Gold9472
07-24-2007, 07:36 AM
Castro suggests Washington fails to stop attacks on US soil to justify war on terror
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/07/16/news/CB-GEN-Cuba-Castro.php
The Associated Press
Published: July 15, 2007
HAVANA: Fidel Castro suggested that Washington has deliberately failed to stop terrorist attacks against Americans because it needed to "deliver a bang" that would justify its war on terror.
In the latest in a series of essays that Cuba's 80-year-old Maximum leader has begun writing every few days, Castro on Sunday seized on U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff's comments this past week expressing a "gut feeling" that the United States faces an increased risk of attack this summer.
"The government of the United States sees and hears all, with or without legal authority," Castro wrote. "They can prevent any attack on their people, unless there is some imperial need to deliver a bang so that they can carry on with and justify the brutal war which has been declared against the culture, religion, economy and independence of other peoples."
The accusation came at the end of an essay titled "Bush, Health and Education," in which Castro claimed Cubans are better cared for than Americans, and that his poor island nation and its legions of doctors working around Latin America have done more for the region than the U.S. ever will.
Published in the Communist Party youth newspaper Juventud Rebelde, the essay criticized U.S. President George W. Bush for suggesting that recent U.S. initiatives have provided quality medical care to Latin Americans.
"In Cuba, where health care is not a commodity, we can do things that Bush cannot even dream of," he wrote.
Castro singled out the USNS Comfort, a Navy medical ship staffed by hundreds of American doctors and nurses dispatched to treat the poor in Central America.
"Bush knows that he is lying and that his tall tales are hard to swallow, but he doesn't care," Castro wrote. "He is confident that if he repeats it a thousand times, many will finally believe him."
Castro said "The Comfort, with more than 800 people on board, that is, medical staff and crew, will not be able to look after great numbers of people." He added that despite Washington's 45-year-old trade embargo, "Bush is discovering that the economic and political system of his empire cannot compete with Cuba in vital services, such as health care and education."
Castro did not mention the recent U.S. movie "Sicko," in which filmmaker Michael Moore compares Cuba's health care system favorably to the United States'.
Recuperating in an undisclosed location, Castro has not been seen in public since announcing last July 31 that emergency intestinal surgery had forced him to cede power to a provisional government headed by his 75-year-old brother Raul.
For weeks he has published the frequent essays, known as "Reflections of the Commander in Chief," in which he has touched on issues ranging from U.S.-backed plans to use food crops for biofuels to complaints about Cuba's economy and hints about why his recovery is taking so long. Castro's writings seem to show he is in no hurry to return to power.
On Sunday, he also accused Washington of causing an international brain drain, saying that nearly half the foreigners who receive advanced schooling in the United States later opt to stay there.
"Third World countries do not have the resources to set up scientific research centers, while Cuba has created these even if its own professionals have often been enticed and encouraged to defect," Castro wrote.
The U.S. embargo prohibits American tourists from visiting Cuba while severely limiting trade between both countries. Castro claimed Washington uses the policy to discourage international medical equipment manufacturers from selling replacement parts to Cuban hospitals.
"It is disgusting," he wrote.
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/07/16/news/CB-GEN-Cuba-Castro.php
The Associated Press
Published: July 15, 2007
HAVANA: Fidel Castro suggested that Washington has deliberately failed to stop terrorist attacks against Americans because it needed to "deliver a bang" that would justify its war on terror.
In the latest in a series of essays that Cuba's 80-year-old Maximum leader has begun writing every few days, Castro on Sunday seized on U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff's comments this past week expressing a "gut feeling" that the United States faces an increased risk of attack this summer.
"The government of the United States sees and hears all, with or without legal authority," Castro wrote. "They can prevent any attack on their people, unless there is some imperial need to deliver a bang so that they can carry on with and justify the brutal war which has been declared against the culture, religion, economy and independence of other peoples."
The accusation came at the end of an essay titled "Bush, Health and Education," in which Castro claimed Cubans are better cared for than Americans, and that his poor island nation and its legions of doctors working around Latin America have done more for the region than the U.S. ever will.
Published in the Communist Party youth newspaper Juventud Rebelde, the essay criticized U.S. President George W. Bush for suggesting that recent U.S. initiatives have provided quality medical care to Latin Americans.
"In Cuba, where health care is not a commodity, we can do things that Bush cannot even dream of," he wrote.
Castro singled out the USNS Comfort, a Navy medical ship staffed by hundreds of American doctors and nurses dispatched to treat the poor in Central America.
"Bush knows that he is lying and that his tall tales are hard to swallow, but he doesn't care," Castro wrote. "He is confident that if he repeats it a thousand times, many will finally believe him."
Castro said "The Comfort, with more than 800 people on board, that is, medical staff and crew, will not be able to look after great numbers of people." He added that despite Washington's 45-year-old trade embargo, "Bush is discovering that the economic and political system of his empire cannot compete with Cuba in vital services, such as health care and education."
Castro did not mention the recent U.S. movie "Sicko," in which filmmaker Michael Moore compares Cuba's health care system favorably to the United States'.
Recuperating in an undisclosed location, Castro has not been seen in public since announcing last July 31 that emergency intestinal surgery had forced him to cede power to a provisional government headed by his 75-year-old brother Raul.
For weeks he has published the frequent essays, known as "Reflections of the Commander in Chief," in which he has touched on issues ranging from U.S.-backed plans to use food crops for biofuels to complaints about Cuba's economy and hints about why his recovery is taking so long. Castro's writings seem to show he is in no hurry to return to power.
On Sunday, he also accused Washington of causing an international brain drain, saying that nearly half the foreigners who receive advanced schooling in the United States later opt to stay there.
"Third World countries do not have the resources to set up scientific research centers, while Cuba has created these even if its own professionals have often been enticed and encouraged to defect," Castro wrote.
The U.S. embargo prohibits American tourists from visiting Cuba while severely limiting trade between both countries. Castro claimed Washington uses the policy to discourage international medical equipment manufacturers from selling replacement parts to Cuban hospitals.
"It is disgusting," he wrote.