extraordinary privileges that are not granted to citizens of any other country in the 
world.

Nevertheless, years ago, even before the collapse of the Soviet Union and the special 
period that ensued, and despite the risk of espionage and terrorist plans originating 
in the United States which the measures entailed, Cuba gave permits to �migr�s so they 
could visit their relatives and their country of origin, whereas the Bush 
administration is abruptly closing the doors because of its fanatical obsession of 
bringing Cuba to its knees through economic suffocation.

And, to that same end of depriving our country of any income whatsoever, he labels the 
tourist industry in Cuba sex tourism and calls those who visit our country coming from 
the United States paedophiles and pleasure seekers .

Mr Bush does not hesitate either in tarring Canadian tourists with the same brush when 
everybody knows that the overwhelming majority of them are pensioners and senior 
citizens who, in the company of their relatives, come to enjoy the exceptional safety 
and calm, the politeness, culture and hospitality that they find in our country. 

What would Mr. Bush call the tens of millions of tourists who visit the United States 
every year where casinos, gambling dens, areas of male and female prostitution and 
many other activities related to pornography and sex abound, none of which exist in 
Cuba and all of which are alien to the revolutionary culture of our people?

What would he call the tens of millions of Europeans who visit Spain every year where 
many pages in the papers are used to advertising the names, addresses, the physical, 
cultural and intellectual characteristics and the specialities and individual gifts to 
suit all tastes of those who exercise the age-old profession of prostitution? Would he 
call the US and Spanish tourist industries sex tourism?

None of the aforementioned activities take place in Cuba. However, in the fevered and 
fundamentalist mind of the all-powerful gentleman in the White House and in those of 
his most intimate advisors, Cuba must now be saved not only from tyranny , Cuban 
children must now be saved from sexual exploitation and trafficking in persons the 
world must be freed from this dreadful problem which takes place 90 miles away from 
the United States .

Has no one told him that in Cuba before the triumph of the revolution in 1959 about 
100,000 women were directly or indirectly involved in prostitution for reasons of 
poverty, discrimination and lack of work and that the Revolution educated these women 
and found them jobs, and outlawed the so-called tolerance zones which existed in the 
pseudo-republic and the neo-colony installed by the United States?

Has no one told him that the Cuban children, whose physical, mental and moral health 
is the number one priority of the Revolution, are protected by more severe laws than 
those of the United States and that they all attend school, including more than 50,000 
who suffer from mental or physical disabilities and that, without exceptions, receive 
specialized care in special education centres?

Has no one told him that infant mortality is lower in Cuba than it is in the United 
States and that it continues to decrease?

Has no one dared to whisper in his ear that Cuba occupies an outstanding and 
internationally recognized place in education; that health and education services are 
free and extend to the whole population; that today programs are underway in 
education, health and culture that will place Cuba far above all the other countries 
in the world?

The historic session of the National Assembly of People s Power held on July 1 and 2, 
exposed them and showed how ridiculous is the grotesque over 400-page-long-report 
which gives an ample account and full details of the neo-colonial and annexationist 
programs the fascist group which begot this disgusting project propose to implement to 
the detriment of the Cuban people and their sovereignty. This report has done nothing 
if not unite our people even more and give a boost to their fighting spirit.

They must be absolutely mad to talk of such things as implementing literacy and 
vaccination programs in Cuba where illiteracy was eradicated a long time ago, where 
minimum school attendance is up to grade nine and where children are vaccinated 
against 13 diseases. Actually, such programs should be applied to tens of millions of 
Americans who are left out, who do not enjoy the benefits of social security and who 
have not been to school or are completely illiterate or functionally illiterate.

The US administration has not even dared to say a single word about the generous offer 
that our country made of saving, in a short 5 year period, a life for every life lost 
in the Twin Towers, by providing free health care to 3000 US citizens who have no 
access to healthcare services that are indispensable for preserving life. Neither have 
they replied to the question of whether or not those who may decide to come to Cuba to 
take advantage of this opportunity would be punished.

It is really revealing that on the very same day that Mr. Bush spouted such outrageous 
slanders and threats, a prestigious American scientific institution from California 
signed an agreement with the Cuban Molecular Immunology Centre for transferring 
technology developed in our country for the clinical trials and later manufacture of 
three promising vaccines in the battle against cancer, which, as you know, kills more 
than half a million Americans every year.

It is only fair to acknowledge that in this case the US authorities did not set any 
obstacle.

This fact shows how the fruits of everything I have talked about before are beginning 
to sprout all over our country, despite 45 years of a harsh blockade and of 
aggressions by US governments.

And these are not biological weapons, nor chemical weapons, nor nuclear weapons; these 
are scientific discoveries which could help all humanity.

Let s hope that, in Cuba s case, God does not instruct Mr. Bush to attack our country 
but that he rather inspires him to avoid this colossal mistake! He had better check on 
any divine belligerent order by consulting the Pope and other prestigious dignitaries 
and theologians from the Christian churches, asking them for their opinion

Excuse me, Mr. President of the United States of America, for not writing a third 
epistle to you this time but it would have been difficult to analyze this subject in 
that way. It might have been taken for a personal insult and I rather adhere to common 
courtesy.

Hail, Caesar! I say, but this time I add: Those who are willing to die have no fear of 
your enormous power, of your unbridled rage, nor of your dangerous and cowardly 
threats against Cuba!

Long live the truth!
Long live human dignity!

July 26, 2004 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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