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Cuba After Fidel — A New
Chapter for the Revolution
Peter Taaffe
The formal resignation of Fidel Castro as President
of Cuba opens up a new chapter in Cuba's history. Since Castro's
original illness in 2006, there has been intense discussion about his
role and the future of Cuba. His resignation signifies that he is
unlikely to recover and that the Cuban government is seeking to prepare
the Cuban population for his death.
Despite any shortcomings and mistakes by Castro, he is recognized by the
downtrodden masses worldwide as a monumental figure who tenaciously
fought against their capitalist and imperialist oppressors. Millions of
working-class people and poor worldwide hope the social gains of the
revolution will endure.
Since the revolution in 1959, Cuba has faced a savage embargo imposed by
U.S. imperialism. There have been 600 assassination attempts against
Castro. However, through its planned economy Cuba has given a glimpse of
the great possibilities for humankind if the straitjacket of landlordism
and capitalism is eliminated. Heroic figures like Che Guevara and Fidel
Castro exercise a profound influence upon many young people and workers
throughout the world.
If anything, the reputation of Cuba on social issues, such as housing,
education, and particularly health, has soared recently. In Michael
Moore's incredible film Sicko, the contrast between the brutal, profit-driven
health system in the U.S. and the free care provided by Cuba is starkly
emphasized. The achievements of Cuba are compared to the dismal record
of landlordism and capitalism in the region, as well as in Africa and
Asia.
In a revealing new book, Fidel Castro - My Life, on which Castro
collaborated with writer Ignacio Ramonet, Castro sets out the impressive
achievements of the revolution.
Between 1959 and today, life expectancy in Cuba has risen by 19 years.
Following the social counter-revolution in Russia, it fell for men to
56!
Could there be a greater contrast between the claims of social
revolution and the barbarism of capitalist counter-revolution? And this
has been achieved in the teeth of a massive economic decline in Cuba in
the early 1990s following the spiteful withdrawal of aid, particularly
oil supplies, from Russia, as Castro explains in his book.
While the historic achievements of free education and medical attention
were preserved, nevertheless a brutal austerity program was inflicted on
the great mass of the population. The regime was forced to make
concessions to the capitalist “market.”
Through “dollarization,” a parallel economy developed, which resulted in
relative privileges for those involved in tourism, where they were paid
in dollars, and sectors involving “joint ventures.” Unfortunately, those
who remain firm supporters of the planned economy, such as doctors,
teachers, etc., continue to be paid in the Cuban peso and suffer
accordingly.
Even the state monopoly on foreign trade, according to left-wing author
Richard Gott, was formally abolished in 1992. But essentially, Cuba
remained a planned economy with foreign enterprises requiring
authorization from the ministry of trade to operate.
Decentralization took place, with hundreds of enterprises permitted to
import and export on their own authority. However, Castro declared that
"nothing will be privatized in Cuba that is suitable for, and therefore
can be kept under, ownership by the nation of the workers' collective."
Yet it is not true, as Castro argues, that bureaucracy and inequalities
do not exist in Cuba. However, Castro is not, as his capitalist
opponents have tried to picture, in the mold of Stalin.
While he freely admits that he has made mistakes and has zigzagged from
one policy to another throughout the last 49 years - sometimes causing
significant harm - this has not been comparable to the monstrous crimes
of Stalinism: forced collectivization, big purge trials, etc.
Missile Crisis
The book also reveals that Castro could sometimes
behave erratically. For instance, during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis
he incredibly proposed to Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev that a “first
strike” nuclear attack should be launched against the U.S. by the Soviet
Union.
Khrushchev replied to Castro: "You propose that we carry out a first
strike against the enemy territory. This would not be a simple strike
but the beginning of a thermonuclear war."
Castro sometimes attacks Stalin: "He was to blame, in my view, for the
invasion of the USSR in 1941 by Hitler's powerful war machine without
the Soviet forces ever hearing a call to arms... Everyone knows about
his abuse of force, the repression, and his personal characteristics,
the cult of personality."
Yet, at the same time, he claims that Stalin "also showed tremendous
merit in industrializing the country, in moving the military industry to
Siberia - those were decisive factors in the world's great fight against
Nazism."
But Stalin was not the original author of the idea of the “Five-Year
Plan” and the accompanying idea of industrialization. It was Trotsky and
the Left Opposition who first formulated these ideas. Stalin borrowed
them and applied them in a bureaucratic fashion at great, unnecessary
costs to the Soviet Union and its people.
In his book, Castro pointedly denies - quite wrongly as Celia Hart has
indicated - that Che Guevara had “Trotskyite sympathies.” Castro states:
"I never heard him talk about Trotsky... He was a Leninist and, to a
degree, he even recognized some merits in Stalin."
Che, it is true, was not a conscious Trotskyist. Yet in his last period
in Cuba, he became a critic of bureaucratism and particularly in the
“socialist” countries he had visited. Moreover, he had a book by Trotsky
in his knapsack when he was killed in Bolivia in 1967.
In these comments, however, Castro reveals, at best, a one-sided
understanding of Stalinism from a “sociological” and political point of
view. The blunder of forced collectivization, the monstrous purge trials,
the annihilation of the last remnants of the heroic Bolshevik party were
not just personal traits of Stalin alone or “mistakes,” but flowed from
the character of the bureaucratic machine that he personified and
represented.
Stalin presided over a bureaucratic political counter-revolution, as
Trotsky brilliantly analyzed, that feared the independent movement of
the working class and the ideas of workers' democracy. Castro distances
himself and Che from Trotsky and his criticisms of Stalinism, because
his regime, in the final analysis, is also ruled by a bureaucratic elite
unaccountable to the masses.
Cuba and its revolution had many features different from the Russian
revolution, and Castro is not Stalin. However, despite the Cuban
revolution's enormous popularity at the beginning, its weaknesses were
evident in the absence of democratic control and management and a clear
class consciousness by the working class and the poor.
“Socialist Awareness”
Castro himself says that at the beginning there was "not
yet a socialist awareness." Throughout his book, moreover, there is no
clear perception of the role of the working class - as explained by Marx
- as the main agency of the socialist revolution, nor of its role in
controlling, together with the peasant poor, the workers' state that is
thrown up by the revolution.
The consequence of this approach is that the state presided over by
Castro and Che, while initially enormously popular because of the
carrying out of a revolution in the jaws of the U.S. monster, was not
controlled by workers' and peasants' councils as was the case in Russia
in 1917. This historically put its stamp on the Cuban state and the kind
of society that subsequently emerged.
However, without real workers' democracy the transition to socialism is
impossible. An end to the one-party monopoly, fair elections to genuine
workers' councils, strict control over the incomes of elected officials,
and the right of recall over them are minimum requirements for a
democratic workers' state.
Without real control and management of the state and society, an
inevitable bureaucratic machine will take hold, which ultimately
threatens the very existence of the planned economy. This would be a
real possibility even in a highly advanced, developed economy after a
revolution, let alone one like Cuba that has a gross domestic product
just 0.3% of that of the U.S.
It is true that in the early 1990s, faced with a deteriorating economic
situation, an open discussion on the constitution ensued and
constitutional amendments to the national assembly, including a form of
direct elections, were proposed. However, this was still on the basis of
only one candidate for each seat in parliament.
In the January 2008 elections, there were 614 candidates for 614 seats!
At the same time, members of the Central Committee of the Communist
Party, the Politburo, and the Council of State, were ultimately subject
to the veto, if necessary, of Castro.
Ultimately, power is wielded in any state by leaders and parties. But
every leadership, every party, particularly in a healthy workers' state,
needs strict control to be exercised by the masses from below.
In Cuba today, discontent is growing, particularly amongst the new
generation; 73% of the population were born after the triumph of the
revolution in 1959. The alienation of the new generation risks a
“revolution with no heirs.”
Replacement of Castro by his brother Raúl will not solve the underlying
problems. Raúl is associated with the Cuban army, as defense minister.
In the early 1990s, faced with austerity conditions, he sought to use
the army in some “free-market” experiments.
He has visited China on a number of occasions to study Beijing's
economic policies. He has pushed innovations such as farmers' markets
and self-employment for plumbers, hairdressers, and other small-time
entrepreneurs. Through measures like these, elements of capitalism have
already been reintroduced into Cuba, though not yet far enough to
destroy the main features of the planned economy.
There are undoubtedly divisions within the bureaucratic elite that
controls Cuba. There is a section that wishes to “open up” to capitalism
in a “democratic” form. Their difficulty is the brutal U.S. Helms-Burton
Act. Even those bureaucrats who wish to see the dismantling of the
planned economy face the prospect of the Miami refugees returning to
Cuba "to hold auctions for state enterprises.” (Wall Street Journal)
Events, particularly the U.S. presidential election, could have a
profound effect on Cuba. Barack Obama has already indicated he will
adopt a softer line to America's traditional foes: Cuba, Iran, etc. He
or even Hillary Clinton - despite her recent bellicose statements
towards the Cuban regime - could act to limit or completely dismantle
the embargo.
Profitable Bites
There is already considerable pressure from farmers,
from the tourist trade, not to say McDonald's, for the barriers to come
down so they can take big profitable bites out of Cuba. One hundred U.S.
Congress members have demanded the embargo be lifted.
As Leon Trotsky commented, the real danger to an isolated workers' state
lay not so much in a military invasion but “cheap goods in the baggage
train of imperialism.”
This “invasion” of Cuba today would probably take the form of tourism,
as well as capitalist investment, if the regime “opened up” under Raúl
or another leader in the future. This may remain an unlikely prospect as
long as Fidel lives. But a real danger of capitalist restoration
nevertheless still exists.
Venezuelan oil is a vital lifeline at present for Cuba. But what if the
price of oil collapses, as it could with the onset of the world economic
recession? Venezuela would be profoundly affected and, consequently,
Cuba as well.
Marxists, as Trotsky advocated, while critical, would seek a principled
bloc with the wing of the Cuban leadership who will fight to maintain a
planned economy and seek to mobilize mass Cuban resistance to any threat
of a return to capitalism.
Given the advantages of the planned economy - and especially if these
were spread through a democratic socialist confederation of Venezuela,
Bolivia and, perhaps, Ecuador - capitalist counter-revolutionaries,
wishing to return to the barbarism of the landlordism and capitalism
that exists on the Latin American continent, would find little support.
It is true that the vicious capitalist embargo of Cuba is an important
factor in the lack of democracy on the island. However, while the
prohibition against right-wing capitalist parties wishing to return to
capitalism can be a subject of debate, the question of workers'
democracy should not. All those who support the planned economy -
including Trotskyists and others - should be allowed to operate in Cuba.
This should be part of preserving and extending the planned economy.
Without workers' democracy, Cuba could be thrown back decades and, with
it, the expectations of the socialist revolution in Latin America and
worldwide could suffer a severe blow.
The maintenance of this revolution should not be placed in the hands of
one man, no matter how steadfast and courageous, or a group of men and
women, but in an aroused, politically conscious Cuban working class
linked to the masses in Latin America and elsewhere.
This cannot be achieved from above, as the mistakes of Hugo Chávez in
Venezuela have shown. Steps should be undertaken now to organize a mass
campaign in Cuba to prepare the ground for real workers' democracy. The
worldwide crisis of globalized capitalism and the revolt against neo-liberalism
in Latin America strengthens the prospect of defending and developing
the gains of the Cuban revolution. But no time must be lost in the fight
for workers' democracy and socialism in Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, and
elsewhere.
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