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USACGSC RB 31-6

REFERENCE BOOK
,."',
j
P'l7 /
,/
)
SELECTED READINGS ON
INSURGENT WAR:
CUBA 1953-59
Col. (Ret.) TeflY E. Rowe
4800 Warren WBty
Reno, NV89509
(VIetnam, 1964-72)
This publication contains copyright
material and under no circumstances
will be sold nor commercially used.
,--....
I ---------------------------

U.S. ARMY COMMAND AND GENERAL STAFF COLLEGE


Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
15 AUGUST 1969
U.S. ARMY COMMAND AND GENERAL STAFF COLLEGE
Fort Leavenworth, Kansas
ALLDJ 15 August 1969
SUBJECT: RB 31-6, Selected Readings on Insurgent War: Cuba 1953-59
SEE DISTRIBUTION
1. This reference book is prepared at the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College
to support instruction in internal defense operations. Most of the source material in this
book describes the insurgent situation and the conduct of internal defense operations in
Cuba during the period 1953-59.
2. The views expressed in this reference book are those of the original authors and are
not the views of the Department of the Army, the Department of Defense, or the U.S.
Army Command and General Staff College. They are presented as historical accounts of
the recent struggle for Cuba.
3. The copyright material contained in this book has been reproduced by special arrange-
ment with the copyright owner in each case. Such material is fully protected by the
copyright laws of the United States. It is reproduced at USACGSC by special permission
and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission. of
the copyright owner.
FOR THE COMMANDANT:
C. E. LAWING
Colonel, CE
Secretary
DISTRIBUTION:
Special
REFERENCE 800K U.5, ..R>lY CC/IMolAHO "'teGENERALSTAFF COllEGE
h,IH
FOri L........ I"""".,1969
SELECTED READINGS IN INTERNAL DEFENSE OPERATIONS, CUBA 195359
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CHAPTER 2. SOCJO-I:C01"Cll.I1C O1SCrSSIO\1;_-._- _._._.

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CIV.I"Tt:H 6. I:PlLDGIJE-CUllo\.. rn; u.,.,,_..01 Stat< (lll6il ...................

JoLIpOFCUflo\.--.-.
INTRODUCTION
"In our country the individual knows that the glorious period in
which it has befallen him to live is one of sacrifice; he has learned
its meaning.
"The men in the Sierra Maestra-and wherever else there was
fighting-learned it first; later, all Cuba came to know it. Cuba,
the vanguard of America, must make sacrifices, because it points
the way to full freedom for the Latin American peoples.
ce the true revolutionary is moved by strong feelings of love.
c' It is impossible to conceive of an authentic revolutionary who lacks
this quality. Herein lie what are perhaps the great dramatic chal-
lenges to a leader: he must combine an impassioned spirit with cool-
ness of mind; and he must make painful decisions unfalteringly.
"The love our vanguard revolutionaries bear for the people and
for the most hallowed causes must be the same indivisible, spiritu-
alized love. Not for them the routine expressions of finite love as
expressed by ordinary men.
"Revolutionary leaders are not often present to hear their chil-
dren's first hesitant words; their wives must also share in their
sacrifice if the revolution is to reach its goal; their friends are to be
found only among their comrades in revolution. For them there is
no life outside the revolution. If they are to sidestep dogmatic ex-
tremes, sterile scholasticism, and isolation from the people, they
must possess a full measure of humanity and a sense of justice and
truth. Theirs is a daily struggle to transform their love of living
humanity into concrtite deeds, into acts that will serve as a mobiliz-
ing force and an example:'
-CHE GUEVARA
Socialism and Man in Cuba
Copyright C 1968 by Monthly Review Press; reprinted by permission of Monthly Review Press at
USACGSC and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright
owner.
ii
I.
II.
III.
IV.
Section
CHAPTER 1
SELECTED SUMMARIES
The Sergeant and the Lawyer, Enrique Meneses - - - - -
Steps Toward Democracy, Fulgencio Batista - - -
The St"uggle Against Batista, Nicholas Rivero - -
Slavery and Its Apologists, Fulgencio Batista - - - -
V. Victory, Enrique Meneses- - - - - - - - - - - -
1-2
1-14
1-26
1-45
1-57
Ii,
t The purpose of this chapter is to provide a general overview of the Cuban Insur-
~ g e n c y A closer inspection of many specific events and major contributing forces
!i, alluded to in this chapter, will occur in succeeding chapters.

" Each of the five sections provides the student of the Cuban Insurgency with a
l:alllghtly different viewpoint or opinion on the events and personalities that shaped the
ventual outcome of the Cuban Insurgency.
1-1
Section I. THE SERGEANT AND THE LAWYER
* * * * * * *
The two men facing up to each other in the Cuban ring were
completely different, both physically and mentally. Batista was
fifty-two and Castro twenty-seven when the attack on the Mon-
cada took place. [1] The President was short, with an olive com-
plexion and mestizo features, while his opponent was tall,
athletic, and fair-skinned. Batista was an ordinary soldier,
though he had promoted himself from sergeant to general.
Castro was a lawyer, more interested in social causes than in
bourgeois litigation. The President had been born in Oriente,
like Castro, but while Batista came from a very humble home,
the rebel had been born into a comfortably-off landowning
family.
But just who were these two men who were to bathe Cuba in
blood and turn her into one of the nerve-centres of the world?
Let us look first at Fulgencio Batista.
On the 12th August 1933 the dictator Gerardo Machado had
been overthrown. For the three weeks following his fall, chaos
and anarchy reigned in the country. Revenge, looting and crime
were rampant throughout the island. The Army, which had
hitherto kept out of politics, became more and more involved.
The breakdown of order and discipline was sorely felt, even by
many of those who had contributed to the downfall of the
corrupt Machado regime. The first to want a return to normality
were the country's conservative elements.
[l See chap 3. J
Reprinted {rom pages 29-49 Fide l Cas tro, by Enrique Meneses. @ 1966 by Enrique Meneses. Published
in the U.S. 1968 by Taplinger Publishing Co., Inc. Reproduced at USACGSC by special permission and may
not be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
1-2
Fulgencio Batista y Zaldivar was an Army stenographer, and
in the course of his job he learned everything that was being
said and done in the armed forces.
On the 4th September 1933, taking advantage of the chaotic
situation in Cuba, and with the help of some comrades-in-arms
of the same rank, he seized power and dubbed himself colonel
and Chief of the Armed Forces. This military coup passed into
history as 'the sergeants' revolt'.
Batista, to make sure of his power, persecuted political
enemies, opposition newspaper editors, and in fact all the
counter-revolutionaries of the time. However, this persecution
was mild in comparison with what was to happen twenty years
later.
President Batista, despite his authoritarian Government, tried
hard to win the sympathies of the country. A mestizo of work-
ing-class background, he wanted above all to go down in the
history of his country as a man beloved by the people. Although
he had taken power by force, many considered he had brought
back peace and order to the country, and for this alone they were
prepared to tolerate him.
The years passed, and, still seeking popularity, Batista
decided to hold elections. Being unsure of winning sufficient
electoral support, in 1938 he legalized the Comm.unist Party,
which could swing a number of valuable votes to him. Two years
later he was duly elected, and he repaid his debt to the ~
munists by naming two of their members as Ministers without
Portfolio. He also presented the Party with a radio station and
a newpaper.
Under pressure from North America (and confident ofhaving
gained the Army's support) in 1944 Batista again called elections
and this time-a rare event in Cuban history-they were honest
elections. They were won by a medical man, Dr. Ram6n Grau
San Martin, leader of the Opposition. Batista left the country
and the new President controlled the destiny of Cuba until
1948.
Grau San Martin belonged to the Autentico Party or PRC
(Partido Revolucionario Cubano), of which Carlos Prio
1-3
, .
Socarras was also a member. In the Presidential election of
1948 Pdo, up till then one of Grau San Martin's Ministers, was
returned to office. His first measure was to get rid of Lazaro
Pena, Secretary-General of tIie Cuban Workers' Confederation
(CTC) and a well-known Communist. The second was to
authorize the return of Batista, who had oeen living at Daytona
Beach, Florida.
In 1952 new Presidential elections were due, and the date was
fixed for the 1st June.. There were three major candidates:
Carlos Hevia (of the PRC), Batista and Roberto Agramonte.
The last was the head of the recently formed People's Party or
Partido Ortodoxo. This party's aim was to fight against govern-
mental corruption.
It should be pointed out that every sort of corruption had
been sanctioned not only by Batista and Machado but also by
Pdo Socarras. Astronomical sums were salted away by these
three Presidents in North American and European banks. Half
the city of Daytona Beach belonged to Batista. In these circum-
stances, a party which came out against such abuses, against the
immorality of gaming tables which attracted the world's most
notorious gamblers, and against the private lotteries which were
farmed out among the friends and relations of the government
in power, was bound to have the whole country's sympathy.
Every Sunday evening over CQM-TV Eduardo ChiMs de-
nounced the corruption of the rulers and spoke of a just and
honest future for Cuba. One Sunday, worn out by his efforts,
according to some, or because he had made false accusations
without proof, as alleged by others, Eduardo ChiMs took his
own life in the television studio.
The death of ChiMs and its dramatic circumstances increased
the electoral chances of the Ortodoxo Party and its Presidential
candidate, Roberto Agramonte. Another result was that a
young lawyer who had recently graduated from the University
of Havana became a member of the party: Fidel Castro Ruz.
Immediately on joining the Ortodoxos, he offered himself as a
candidate for Congress.
Three months before the elections, the public opinion polls
1-4

gave Agramonte as favourite, followed by Hevia, with Batista
in third place. But these elections were never to be held.
On the 10th March 1952, at 2040 in the morning, Fulgencio
Batista entered Camp Columbia, the principal garrison in the
country, situated a few miles from Havana. In les.s than twelve
hours Batista had deposed Prio Socarras and, without a shot
being fired, made himself once again master of the country.
But let us go back and look at Fidel Castro's life before
Batista's coup d'etat put an end to his electoral aspirations.
Like Batista, Fidel Castro was born in Oriente, on the 13th
August 1926, on his father's farm in Binin, in the District of
Mayari, on the north coast of Oriente Province.
His father, Angel Castro y Argiz, was a Galician. He had come
to Cuba as a soldier in the Spanish Army in 1898, during the
War of Independence. On demobilization he decided to stay in
the island and went to work for the Nipe Bay Company, a
subsidiary of the United Fruit Company of Boston. In 1904 he
became an overseer for United Fruit and in 1920 he sold them a
strategic piece of land, for which he was paid a considerable
sum. From that moment on his fortune gradually increased, and
when he died, on the 21st October 1956, he left his family
more than $500,000. Many of Fidel's enemies maintain that
the foundations of his father's fortune were laid on his iII-
treatment of the countryfolk of the Binin area.
By his first marriage, to a schoolmistress, Angel Castro had
two children: Lidia and Pedro Emilio. Later, by Lina Ruz
Gonzalez, the family cook and a Galician like himself, he had
five more: Angela, Ram6n, Fidel, Raul and Juana. Fidel's
detractors claim that his father only married the cook on the
death of his legal wife, when Fidel was twelve years old.
Fidel and RaUl were sent to Santiago de Cuba to study under
the Jesuits at the Colegio Lasalle, and then to the Colegio
Dolores, also Jesuit. Whep I spoke to Fidel about this period
of his life, he told me that he had been expelled from college to-
gether with Raul for having organized a strike in the dining hall,
claiming that the Jesuits were exercising social discrimination in
distributing the food. Some people allege that such strikes were
1-5
" "
nio I&k... ill I!Io Soomo MMco __ ~ ......
Baliua _tloo.
a by-product of the influence exercised over Fidelby his private
Maths tutor, a certain Captain Safazar, known as 'The Crippfe',
a veteran of the International Brigade in the Spanish Civil War.
In our conversations together, Fidel mentioned only the short-
age of food he was getting compared with his schoolfellows as
the reason for the strike.
In 1942, Fidel was sent to Havana, where he carried on with
his secondary education at the Jesuit College of Belen (Bethle-
hem). In the College's Book of Honour for June 1945, there
appears this report from his teachers: 'He has good qualities,
and is something of an actor'.
As well as being a satisfactory student, Fidel was an excellent
swimmer, a magnificent runner, and a good basketball player,
though some of his schoolmates of that period remember him
as 'very dirty and untidy in his appearance'.
In the autumn of 1945, after spending the summer holidays
in Birl:ln with his family, he returned to Havana and enrolled in
the Facufty of Law.
The University of Havana, like almost all Latin American
Universities at the time, was a hotbed of dissent. Politics
dominated the fife of the 'Alma Mater' and the students' asso-
ciations were simply cells of the various pofitical parties. Castro
entered into the activities of these circles with all his characteris-
tic impetuosity.
He had been only two years at the University when he became
involved in his first rebellious escapade. In 1947 he joined a
group which was preparing to launch an invasion of the
Dominican Repubfic from Cayo Confites with the aim of over-
throwing General Trujillo. The exiled Dominican General Juan
Rodriguez was paying the expenses. Ram6n Grau San Martin
was President of Cuba at the time and he turned a bfind eye
while the scarcely discreet preparations for the landing were
being made in Oriente.
While this was going on the Ministers of Foreign Affairs of
the Pan-American Union were holding a meeting at Petr6-
pofis in Brazil. The Dominican delegate accused Cuba of
mounting an expedition against his country. His documentation
1-8

was so precise that Grau San Martin felt obliged to give orders
to his armed forces to stop the invasion. The Cuban Navy
intercepted tb.e would-be expeditionaries, and Fidel Castro had
to swim for it, with his tommy-gun slung round his neck, to
avoid falling into the hands of the Cuban Naval Police. This
failure, like many more he was to have in the future, drove
Castro to an even more earnest dedication to politics.
Itis interesting to note that at Havana University Fidel
sought the support of the Communists to get himself elected
Vice-President of the Law Students' Association, but as soon as
he had achieved his object he began to attack them violently, so
that he was obliged to go round armed and then to go into
hiding until things had calmed down. This behaviour caused
the President of the Association to tender his resignation, a
step which suited Fidel Castro, who automatically took his
place.
Less than a year after the abortive attempt to overthrow
Trujillo, Castro, accompanied by his friend Rafael del Pino and
other Cuban students, arrived in Bogota, Columbia. On the 9th
April 1948 the Colombian capital was due to play host to the
Ninth Conference of the Pan-American Union, at which
General George C. Marshall, then Secretary of State, was a
member of the U.S. delegation. At the same time as the Con-
ference, and with the object of upsetting it, an Anti-Colonialist
and Anti-Imperialist Student Congress had also been organized
in Bogota. Fidel Castro and his companions were the Cuban
delegates to this Congress, and its principal organizers.
Among the points which Castro had set out in his agenda
there were three main ones: independence for Puerto Rico;
overthrow of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Repub-
lic; and Panamanian control of the Panama Canal. Colombia
itself was not mentioned in these written proposals. On the 3rd
April, Fidel Castro and his group were expelled from the
Teatro Colon in Bogota for distributing anti-North American
leaflets. In addition to some members of the Colombian Liberal
Opposition Party, the Colombian Communist Party and the
students taking part in the Anti-Imperialist Congress tried to
1-9
secure a boycott of the Pan-American Conference by every
means possible.
The Colombian Government, at the time the Ninth Con-
ference was held, was Conservative. The majority ofthe Liberals,
although in opposition, denounced the Communist efforts
to wreck the conference. One of those who joined in this
denunciation was the populist Liberal leader Jorge Eliecer
Gaitan.
On the 9th April, Gaitan accepted an invitation from the
students of the Anti-Imperialist Congress to take part in a dis-
cussion due to be held at the editorial offices of the Liberal news-
paper El Tiempo. Before that, he went to the Capitol, where the
twenty-one Foreign Ministers were meeting, to listen to some of
the speeches.
He left the Capitol in the company of the editor of El Tiempo,
Roberto Garcia Peiia. The distance he had to cover to reach the
newspaper office was too short to warrant taking a cab. On the
way Gaitan greeted a number of passing acquaintances and
chatted briefly with some of them about the day's events. A
few steps short of the newspaper office, in the Carrera Septima
at the corner of Avenida Jimenez Quesada, a man threw himself
at Gaitan and fired at him point-blank. The crowd which saw
the attack threw themselves on the murderer and beat him to
death on the spot. Gaitan himself, gravely wounded, died in
hospital a short time later.
The news of the murder spread like wildfire through the city,
where the Liberals had a great deal of support, and where
Gaitan in particular enjoyed considerable popularity. The
Liberal students started to march on the Capitol. Among them
was Fidel Castro, accompanied by Del Pino.
One wing of the Capitol housed a police station. The officer
in charge was a Liberal, and as soon as he heard from the
students that Gaitan was dead he began to hand out arms to
them. The demonstrators, thus equipped, turned back to the
main building of the Capitol and succeeded in forcing an en-
trance, wrecking several rooms before they could be ejected by
the troops stationed there to protect the building. The students
1-10
then swept through the city like a tidal wave smashing up every-
thing they could lay their hands on. Shops were looted and then
wrecked.
In the mea1J.time the Communists had quickly organized, and
were driving round the city with loudspeakers announcing the
beginning of 'the Leftist Revolution in the Americas'. An hour
later the Communists of the port of Barranquilla occupied the
Governor's Palace and hoisted the hammer and sickle.
At Liberal headquarters Fidel Castro failed in his attempt to
take over the angry student movement. Four hundred armed
police were keeping an eye on the students, but having no in-
structions their role was completely passive. The Communists
were on one side, the Liberals on the other, and, confronting
them both, the Army.
By now numbers of buildings were on fire in all parts of the
city. President Ospina lost no time in summoning the Liberal
Party leaders and reaching a rapid agreement with them, since
it was obviously ridiculous to blame the Conservatives, the
party in power, for the assassination of a Liberal leader on the
very day of the arrival in the country of the twenty-one American
Foreign Ministers. In announcing the conclusion of the agree-
ment over the radio, President Ospina accused the students of
having instigated all the disturbances of the day before. Fidel
Castro and Rafael del Pino had to seek refuge in the Cuban
Embassy, from which they were smuggled out and flown to
Havana on an aircraft transporting cattle.
It is hard to say exactly what part was played by Castro and
his compatriots in what has gone down to history as 'the
Bogotazo'. What is certain is that Gaitan himself had warned
his own countrymen that the Communist Party planned to
create disturbances during the Ninth Pan-American Conference
and that he was assassinated by someone who was killed before
he could say at whose behest he had committed the crime. The
role of Castro and the Cuban students in the affair remains
obscure, to the point that some people now claim that Castro
himself was behind the murder, in the hope of causing such
popular indignation that the people would take to the streets.
1-11

But whatever the plans for insurrection may have been, they
were thwarted by the agreement. .
Six months after the Bogotazo, on the 12th October 1948, Fidel

Castro married a fellow-student at the University, Mirtha Diaz


Balart. The wedding took place in Banes, Oriente Province. The
honeymoon in Miami was not altogether a success due to the
young couple's financial difficulties; Fidel Castro was still living
on a monthly allowance given him by his father to enable him
to continue his studies.
When his son, Fidelito, was born on Ist September 1949 Fidel
Castro had still not completed his course in the Law Faculty.
This addition to his family meant that Fidel had to spend his
time borrowing from his parents and his brothers in order to get
through the month.
In 1950 Castro obtained his law degree and set up in chambers
with two other lawyers. But his preference for cases with possible
social and political implications led him to accept briefs which
brought in no money, though they brought him some publicity.
In the meantime, the reputation of Eduardo Chibas and his
Ortodoxo Party continued to grow. Fidel Castro joined the
party, which was fighting governmental corruption. Shortly
afterwards he became Congressional candidate for a Havana
constituency and prepared to contest what was to be the first and
only election ofhis life on the 1st June 1952, the date fixed for the
poll at the end of Prio Socarras' Presidential term. This was the
election which Batista prevented by his coup d'etat on the 10th
March.
When a year later the public prosecutor of the Santiago de
Cuba court asked Castro why he had attacked the Moncada
garrison instead of going to law, he was unaware that the young
rebel had indeed gone to law on two occasions. First, two days
after Batista took power, accusing him of having violated the
Constitution of 1940. Then, a few days later he informed the
Emergency Court of Havana that Batista had violated specific
articles of the Constitution which made him liable to serve more
than a hundred years in prison.
Fidel Castro received only one reply. The Court of Consti-
1-12

tutional Guarantees rejected his petition, s i n ~ its judgment on
the fact that 'revolution is the fount of law', and ruling that
since Batista !\ad become President by revolutionary means, he
could not be considered an unconstitutional President.
Months later, with 200 men, Fidel Castro attacked the Mon-
cada Barracks, thus giving his own interpretation to the ruling
of the Court of Constitutional Guarantees.
1-13

Section II. STEPS TOWARD DEMOCRACY
The seizure of power had" been inevitable to avert an attempted
coup d'etat and civil war. There was not only President Prio's
twisted scheme for a coup d'etat to worry about, but another con-
sideration. Regardless of who won the June 1st elections, there
was reason to believe that Communist agitators and other mal-
contents would announce that the Government had
been defeated, would stir up the mobs and call them into the
streets. We might then face a Cuban edition of the 1948 Bogotazo,
in other words, bombings, lootings, burnings and killings that
would gut our capital city, bring us into international disrepute
and lead to a possible seizure of power by the extreme left. Addi-
tional reason to consider this prospect was that the student mur-
derer, Fidel'Castro, had been sent to Bogota in 1948 by his Soviet
masters and had played an important and sinister role in that
holocaust. While he had been distrusted by Eduardo Chibas and
other leaders of the Orthodox Party, Castro was prominent among
the wild Orthodox youth element and was a: candidate for Con-
gress in the June elections.
After March 10, 1952, I felt it was necessary to limit the time
and scope of the emergency powers that flowed from the blood-
less revolution. From the outset, I explained that I had no de-
sire to perpetuate myself in office. We prepared the means for a
smooth transition from the extraordinary regime to a normal
democratic one. Article 254 of the Constitutional Law enacted
on April 4th provided for general elections and required the
Reprinted by permission of the publisher The Devin..Adair Company from the book THE GROWTH AND
DECLINE OF THE CUBAN REPUBLIC by Fulgencio Batista. Reproduced at USACGSC by special permis-
sion and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without the express permission of the copyright
owner.
1-14

Cabinet to specify within 60 days the offices to be filled and their


length of tenure. .. .
The Electoral College was assigned the task of proposing revi-
sions in the Electoral Code and of promulgating regulations
based upon the Code. The impartiality of that 1943 Code could
scarcely be challenged by my opponents .since it had governed
the 1944 elections in which my political group was defeated by
the under Grau San Martin.
To give greater scope to political activity and to ensure that the
vote of the people would determine the Government, a Constitu-
tional Reform was drafted. This was to be submitted to referen-
dum at the time of the election with the understanding that, if
it should be defeated, the 1940 Constitution would automatically
be reinstated upon the inauguration of the next President.
These procedures were closely parallel to those we had re-
sorted to during the transition from the revolutionary regimes
arising out of the overthrow of the Machado Government to the
Administrations elected under the 1940 Constitution. During that
interim period, four electoral codes had been enacted and three
Censuses carried out so that we would have a complete and ac-
curate roster of eligible voters. Our Revolution summoned the
people three times to vote for a President, Governors, Mayors,
Senators and Aldermen, five times for Congressmen and once for
delegates to a Constitutional Convention.
Within the time set by law, the Government specified the elec-
tive offices to be filled. Law #105 of June 2, 1952 defined the
procedures for the election of a President, a Vice President, a
Senate of 54 members, at least a third of whom must represent
minority parties, a House of Representatives with one member
for every 45,000 inhabitants and also Governors, Mayors and
Aldermen.
1
The Electoral College submitted a proposed Electoral Code to
the Cabinet on schedule. The draft law strengthened our demo-
cratic institutions and, by making split-ticket voting impossible in
many instances, tended to make parties and programs more im-
.portant than the personalities of the individual candidates.
The realization of this transition was blocked by the intolerance
of the opposition political organizations, which preferred to ab-
stain from the elections to admitting the existence of the revolu-
1 According to the 1953 Census, Cuba had over 6 million inhabitants, of
whom 2,870,678 were voters. Voting was compulsory.
1-15
tionary government. Because of this intransigent attitude, we
were obliged to move the date of the proposed election forward
to 1954. While the motivation for abstention was the well-justified
fear by the opposition that'it would be defeated at the polls, my
associates and I were determined to do everything pOSSible to
have an electoral contest in which the voters would be free to
vote for the opposition parties as well as for our own.
THE MONCADA ASSAULT
The country was at p e ~ e order reigned; the people enjoyed
complete liberty; there seemed to be general support of the
Government. At this time, in midsummer of 1953, the people of
Santiago de Cuba were enjoying the carnival and had little
thought of politics. In this atmosphere of peace, a sudden, un-
provoked surprise attack on the soldiers of the Moncada Barracks
in the city took place. The assault began in the early hours of
July 26, 1953, a Sunday when the troops were either enjoying the
carnival in the city or sleeping off their revelries.
The attack was led by Fidel and Raul Castro and other Com-
munists. It began with the assassination of sick men in their beds
in the hospital clinic adjoining the camp. Sentinels and soldiers
sleeping in their beds were also murdered. The troops fought
back, killed a number of their assailants and easily restored com-
plete control over the barracks.
Fidel Castro, the organizer of the attack, did not appear at the
scene of the fighting. Both during, and for several days after, the
murders, which he and his Communist superiors had planned, he
remained hidden in town. When it was safe to do so, he emerged
under the protection of Monsignor Enrique Perez Serantes, Arch-
bishop of Santiago de Cuba.
Orders were given to respect Castro's life. In accordance with
the democratic principles of my Administration, he was tried in
an ordinary civilian court before independent judges, at least one
of whom was hostile to the regime.
At the time Castro arrived in Santiago to help plan the opera-
tion, eight of the top ranking leaders of Cuban communism,
among them Lazaro Pefia and Joaquin Ordoqui, slipped into
Santiago. Later, at the trial, they alleged that they had come to
the city to celebrate the birthday of their leader, BIas Roca, the
General Secretary of the Party. This was a transparent falsifica-
1-16

tion, both because'Blas Roca lived in Havana and because Com-


munist functionaries are not sentimental enough to take a round
trip of over a thousand miles because of a birthday party. More-
over, the Party"had been outlawed and its leaders had either fled
abroad or were in hiding. Under these circumstances, they would
only have travelled to Santiago de Cuba for a most important
reason. That reason was to plan the attack on the Moncada Bar-
racks.
Castro was sentenced t9 15 years in prison. He began to serve
his term on the Isle of Pines which, under his dictatorship, has
become the worst hell hole in the Western Hemisphere. Under
my Administration, however, Fidel Castro, as a political prisoner,
was given a pavilion to live in, the use of a jeep with chauffeur,
full access to whatever books he chose to read and complete free-
dom to write whatever he wanted to.
In prison, Castro continued with his monstrous deception. Writ-
ing to Dr. Luis Conte Aguero on December 12, 1953 from prison,
he observed: "Our triumph would have meant the immediate
rise of the Orthodox Party to power ... Speak to Dr. Agra-
monte,2 show him this letter, express to him our loyal senti-
ments ..." To his Communist associates, Castro sang another
tune. On April 17, 1954, he wrote Melba Hernandez, one of those
who had used cold steel in the Moncada attack:
"Use guile and smiles with everyone. Follow the same tactics
we followed at the trial: defend our point of view without irritat-
ing anyone. There will be more than enough time later to trample
all of the cockroaches together. Accept any help offered, but
remember to trust no one . . "
RETURN TO THE BALLOT BOXES
The cowardly attack on the Moncada Barracks forced the Gov-
ernment to take exceptional measures and to suspend certain
guarantees as provided for in the Cuban Constitution. The elec-
tions had to be postponed, but the political parties could carryon
their activities at will.
To ensure complete fairness, we invited all the political parties
and factions to discuss the new Electoral Code which would gov-
ern the forthcoming Presidential elections of November 1,1954.
A few hours before the polls were opened and at a time when
2 The successor to Chibas as leader of the Orthodox Party.
1-17
all the election 'boards had been named, Dr. Grau San Martin,
the candidate of the Cuban Revolutionary Party, requested a
postponement of the ballotting. The matter was debated on tele-
vision and radio. The Electoral College decided that Dr. Grall's
complaints were without foundation and it was generally real-
ized that he was concerned with obstructing the democratic proc-
ess for the simple reason that he had no chance of winning.
Grau withdrew and ordered the candidates of his party to do
likewise. Nevertheless, the people went to the polls in droves. I
was elected President of Cuba for the second time and, despite
their leader's directive, several Cuban Revolutionary Party (PRC)
candidates were elected to Congress.
My inauguration in February 1954 as Constitutional President
of Cuba was attended by special envoys from 51 countries.
s
The
growth of Cuba's international prestige was clearly evident. For
our part, we maintained cordial relations with all the nations of
the world with the exception of the Communist countries.
At the end of eight years of persecution, four of which were
spent in exile, our second constitutional government began in an
aura of peace and work. The fundamental objective was to carry
out a great program for economic and social development, one
which was already under way. I hoped that Cuba would continue
to set an example in advanced social legislation for the Americas.
The opposition was divided into two groups: those who fa-
vored attaining power through peaceful and constitutional means
and those who refused all compromise, abstained from the polls
and were prepared to use conspiracy, assassination, sabotage and
terror to win supreme power for themselves.
AMNESTY
The times were not propitious for an amnesty of all political pris-
oners, but my supporters in Congress and I hoped that an act of
great clemency and generosity which opened the prison doors to
S These special envoys were from: the Vatican, Federal Republic of Ger-
many, u s t ~ i a Belgium, Denmark, Spain, Finland, France, United King-
dom, Greece, Netherlands, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Sweden,
Switzerland, Portugal, Yugoslavia, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Co-
lombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Ecuador, El Salvador, United States, Guatemala,
Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Dominican
Republic, Uruguay, Venezuela, Cambodia, Nationalist China, Egypt, India,
Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Lebanon, Pakistan and Thailand.
1-18

the terrorists might convince some of them to become normal hu-
man beings, to do something useful for society and to confine
their political 0EPosition to the channels prescribed by law.
The general amnesty was issued and the Castro brothers, among
others, were freed under it. After loudly announcing his intention
to repeat his treasonable attack on the State, Fidel Castro pro-
ceeded openly to Mexico to prepare there to carry out his pur-
pose.
4
CONSULTATIVE COUNCIL
Although my Government had been invested with extraordinary
powers by the fact of revolution, I did not want to exercise the
legislative power without first hearing public opinion. Therefore,
as soon as the Revolution had consolidated its power, I created a
new organism, consisting of outstanding men and women who
represented the manifold activities of the nation. It was called the
Consultative Council and was composed of 80 members and 15
alternates.
Among other powers, it had the right to propose laws, to be
heard on basic matters of government and to intervene in fiscal
matters and international relations through its commissions and
its plenary sessions. All of its proposals, once they had been dis-
cussed and approved, were submitted to the Council of Ministers
for final action. The members of the Council had the untram-
meled right to express their opinions and vote as their consciences
dictated. They enjoyed a protection tantamount to parliamentary
immunity.
The most important organizations of the nation were repre-
sented on the Council by their most prominent members. This
included, for example, the Presidents of the Associations of Sugar
Mill Owners and of Sugar Planters, the Secretary General of the
Cuban Confederation of Labor (CTC) and of the National Fed-
eration of Sugar Workers (FNTA), the leaders of other federa-
tions and labor unions, agrarian leaders, veterans of the War of
4 Itis worth noting that the presiding judge at Castro's trial, Manuel Urrutia,
had been so disaffected that he rermitted the accused to deliver an inter-
minable harangue, the content 0 which was pure Marxism and the perora-
tion of which was plagiarized from Adolf Hitler's speech to the court when
accused of treason after the Bierhall Putsch of 1923. Urrutia even rendered
a dissenting opinion stating that the murder of the soldiers at the Moncada
was a lawful act.
1-19
Independence, farmers, economists, landowners, industrialists,
former Ministers, legislators and mayors. No other deliberative
body ever represented the nation as well.
5
. .
The Consultative Council was called into session on 168 occa-
sions and there were only ten times when it was unable to
because of lack of a quorum. It met weekly in plenary session,
dedicating the rest of its time to the study by its many commis-
sions of the various projects placed before it. The constitutional
principle of not passing on any legislation without at least one re-
port from one of its commissions was strictly observed. Before
acting on its recommendations, the proposed legislation was dis-
cussed in hearings at which interested groups were heard. This
system, which was rigorously adhered to, assured that all inter-
ested groups would be able to state their case and, on occasion,
secure modifications before laws were enacted.
6
The Council had four Presidents: Drs. Carlos Saladrigas Zayas,
Gast6n Godoy Loret de Mola, Justo Garcia Rayneri and General
of the Armies of. Liberation Generoso Campos Marquetti. Each
of these men left the Council in order to form part of the Cabinet.
THE CIVIC DIALOGUES
In the beginning of 1956, efforts were made to bring about an
agreement or modus vivendi between the opposition and the
Government. Meetings were organized by the Society of Friends
of the Republic, composed of semi-neutrals and opponents of the
Administration: the Orthodox Party to which Castro belonged, the
Prio faction of the which favored conspiracy and
violence, and the Autenticos of Grau who favored a solution at
the polls.
I) Of the 115 people on the Consultative Council over a period of time that
was analyzed, 14 were lawyers, 3 farmers, 1 an architect, 2 pilots, a banker,
. a coHee grower, 5 sugar cane planters, 2 businessmen, a midWife, an econ-
omist, 2 students, a cattleman, a pharmacist, 9 sugar mill owners, an indus-
trialist, 4 engineers, an agricultural extension teacher, 3 politicians, 4 doctors
of medicine, 18 workers and labor leaders, 12 journalists, a teacher, a land-
owner, 2 lawyer's assistants, 2 sociologists, 2 tobacco growers, 2 veterans of
the War of Independence, 3 former Cabinet Ministers, 14 former Congress-
men and 1 former mayor.
&In some aspects, the Consultative Council did not replace Congress, nor
was the National Capitol used for its deliberations. Senators and Congress-
liJ:lIllen continued to draw salaries until the expiration of their terms of office
.1-20
;
.conferences were called Civic Dialogues. They. were
'.j' .... ... .... over by the eighty-year-old patrician, Cosme de la Tor-
a Colonel of the War of Independence. No agreement
!.!. be reached the :adicals as. their condi-
,ion, that the Government resIgn. We dId not reJect thIs demand
hand, but proposed instead that a Constituent Assembly
:... t,&,p,th unlimited power be called to give the people the opportu-
to decide whether the Government should resign or serve
'r!?ut legal term until February 24, 1959. This counterproposal
rejected by the extremists, possibly because they were intimi-
, by Castro terrorists, and the discussions came to an end. .
., It is of some interest that, while Pdo was negotiating at these
,pivic Dialogues and simulating a desire for peace, his henchmen
! n'}ade an attack on the Goicuria military camp in the city of
. ,Matanzas.
;',. Despite the failure of the Civic Dialogues, we did everything
in our power to help the opposition use legal and democratic
phannels. For example, the National Revolutionary Movement
'. under Pardo Llada did not have enough registrations to qualify as
.. }l- legal party. To encourage lawful opposition, Law # 1307 of
... <February 26, 1954 was passed so that it could qualify. However,
! "when Pardo Llada saw he would not have enough support to win
\., Elven a single seat for himself or his followers in the House of Rep-
". (l'esentatives, he left for Spain on funds belonging to his party and
Lthen announced that he would return via the United States and
,enter the election campaign. Actually, he proceeded from New
idXork to Venezuela, then appeared suddenly in the Sierra Maestra
,.",and served as Fidel Castro's privileged radio propagandist until
'i;lt961. In the latter year, on arriving in Mexico on a mission for his
'...:!,Covernment, he "deserted." The Mexican press was unanimously
...hostile and labelled him "the Minister of Hate."
....,
'>,
OF NOVEMBER 1958
The elections of November 1958 were held under horribly un-
;avorable conditions. With the consistent support of the United
. States Government and a dominant sector of the American press,
the Castro movement was gaining strength by leaps and bounds.
The American arms embargo on my Government was generally
interpreted as a decision by Washington to support Castro's drive
for power. Under these conditions, the morally weak, the venal
1-21
and the opportunistic supported the bearded outlaw. When the
State Department allowed Castro's Communist bands to kidnap
American citizens without making any effective protest, a fur-
ther demoralization of those forces in Cuba which believed in
democracy and decency inevitably occurred.
A campaign of deceit and lies was unleashed by the men of the
Sierra Maestra. Since they were determined to seize power for
themselves with no competitors, it was necessary to their purpose
that the scheduled elections should either not take place or else
be discredited. Law #2 pf the Sierra Maestra imposed the death
penalty on all urban candidates in the election who refused to
withdraw their candidacy. This death sentence could be im-
posed by members of the Rebel Army or by the so-called Castro
militia. It applied to opposition candidates (including the candi-
dates of what had supposedly been Castro's own political group,
the Orthodox Party) as well as to my supporters. This law was
nothing less than a general license to murder any Cuban who be-
lieved in democracy and good government enough to run for pub-
lic office.
Terrorist attacks increased. Coercion rose toward a zenith.
Communications, schools, courthouses and trade union centers
were demolished. Candidates, political leaders, party workers
and others were murdered in their homes or on their way to work.
To give a few examples from hundreds of cases: Nicolas Rivero
AgUero, brother of the Presidential candidate of the pro-govern-
ment forces, and also brother of Rebel leader Luis Conte AgUero,
was assassinated; Felipe Navea, Vice President of the National
Maritime Union, was killed in the presence of his wife; the
teacher-candidate for Congress, Anibal Vega Vega, was killed on
his doorstep; and cattleman Rosendo Collazo was murdered at
his ranch in the presence of his wife by a group of outlaws wear-
ing 26th of July armbands and led by his former foreman.
In spite of threats, bombings and murder, the election took
place on the announced date, November 3, 1958. Had it not been
for acts of violence that sacrificed men, women and children,
voting would have been normal. As it happened, from 72% to
75% of the normal number of voters cast their ballots. Since mu-
nicipal and local officers were also at stake, there was keen inter-
est in the results.
In 1958, under these conditions of intimidation and terror,
54.01% of the eligible electorate voted. This compares with a
1-22
.qter turnout of about 60% in recent 'Presidential elections in the
U,nited States.
1rHE MYTH OF THE- 20,000 CORPSES
The real terrorists were those who threw bombs into police sta-
tions and crowded streetcars and who murdered candidates for
public office in order to destroy all democratic institutions.
However, the Castro propaganda mill cleverly imputed its own
crimes to its victims. The forces of law and order became the mur-
derers and sadists. These big lies were shrewdly disseminated by
a minority of U.S. publicists who, wittingly or unwittingly, served
the Communist cause with unswerving consistency and consum-
mate guile.
A few days after he had seized power, Fidel Castro charged
my Government with haVing killed 20,000 Cubans. Even though
this figure was "patently ridiculous-and every informed person
in Cuba knew it-the tremendous surge of popular enthusiasm
for the new dictator swept over the voices of reason and unques-
tionably accepted Castro's macabre arithmetic." 7
There were many commonsense refutations of this audacious
lie. In the first days of Castro rule, the refugees from my regime
-voluntary expatriates-began to return from the United States.
There were less than two thousand of them. "Cuban jails were
emptied of political prisoners; and the total liberated did not go
beyond several hundred, all in good condition, hale and well-
fed." 8
Moreover, every important leader of the Castro movement,
with the single exception of Ernesto (CM) Guevara had at one
time or another been in the hands of the Cuban Police. These
former prisoners of Batista were living refutations of the Castro
propaganda, imputing atrocities and bestial tortures to my re-
gime. The plain and self-evident fact was that all of,these former
prisoners were alive, healthy, unmutilated and untortured.
In January 1959, the weekly magazine, Bohemia, published a
list of the supposed victims of the Batista regime. This magazine
was notorious for its fanatical partisanship of Castro and his
movement. Despite its unabashed propaganda, it had flourished
without hindrance in Batista Cuba. After Castro took power, how-
7 Cuban Information Service, editor Carlos Todd, No. 130, page 9.
8 Ibid.
1-23
ever, the editors of Bohemia were driven into exile because they
had the decency to refuse to serve as pliant instruments of Soviet
tyranny.
Bohemia's list of victims consisted primarily of saboteurs and
terrorists who were killed in gun battles with the authorities or
else in immediate and passionate reprisal by soldiers and police-
men who were understandably emotional about seeing their
friends and comrades blown to bits. The second largest cate-
gory consisted of innocent bystanders who got killed in these
bombings and gun battles.
The most significant thing about the Bohemia total, which
was generally accepted as accurate at the time, was that it
amounted to slightly over 900 people. Not the 20,000 that Castro
allegedl
Let me compare the fictitious reign of terror of Batista with the
real reign of terror of Fidel Castro. The figures are those com-
piled by Carlos Todd.
9
Some 10,717 people had been killed by Castro and his Commu-
nists up to June 1, 1963 as follows:
Executed by order of "Revolutionary Tribunals"
Executed without any trial whatsoever
Killed in action against Castro forces
Missing
TOTAL
2,897
4,245
2,962
613
10,717
By comparison, during the seven years of my second Adminis-
tration, there were no legal executions (because we had no death
sentence) and the number of Castro supporters and bystanders
killed otherwise is estimated by the hostile source, Bohemia, at
about 900.
Todd estimated that 965,000 people (over 14% of the Cuban
population) had been arrested for political reasons at one time
or another and that 81,706 persons were in prisons, of whom 16,
120 were in concentration camps and 2,146 in C-2 torture farms.
Over 6.6% of Cuba's population, 449,450 persons, left the is-
land since Castro took power. Of these, 2,742 left secretly in small
boats and it is estimated that over 600 more were killed in the
attempt.
Of these refugees, 385,000 were in the United States, 42,000
91bid.
1-24
Pt Latin America, 21,000 in Europe and 1,4$0 scattered else-
'Where. An additional 3,401 gained asylum in foreign embassies.
pfthese, 3,165 'Yere given safe conduct out of the country, leav-
lig 236 still in the embassies. Castro agents frequently violated
fl1e right of asylum, entered the embassies by force and murdered
flrIerefugees .10
{, Some 230,000 Cubans on the Island had passports and visa
!\'aivers, but could not get transport. Another 385,000 applied for
;passports and visas. Thus, a conservative estimate would be that
1,067,000 Cubans-almost a sixth of the total population-had
left the country or were seeking to leave it.
'. ,These figures are necessarily incomplete and understatements
not all the executions, murders, imprisonments and ship-
ments to concentration camps are known. Moreover, the proc-
esses at work are continuous. The mills of death continue to grind
throughout Cuba.
"The whole story of the crimes of the Castro regime will not be
known until Communism is ousted from the Island," Todd writes.
<fPerhaps it will never be known, for many lie dead and buried
a single record of their demise. But Cuba, the burial
"ound of thousands, the prison of millions, will go down in his-
tory as one of the most brutal examples of the bestial, tyrannical
system that is communism." 11
to Todd's figures show that the victims of Castro terror are primarily humble
people. He breaks down the 10,717 corpses as follows:
Military 3,462 Activists in Catholic or
Workers 2,677 lay organizations 187
Feasants 2,473 Industrialists 71
Professionals 783 Property owners 63
Students ' 711 Foreigners 62
Small businessmen 228
11 Ibid.
1-25
Section III. THE STRUGGLE AGAINST BATISTA

T
o understand how Fidel Castro, the son of a fairly big
landowner, found his destiny in the leadership of a rev-
olutionary movement that took him to power and sovietized
a country 90 miles off the coast of the United States, it is
necessary to return to the events leading to the fall of Ba-
tista.
Cuba, as an independent nation, came into existence at
the beginning of the century as a result of the Spanish-
American War of 1898, the climax of many years of bloody
struggle by Cuban patriots against the colonial government
of Spain.
As an independent republic, inaugurated on May 20, 1902,
Cuba has had good and bad governments, elected by the
. people in more or less fair elections, and two dictatorships.
One of the dictatorships was headed by General Gerardo
Machado, who in 1924 was elected to the presidency in an
honest election. He perpetuated himself in office and ruled
as a dictator until 1933, when he was forced to flee the
country after three years of bloody repression, assassination,
and terrorism. The other dictatorship was that of ex-Sergeant
Fulgencio Batista, who first seized control of the island on
September 4, 1933, when he organized a successful revolt
From pages 27-45 Castro's Cuba by Nicolas Rivero. Reprinted by permission Robert B. Luce Company,
In.c. Reproduced I:\t USACGSC by special permission and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part
without express permission of the copyright owner.
1-26
among noncommissioned officers of the Cuban Army. From
then on Batista, who made himself chief of staff, was the
teal power behind the throne in Cuba, during which time

he made and unmade presidents.


In 1940, in a reasonably fair election, Batista was elected
president. At the end of his term, surprisingly, he allowed
free elections, and his bitter enemy, Dr. Ramon Grau San
Martin, was put into office. For the next eight years (1944-
1952) the Cuban people enjoyed freedom under the admin-
istrations of Dr. Grau San Martin and Dr. Carlos Pdo So-
carras. Both presidents were members of the middle-of-the-
road Cuban Revolutionary party, generally known as Auten-
ticos.
When Batista again seized power in 1952 through a mili-
tary coup the government of President Pdo was preparing to
celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Cuba as a free and in-
dependent nation. A presidential election was scheduled for
i'
June 1, 1952, and a public opinion poll published on March 1
~ t days before the military coup-showed that of the three
presidential candidates Batista was running in last place
with no chance whatsoever of being elected.
The Batista coup shocked the Cuban public, and almost
immediately there began a .campaign of bitter opposition to
unseat him. This opposition was led by university students
and by followers of ousted President Pdo, who was making
his headquarters in Florida. Underground organizations such
as the Triple A headed by President Pdo's former Minister
of Education, Aureliano Sanchez Arango, flourished through-
out the island.
At that time Fidel Castro was unknown to the Cuban
people. He had, however, a police record in which he was
1-27
described as a 'terrorist for his activities while a student at
Havana University.
Havana University, as were most of the universities and
colleges in the other Latin-American countries, was a driving
force behind all revolutionary movements. During his stu-
dent years Castro was known as a hotheaded, impetuous
youth whose idealism for political and economic change, in
Cuba forced him to collaborate with known communist agi-
tators on the campus and with students of secret organiza-
tions of a nihilist character, which plunged him into the web
of the student terrorist groups.
One of the most controversial episodes of Castro's life was
his participation in "Bogotazo"-the riots of April 9, 1948, in
Bogota during the Ninth Inter-American Conference which
was meeting to draft the charter of the Organization of
American States.
Fidel was sent to Bogota by a student group of Havana
University to attend an anticolonialism, anti-imperialist stu-
dent congress which was planned to coincide with the Inter-
American Conference. According to some of his friends, the
expenses of Castro's trip to Bogota were paid by a student
federation of the Per6n government. In that period the Per6n
administration was anti-United States and cooperated closely
with communist agitators. It was also known that the inter-
national Communists had planned in advance to break up
the Inter-American meeting, and during the riots it was re-
ported that there was a plot to assassinate United States Sec-
retary of State George C. Marshall, chairman of his coun-
try's delegation to the conference.
There is no doubt about Castro's participation in the Bo-
gota uprising. It is a fact that he joined the insurrectionists
1-28
immediately and obtained a rifle from the Colombian Police,
most of whom were disloyal to their government.
1
There have been several stories about the role Castro
played in the tiots. To some people it was an evidence of
Castro's earliest link with international communism, but to
others it was just a coincidence. But to all those who wish
to present the Cuban revolution as a communist undertaking
from its very inception, Castro's part in the Bogota riots is
evidence of the communist conspiracy.
At the end of the Bogota riots Castro and his companions
found a safe haven in the Cuban Legation just in time to
avoid being arrested by the Colombian authorities. The head
of the Cuban delegation to the Inter-American Conference
arranged to have him flown back to Cuba in a plane that
had been sent to Bogota by the Cuban government to evac
uate its delegation should events warrant.
Despite his part in the Bogota incident, Castro was un-
known to the Cuban people until the midsummer of 1953.
On July 26, 1953, after a year of recruiting, training and plot-
ting, Fidel Castro made a suicidal attack on Fort Moncada
in Santiago de Cuba, the nation's second largest city, in Cas-
tro's native province of Oriente.
The plan was to attack Moncada at dawn, to take by sur-
prise the 1,000 soldiers garrisoned there and, if successful, to
seize the radio station and call upon the people to support
the revolutionary movement against Batista's dictatorship.
The Moncada assault resulted in a frightful slaughter.
Many of the attackers were killed in action, but by far j:he
largest number of them were afterward executed by order of
Batista. Fidel and his brother, Raul, managed to escape and
hid in the nearby mountains. Monsignor Enrique Perez Se-
1 Jules Dubois, Fidel Castro (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1959), p. 20.
1-29
rantes, archbishop of Santiago de Cuba, intervened to put an
end to the execution of prisoners taken at Moncada and was
able to secure a promise from the commanding officer at
Moncada, Colonel Alberto del Rio Chaviano, that the lives of
the rebels still at large would be spared if they gave them-
selves up; that they would be brought to trial-not murdered
in cold blood.
Monsignor Perez Serantes, an old friend of the Castro
family, went personally in an army jeep to a place close to
Fidel's hideout and delivered him to the army.
The assault on Moncada ended in defeat, but Fidel Castro
and his revolutionary movement, which from then on was
called the "26th of July Movement," became known to the
Cuban people.
At the Moncada trial, which was held in September of
the same year in the courthouse of Santiago de Cuba, Fidel
Castro became the accuser of his jailers, indicted the Batista
dictatorship, and proclaimed the aims of his revolution.
He left no doubt at the trial that his revolutionary move-
ment sought social justice for the unemployed and the farm
laborers, land reform, reduction in rents, industrialization,
and better distribution of wealth. At the same time he prom-
ised categorically that the "first revolutionary law of the na-
tion would be to proclaim the Constitution of 1940 as the
. supreme law of the land." (The Cuban Constitution of 1940
is one of the most progressive and democratic in contem-
porary Latin America. )
Fidel Castro was sentenced to fifteen years in prison, but
he served hardly a year and a half, as Batista, in an attempt
to calm his opponents, granted a general amnesty to all po-
litical prisoners.
Fidel understandably did not feel at ease in Cuba after
1-30
his release. He wanted to buila a legend out of the Moncada
attack and become the leader who would liberate Cuba from
the Batista dictatorship; but it was not Batista's intention to
permit Fidel to build such a legend. On one occasion when
Castro was scheduled to speak over the radio the police pre-
vented him from doing so. Shortly after that, he decided to
go to Mexico to organize a new revolutionary attempt to
overthrow Batista.
Upon his arrival in Mexico in 1955 he began recruiting
and training for a seaborne invasion of Cuba. He acquired a
ranch near Mexico City covering sixteen miles of moun-
tainous terrain for the training of his small band. The train-
ing was under a Colonel Alberto Bayo, a one-eyed Spaniard
born in Cuba, who had served for many years in the regular
Spanish Army. He had had experience in guerrilla warfare
as a captain in the Spanish Foreign Legion fighting the
Moors in Morocco. He was also an air force pilot.
During the Spanish Civil War Bayo sided with the Loyal-
ist forces of the Spanish Republic and was in command of
the expedition against the Balearic Islands, which resulted
in military disaster for the republic. After the Civil War
Bayo emigrated to Mexico and became an instructor in the
Mexican Military Academy at Guadalajara. According to
some Spanish sources, he was one of the few officers of the
Spanish Army who became a member of the Communist
party of Spain during the Civil War.
Another controversial figure whom Fidel met while in
Mexico, and who until this day [2] has had extraordinary in-
fluence over him, was Che Guevara, Argentine-born physi-
cian. Guevara is now the economic czar of Cuba and one of
the most influential men in the Castro government.
There is little doubt that Guevara is a communist agent,
[2
196
LJ 1-31
. .
and it is believed that he was planted in Mexico by the
Soviet apparatus in order to infiltrate the Castro movement,
although there is no proof of this. He was, however, asso-
ciated in Guatemala with Colonel Jaime Rosenberg, the
dreaded chief of the Security Police of the procommunist
regime of former Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz.
Guevara is now [
3
] known in Cuba as the Marxist mentor of
Fidel Castro, and Number One ideologist of his regime. In
an article published on October 8, 1960, by the Cuban
magazine Verde Olivo (Olive Green), organ of Castro's Cu-
ban armed forces, Guevara stated:
When asked whether or not we are Marxist, our position is the
same as that of a physicist or a biologist when asked if he is a
Newtonian or if he is a Pasteurian.
There are truths so evident, so much a part of people'sknowl-
edge that it is now useless to discuss them. One ought to be a
Marxist with the same naturalness with which one is a Newtonian
or if he is a Pasteurian in biology.
Beginning with the revolutionary Marx, a political group with
concrete ideas establishes itself. Basing itself on the giants, Marx
and Engels, and developing through successive steps with per-
sonalities, like Lenin, Stalin, Mao Tse-tung and the new Soviet
and Chinese rulers, it establishes a body of doctrines and, let us
say, examples to follow.
In an address in December, 1960, in Moscow Guevara said
that Cuba stood ready to fulfill her communist-designated
goal as a model for armed revolution in Latin America. He
also said that Cuba "has taken the road of frontal struggle
against North American imperialism" and that the Cuban
government had decided to meet terror with terror in an-
nihilating what he described as United States-supported
antirevolutionary forces in Cuba.
Guevara, who is now the director of the new Ministry of
1-32 [3
196
LJ

Industry, has long been considered Moscow's top man in the
Cuban government. He is the author of a book intended to
serve as a maI1'Ual for conducting guerrilla warfare and for
carrying out Sierra Maestra-type revolutions in the other re-
publics of Latin America.
Although today Guevara is known to be the communist
brain behind Castro and the man who has built the Cuban
economic structure along classical Soviet lines, very few peo-
ple, even in the inner circle of the Castro regime, know that
as a Marxist economist Guevara is a very poor one and that
in his office in the National Bank of Cuba he received daily
lessons in Marxist economy from a young Mexican econ-
omist, Juan Noyola.
While Castro was recruiting a revolutionary force in Mex-
ico, other Cubans having no connection whatever with him
were plotting in Cuba to unseat Batista. One of these groups,
known as Montecristi, was headed by Dr. Justo Carrillo,
president of the Cuban Bank for Industrial and Agricultural
Development under the administration of President Prio.
The Montecristi group worked closely with a group of young
army officers who were planning to end Batista's rule through
a military coup.
On April 4, 1956, a military plot to overthrow Batista was
discovered and its leaders arrested. At the head of the con-
spiracy was the able Colonel Ram6n Barqufn, then military
attache of the Cuban Embassy in Washington and Cuba's
chief delegate to the Inter-American Defense Board. He had
been awarded the Legion of Merit for his contribution to the
planning of the military defense of Latin America. Colonel
Barqufn, with the other officers in the conspiracy, was ar-
rested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to six years in the mil-
itary prison on the Isle of Pines.
1-33

Had Barquin's plans succeeded, the course of Cuban his-
tory would have been different, as he was pledged to re-
establish constitutional -government and call for elections
within eighteen months. Dr. Carrillo was chosen by Barquin
to be president. All the members slated for Carrillo's Cabinet
were distinguished civilians.
Barquin's plans to overthrow Batista started in Washington
almost the day following Batista's coup. Most of the planning
took place at 6128 Massachusetts Avenue, Wood Acres,
Maryland, the residence of Dr. Fernando R. Leyva, a well-
known Cuban pediatrician in Washington.
Shortly after Barquin's conspiracy was discovered, another
suicidal attempt, Moncada style, was made at Matanzas,
capital of the province of Matanzas, 55 miles east of Havana,
by the underground organization of ousted President Carlos
Prio. Using trucks protected by sandbags, a small group of
young revolutionists attacked the Matanzas military post and
were shot down by cross fire from the machine guns of the
post. After this unsuccessful assault the Cuban military in-
telligence began- an intensive roundup of all suspects in Ma-
tanzas, and many of them were executed. Castro had no con-
nection with any of these attempts against Batista but they
served to underscore the extent of the revolutionary desire
to overthrow the dictatorship.
By the fall of 1956 Fidel Castro was ready to launch his
much-publicized seaborne invasion of Cuba from Mexico.
On November 25, 1956, with eighty-two men, Castro left
Tuxpan, Mexico, on the yacht Gramma, bought with money
contributed by former President Prio.
According to a prearranged plan, the arrival on the south
coast of Oriente Province, near the towering Sierra Maestra
mountain range, was to be synchronized with an uprising in
1-34
Santi1;lgo de Cuba and other places, and November 30 was
the date set for both the landing and the uprising. But every-
thing went wrong. The uprising in Santiago took place as
scheduled, but Fidel was still at sea battling heavy seas and
40-knot gales. At last, on the morning of December 2, the
expedition landed safely at a small fishing village named
Belie on the south coast of Oriente. A few hours after the
landing a Cuban naval ship spotted the Gramma and within
an hour Cuban airplanes were over Castro and his group,
strafing them. A thousand soldiers were rushed to the area
to wipe out the rebels. Only twelve of the eighty-two in-
vaders survived.
This small group of survivors, including Fidel, his brother
Raul, and Che Guevara, were able to reach the Sierra Maes-
tra, where they formed the nucleus of a guerrilla band which
within two years was to become a ragtag army of almost ten
thousand men.
The Batista propaganda machine claimed that Fidel Cas-
tro and his followers had been killed. Francis L. McCarthy,
chief of the United Press Bureau in Havana, reported that
Castro had been killed in the landing and credited the news
to a reliable source. The "reliable source" turned out to be
Batista himself.
In less than three months, to the great embarrassment of
the Cuban government, the New York Times correspondent,
Herbert Matthews, went into the Sierra Maestra, interviewed
Castro, and took pictures of him and some of his followers.
Matthews' first article was published on the front page of
the New York Times without a picture of Castro. There was
immediate reaction from the Cuban government, which
termed the article a fake. The Minister of Defense, Dr. San-
tiago Verdeja, in a cable to the New York Herald Tribune,
1-35
called the story a "chapter in a fantastic novel." 2 The next
day the New York Times published another article by Mat-
thews with a picture of him and Fidel Castro, which prompted
the Cuban government to declare that the photograph was a
doctored one.
From then on everyone in Cuba knew that Fidel Castro
was alive and that an active army of insurrection was afoot
against Batista. However, the Castro expedition in the moun-
tains was not taken too seriously by the people in Havana,
who believed it would tum out to be another suicidal scheme
like the Moncada assault. The only ones who. believed that
Batista could be overthrown by Castro's guerrillas were the
youth of the island, boys and girls from twelve to twenty-five
years of age, who joined Castro's underground apparatus.
Terrorism Hared. Bombs exploded; trains were derailed; towns
were blacked out by sabotage of power lines; incendiary fires
were started by the young revolutionists. Molotov cocktails
were hurled into trucks, government buildings, and ware-
houses.
On March 13, 1957, a spectacular four-hour attack was
made on the presidential palace, with the aim of killing Ba-
tista and establishing a revolutionary government. The at-
tackers were Havana University students of the Directorio
Revolucionario, an underground organization composed of
Havana University alumni and students. Followers of former
President Pdo also took part in the attack. These revolution-
aries had driven up to one of the entrances of the palace in
a truck while the guards were at lunch. They rushed the
entrance, firing as they went, got inside the building and up
to the second Hoor, but an iron grille stopped them. The
2 R. Hart Phillips, Cuba: Island of Paradox (New York: McDowell, Obo-
lensky, 1959).
1-36
\Ji !1llElittle,Iasted for about four hours andmost of the revolution-
who entered the building were killed. It is said that the
))tPPack failed because they did not receive the support from
rtltJI.other group that was supposed to have arrived as soon as
started, and which never came. Another reason
for the failure was because the elevator operator switched off
tbe power on the second floor, thereby preventing the at-
from reaching the third floor, where Batista was at
time. Neither could they use the stairway, as heavy iron-
grilled gates at the foot of each stairway were locked. Had
. used the bazookas which they had available and had
they come prepared to blow up the big iron doors they prob-
aMy would have succeeded.
10 The attack was timed to coincide with the seizure of CMQ
. Broadcasting Station in Vedado, a suburb of Havana, where
.. &;group of university students were waiting to broadcast that
i f,resident Batista had been killed and his government over-
Wown. The timing was wrong, and when the group of stu-
headed by the president of the Havana University
,
.. $tudent Federation, Jose Antonio Echevarria, left the station
many of them were shot down by the police waiting outside.
.. Fidel Castro was not connected in any way with the palace
attack. Throughout his struggle for power he was opposed
to a military coup, the assassination of Batista, or any act that
would topple the Batista regime, only because he wanted to
Qq this himself and thereby keep leadership and control.
Shortly after the unsuccessful attack on the presidential
palace, a 26-man expedition landed on the north coast of
Oriente Province. They arrived aboard the yacht Corinthia,
which had been purchased in Miami by former President
Prio. The landing was made successfully on a small beach in
Carbonico Bay, about a mile from the United States Nicaro
1-37
nickel plant: The landing group was 'led by Calixto Sanchez
White, who had been the leader of the Havana Airport
Workers' Union. Sanchez had been forced into exile in Miami

when SIM, Batista's military intelligence service, discovered


that he had been smugglingweapons into Cuba by air freight,
mostly inside of refrigerators.
As was so often the case in Cuba during the long and bitter
struggle against Batista, the Corinthia expedition was badly
planned and executed and the invaders never got a chance
to reach the Sierra Cristal Mountains, where they intended
to open another guerrilla front like the Sierra Maestra one.
They were surrounded by the troops of a nearby army post
and most of them were vilely assassinated by order of Colo-
nel Fermin Cowley, one of the most brutal commanders of
the Batista army.
Cowley was the military chief at Holguin, the second larg-
est city in Oriente Province. On Christmas Eve of 1957
twenty-six young men were rounded up from their homes by
soldiers under the command of Cowley and the next day,
Christmas Day, their corpses, bullet-riddled or strangled,
were found on the outskirts of the city. Afew months after this
macabre Christmas present to the Holguineros, Cowley was
shot and killed by the boys of the local underground move-
ment as he was leaving a store.
Another attempt that shook the Batista regime was the
September, 1957, naval uprising at Cienfuegos on the south
coast of Las Villas Province, about 150 miles from Havana.
The uprising had been planned as a coordinated effort of
naval forces all over the island, together with the help of
Castro's 26th of July Movement and the group of President
Prio. However, something went wrong: the date had been
set but had to be postponed. The Cienfuegos naval garrison
1-38
never' got the word of the postponement. They started the
revolt at daybreak as scheduled. The local underground
joined them and the city was taken and held for several hours.
The Batista troops moved in from Santa Clara, 45 miles away,
in army tanks and planes. The city was strafed and many
innocent people in the streets were killed. Several fliers re-
fused to bomb the city and dropped the bombs in the bay.
Those fliers were court-martialed and sentenced to six years
in prison.
General Batista was shaken by the Cienfuegos revolt, for
he knew it had been planned as a revolt of the whole navy.
He realized that the navy could not be trusted, and soldiers
were put on guard at many naval posts. Lieutenant Jose San
Roman Toledo, a leader in the Cienfuegos revolt, was hor-
ribly tortured by naval intelligence agents and murdered.
There was no official record of the exact number of casualties.
Jules Dubois, Latin-American correspondent of the Chicago
Tribune press service, said that a common grave was dug by
a bulldozer in Cienfuegos Cemetery and that he saw "fifty-
two bodies dumped into it." 8
It was reported at the time that many of the Cienfuegos
rebels reached the Sierra del Escambray, a mountain range
to the east of Cienfuegos. There they began to organize them-
selves for what was to become an active and effective second
military front against the Batista army, in which William AI-
r exander Morgan, a twenty-nine-year-old former paratrooper
, from Toledo, Ohio, was later to play an important role.
r By the beginning of 1958 two facts had become clear. One
was that the rebellion was too deeply rooted to be ended
either by force or by any elections which might be' held
under Batista. The other fact was that Fidel Castro had be-
S Jules Dubois, Fidel Castro, p. 177.
1-39
come the undisputed leader in the struggle against the dic-
tatorship, although various other groups had participated in
both the underground and the guerrilla warfare in the moun-
tains, including a new military front in the Escambray Moun-
tains made up of members of the Pdo grQup and students of
the Revolutionary Directorate.
However, the hierarchy. of the Roman Catholic Church
tried to put an end to the civil war. On February 25 of that
year the episcopacy of the Church called for a "national
union government" to end bloodshed and restore "normal
political life." Batista was annoyed because he realized that
the statement implied that he should resign or bring into his
government representatives from the opposition. Further-
more, Batista had other plans for carrying out elections with-
out resigning.
Batista appointed Dr. Emilio Nunez Portuondo, his ambas-
sador to the United Nations, as prime minister, believing that
Nunez Portuondo as an old politician could appeal to the
opposition, quiet down the country, and carry out plans for
an election. Batista's plans backfired as Nunez Portuondo re-
signed when again constitutional guarantees were suspended
and a tight censorship was imposed on the press.
Batista took these harsh measures because he wanted to
hide from the public the brutal treatment of a fifty-year-old
Catholic schoolteacher, Esther Milanes Datin, who was ar-
rested and subjected by Batista's police to one of the most
horrible tortures ever inflicted on any woman who survived
to tell the story. This outrageous incident became known
quite by accident when the ColOn1bian ambassador, Juan
("Juancho") Calvo, found her at the police station where he
had gone to obtain the release of one of his countrymen.
By April of that year Fidel announced total war against
1-40

. Batista and called for a general strike, which failed because


of poor organization. The Communists did not support the
strike because the Castro underground movement had re-
fused to agree to a communist proposal to form a united
front against the dictatorship. The failure of the strike was
undoubtedly ablow to Castro's prestige, and Batista tried to
make it appear that the rebels were finished. He announced
a drive to wipe out the last rebel from the Sierra Maestra and
appointed a highly respected and capable army officer, Gen-
eral Eulogio Cantillo, to command the big offensive, which
began in the first part of May.
Batista's optimism proved to be unjustified. The drive
ended in a rout for Cantillo's forces. One of the main Batista
detachments in the Sierra, under the command of Major Jose
Quevedo, an old friend of Castro's from student days, was cut
off by rebel guerrillas and after two weeks of bitter fighting
surrendered.
This proved to be the turning point in the Cuban civil war.
From then on the rebels began to venture out of the moun-
tains from where they operated. By October of 1958 they had
cut virtually all transportation between Santiago de Cuba,
capital of Oriente Province, and the rest of the island.
In October a column from Castro's army, led by Che Gue-
vara, joined forces with the second-front rebels in Las Villas.
Guevara's column arrived in the Escambray Mountains with-
out meeting any opposition from Batista's army.
This lack of resistance was due to the fact that Castro's
agents had bribed the corrupt military commander of Cama-
giiey, General VIctor Manuel Duenas. Castro also bribed
Colonel Alberto del RIO Chaviano, who was then in charge
of the military forces in Las Villas. Chaviano ordered the
withdrawal of most of the forces from the places at which
1-41

the rebel columns were to move toward Escambray and the
northern part of the province. Batista was aware of this
treachery and summonild Chaviano to Havana, where, dur-
ing a violent argument, he called him a traitor, slapped him
in the face, and ordered his immediate court-martial. Ithap-
pened, however, that Chaviano was a relative as well as a
partner in shady undertakings of General Francisco Taber-
nilla, chief of staff of the Cuban Army. Tabernilla disobeyed
Batista's order, and let Chaviano get out of the country a few
days before Batista's downfall.
By Christmas, 1958, the situation for the Batista govern-
ment was desperate. Guevara's forces had already seized
Sancti SpIritus, an important city at the foot of the slopes of
the Escambray Mountains and were preparing an offensive
against Santa Clara, capital of the province.
These successes by Castro's army and the rumor that Gen-
eral Eulogio Cantillo had been holding secret meetings with
Castro shattered the morale of the entire Cuban Army, which
from then on lost all will to fight. Santa Clara was captured
in the last days of December, 1958, and during the early
hours of the morning of January 1, 1959, Fulgeneio Batista
turned the power of the government over to General Can-
tillo and with his family fled to the Dominican Republic.
Castro's reaction was that Cantillo had betrayed him. He
said, "This is a cowardly betrayal," and disclosed that Can-
tillo had agreed to arrest and deliver Batista and all his
henchmen to the revolutionaries. Fidel also stated that Can-
tillo was trying to prevent the triumph of the revolution. "If
he is so ingenuous as to think that a coup d'etat would
paralyze the revolution he is completely wrong," Castro de-
clared over the rebel radio.
Castro immediately proceeded to notify his commanding
1-42
officers on all fronts to continne the fight and admonished the
people of Cuba by radio not to be deceived by the coup
d'etat in Havana. He declared that the fight would go on
'until the unconditional surrender of Batista's armed forces
and caned on labor to start a general strike. While the gen-
eral strike was taking place throughout the island, Radio
Rebelde continually broadcast the new slogan' of Castro's
26th of July Movement-"Revolution yes, Military Coup no."
Things were not turning out in CantilIo's favor. Most of
the army commanders, including Colonel Jose Rego Rubido,
commander of the Moncada fortress, were surrendering their
troops to the rebels. In Havana the justices of the Supreme
Court refused to go to the palace to administer the oath of
office to Chief Justice Piedra, and late on the night of Janu-
ary 1, 1959, Colonel Ram6n Barquin, who had broken out of
the Isle of Pines prison, swiftly took command of Camp
Columbia, Cuba's largest military post.
Barquin bluntly told Cantillo that he had taken command
'[ of the armed forces in Havana, that he supported the revo-
;' lution, and that he intended to deliver the presidency to Dr.
Manuel Urrutia, who was Castro's chosen man for the office.
Castro had selected Urrutia for the presidency because of the
stand he had taken in the trial of a group of young revolu-
tionaries of the Gramma expedition and of the November 30,
1956, anti-Batista uprisings in Santiago de Cuba. At the trial
Dr. Urrutia issued a famous decision in stating that all the
accused should be freed in accordance with Article 40 0' the
Cuban Constitution, which protected the right to rebel
against tyranny.
With the fall of Batista, Fidel Castro found himself to be
not only the commander in chief of the revolutionary forces
but also the hero of a genuine uprising against one of the
1-43
most despised tyrannies ever suffered by a Latin-American
country. Nothing would have been easier than for Castro to
take over the government of Cuba and establish himself as
head of a revolutionary regime. But to do this was not ad-
visable, for during his lonely, ofttimes heartbreaking two-
year rebellion, Fidel had accentuated that the struggle he
was waging against the dictatorship was for the general good
of Cuba and not in the traditional manner of the old-style
Latin-American revolution-to gain office and line his pockets
with the people's money.
The day after Batista fled Urrutia took the oath of office at
Santiago de Cuba. Soon afterward he named his first Cabinet,
headed by Dr. Jose Miro Cardona, a distinguished lawyer
who had gone into exile during the Batista dictatorship.
Other members of the Cabinet were drawn from the ranks
of the 26th of July Movement and included several of Cas-
tro's guerrilla leaders.
All members of Urrutia's first Cabinet, including Urrutia
himself, have since fled Cuba or sought asylum in the various
Latin-American embassies. One of them, Humberto Sori
Marin, the man who drew up the revolutionary law for the
executions of the Batista henchmen, was himself recently
executed by Castro's firing squad for anti-Castro activity.
1-44

Section IV. SLAVERY AND ITS APOLOGISTS

My Administration was overthrown by force and violence exactly


54 days before the scheduled inauguration, on February 14, 1959,
of a President-elect who had been chQsen by the Cuban people in
. democratic elections and whose victory was acknowledged even
by his political opponents at the joint session of Congress at
which the ballots were counted. The victorious candidate was of
,my political party. He was unacceptable to the Rebels ill the
,mountains because Dr. Andres Rivero Aguero was unwilling to
sell his country to the Soviet dictatorship.
The Administration of March 10, 1952 had been internationally
acknowledged as legitimate on two occasions: first, by the dip-
lomatic recognition of my Government by non-communist coun-
tries after the Revolution of the 10th of March and, second, upon
my inauguration on February 24, 1955 as the constitutionally
. elected President of Cuba for a term of four years. On that latter
, occasion, 51 nations sent their envoys extraordinary to attend the
solemn ceremonies and thus show their good will toward our new
Administration. Of course, no Communist countries were repre-
sented as, several years before, I had severed diplomatic relations
with the Soviet Union. The diplomatic envoys present represented
all 19 Latin American nations, Canada, the United States, 19 Eu-
ropean countries (among them the Vatican), 10 Asian countries,
Egypt and Indonesia.
The extremist movements, which are carrying the plague of
Reprinted by permission of the publisher The Company from the book THE GROWTH AND DE..
CLINE OF THE CUBAN REPUBLIC by Fulgencio Batista. Pages 261-272 reproduced st USACGSC by spe-
cial permission and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without the express permission of the
copyright owner.
1-45
violence through Latin America, which-spread havoc and blood-
shed in the Far East, in Laos, in the Congo and elsewhere are
undoubtedly communist-dominated or communist-influenced.
Whenever eruptions of this sort occur, the long arm of the Krem-
lin is likely to be the moving force. Sometimes, the Reds act
directly and openly; on other occasions, they display their "neu-
tralist" face. In either case, their propaganda and action is ad-
justed to the peculiarities of the nation they seek to destroy. Their
purpose in every case is to weaken democracy and Western Civil-
ization and to make a contribution to the Soviet conquest of the
world.
The Communist propagandists show an extraordinary ability to
use the most effective media. Thus, they have friends within the
great international news agencies who lose no time in transmit-
ting any items that may further the cause. Any story, no matter
how unimportant, will circle the globe in a matter of minutes if
it is grist to the mills of communism.
There were two incidents of this sort in Cuba during my sec-
ond Administration which were instructive. The first occurred sev-
eral years ago. Clever agitators made a bet with some drunken
U. S. Marines that the latter would not dare to climb the statue
of Marti in Havana's Central Park. A team of press cameramen
suddenly appeared from nowhere and photographed this trivial
incident. Their picture was flashed around the world with the
caption: "American Soldiers Desecrate the Statue of Cuban Patriot
Jose Marti." Obviously, the stage had been set in advance; the
bet was a ruse by the Communist instigators of the plot and the
purpose was to arouse popular anger against the United States.
Fortunately, the people of Cuba did not fall for it.
The second instance occurred when, in the midst of a resound-
ing propaganda campaign against my Administration, a certain
South American delegate to the United Nations proposed that a
telegram be sent to me as President, requesting that a certain
"Rebel" be spared from the firing squad. He was perhaps una-
ware that in those days the death penalty did not exist in Cuba.
Nevertheless, the "news" of this man about to be executed by
"tyranny" girdled the globe and had the desired effect.
The same impressive tactic was repeated when reporter Herbert
L. Matthews visited Cuba and secretly interviewed Castro in the
Sierra Maestra; when anarcho-communist banners of the 26th of
July Movement were displayed high on the Eiffel Tower, mock-
1-46
, .
j ~ the dedication of France to liberty; or when American and
jtcpanadian civilians and Marines were kidnapped in Oriente to
'i1!llackmail the United States into declaring an arms embargo
'against the legitimate government of Cuba.
C' The presence of a foreign hand can be sensed in everyone of
these "episodes." It is a long hand, the directing brain of which
was carrying out a plot, not primarily against my Administration,
:but rather against the free institutions of the Americas.
Well trained in mass psychology, the Reds have advanced ev-
.erywhere by brainwashing, frightening the cowardly and im-
pressing the ignorant. They are aware that the despotism which
'strangles prostrate Poland, turns Hungary into a land of mar-
"tyrs and, imposes its system of blood and terror through Asia,
Africa and the Americas may well provoke a reaction from the
West and from the world in general either because of solidarity
with the human cause or for purely political reasons.
To minimize the possibility of a strong reaction of this sort, the
Reds constantly dope the masses with their slogans against war
and in favor of international peace. Within the great nations of
the West (the United States, England and France), they utilize
the so-called liberals to head their campaigns against the cold war.
THE BLACK LEGEND
My Government fought against terror and communism in the in-
terests of the peace, progress and freedom of the people. We re-
spected the rights of all. ~ even commuted Castro's prison sen-
tence so ;be-could seek political power via the polls rather than
through violence and terror. We left no stone unturned in an ef-
fort to achieve the most for the Cuban people. We multiplied the
autonomous organizations so that a larger number of. Cubans
could take part in governmental responsibilities and work for the
promotion of social welfare. We never deprived anyone of his
property or his rights.
Legends of non-existent tortures and abominable persecutions
were ceaselessly spread and repeated by the Communists, their
agents and dupes. Rumors sprouted like mushrooms of mass as-
sassinations and summary trials that never took place. P;'opa-
ganda presented these baseless rumors as sober facts and even
went so far as to support them with the false testimony of in-
doctrinated physicians and intimidated lawyers.
1-47
., Wherever possible, the fog of confusion was spread over the
distinction between political persecution and the legitimate duty
of the State to defend itself, The armed forces were obligated both
to obey the law and to enforce it. If they ever reacted with out-
bursts of violence, as has been charged, this was not because
they derived any morbid pleasure from physical assault, but be-
cause they were provoked, sometimes to the limits of human en-
durance, by the carefully contrived campaign of hatred, violence
and murder launched against Cuba by the forces of international
communism.
Was it meritorious to murder a soldier or policeman while he
was performing his duty to defend his country or to
laws? Should terrorists be praised when they threw bombs into
crowded places, tearing apart the bodies of workers, teachers,
government employees, women and, for that matter, children,
splattering blood, tissue and human organs in all directions?
Many Cubans paid with their lives for performing their duties as
the citizens of a democratic regime. Some were murdered by the
Communists of Fidel Castro for voting at the polls; others for
even lesser reasons.
I wondered how it was possible for inHuential foreign corre-
spondents and shapers of public opinion in the Free WorId to re-
main silent when Cubans who defended law and order, justice,
democracy and free institutions, performing their duty in doing
so, were branded as "war criminals." I wondered how these peo-
ple succeeded in closing their eyes, their ears and their mouths to
the massacres and frightful acts of persecution and cruelty which
the Communist regime in Cuba from its very in-
ception. These men who denounced crimes that never occurred
and then explained away the enormities that did occur at least
pretended to be spiritually part of Western Civilization. They
were ultra "liberals," to be sure, but they had seemed not to be
devoid of human decency.
Why wasn't at least a minimum of pity or ordinary Christian
feeling shown when a soldier, in the performance of his sworn
duty to protect his country, was murdered by an enemy who
wore no uniform, lurked in ambush or attacked only from behind,
sometimes wearing women's clothes to do murder with impunity?
1-48
THE SILENCE OF THE

C( "
HUMANISTS
The revulsion of the civilized and Christian world to incredibly
long lists of assassinations, tortures and extortions by the Castro
regime has at last become It has taken years for this to
happen, but, as the proverb "God for a witness and time for
the truth."
The cold-blooded assassination of over a hundred innocent
Cubans by Raul Castro in the first days of Red victory (they
were machinegunned and toppled into bulldozed ditches) was
the first act of a carefully planned operation. The destruction of
the Army and its viIIification by propaganda was essential to
the Communist plan of imposing a Red force commanded by
Russian officers. The Castro brothers shrewdly recognized that \
the professional corps of officers and soldiers could not be cor-
rupted and would never acquiesce in the sale of their country to
a foreign power.
Thereafter, the creation of popular militias converted every
school into a garrison and placed the people at the mercy of
armed gangs of frustrated people with an uncontrollable lust for
plunder and blood.
Another virtue which was attributed to the self-styled '1ibera-
tors" was "honesty and efficient administration." Yet the man who
calls himself the Tropical Robespierre has never accounted for
eleven million dollars extorted by his revolutionary forces nor has
he ever attempted to account for the vast income of INRA to the
Court of Accounts, to which my Administration reported in full
and in accordance with the Constitution and the laws. Nor has
he ever made this accounting directly to the people, either in
his marathon televised harangues or otherwise. As for the "effi-
ciency" of the new Administration, the shortest answer is that
Cuba is in ruins, its economy destroyed, its political life under
as primitive a type of absolute personal rule as can be found in
modem history.
The native Cubans who mistook the bearded leader for a Moses
destined to lead them to the promised land, suffered in their
property and Hesh the penalty for their error. At first, they
blamed the colossal blunder of "agrarian reform" on inexperience.
They neglected to urge mercy for the men sent -before firing
squads or to rot in filthy prisons by courts of pliterate and venge-
1-49
ful representatives of the "revolution." Some would justify their
moral inertia by confessing fear of being labeled "Batistianos";
others morbidly acquiesced; still others joined the mobs. The re-
action came too late and was on a global scale only when the
corpses of innocent victims were piled high.
Where were the national organizations of self-styled humani-
tarians? They kept silent during the reign of terror, closed their
eyes to the total violation of human rights, then joined the clamor
of denunciation from the safety of exile when it was fashionable
to do so. Many of them, still unrepentent enemies of democracy,
private property and personal freedom, were presented as heroes
of "Fidelismo without Fidel." That is to say, endorsing the events
of the past, eliminating Castro individually and themselves sup-
planting him as the gravediggers of civilization in Cuba.
Thus, a political ideology arose that took under its banner all
the frustrated and rejected ne'llrotics, the resentful lawyers with-
out clients, the doctors without patients and the vast mass of
drifting opportunists, the men without trades, professions or com-
petence. They were supported, while in exile in the United
States, by glib men who felt sympathy for the mass of radical re-
sentment, frustration and incompetence that had been rejected
even by the Communist dictatorship. To gain an audience, this
new group repeated all the old lies of the Communists, including
particularly the denial that Cuba, when free, had made great ad-
vances in science, culture, the arts, and social justice.
For over three years, the OAS was concerned about the con-
ditions of political prisoners in every American country except
Cuba.
The International Red Cross, which had previously been so re-
ceptive to the false charges of the outlaws of the Sierra Maestra,
remained silent and inert while brutal violations of human rights
were perpetrated daily against the people of my unfortunate
country. Yet, under my Administration, the Red Cross had been
given every facility to investigate the charges leveled by the
Marxists, even when they were absurd and obviously designed to
impress the naive and enrage the ignorant. The press is full of
the enormities perpetrated in Communist Cuba. How can the In-
ternational Red Cross reconcile its zeal of yesterday with its cal-
lous indifference of t.oday?
1-50
'>THE AMERICAN WHITE PAPER ON CUBA
r;.A White Paper on Cuba was published by the United States State
Department in April 1961, a few days before the disastrous and
"half-hearted attempt of the Administration to overthrow the
Castro dictatorship by spending Cuban lives, while withholding
American arms and avoiding official responsibility. .
The New York Times, which was exceptionally well-informed
concerning the inner workings of the New Frontier, reported as
follows on Aptil4, 1961 concerning its origins:
"According to informed sources here, the idea for the pam-
];>hlet was President Kennedy's. He has long been concerned at
the lack of popular understanding in Latin America of the United
States attitude toward the Castro regime . . .
"The pamphlet was written largely by Mr. (Arthur M.) Schle-
singer with the cooperation of Richard Goodwin, a Presidential
assistant dealing with foreign aid,
l
and in consultation with the
.. State Department.
"However, according to these informants, President Kennedy
devoted many hours to the pamphlet, personally going over it
.with Mr. Schlesinger."
The nature of this analysis of the Cuban tragedy can be gath-
ered by the following excerpts from a brilliant speech delivered
by Spruille Braden before the Cuban Chamber of Commerce in
the United States on May 17,1961. A former U. S. Ambassador to
Argentina, Colombia and Cuba and at one time Assistant Secre-
tary of State for Latin American Affairs, Mr. Braden has a keen
understanding of the realities of inter-American affairs.
"That abysmal ignorance in Washington concerning this whole
Cuban situation endures, even at this late date, is clearly appar-
ent in the so-called White Paper issued by the Department of
State on April 3rd.
"This document begins by giving approval, i.e., encouraging
1 Richard Nathan Goodwin was one of the most powerful White House ad-
visors on Latin American affairs during the first years of the Kennedy Ad-
ministration. His qualifications for this job, so important to the security of
his country, were that he had never been to Latin America prior to 1961,
spoke no Spanish and was under thirty. However, he was from Harvard
and a socialist or a liberal extremist of one brand or another.
1-51
what it calls the 'authentic and autonomous revolution of the
Americas,' that is to promote more Fidelismo but without Fidel.
For my part, I prefer to see the sound evolution of the Americas
without the violence, ablolse and waste inherent in all revolutions.
Nor do I consider it wise or proper for my government to advo-
cate 'authentic and autonomous revolutions' all over the Ameri-
can continents. This is an outright intervention which may prove
very costly and disastrous for everyone concerned, and especially
for the U.S.A.
"The State Department continues with an apocryphal history of
the Castro revolution, with many half truths and outright errors.
It is ignorant of the fact that the 26th of July Movement was a
child of the Buro del Caribe, which in turn was the off-spring of
the Comintern. It repeats the old fantasy about Fidel being a
'traitor to the revolution: His revolution was Communist-planned
and inspired from the beginning; he was a traitor to God and
country, but never to his Communist bosses and beliefs. It damns
Batista as a tyrant and impugns the honor and reputation of any-
one and everyone who even remotely had been connected with
him. It implies that the Cuban nation as a whole, until the ad-
vent of Castro, suffered from want, lack of medical care, housing
and other social needs. In an unbelievable display of ignorance,
it praises David Salvador, a notorious Communist, as fighting for
a free labor movement and childishly accepts Pardo Llada's ab-
surd allegation recently that he was anti-Communist ...
"As most of you know, Batista and I, as Ambassador during his
first term, had some pretty severe, head-on collisions. Clearly, I
am not prejudiced in his favor. But, as a matter of simple justice,
I should like to call certain facts to the attention of the authors of
the White Paper ... To speak, as the White Paper does, of the
'rapacity of the leadership' and damn such splendid characters as
Saladrigas and hundreds of others like him, is calumny, cheap
demagoguery and a despicable act, unworthy of a responsible
government and foreign office.
"The White Paper's direct and implied animadversions as to
the poverty and bad economic conditions of Cuba, prior to the
coming of Castro, are inaccurate and evidence the socialistic
prejudices of its drafters.
"How false is the picture drawn by the White Paper can be
shown by a few brief citations: Cuba, previous to 1959, enjoyed
1-52
fi' e largest per capita income of any Latin American republic.
ilc;ross national income was $2,834,000,000 and bank clearings
... in 1958. There was a massive construction of hos-
schools of al] grades, houses for the poor and middle
highways and feeder roads. The standard of living was
';fising; there were 4 to 5 persons for each radio, 13 to 18 for each
set, and 39 to each automobile. I remember the long-
"lioremen getting $27 per day even when I was in Cuba.
" ,"Of course, there still existed much corruption, poverty and il-
iYteracy; and there was the perennial problem of 'el tiempo
muerto' (the dead season). Yet, right on Manhattan Island, not to
,1nention in the rest of the city, there are comparable conditions
iqfpoverty, illiteracy, and crime. And a trip totJ;1e West Virginia,
entucky, and Tennessee hills may be edifying in respect to
", ad rural conditions.
"To sum up, the White Paper is one of the most indefensible
,:(1ocuments I ever have seen issued by a presumably responsible
office. The best that can be said for it is that it displays
ignorance and lack of understanding as to explain in con-
Iderable measure the tragic bungling of the catastrophe in Bahia
tie Cochinos."
GLIGENCE OR TREASON?
(Jj'estifying before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee on
.June 12, 1961, former U. S. Ambassador to Mexico, Costa Rica
EI Salvador Robert C. Hill testified that, ,in his judgment, the
: New York Times and the State Department contributed to the sei-
zure of Cuba by Castro and the Communists. He added that in
\.xMay 1959 "the Russians themselves identified Raul Castro as a
,)Communist" in an official Communist document duly reported
jJby the U. S. Embassy in Moscow to the State Department.
2
Mr.
,Hill stated that this report was called to the attention of the De-
,C;partment, but was evidently ignored. Hill noted that Ambassa-
') dor to Cuba Earl E. T. Smith was instructed by the State Depart-
ment to be briefed by Herbert L. Matthews of the New York
Times, who "has always been an enthusiastic supporter of Fidel
2 Dispatch #666, May 22, 1959, "Soviet Attitude Toward Latin America,"
American Embassy, Moscow, to Department of State.
1-53
Castro"8 and added: "Individuals in {he State Department and
individuals in the New York Times put Castro in power." 4
Mr. Hill and several other former United States Ambassadors
laid blame for decisions favorable to Castro and adverse to the
interests of the United'States on a certain William Arthur Wie-
land, alias Montenegro, who was in charge of Caribbean and Mex-
ican affairs during the time that free Cuba was undermined, be-
trayed and destroyed. Hill testifled concerning a session on board
an airplane with Dr. Milton Eisenhower, the brother of the Presi-
dent and an influential policy maker on Latin American affairs.
Ambassador Hill and his staff tried to warn Dr. Eisenhower of
the fact that Castro was a Communist or Communist tool, but
they were incessantly interrupted by Wieland. When Wieland
stated that "there is no evidence of Communist infiltration in
Cuba," Colonel Glawe, the U. S. Air Attache, retorted: "You are
either a damn fool or a Communist." IS
Hill testified that, at a conference of American Ambassadors in
El Salvador in 9 5 ~ Philip BonsaI, who had just been named U. S.
Ambassador to Cuba, insisted that nothing be put in the commu-
nique which might seem critical of Fidel Castro as that "would
make his (BonsaI's) job in Cuba very difficult." When Hill ob-
jected, BonsaI replied: "If you cannot be a team player, why not
resign?" 6
Hill also testified concerning the existence of a pro-Castro
cell in the American Embassy in Havana and a "CIA representa-
tive in Havana who was pro-Castro." 7 He told U. S. Ambassador
to Cuba Earl E. T. Smith that he was sorry for him because:
"You are assigned to Cuba to preside over the downfall of Ba-
tista. The decision has been made that Batista has to go. You
must be very careful." 8
Hill added that this decision had been made at a low bureau-
cratic level, not by top officials, but by subordinates. Nonetheless,
it was a firm decision and nobody entering the State Department
8 U. S. Senate, Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, Hearings, Commu-
nist Threat to the United States Through the Caribbean, Part 12, Testi-
mony of Robert C. Hill, June 12, 1961, p. 815.
4 Ibid, p. 821.
IS Ibid, pp. 806-807.
6 Ibid, pp. 816-817.
7 Ibid, p.821.
8 Ibid, p. 807.
1-54
could be unaware of tbe fact that Castro's rise 10 powt'f was be-
ing plotted.' Among other things, FBI officials in Mexico, who
were sent there with tbe full toope,ation of the Govern-
ment, sent rcporl$ on the Communist connections of Castro and
his movement to the State Dep:utment. lIowever, these rcports
were sidetracked -at the desk le\-el- and "had not reached the
upper echelons of the State Department.- II

Thus, the testimony of American Amba.uarlon who belie\'fl in
freedom and patriotism has helped reveal some of the machina-
tions of ultra-liberals- lind pro-Communists who, from the sllclter
of the government departments they had in.6ltrated,
to make possible the creation of the first Soviet state in the New
World. Simultaneously, an audacious propaganda of lies was used
to brainwash the people. Despite Cuba's obvious prosperity llnd
advanced labor, educational and social welfare inslitutiolU, it
....'a.5 alleged that her underdeveloped condition called for a revo-
lution.
This came as an unbelievable shock to those of whn 10v('
peace, who have alwa)'s worked for fair relations beh\'een men
and peoples, who slro\'e to provide the homes of our neighbors
with the same happillCS5 and security that we wanted for our
own homes, who battled continuously for better health, more
education llnd culture, and higher Ih';ng standards for the peo-
ple, and who defended our nation's so\'ereignty and worked for
conditions of order and due procns of law in which all men of
will could Ih'e without fear. We found that we
Jiad struggled for was s.....ept aside in the savage chain of crimes
and moral enormities that followed that ominous New Year's
Day of 1959. In addition, we found and our life's ,,-ark
\i1lilied as that of despoU, killers and mcn indifferent to the
needs and welfare of the people,
WIlcn he was contemplating the horrors of fratricidal war,
Abraham Linroln once said his gre:ltest conso1:ltion was his
knowledge that -e\'CJl this shall pass. On another ClC'Ca5ion he told
a wounded $Oldier. -Remember, Dick, 10 keep close to the peG-
Ibid, p. 808.
II Jbld, p. 819,
, ..
pIe-they are always right and will mislead no one." 11 A consola-
tion for us is the knowledge that, despite the cruelties of the Red
terror and the confusing-and false propaganda of its agents, ad-
mirers and dupes, the common people of Cuba have a greatness
of capacity, comprehension and courage that their oppressors can-
not imagine.
The chains of slavery will not for long bind a people which has
offered so many blood sacrifices for its liberty.
Now I am finished. I have tried to give a factual account of
the services which my associates and I performed, or tried to
perform, for our country. The purpose of this book has been to
present the Cuban story as it is in a setting of hard facts and
stubborn realities. The truth, like liberty against slavery and light
against darkness always and in the long run wins its battle against
lies and slander.
As Milton wrote in Areopagitica:
"Though all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon
the earth, so Truth be in the field, we do injuriously by licensing
and prohibiting to misdoubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood
grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and
t open encoun er.
"
It cannot be otherwise in Cuba.
11 Quoted in Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln: The War Years, Harcourt
Brace & Company, New York, 1939, Vol. III, p. 384.
1-56

Section V. VICTORY

When I reached Havana [l] I found the atmosphere had changed


since my previous visit. Everyone, whether for or against the
Government, was preparing for the general strike. Just over a
thousand students, divided into five-man commandos, had been
quartered in the homes of sympathizers, ready to take to the
streets. With Piedad Ferrer acting as my guide and chauffeuse I
visited several of the flats where these boys were staying.
I was impressed by their wish to get into the fight, but at the
same time I couldn't help noticing that their armament was very
inadequate; sometimes consisting of only one pistol between
five people. When I showed my surprise at this, one of the lads
explained to me that Molotov cocktails were going to be distri-
buted by Twenty-Sixth of July trucks at pre-arranged points,
and that they would also capture weapons from policemen and
soldiers.
Still with Piedad Ferrer, I called at a number of churches in
Old Havana, where the parish priests, almost without exception,
had agreed to stock emergency medical supplies. The priests'
only condition was that they would look after all the wounded,
whichever side they belonged to. On the day of the strike, every
church was to have available, in addition to the first-aid kit, the
services of a doctor and a nurse from the Twenty-Sixth of July.
On the other side, Senator Masferrer and his men were
making preparations for a counter-offensive. The Twenty-
Sixth of July found out that in one barracks, called if I remem-
ber rightly San Crist6bal, they were making up Twenty-Sixth of
July uniforms so that Masferreristas could pass themselves off
as rebels in order to sow confusion among the strikers.
[11958]
Reprinted from pages 74-88, Fidel Castro by Enrique Meneses. 1966 by Enrique Meneses. Published
in the U.S. 1968 by Taplinger Publishing Co Inc. Reproduced at USACGSC by special permission and
may Dot be further reproduced -in whole or in part without special permission of the copyright owner.
1-57
TheCivicResistanceMovement
1
issuedaproclamationdated
the14thMarchgivingthefollowinginstructionstothepeopleof
Cuba:
"1. The general strtke will be declared at any moment.
Everyone must be ready for it.
2. Lay in reserves offood and stocks ofnecessary items
such as cooking oil, kerosene, candles and medica-
ments.
3. Immediately you receive the order to strike, sabotage
yourplace ofworkandleave with yourworkmates.
4. Stayawayfrom workuntilthetyranthasfallen.
5. Keepaway from any place where the forces ofrepres-
sioncouldfind you.
6. ListenfortheordersoftheTwenty-SixthofJulymove-
ment. Onlongwave about 1,000kilocycles, andonthe
shortwave40 metre band.
7. Do not board any buses driven by police or strike-
breakers. It couldbeextremely dangerous.
8. Owners ofshops and offices which stay open will be
regarded as collaboratorswith the dictator. It is there-
fore yourduty to help close these establishments.
9. Employers who lay accusations against anyone who
worksforthemorinformonthemwill bedealtwithas
collaborators.
10. Ifamilitantasksyouforrefuge, giveittohim. It isthe
leastyoucandofor afighter for ourfreedom.
11. Barricade the streets with dustbins, buckets, wood,
vehicles, bottles,etc.
12. Make Molotov cocktails to throw atofficialcars.This
ishowtomakethem:fill alargebottlewiththreeparts
paraffinandonepartusedmotor-oilwhichyoucanget
fromagarage.Closethebottleandsecurethetopwitha
1 ThispartoftheTwenty-SixthofJuly MovementwasorganizedbyDr.
Angel Maria Santos Buch in cells ofthree sections (Propaganda, Fund-
raising, Supply). Each cell contained ten people each ofwhom was ex-
pectedtoenlisttenmorepeopletoformanothercell.Membersweredrawn
mainly from the middle and upperclasses (businessmen, manufacturers,
collegeprofessors,teachers, white-collarworkersandhousewives).
1-58
piece of colton. Pour petrol over the cotton and light
before throwing.
13. Pour oil and scatter nails over the streets.
14. If you are worthy of your unifonn, do not
fire on your brothers; desert and join their ranks. This
is your chance 10 win their friendship.
Liberty or Death
26th July MO\'ement."
On the 28m March, for me first time, an aeroplane from
Mexico managed to land in the Sierra Maestra. II brought Pedro
Mittl' together .....ith seven companions and four tons of anns
with wlUch large numbers of volunteers 'I\'ere equipped,
On the 1st April Raul Castro reached the Siem\ de Cristal and
the rebels bep.n 10 cut down lelegraph poles and destroy railway
IraCks through the nUey ....hich separaled the SierB de CriSUlI
from the Sierra Maeura.
At this poinl tbe Communist Pany issued a manifesto asking
the population to unite its effons and admit Communist dele-
pies to the bosom of the strike committe. Faustino Pan
reacted to this by putting out another manifesto telling the pub-
lic to be on its guard against this slratagem. In this document
Faustino also dcclareO that the Twenty.Sixth of July was
a democratic movement which would maintain ilS l'elations with
the great democracies of the world and respect the foreign invest
menlS 'which the country needs so much', (The Movement's
funds came principally from what were called 'The Wages of
Freedom', monthly contributions from its members of the
equivalent of n day's pay.)
Meanwhile, the United States had placed an embargo on any
further anns shipments to Batista. The Batista Press played
down this news., which was a very bad advertisement for the
, Ptdro MiRt _ ODe of the oriaiDalIcn ma\ who led the lllIid< 00 the
MODQCla and Ihlll one or roundas or the Twenl)'-St.tth of Jul)'
mmt. He _ jailed ,n the bk oC Pines and 00 ha rclcatc ...-1 Into eWe ill
McUco Iloa& with tbl: otbcn. TI>c arms had bccD bouIhl ill the Ullilcd
SCats and MoX:o, Uld pocked in McU::o wbtre tlte)' were pif;l.cd Up.
tor'kwr..,lh MlJ'Ct and theothcn. by I ptaaee:twtered in Coeu RIcIand
lkloa'o into rho: SitnI MII:$U'I UDda tbl: command oC CapaWl Roberto
v__.
_w

regime. Fulgencio Batista then turned to Britain, the Dominican
Republic and Nicaragua in order to get the arms and aircraft he
wanted, but several Cuban pilots who were sent to collect the

equipment chose to defect and asked for political asylum in


Miami. So many did this that they were thinking of setting up
their own air-line in exile. Trujillo of the Dominican Republic,
whose relations with Batista had been luke-warm when not
actually hostile, justified selling him arms by claiming that Fidel
Castro was receiving Russian arms which were unloaded from
Soviet submarines in the south of Cuba. Anyone who knows the
area and the vigilance exercised by the United States from its
Guanmnamo base can appreciate that this was only a pretext
designed to excuse the Dominican dictator's collaboration with
President Batista.
As time went on tension mounted within both factions in
Cuba. Rumours circulated throughout the country, some false,
some well-founded, some denied, but nobody yet knew which
to believe and which to reject.
On the 8th April, I was invited to a meeting of the Twenty-
Sixth of July at the house of the Mendoza family, by the beach
in the fashionable suburb of Miramar. I didn't go to the actual
meeting, however, as I was asked to wait outside in the drawing-
room with Beba Mendoza. When the conference was over,
Faustino Perez handed me a sealed envelope telling me not to
open it until eleven o'clock the following morning, the 9th
April. The same instructions were given to the people who had
attended the meeting.
Agustin Cap6 drove me to Piedad Ferrer's house. As soon as
we were inthe car we opened the envelope. The general strike
was due to start at eleven in the morning on the 9th. Cap6 gave
a whistle of surprise. We were going through the tunnel under
the Rio Almendares, an underpass on the main road between
Camp Columbia and the centre of Havana.
'One of my jobs,' said Cap6; 'is to blow up this tunnel, to
stop them bringing reinforcements into the capital. But I
haven't got the explosives I need yet. What can I do with only
32 lb of dynamite? And the general strike's tomorrow!'
1-60

The secrecy surrounding the exact date and hour ofthe general
strike was so complete that next day, when it failed two hours
after it had started, several responsible people in the Twenty-
Sixth of July didn't even know when it was supposed to have
begun.
On the morning of the 9th, things started moving early at
Piedad Ferrer's house. A short-wave transmitter had been in-
stalled in a room usually used for storing clothes. Underneath
the beds were quantities of medical supplies, mixed up with
arms and ammunition. A crowd of youths puffed nervously at
cigarettes in the drawing-room while Piedad and her two
coloured maids served everyone with coffee. A young man with
his hair dyed blond, wearing a white guayabera, arrived about
ten. He was the leader of a commando whose job was to make a
proclamation about the strike over CMQ TV and then blow the
place up. He greeted his men, and as the TV studios were so
near they didn't leave until a quarter to eleven. A fat opera
singer was occupying the screen on CMQ's channel and I
started photographing her, hoping that at 11 o'clock precisely I
should get shots of the proclamation and then of the station
being blown up.
At eleven the singer disappeared from the screen and voices
could be heard in the studio. There was no picture at all, and I
tried hard to hear what the voices were saying. An argu-
ment was going on, but it was impossible to distinguish the
words.
At 11.15 I had made up my mind to go down to Old Havana,
where the Twenty-Sixth of July commandos should have been
attacking armouries, police stations and the Admiralty, when
the members of the CMQ commando came back, shaky, sweat-
ing and pale.
'Those bloody Communists!' muttered the boy with the dyed
hair furiously, collapsing on to a sofa. 'They stopped us doing it.
There were half a dozen Communists there to defend the equip-
ment-that's all we needed! We had to give up when the police
arrived. Probably tipped off by the Communists. It's a miracle
we're still alive.'
1-61

I left them to their despair and set out for Old Havana.
Nothing was happening. I put a few discreet questions to people
who were talking in the street. A few shots, they said, a few

flashes, young men running away and police chasing them. It


had all been over in ten minutes. Ambulances had taken away
half a dozen injured. The Floridita, the bar where they invented
the daiquiri and where Ernest Hemingway had a table always
reserved for him, was full of North American tourists who had
come specially from New York to see 'a real South American
revolution' .
With Piedad Ferrer I went on to Agustin Cap6's house, and
it was a miracle we didn't fall into a trap, because the place was
surrounded by SIM-members of the Military Intelligence
Service. We then went to the hide-outs of several leading mem-
bers of the National Delegation. Quite a few of them were
packing their bags preparatory to seeking asylum in foreign
embassies.
A hundred and forty of the commando boys had died, partly
because the Army and the police were waiting for them and
partly because the famous trucks with the Molotov cocktails had
never arrived. Manuel Ray was in a state of utter frustration
when Piedad and I got to the house where he was hiding.
We visited several flats where the young commandos had
holed up after the failure of the strike and found some of them
inclined to lay the blame at the door of Faustino Perez. Perez
himself, meanwhile, was being driven around by Emma Perez
(no relation), machine-gunning buses, as the Twenty-Sixth of
July had warned it would do as soon as the strike started.
At Piedad's house victory announcements were coming over
the radio. The forces of repression lost no time; as soon as the
rising had been put down, the police found out from captured
prisoners exactly where they had been staying in the days
immediately preceding the strike. This cost a lot of commandos
their lives. Nobody dared to sleep in the same house the follow-
ing night for fear of having been 'blown' by the confessions of
their captured comrades.
Twenty-four hours after the general strike had ended, there
1-62

were ninety-five bullet-ridden bodies in the mortuary. About a


hundred more were listed as missing, believed killed.
The failure of the strike was largely due to the excessive pre-
cautions taken by the leadership of the Twenty-sixth of July
Movement. But the failure had been limited to Havana itself. In
the rest of the country the strike had enjoyed considerable
success. Castro and his men had penetrated to the plains as
promised and withdrawn to the Sierra Maestra after proving
that they could operate with impunity anywhere in the Province
of Oriente.
After the failure of the general strike in the capital, the
Batista Press laid great emphasis on the part the Communists
had taken in it. In fact the Communists had played the role of
strike-breakers because they had not got the concessions
l
they
had wanted from the Twenty-Sixth of July in exchange for their
help. The Press also announced that the blowing up of an
ammunition dump in Santiago had destroyed the statue of the
Copper Virgin, which was not the case, although some damage
had been unintentionally caused to the sanctuary. The Arch-
bishop, Monsignor Enrique Perez Serantes, tried to publish a
denial of the report, but he was prevented from doing so by the
censorship.
Batista also tried to establish a connection between the date
of the strike and the Bogotazo, which was in fact a matter of
pure coincidence: the Twenty-Sixth of July had chosen several
earlier dates which had had to be abandoned due to the delay in
the arrival of arms and explosives.
A month after the unsuccessful strike, the rebel forces were
not only still intact but had increased their numbers and
strengthened their positions. When the United States delivered
300 rockets to Batista's Government, Raul Castro reacted by
kidnapping a group of Marines from the Guantanamo base to-
gether with a number of North American and Canadian
civilians.
1 At the time the Communist Party was outlawed and working under-
ground. It wanted the assurance that after Castro's victory it would be
recognized.
1-63
The fact is that the United States had not broken the arms
embargo on Cuba. Before the.embargo was enforced, they had
shipped 300 rockets without their war-heads, due to an error in
the Cuban order. What they had then done, on 17th May 1958,
was to ask the Guantanamo base to replace the useless rockets
by serviceable ones. The original order had been placed before
the embargo date of 11th January, and since then the U.S.
Government had made no sales to Batista. The rebels had got
hold of documents which showed the shipment of 17th May,
but did not mention that this was only the rectification of an
error made several months earlier. According to Raul Castro,
his principal motive in kidnapping the foreigners was to show
them the damage done by Batista's rockets,
l
although he planned
at the same time to attract the attention of the world Press, and
above all of the State Department.
As soon as Fidel Castro heard what had happened in the
Sierra de Cristal, he told his brother to release everyone at once.
After negotiations with the U.S. Consul in Santiago de Cuba,
the prisoners were evacuated by means of helicopters from
Guantanamo base.
Fidel meanwhile was reorganizing his forces and preparing to
deliver the final blow to the Batista dictatorship. He sent two of
his faithful companions, Hayd6e Santamaria and Dr. Antonio
Buch, to Miami and, as a result of their efforts there, large
quantities of money and arms soon began to arrive.
From Caracas, Tony Varona spoke by radio to Fidel Castro
and came to an agreement by which Castro repealed his mani-
festo of December 1957 in which he had rejected any association
with existing political parties. The new agreement for a Civic
Revolutionary Front was signed in Caracas on the 20th July on
the basis of a text transmitted to Castro over Radio Rebelde.
Basically it called for the unity of all sectors of Cuban society in
the struggle against Batista, but without specifying any political
conditions for the future.
1 RaUl Castro alleged that the rockets were used in the Sierra de Cristal;
and although I was not able to check this personally, I think it highly likely
that Batista did in fact use rockets. E.M.
1-64

On the 29th June, Castro, with 350 rebels, had succeeded in
defeating 1,000 Batistianos at Santo Domingo de Cuba. On the
11th July he .found himself face to face with an old friend of his
University days, Major Jose Quevedo. Castro offered him the
chance to surrender, but Quevedo would not take it. He was
waiting for large reinforcements from Batista, but these fell
into the hands of the rebels, increasing the latter's resources and
lessening the probability of Quevedo being able to save himself
by breaking out of the rebel encirclement. He therefore divided
his forces into three groups, each of which was to take a different
route in an attempt to get out. Two groups were forced to re-
treat to their starting point, and the third surrendered. So tight
was the circle that the airborne supplies sent by the Government
also fell into rebel hands. On the 20th July Quevedo surren-
dered to Castro. The situation had become untenable for the
Government forces largely because their code was in the hands
of the rebels, who had been giving bogus orders to Batista's air-
craft by radio and misleading them into bombing their own
troops.
But Batista himself was not remaining idle. During the pre-
vious months he had been preparing a great offensive against
the insurgents, and it was finally launched in August 1958.
Castro decided to extend his activities to several other areas and
there was now fighting in four of the six Cuban provinces. This
meant that Castro no longer had to get his arms by devious
routes across the island or through highly risky deliveries on the
coast of Oriente. Exiled pilots were flying in from Miami and
landing with their cargoes of money and armaments in the very
heart of the Sierra Maestra and the Sierra de Cristal.
Ciro Redondo was ordered to advance on Las Villas, where
he was to take charge of all rebel forces. CM Guevara, with the
Eighth Column, and Camilo Cienfuegos with the Second, were
to set out towards the centre of the island, with the ultimate
objective of cutting it in two.
The march was not an easy one. There were constant clashes
with the army, but the boldness of the rebels, who had requi-
sitioned trucks to speed their advance, their rapid movement by
1-65
1-66

night, and their caution during the day, all combined to contri-
bute to the success of the operation. On the 6th October
Guevara and Cienfuego&joined up with the rebel groups in the
Sierra Escambray.
Presidential elections called by Batista were due on the 3rd
November. Batista's own hand-picked candidate was Dr.
Andres Rivero Agiiero. Opposing him were Carlos Marquez
Sterling, former President Ramon Grau San Martin and
Alberto Salas Amara. Batista financed the campaigns of the
opposition candidates to ensure that they would stand. How-
ever, Castro had threatened anyone taking part in them
whether as voter or candidate. Three-quarters of the people in
Havana abstained from voting, and in the rest of the country
the rate of abstention was even higher, in some places reaching
98 per cent.
Havana, in spite of being permanently out of step with the
rest of the country as far as the rebellion was concerned, was
recovering from the failure of the April strike. Manolo Ray
(whose code name was Campa) had reorganized his network of
resistance groups in the capital.
Throughout the Oriente the watchword of Batista's Army
was 'regroupment'. The garrisons of several small posts, badly
situated and impossible to reach when they needed help, were
withdrawn to larger and more defensible quarters. This strategy
gave the Government far fewer but much stronger bases. On the
other hand, it gave the rebels far more liberty of movement and
allowed them to set up road-blocks on all the major highways
in Eastern Cuba.
Fidel then began his next sally from the Sierra Maestra. To-
gether with his general staff he headed for Bueycito, where he
found on his arrival that the garrison had pulled out when they
learned of his approach. Near Bayamo a rebel force accounted
for 200 dead and twenty-one prisoners out of a total of 1,800
Government troops. Raul Castro, who by now had 2,000 men
under his command, captured Sagua de Tanamo, while CM
Guevara was threatening Sancti Spiritus and Cienfuegos was
poised to take Yaguajay.
, Fidel's own immediate objectives were Santiago de Cuba and
the province of Las Villas. By capturing Santiago he would get
control of Cuba's second city, where he could set up a Pro-
visional and by taking Las Villas he would effec-
tively cut the island in two, leaving the Government forces in
the east completely isolated from Havana. Helped by the
Revolutionary Directorate, Guevara and Cienfuegos attacked
Santa Clara (the capital of Las Villas with 77,000 inhabitants).
On the 24th December Guevara occupied Sancti Spiritus, while
Fidel Castro took Palma Soriano. That night Fidel and Raul
dined with their mother and sisters. It was the first Christmas
they had spent together for many years.
When Guevara marched on Santa Clara, the towns on his
route had fallen to him one after another. During the rebel
advance, which was helped by local resistance movements, the
Army almost always surrendered, but not invariably: there
were some cases where towns had to be taken house by house.
Some senior Army officers in these Provinces knew that they
couldn't save their lives anyway so they resolved to sell them
dearly.
On the 28th December 1958, when he was on the outskirts of
Santiago, Fidel Castro received a visit, by helicopter, from
General Eulogio Cantillo, commandant of the garrison of Mon-
cada, the one Castro had attacked more than five years earlier.
Cantillo's visit was the culmination of a series of contacts be-
tween the two men over a long period. Cantillo told Castro that
Batista was prepared to go if the structure of the Army was left
intact. Castro, however, was conscious of the strength of his
own position. The interview showed that Batista had given up
hope of defeating the revolution. The proposal contained two
elements that Fidel Castro could not accept at any price. Firstly,
Batista was to be allowed to leave the country, while Castro
wanted him brought to trial before the Cuban people. Secondly,
he had always disapproved of the Army's role in Latin America
because of the help it had so often given to dictators: Somoza
in Nicaragua, Trujillo in the Dominican Republic, Perez
Jimenez in Venezuela. He flatly rejected the offer. Cantillo then
1-67
40!_
offered to organize a coup against Batista. and pledged, as a
token of good faith, to surrender Moncada at three o'clock the
next day without a shot being fired. Castro accepted.
The following day, the 29th December, at five in the morning,

Guevara prepared for the final assault on Santa Clara. Due to


arrive was a Government train carrying 400 men and a million
dollars to help the garrison ofthe city. The rebels found out and
trapped the train on the outskirts of the city to prevent it going
either forward or back: trying to reverse out, the train was
derailed, and its occupants surrendered. The arms taken from
them enabled Guevara to equip the local resistance which up to
then had been immobilized due to lack of weapons.
On the 30th December Cantillo sent a message to Castro
telling him his plan would have to be postponed until the 6th
January because certain difficulties had arisen. Castro did not
trust Cantillo, particularly since the Moncada garrison had
failed to surrender on the day Cantillo had promised.
Fidel took El Caney, posing a direct threat to Santiago de
Cuba. Yaguajay was already in the hands of Cienfuegos who, as
soon as he had taken the city, set off for Santa Clara to join up
with CM Guevara.
In Cuba all was lost for Fulgencio Batista. On the 1st January
1959 the President composed a message to the nation giving his
reasons for leaving the country-these being, according to him,
that he had received a petition from the Army and that he
wanted to avoid further bloodshed. After signing this message,
Batista proceeded to his aircraft, where he was awaited by his
relatives, his baggage, and a number of Batistianos who knew
they could expect no mercy from the rebels. At the foot of the
aircraft steps at Camp Columbia he gave his last instructions to
Cantillo, probably aware that if he had saved his own life and
that of those close to him, he could not save the Army or its
senior officers. At 2.10 in the morning Batista boarded the
DC-4 and flew to the Dominican Republic.
At nine in the morning Castro discovered that Batista had
fled, although Cantillo had done his best to keep it dark until
he could organize what remained of the Army and of a regime
1-68
Whi<fh had collapsed before the first night of the year was over.
1
Castro did not feel as elated as he had expected. Back in Palma
Soriano, he paced up and down like a lion, his hands clasped
behind his back and his cigar clamped between his teeth. For
. .
the people with him, the news was the best that the New Year
could have brought, but for the rebel chief it meant that Batista
with some of his closest collaborators had escaped his ven-
geance, and that Cantillo, whom he distrusted, was now in
charge of the country-which made him suspect that a military
coup was imminent.
The first thing he did was to send a message to all rebel forces
in the country telling them to continue the fight on all fronts
with more determination than ever, whatever news might come
out of Havana. To make sure of success, he called for a general
strike although he insisted that nobody should take justice into
his own hands, so that the troubles which had followed the fall
of Gerardo Machado in 1933 would be avoided. 'No more
little soldiers to keep the conservatives happy,' said Castro as he
signed the order for the strike. Then, turning to his captains, he
snapped: 'Santiago, immediately.'
However, in spite of Castro's injunction, the population of
Havana had already broken loose, smashing up the casinos, the
black marias, the parking meters which were a racket run by
Batista's brother-in-law, and even liquidating some people sus-
pected of collaboration with the Batista regime.
Armando Hart and Jesus Montane emerged from their prison
on the Isle of Pines, liberated by those who had yesterday been
their jailers. Santiago fell into Fidel Castro's hands on the 2nd
January, .and its 163,000 inhabitants poured into the streets.
Moncada garrison had fallen without a shot. For Castro it was
the most moving moment of his life.
At 1.30 that morning, from the same Moncada barracks,
1 In the chaos that prevailed throughout the island Cantillo's regime was
stillborn. At 11 a.m. he escorted Justice Piedra to the Presidential Palace.
At 2 p.m. Piedra was signing decrees but without having taken the oath
because the justices of the Supreme Court refused to go to the Presidential
Palace. Before the end of the day Cantillo was put under house arrest by
Colonel Ram6n Barqufn, himself just out of the Isle of Pines Prison.
1-69
'il
---------

Castro made his first speech to a great crowd. In the place where
Dr. Munoz, Guitart and many other of his comrades had died,
five years, six months and seven days before, Fidel Castro ful-
filled his promise to liberate Cuba from Fulgencio Batista. He
had started with 200' men who were reduced to seventy; seventy
who, with another twelve, made up the eighty-two who dis-
embarked at Belie; eighty-two, of whom twelve remained at the
end of the first week in the Sierra; twelve, who in twenty-five
months had wiped out an army of 30,000 professional soldiers.
Fidel Castro was to go through many emotional moments on
his journey along the length of the island to the Presidential
Palace in Havana, but perhaps none was so significant, so full of
drama, as when he spoke at the Moncada on that morning of
the 2nd January 1959. Next to him stood the new President
of Cuba, Manuel Urrutia Lleo, and on his other side Monsignor
Enrique Perez Serantes, Archbishop of Santiago de Cuba, the
man who had not only baptized Fidel Castro but had also saved
his life when Batista wanted to eliminate him after the un-
successful attack on the Moncada.
With more than a thousand men, Fidel Castro set out on the
long march of over 800 miles to Havana. Raul stayed behind in
Santiago as Commander-in-Chief of the Province of Oriente.
The progress of the march to the capital was slow. Many
foreign observers were puzzled, as in similar circumstances
rebel leaders generally take over the Presidential Palace as soon
as possible. But Castro was not in a hurry. Urrutia was the
President and he had already left for the Palace. Castro had
several times expressed his complete lack of interest in taking
any political post in the new Government. He had accepted the
position of representative of the Rebel Armed Forces to the
Presidency almost as if to avoid overdoing his modesty.
But behind that 'modesty', Castro had a well-laid plan. He
wanted to satisfy his yearning for publicity, to enjoy everything
he had missed for twenty-five months, and to project an image
of his personality even larger than the one he had projected
among the peaks of the Sierra Maestra. It is not the same to
imagine a hero from Press photographs as it is to see him in the
1-70
flesh, to be able to touch him, t<1 hear his voice without the
artificial interposition of the radio.
Meanwhile, Cienfuegos had occupied Camp Columbia, the
former symbol of ."Batista; Che Guevara was installed in the
fortress of La Cabana; and Urrutia was in the capital with Jose
Mir6 Cardona as Prime Minister, Humberto Sori Marin as
Minister of Agriculture, Roberto Agramonte as Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Manuel Ray as Minister of Public Health,
Carlos Rafael Rodriguez as Minister of the Interior, and Julio
Martinez Paez as Minister of Public Health.
Only one military problem still remained to be settled. The
members of the Revolutionary Directorate, who were the first to
occupy the Presidential Palace, refused to hand it over until they
had obtained assurances from Castro that the rest of the revo-
lutionary forces would be given the same respect as the members
of the Twenty-Sixth of July. Castro ignored the problem. He
carried on, making speech after speech wherever he happened
to be and whatever the time of day or night. He wove a web of
words around his political ideas and all the reforms he would
make in building a new Cuba, a Cuba which would make a new
start with the New Year.
At last, urged on by his more impatient supporters, Castro
reached Havana. He was reunited with his son Fidelito and
finished the journey to the Presidential Palace with the boy by
his side. By this time Urrutia had managed to reach agreement
with the Revolutionary Directorate.
Castro made a speech from the Palace balcony but kept it
brief. He wanted to reserve the most important speech of his life
until he faced the crowds gathered at Camp Columbia. When
he arrived there, flocks of pigeons were released and one bird
perched for a moment on his shoulder. In the eyes of the people
this was an undoubted sign that Providence, which had been so
long on his side, endorsed his final achievement. He spoke for
hours.
1-71
,.,
2_13
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II W _and 1.Ilat 01 eM avon... ID oecuon IV.

Section I. THE TWO REVOLUTIONS

Who is Fidel Castro? What is he? In the first months


of his regime, Castro used to speak of "humanism,"
which he defined as "liberty with bread without terror"
-hardly a political or social program. But after trying it
out a few times, he dropped it in favor of even more
ambiguous formulas. When he or his associates were
asked what kind of society they were building or what
it should be called, they usually answered that they were
building "a reality, not a theory," or that they were in-
terested "in deeds, not words," or that their revolution
was "indigenously Cuban."
At a youth congress in Havana in August, 1960, how-
ever, Emesto Guevara, Minister of Industries and former
President of the National Bank of Cuba-who signed
its banknotes with his nickname, "Che," nothing more
-took a long step toward giving the regime an ideology
and a name. Since Guevara was then the ideological
mentor of Castro's regime, he had the habit of saying
one day what Castro would say weeks or months later.
He said: "What isour ideology? IfI were asked whether
our revolution is Communist, I would define it as Marx-
ist. Our revolution has discovered by its methods the
paths that Marx pointed out." In "Notes for ~ Study
From pages 3-23, CASTRO's REVOLUTION I by Theodore Draper; Frederick A. Praeger, Inc., Publishers,
New York, 1962j <C> by Theodore Draper 1962. Reprinted with permission of the publishers at USACGSC and
!nay not be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
2-2
of the Ideology of the Cuban Revolution," published in
October, 1960, in the magazine Verde Olivo, the official
organ of the Cuban armed forces, Guevara wrote: "The
principal actoffi of this revolution had no coherent theo:
retical criteria; but it cannot be said that they were
ignorant of the various concepts of history, society,
economics, and revolution which are being discussed in
the world today." Then he declared: "We, practical
revolutionaries, initiating our own struggle, simply ful-
fill laws foreseen by Marx the scientist."
These statements were far less revealing and straight-
forward than they seemed. Did Guevara mean to imply
that the ideology was "Marxist" but not "Communist"?
Was it the "Marxism" of the Communists or some other
"Marxism"? Did Fidel, Guevara, and the others really
come upon Marxism as if they were bright but naive
children rediscovering the roundness of the earth? Could
the "laws" of "Marx the scientist," which have not been
fulfilled anywhere else, be fulfilled in the little island of
Cuba by those who did not know what they were doing
until after they had done it?
Guevara's explanation obviously explained too little or
too much. But Castro, Guevara, and other Cuban leaders
spoke much more freely and at far greater length to a
chosen few who became their foreign interpreters and
apologists. This growing band, however, did not have
an easy time of it and was for a while forced to do much
of the theorizing that the Cubans refused to do for them-
selves. In time, every revolution has created its own
mythology, but in this case, these foreign sympathizers,
2-3
in lieu of embracing one ready-made; had to produce
their own. Each of these sympathizers made his own
characteristic contribution to this mythology, which, if
n?thing else, told us what those who felt closest to
Castro made of him. The situation was undoubtedly an
oddity but, then, the Cuban revolution was an odd one.
THE MYTHMAKERS
One of the first and favorite myths was that of Castro's
"peasant revolution." It turned up in the articles written
and interviews given by the French writers Jean-Paul
Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, who spent March, 1960,
in Cuba. After the usual hectic round of short trips and
long talks, Sartre wrote a series of sixteen articles in
France-soir, subsequently published as a book, Sartre
on Cuba. In one of them he related how he had in-
formed the Cubans that, like the Chinese, they had made
a "peasant revolution." The Cuban reaction, he reported,.
was divided: The "bearded ones" (the barbudos; those
who had fought in the mountains) agreed with him; the
"unbearded ones" (those who had Iought in the resist-
ance movements in the cities) maintained that the peas-
ants had fought little or badly and that the revolution
had sprung from the cities.
Mme. de Beauvoir gave a somewhat different version
in an interview in Frtmce Qbservateur. She said that the
petty bourgeoisie had begun by stirring up the urban
revolution while the peasants had held back; then, bit by
bit, the peasants had joined in, the "immediate interests"
2-4
of 'the victorious revolution had become those of the
peasant class, and thus "despite its origins, the urban
revolution can be considered a peasant revolution."

As a full-fledged theory, however, the Cuban peasant
revolution made its appearance in the book Cuba, Anat-
omy of a Revolution, by Leo Huberman and Paul M.
Sweezy, editors of the magazine Monthly Review. After
three weeks in Cuba, they were persuaded that the revo-
lution had succeeded because the peasants as a class had
actively joined the rebels and had become "one with the
revolutionary army." Fidel Castro appeared to them to
be "the embodiment of the revolutionary will and energy
of the peasantry." As for the kind of system that this
peasant revolution had brought forth, Huberman and
Sweezy had "no hesitation in answering: the new Cuba
is a socialist Cuba."
Six months later, they paid another three-week visit
to Cuba. By this time, the Castro regime had nationalized
a large part of the Cuban economy. This development
caused them to revise their previous estimate-the Cuban
revolution was no longer "essentially a peasant revolu-
tion" because the working class had finally been "swept"
into it. Castro himself had not yet reached the point of
calling himself a "Marxist," but the two visitors con-
ferred on him the distinction of having arrived, by virtue
of his own "rich experience" and "sharp and fertile
mind," at an "unmistakably Marxist" interpretation in a
way that would have made Marx himself "proud to
acknowledge him as a disciple." Despite Castro's "mod-
esty," however, they heard so much about a socialist
Cuba that it had become a "commonplace," in contrast
2-5
to their first trip, during which no one had spoken to
them of Cuba as a socialist country, and socialism was not
even included among the revolution's ultimate goals.
And so, in the spring of 1960, a new path to socialism
was discovered-a peasant revolution led by the middle-
class son of a wealthy landowner. And in the fall of 1960,
there was more certainty than ever of the socialist revo-
lution in Cuba because the working class had at .last
caught up with it.
Other Castro sympathizers went further. Paul John-
son, of the British weekly New Statesman, took a quick
look at Cuba and reported that Castro had come to
power through a "peasant revolution" but governed
through "a genuine dictatorship of the proletariat," ex-
pressed through the "arbitrary" rule of one man. In The
New Republic, Professor Samuel Schapiro, an American
academic advocate for Castro, merely limited himself to
commenting that "the heart of the revolution, the land
reform program, is essentially Marxist." And C. Wright
Mills, of Columbia University, made an anthology of all
the things that Castro and his closest associates said of
themselves, at least as of August, 1960.
Professor Mills's book, Listen, Ytmkeel, is a peculiarly
useful and exasperating work. It purports to be "the
In their book, Hubennan and Sweezy devoted less than a page
to the working class, compared to pages about the peasantry, and
they vaguely suggested far more working-class support for the revo.
lution before 1959 than was actually the case. In part of one sentence
elsewhere in the book, however, they admitted that "growing support
among urban workers" came to Castro after he took power. In their
subsequent article in the Monthly Review of December, 1960, they
implied the peculiar "backwardness" of the Cuban workers by writing
that "the nationalizations of the summer and fall have swept the
working class into the revolutionary process."
2-6
.voice oftheCubanrevolutionary,"notthatofitsauthor.
From the conversations I had in Cuba in April, 1960, I
,
can testify that the Castro leaders talked in much the

way Mills recorded them. Sometimes the words in the
bookweresoclosetothoseIhadheardthatIfeltIknew
the name ofthe source. Tothis extent, Mills made him-
selfthevehicleofthepurestandmostdirectpropaganda,
unlike the others who talked to more or less thesame
people butpassed on in their own name what theyhad
beentold.Nooneeversaid"Listen,Yankee!"or"Yankee
this" and"Yankeethat"tome, butexceptforthis touch
ofartisticlicense, Iconsiderthese longmonologuesmore
or less authentic. Anyone who wants to get the Castro
partyline ofthefirst halfof1960mostnakedly can get
ithere.
Nevertheless,Millsputhisnametothebookandinthe
lastfew pagesgave theCastrocase his personal endorse-
ment. Hesays that he leaves ittothereader to agree or
disagree with the points in it, as if there might be one
non-Cuban reader in a hundred ora thousand with the
necessary background. A reader has a right to expect
thattheauthorshould dosome workofhisownbeyond
listening only to one side, and that a sociologist would
be able at least to give a reasonably accurate report of
thesocialstructureofthecountry.Thebookas awhole
is justas honest and dishonest as any unrelieved propa-
gandais likely to be, and ifMillsmerelysoughtto be a
front man for the Castro propaganda machine, he suc-
ceeded brilliantly. But is that all that should have been
expected of C. Wright Mills?
Mills's Cubans-oneneverknows wheretheyend and
2-7
he begins-arenotaltogetherinagreementwith w ~ y
andHuberman.First, Mills tellswhattherevolutionwas
not-"not a fight .between peasants and landowners, or
between wage workers and capitalists-either Cuban or
Yankee; nor was it a direct nationalist battle between
Cubans and foreigners." It was "not an 'economically
determined' revolution-either in its origins or in its
sources." Nor was it "a revolution by labor unions or
wageworkersinthe city,orbylaborparties, orbyany-
thing like that." What was it then? The leaders were
"youngintellectualsandstudentsfrom theUniversityof
Havana"-they are also called "a few middle-class stu-
dents and intellectuals"-whomade "alot offirst moves
foralongtime beforesome oftheirmoves begantopay
off."Therevolution"reallybegan"when,inoneofthese
moves, "ahandfuloftheseyoungintellectuals reallygot
togetherwiththepeasants."
Thus Mills's version contains no nonsense about a
"peasant revolution"; it merely claims that the decisive
forcesintheinsurrectionaryperiodweretheintellectuals
and the peasants, with the former i,n total command.
Thereis also no nonsense abouttheworkers makingthe
revolution; they are said to have joined in after the
victory, and their "revolutionary consciousness" was
allegedly aroused only subsequently. At this point,
however, mythology takes over, and Mills also has the
workers superseding the peasants as a revolutionary
force. But the greatest nonsense is written about the
middle class. The original "handful" of leaders admit-
tedlycame exclusively from thatclass. Nevertheless, the
mythology requires that "the middle classes generally
'2-8
supported the revolution, at least in a passive way, during
the insurrectionary period, although as a class they had
little to do with making it." I take it this means that most

members of the middle class supported the revolution
passively or not at all.
Mills also compiled a number of programmatic state-
ments by Castro's group. There was still the old reluc-
tance to be pinned down to anything definite, because a
"political system" would hamper the leaders, because
very few people cared about it anyway, or because the
very lack of a system proved that it was democratic.
But this motif slides gently into another one: "We our-
selves don't quite know what to call what we are build-
ing, and we don't care. It is, of course, socialism of a
sort." Or, whatever the system is, the Cubans discovered
it all by themselves: "In so far as we are Marxist or
Leftist (or Communist, if you will) in our revolutionary
development and thought, it is not due to any prior com-
mitment in our ideology. It is because of our own de-
velopment." Still later in the book, Castro's Cuba becomes
"a dictatorship of, by and for the peasants and the
workers of Cuba" or "a dictatorship of the people." Mills
himself considered Castro's regime to be "a revolutionary
dictatorship of the peasants and workers of Cuba" in
which one man possessed "virtually absolute power."
All these theories by Sartre and De Beauvoir, Huber-
man and Sweezy, Johnson and Schapiro, Mills's Cubans
and Mills cannot be true, but they have one thing in
common-they serve the purpose of concealing the fact
that the Cuban revolution was essentially a middle-class
revolution that has been used to destroy the middle class.
2-9

And without understanding this apparent contradiction,


very little can be understood of Castro's Cuba as a social
system.
TERROR AND COUNTERTERROR
To begin with, what truth is there in Castro's "peasant
revolution"? The core of the eighty-two men under
Castro who invaded Cuba from Mexico in December,
1956, and the twelve who found their way to the moun-
tainous Sierra Maestra at the eastern end of the island
came from the middle class. At first, the peasants were
hostile, and the original twelve dwindled at one time to
only nine. Then in March, 1957, Frank Pals, the under-
ground leader in Santiago de Cuba, sent fifty-eight re-
cruits to the Sierra Maestra, many of them armed with
weapons stolen from the U.S. naval base at Guandnamo.
These reinforcements, overwhelmingly middle class in
character, gave Castro his second wind. Castro himself
was their ideal representative-son of a rich landowner,
university graduate, lawyer. The guajiros, or peasants,
in the mountains were utterly alien to most of them. But
they had to win the confidence of the peasants to obtain
food, to protect themselves from dictator Fulgencio
Batista's spies and soldiers, to gain new recruits. As the
months passed, the relations between them and the p s ~
ants took on a new dimension. The crying poverty,
illiteracy, disease, and primitivism of the outcast peasants
appalled the young city-bred ex-students. Out of this
experience, partly practical and partly emotional, came
a determination to revolutionize Cuban society by raising
2-10
t h ~ lowest and most neglected sector to a civilized level
of well-being and human dignity.
But, for over a year, Castro's i h t ~ n force was so
small that he did not expect to overthrow Batista from
the mountains. Castro himself described his isolated and
near-desperate situation in his letter of December 31,
1957, to the so-called Council of Liberation: "For those
who are fighting against an army incomparable in num-
ber and in arms, without any support during a whole
year other than the dignity with which we are fighting
for a cause which we love sincerely and the cbnviction
that it is worth while to die for it, bitterly forgotten by
fellow-countrymen who, in spite of having all the ways
and means, have systematically (not to say criminally)
denied us their help...." Victory was foreseen through
the vastly larger resistance movement in the cities, over-
whelmingly middle class in composition. This calculation
was behind the ill-fated general strike of April 9, 1958.
Castro's manifesto of March 12, 1958, read in part: "2.
That the strategy of the final stroke should be based on
the general revolutionary strike, to be seconded by mili-
tary action...." It failed because the middle class could
not carry off a general strike. Only the workers and
trade unions could do so, and they refused mainly for
two reasons: They were doing too well under Batista to
take the risk, and the official Cuban Communists delib-
erately sabotaged the strike because they had not been
consulted and no attempt was made to reach an agree-
ment with them in advance. The National Committee
of the Communist Party, known since the last war as
the Partido Socialista Popular (PSP), issued a statement
2-11
on April ~ 1958, a copy of which..I have seen, blaming
the fiasco on the "unilateral call" for the strike by the
leadership of Castro's 26th of July Movement in Havana
under Faustino Perez.
In the mountains at this time, Mills was told, the armed
men under Castro numbered only about 300. Four
months later, in August, 1958, the two columns com-
manded by Majors Guevara and Camilo Cienfuegos,
which had been entrusted with the mission of cutting the
island in two-the biggest single rebel operation of the.
entire .struggle-amounted, according to Guevara, to 220
men (Verde Olivo, October 8, 1960). Sartre was told
that the total number of barbudos in Cuba during the
whole campaign was only 3,000.'" Castro's fighting force
was until the end so minute that it hardly deserves to be
called an army, let alone a "peasant army," and even the
influx of the last four or five months failed to give it
anything like a mass character. In any case, the character
of an army is established by its leadership and cadres,
which remained almost exclusively middle class through-
out, and not by its common soldiers-or every army in
the world would similarly be an army of the peasantry
and proletariat. t
Even this figure may be vastly inflated. The true number was
probably closer to 1,000 than to 3,000. But even Sartte's figure serves
to make the point.
t The cream of the jest is that Guevara is authority for the state-
ment that the cfWlpesinos of the Sierra Maestta, from whom the
rebel army was first recruited, "came from that part of this social
class which shows most aggressively its love for the land and its
possession, that is to say, which expresses most perfectly the spirit
which can be characterized as petty bourgeois" (Verde Olivo, April
9, 1961). Thus, the rebel army was initially made up of the urban
and I.'ural petty bourgeoisie, at least in spirit!
2-12
How could such a small band "defeat" Batista's army
. . .
of over 40,OOO?
The answer is tHat it did not defeat Batista's army in
any military sense. It succeeded in making Batista destroy
himself. Until the spring of 1958, life in most of Cuba
went on much as usual. But the fiasco of the April strike
forced Castro to change his tactics. Disappointed in his
hopes of a mass uprising, he shifted over to full-scale
guerrilla warfare-bombings, sabotage, hit-and-run raids.
Batista's answer to the terror was counterterror. The
army and secret police struck back blindly, indiscrimi-
nately, senselessly. The students, blamed as the main
troublemakers, were their chief victims. It became safer
for young men to take to the hills than to walk in the
streets. The orgy of murders, tortures, and brutalities
sent tremors of fear and horror through the entire Cuban
[ people and especially the middle-class parents of the
middle-class students. ,
,.
This universal revulsion in the last six months of Ba-
tista's rule penetrated and permeated his own army and
made it incapable of carrying out the offensive it launched
in May against Castro's hideout. As Mills's book says,
Batista's army "just evaporated." The engagements be-
tW.een the two sides were so few and inconclusive that
Batista's abdication caught Castro by surprise. The real
victor in this struggle was not Castro's "peasant army"
but the entire Cuban people. The heaviest losses were
sJJfferedby the largely middle-class urban resistance
movement, which secreted the political and psychologi-
cal acids that ate into Batista's fighting force; Sartre was
2-13
told that Batista's anny and police killed 1,000 btll"budos
in the last clashes in the mountains and 19,000 in the
urban resistance movement.
Castro's guerrilla tactics, then, aimed not so much at
"defeating" the enemy as at inducing him to lose his
head, fight terror with counterterror on the largest possi-
ble scale, and make life intolerable for the ordinary citi-
zen. The same terror that Castro used against Batista
has been used against Castro. And Castro has responded
with counterterror, just as Batista did.
THE PROMISED LAND
The struggle for power also helps to answer the ques-
tion: Was the Cuban revolution "betrayed"? The answer
obviously depends on what revolution one has in mind-
the revolution that Castro promised before taking power,
or the one he has made since taking power.
Huberman and Sweezy have written: "Fidel had made
his promises and was determined to carry them out, faith-
fully and to the letter." But neither they, nor Mills, nor
Sanre ever says what these promises were. The oversight
has been a necessary part of the mythology.
I have made a brief inventory of the promises, political
and economic, made by Castro from his "History Will
Absolve Me" speech (at his Moncada trial in 1953) to
the end of 1958. These promises so soon became em-
barrassing that some of his literary champions began to
rewrite history (after less than two years!) by avoiding
.all mention of them.
2-14

POLITICAL
Castro's 1953 speech predicted that the first revolu-
tionary law would be restoration of the 1940 Constitu-
tion and made an allusion to a "government of popular
election."
Castro's manifesto of July, 1957, his first political
declaration from the Sierra Maestra, contained a "formal
promise" of general elections at the end of one year and
an "absolute guarantee" of freedom of information, press,
and all individual and political rights guaranteed by the
1940 Constitution.
Castro's letter of December 14, 1957, to the Cuban
; exiles upheld the "prime duty" of the post-Batista pro-

! visional government to hold general elections and the
" right of political parties, even during the provisional
government, to put forward programs, organize, and
participate in the elections.
In an article in Coronet magazine of February, 1958,
Castro wrote of fighting for a "genuine representative
government," "truly honest" general elections within
twelve months, "full and untrammelled" freedom of pub-
. lie information and all communication media, and re-
establishment of all personal and political rights set forth
in the 1940 Constitution. The greatest irony is that he
defended himself against the accusation "of plotting to
replace military dictatorship with revolutionary dictator-
ship."
In his answers to his first biographer, Jules Dubois, in
May, 1958, Castro pledged "full enforcement" of the
1940 Constitution and "a provisional government of en-
2-15

tirely civilian character that will return the country to
nortnality and hold general elections within a period of
no more than one year."
In the unity manifesto of July, 1958, Castro agreed "to
guide our nation, after the fall of the tyrant, to normality
by instituting a brief provisional government that will
lead the country to full constitutional and democratic
procedures."
EcONOMIC
In the 1953 speech, Castro supported grants of land
to small planters and peasants, with indemnification to
the former owners; the rights of workers to share in
profits; a greater share of the cane crop to all planters;
and confiscation of all illegally obtained property. His
land reform advocated maximum holdings for agricul-
tural enterprises and the distribution of remaining land
to farming families; it also provided for encouragement
of "agricultural cooperatives for the common use of
costly equipment, cold storage, and a uniform profes-
sional direction incultivation and breeding." In addition,
the speech expressed the intention of nationalizing the
electric and telephone companies.
The manifesto of July, 1957, defined the agrarian re-
form as distribution of barren lands, with prior indem-
nification, and conversion of sharecroppers and squatters
into proprietors of the lands worked on.
The Coronet article favored a land reform to give
peasants clear title to the land, with "just compensation
of expropriated owners." It declared that Castro had no
plans for expropriating or nationalizing foreign invest-
2-16
ments and that he had suspended an earlier program to
extend government ownership to public utilities. On
nationalization, he wrote:

I personally have come to feel that nationalization is,
at best, a cumbersome instrument. It does not seem to
make the state any stronger, yet it enfeebles private
enterprise. Even more importantly, any attempt at
wholesale nationalization would obviously hamper
the principal point of our economic platform-indus-
trialization at the fastest possible rate. For this purpose,
foreign investments will always be welcome and secure
here.
In May, 1958, he assured Jules Dubois:
Never has the 26th of July Movement talked about
socializing or nationalizing the industries. This is simply
stupid fear of our revolution. We have proclaimed
from the first day that we fight for the full enforce-
ment of the Constitution of 1940, whose norms estab-
lish guarantees, rights, and obligations for all the
elements that have a part in production. Comprised
therein is free enterprise and invested capital as well
as many other economic, civic, and political rights.
, The unity manifesto of July, 1958, which was writ-
ten by Castro, merely called for:
A minimum governmental program that will guar-
antee the punishment of the guilty ones, the rights of
the workers, the fulfillment of international commit-
ments, public order, peace, freedom, as well as the
economic, social, and political progress of the Cuban
people.
Law No.3 of the Sterra Maestra on Agrarian Reform,
~ d t e d October 10, 1958, on the very eve of taking power,
l'
l
2-17
I
was based on the principle that those who cultivate the
land should own it. This law, signed by Fidel Castro and
the then Judge AQ.vocate General, Dr. Humberto Sod
Marin, made no mention of "cooperatives" or "state
farms." Its entire intent was to implement the hitherto
neglected agrarian-reform provision in the Constitution
of 1940.*
Such were the promises that Fidel had made.t The
near unanimity with which Castro's victory was ac-
cepted in January, 1959, was the result not merely of
his heroic struggle and glamorous beard but of the politi-
cal consensus he appeared to embody. This consensus
had resulted from the democratic disappointments in
1944-52 and the Batista despotism of 1952-58. There was
Its full text, which became extremely rare after Castro took
power, may be found in Enrique Gonzalez Pedrero, La Revoluci6n
Cubana (Mexico: Escuela Nacional de Ciencias PoHticas y Sociales,
1959), pp. 143-56.
t Castro's pre-1959 promises are dealt with by Huberman and
Sweezy in a peculiar way. They cite twelve and a half pages of the
1953 speech but omit the five-point program on which Castro said
the revolution was based. This program began: "The first revolu-
tionary law would have restored sovereignty to the people and pro-
claimed the Constitution of 1940 as the true supreme law of the
state, until such time as the people should decide to modify it or to
change it." The others provided for grants of land to small planters
and peasants, with indemnification to the former owners; the right
of workers to share in profits; a greater share of the cane crop to
all planters; and confiscation of all illegally obtained property.
Although the speech makes other important points, this is the only
itemized program in it, and it is hard to see how its omission can
be justified. The unity pact of July, 1958, is handled in the same
way. It contained three points: a common strategy, postwar "nor-
mality," and "a minimum governmental program." I have quoted the
second point in full in the text. Huberman and Sweezy cite a para-
graph in this unity pact that asked the U.S. to cease all military and
other types of aid to Batista, but ignore the three-point program,
which might have put Castro's promises in a somewhat different light.
Mills simply ignores the whole collection of Castro's prepower
pledges.
2-18
broad agreement that Cuba could never go back to the
corrupt brand of democracy of the past, and the Cuban
middle class was ready for deep-going social and political
reforms to make impossible another PrIO Socarras and
another Batista. Castro promised to restore Cuban de-
mocracy and make it work, not a "direct" or "people's"
democracy but the one associated with the 1940 Consti-
tution, which was so radical that much of it, especially
the provision for agrarian reform, was never imple-
mented.
It is, moreover, unthinkable that Castro could have
won power if he had given the Cuban people the slight-
est forewarning of what he has presented them with-a
press and all other means of communication wholly
government controlled, ridicule of elections, wholesale
confiscation and socialization, "cooperatives" that are (as
Huberman and Sweezy admitted) virtually "state farms,"
or a dictatorship of any kind, including that of the pro':'
letariat. It was precisely the kind of promises Castro made
that enabled him to win the support of the overwhelm-
ing majority of the Cuban middle and other classes; a
"peasant revolution" would hardly have been expressed
in quite the same way.
The least that can be said, therefore, is that Castro
promised one kind of revolution and made another. The
revolution Castro promised was unquestionably betrayed.
THE SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION
The Castro mythology tends to distort not only the
original nature of the Cuban revolution but also the
2-19
character of Cuban society. Pages were written by
Huberman and w ~ z y about the peasantry, a single
paragraph about the working class, and almost nothing.
about the middle class. Mills never seems to have made
up his mind which Cubans were speaking through him.
His own list of the Cubans who spoke to him indicates
that there was not a worker, and certainly not a peasant,
in the lot. Without exception, his informants were mid-
dle-class intellectuals and professionals of the type in
power. Sometimes he makes them speak in their own
name; more often they masquerade as the most impover-
ished and miserable of Cuban peasants. They say, "we
squatted on the edge of the road in our filthy huts," as
if they were the "we" and as if this was typical of all
Cubans. The average reader might imagine that Cuba
was nothing but "a place of misery and filth, illiteracy
and exploitation and sloth." This may be a triumph of
propaganda but it is a travesty of sociology.
Cuba before Castro was, indeed, a country with seri-
ous social problems, but it was far from being a peasant
country or even a typically "underdeveloped" one. Its
population was more urban than rural: 57 per cent lived
in the urban areas and 43 per cent in the rural, with the
trend strongly in favor of the former (according to the
Geogra{fa de Cuba, written by Antonio Nunez Jimenez,
the first Director of the Agrarian Reform Institute).
The people dependent on agriculture for a living made
up about 40 per cent, and ofthese over one-quarter were
classified as farmers and ranchers. In 1954, the national
income was divided as follows: the sugar industry, agri-
cultural and industrial, 25 per cent; other agriculture,
2-20
13 'Per cent; other industry and commerce, 40 per cent;
everything else, 21 per cent. In 1950, only 44 per cent
of the total labor force was agricultural.
The standard of living, low by U.S. and West Euro-
pean standards, was comparatively high for Latin Amer-
ica; only three countries, Venezuela, Argentina, and
Chile, rated above Cuba in per capita income; Cuba's
was almost as high as Italy's and much higher than
Japan's. Cuba ranked fifth in Latin America in manufac-
turing, behind Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, and Chile.
Cuba had 1 automobile for every 39 inhabitants (in
Argentina, 1 for every 60; in Mexico, 91; in Brazil, 158),
and 1 radio for every 5 inhabitants (second to Argen-
tina, with 1 for every 3). Cuban tourists were able to
spend more in the United States than American tourists
spent in Cuba. After World War II, Cuban interests
were strong enough to buy a substantial share of U.S.-
owned sugar production, which fell from 70-80 per cent
of the total at its high point in the 1930's to about 35 per
cent in 1958. Government encouragement of "Cubaniza-
tion" would easily have cut the figure in half again in a
short time under a post-Batista democratic regime.-
.I am not trying to suggest that Cuba's economy was a
.. Cuba was, in fact, an unevenly developed country with a rela-
tively high standard of living, as one of the leading Cuban Com-
munists, Anibal Escalante, has admitted: "In reality, Cuba was not
one of the countries with the lowest standard of living of the masses
in America but, on the contrary, one of those with the highest
standard of living, and it was here where the first great patriotic,
democratic, and socialist revolution of the continent burst forth and
where the in;lperialist chain was first broken. If the historical devel-
opment had been dictated by the false axiom expressed above, the
revolution should have been first produced in Haiti, Colombia, or
even Chile, countries of greater poverty for the masses than the
Cuba of 1952 or 1958" (Verde Olivo, July 30,1961).
2-21
healthy one. It was precariously dependent on the fluctu-
ations of a single crop, sugar, which accounted for more
than 80 per cent of Cuban exports and employed about
a half million workers for only three to four months a
year. As the rates of illiteracy show-41.7 per cent in the
rural areas and only 11.6 per cent in the urban areas-
the social development of Cuba was shockingly unbal-
anced in favor of the cities and towns, and Castro's cru-
sade for the peasantry has repaid the Cuban upper and
middle classes for decades of indifference to the welfare
of the land workers.
But this is not the same thing as implying (as Mills
often does) that Cuba was nothing but a land of back-
ward, illiterate, diseased, starving peasants. When he
writes, "We speak Spanish, we are mainly rural, and we
are poor," the first statement is undoubtedly correct, the
second is demonstrably false, and the third is partly true.
Cuba was one of the most middle-class countries in Latin
America.
In effect, this mythology of the Cuban social structure
makes Castro's victory inexplicable. If a "handful" of
middle-class "students and intellectuals" had the active
support of only a few hundred or even a few thousand
peasants, without either the working or middle classes (as
Mills maintains), the Batista regime would never have
toppled. It was the desertion of the middle class-on
which Batista's power was based-that caused his regime
to disintegrate from within and his army to evaporate.
* * * * *
* *
2-22

Section II. DEMOCRATIC PLANS
IN ORDER TO assure internal and international confidence, the

revolution of the "10th of March," 1952, maintained all the
norms, principles and guarantees of the Constitution of 1940,
with modifications only in regulatory measures. In accord with
these norms and principles, there was no attack on the lives
or the property and political rights of citizens. Nor was there
political censure for anyone fulfilling the obligations of public
office. The government tried to reach an agreement with the
opposition for the holding of immediate elections. But most of
the leaders of the opposition, realizing that the times were not
propitious for their success and, in their own interests, wishing
to delay the return to normalcy, refused the offer, and eagerly
set out to promote disorder and violence.
Respect for Tenure
At the same time the government gave an example-without
precedent in a revolution-of in their positions the
officers of all the autonomous bodies which exercise a good
share of public power in the Cuban Government. This was our
attitude in dealing with the Court of Accounts (Tribunal de
Cuentas)-to respect all its justices and subordinates-in deal-
ing with the National Bank of Cuba (Banco Nacional de
Cuba), and with the Bank of Agricultural and Industrial De-
velopment (Banco de Fomento Agricola e Industrial), inaking
new appointments only when an office-holder had resigned; in
From pages 25-31, Fulgencio Batista, Cuba Betrayed (New York, Vantage Press, Inc., 1962). Reprinted
with permission of the publishers at USACGSC and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part with-
out express permission of the copyright owner.
2-23
dealing with 'the Commission of NatiOIial Development (Comi-
si6n de Fomento Nacional); with the Cuban Institute for the
Stabilization of Sugar (lnstituto Cubano de EstabilizaciOn del
Azucar); with the Commission for Arbitration of the Sugar
Industry (Comisi6n de Arbitraje Azucarero), and with all the
bodies connected with social security, whether of the laboring or
professional classes. Among the bureaucracy of other govern-
ment departments, where formerly any change in leadership had
meant a massive wave of dismissals, the revolutionary govern-
ment of the "10th of March" created hardly a stir.
Terrorism and Sabotage
The purpose of all these acts was to stabilize the country, to
create as little upheaval as possible, gaining general confidence
by seeking the national unity indispensable to progress, eco-
nomic liberation and consolidation. But personal ambitions,
political passions, and the desire to restore the old order vied
with these patriotic objectives. They gave rise with diabolical
intensity to the terror which, in the beginning, revealed its
presence through bombs and explosives, in streets, parks, the-
atres, cinemas, restaurants, cabarets and stores. It brought death
or mutilation to children, women and men, most of whom were
not concerned with politics. Then terror attacked the public
services, the aqueducts and the electric works, highways, rail-
ways, bridges, telephone networks, telegraph stations, post of-
fices, and industrial and agricultural centers.
Economic Aggression
In describing this destructive process one must emphasize the
effort made to destroy the economy, not only through the ac-
tions summarized above, but also by attempts to obstruct the
sugar harvests, and by organizing a campaign of slander through
2-24
telephone calls, and propaganda'protected by the absolute free-
dom of the press. * A rumor was spread that "the government
planned to seize bank deposits as well as the contents of safe
,
deposit boxes in order to overcome its and the country's bank-
ruptcy." After repeated failures of this campaign, public confi-
dence was weakened in April, 1958, when a general strike,
which threatened to put important national and foreign banks
in a difficult spot, was called without success.
These then were the negative methods of a struggle, which,
as we have many times repeated, was directed not against the
government but against Cuba.
Attacks on Schools and Children
The lawless campaign accentuated its own vile nature when
it directed aggressive acts against kindergartens, hurling "Molo-
tov cocktails" and attacking buses carrying boys and girls to
their schools.
In the wave of terror and violence which lashed the Island
in the last two years, our government repeatedly tried the
method of pardon, of forgetting offenses and calling for unity
and national concord. What follows is an example of this policy.
Two tnonths before the assassination in HolguIn of Col. Fer-
min Cowley Gallegos, military chief of the zone in which the
Castro family resided, the mother of Fidel and RaUl, Mrs. Ruz
Castro, addressed herself, with Cowley as intermediary, to the
* "We independent journalists who visited Cuba during the first
five years of Batista's second government could never find reasons for
criticizing a Batista tyranny, simply because both the first and second
governments of the ex-Sergeant were distinguished by a sense of de-
mocracy and liberty unsurpassed by any other Latin American coun-
try." (Aldo Baroni-"The Dance of the Hours" "La Danza de las
Horas")-Excelsior, Jan. 12, 1960. Prensa Libre has continued to
republish, in an effort to justify itself to the Castristas, the violent
attacks it printed during the Batista "dictatorship." This fact proves
the truth of the quotation.
2-25
General Chief of Staff. I was to grant a truce, and through
diplomatic safe-conduct or by the withdrawal of our troops
from the region, the two-could take a plane or a ship out of the
country.
There was nothing suspicious about these overtures. Col.
Cowley's job was to protect the Castro Ruz family on the farm
where the widowed mother lived with her children, Ramon
and Juanita. These two children acted as messengers between
the Colonel and Mrs. Ruz Castro.
The Office of the Chief of Staff gave instructions for the with-
drawal of the troops and called a halt to all fighting. A six-man
patrol of marines and soldiers withdrew to relax on the sea
coast. As they were not on duty, they reconnoitered the area
and then spent the night in two abandoned huts.
Trustingly, they took no precautions. They fell fast asleep,
believing that the truce would be observed. About 4:30 in the
morning one of them arose to prepare breakfast. Kindling the
fire was to be, unknowingly, the signal for the consequent
tragedy. Fidel Castro and a group of villains who accompanied
him, making a mockery of his mother's effort and of the truce,
fell "heroically" upon those defenseless troops and slew them
with knife and gun.
Tolerance and Law
Five laws of amnesty, one of them so comprehensive as to
include the assailants of the "Moncada" barracks in 1953, and
their ringleader Castro; wholesale pardons; repeated invitations
to exiled leaders to return to the country; respect for the free-
dom of the press as ordered by the Constitution; and, finally,
the inclusion into the Electoral Code of the demands formulated
by the opposition, particularly the direct and secret vote-these
acts demonstrated the will of any government to maintain peace
and advance progress.
2-26
Work and Credit

If one examines to what extent Cuba advanced, although
deep in the sorrow; confusion and uncertainty of this struggle,
the conclusion is obvious. If neither sugar*, nor minerals, nor
other exports reached high price levels; if agreements could not
be reached with foreign enterprise and if world investment
capital was adversely influenced; if international opinion turned
so hostile to Cuba as to convert Havana embassies illto centers
of conspiracy; if embargoes against the shipment of arms to
the government were established-practically giving the status
of belligerents to terrorists who committed every sort of outrage
and violated laws, and, even enjoyed advantages in certain
countries-then we must ask ourselves: How did Cuba attain
such a high level of solvency and economic development at
this time and under such circumstances?
We must conclude that world opinion had been led astray
by propaganda but that the Cuban Government had the posi-
tive support of internal public opinion, because in no other way
could the miracle of this economic development* *, this height
of prosperity and the high standard of living of labor, have been
possible.
These heights are not reached with guns. They are achieved
through the confidence of businessmen, of investment capital, of
* Ambassador Arthur Gardner, in his depositions before the Sen-
ate Subcommittee on Internal Security said: "...'During the course of
the time that I was there the economy rose tremendously. The building
boom was sensational. If you had been in Havana ten years earlier, as
I had, and then saw it the day I left, you would not recognize the city.
. . . They (Cubans) felt that the time had finally come when they could
begin investing money in Cuba, rather than putting their money, as
they had in previous years, in banks in Switzerland and New York."
Ambassador Earle E. T. Smith, in his depositions before the same
Subcommittee, said: "The year 1957 was the best economic year that
Cuba has ever had."
**See Economic References in - - - [section III, chapter 2] .
2-27
farmers, of all sectors of the population sharing in the produc-
tion and commerce of a country
Constitution and Despotislfl.
Any suspension of constitutional guarantees was always pre-
ceded by national clamor for such action. The people saw how
the Legislative Power acted within the framework of the Con-
stitution to modify the messages of the Executive Power, and
approved or disapproved measures recommended by the Coun-
cil of Ministers (Consejo de Ministros). It made its own deci-
sions, without conflicts on questions of party discipline. In the
area of Judicial Power not one judge, magistrate, or employee
was removed by the revolutionary government. Nor were there
any dismissals when the constitutional government came to
power after the election of 1954. In accordance with the Con-
stitution, the internal control of the judges and courts was
maintained by the Supreme Court (Tribunal Supremo), the
majority of whose members had taken their seats under previous
administrations.
Intelligent public opinion observed the opposite take place
later under Castro; and the world noted it with horror. We have
seen assault, pillage and confiscation of newspapers imposing
a gag of terror on the press. Those who professed to be defend-
ers of the Constitution, rule without obeying it; nor do they
have even their own revolutionary constitution. Those who
claimed to respect the. Judicial Power, defending Manuel Ur-
rutia against the simple criticisms directed against his lies,
destroyed the courts of justice. It must be strange to watch
men who proclaimed the independence of civil power-among
them the lawyer Jose Mira Cardona-converted into puppets
of the Argentine ("CM Guevara) who speaks in the name
of military power and chieftain Castro. It is easy to observe the
2-28
difference between two regimes, because the latter has
usurped all power, while we worked earnestly in harmony with
the other government departments.
There, in constant effort, in respect for laws and property
rights, lies the secret of the economic greatness of Cuba.
2-29
TABLE [1] : INCOME PER CAPITA IN U. S. DOLLARS
Rank Latin American Country Year Income per Capita
1 Venezuela 1958 868
2 Costa Rica 1958 361
3 CUBA ~ ~
4 Chile ~ 291
5 Mexico 1958 260
6 Uruguay 1957 253
7 Panama 1956 246
8 Dominican Republic 1957 239
Section III. SELECTED STATISTICS
U ~ ?-(
* * * * * * *
From pages 277-292, reprinted by permission of the publisher of The Devin-Adair Company from the book
THE GROWTH AND DECLINE OF THE CUBAN REPUBLIC by Fulgencio Batisla. Reproduced sl USA
CGSC by special permission and maynal be further reproduced in whole or in part without express per-
mission of the copyright owner.
2-30
TABLE [2J:PERCENTAGE OF ILLITEl\J\TES TO TOTAL POPULATION
IN UTIN AMERICA. IN 1958
0
Rank Country PercentIlliterate
1 Argentina 8
2 Costa Rica 21
3 .Chile 24
4 CUBA 24
5 Puerto Rico 26
6 Panama 28
7 Uruguay 35
8 Colombia 35
9 Mexico 38
10 Ecuador 44
11 Peru 50
12 Brazil 51
13 DominicanRepublic 57
14 ElSalvador 58
15 Nicaragua 60
16 Paraguay 60
17 Venezuela 60
18 Honduras 65
19 Bolivia 69
20 Guatemala 72
21 Haiti 90
oDatafrom the United Nations Statistical Yearbook, 1959. The Communist
leader, Antonio Nunez Jimenez, claimed in 1959 that the Cuban illiteracy
,ratewasonly22.8%.
TABLE [3J: PERCENrAGE OFNATIONAL INCOMEDEVOTED TO PUBLIC
EDUCATION .IN 1959
0
Rank Country Percent
1 CUBA 3At
2 Argentina 3.Q
3 CostaRica 3.1
4 Peru 3.1
5 Chile 2.6
6 Guatemala 2.3
7 Brazil 2.3
8 Colombia 1.9
oPan American Union, America in Figures, 1960, Washington, D.C. The
comparable U.S. figure for 1957-58 was 4.3%.
t 1957-58. t 195960. 1957.
2-31
TABLE [4] :lNHABlTANTS FER UNIVERSITY SnIDEN'T (1958)
Inhabitants
Rank Country per Student
I Argentina" 135
2 Uruguay 199
3 CUBA 273
4 Mexico 334
5 PanaIna 387
6 Paraguay 496
7 Costa Rica 514
.. UNESCO, Annuaire Internationale d'Education. The comparable figures
are 61 for the United States and 210 for Canada.
TABLE [5]: INHABITANTS PER PHYSICIAN INACTIVE PRACTICE
Rank Country No. Inhabitants Year
I Argentina 760 1956
2 Uruguay 860 1957
3 CUBA 1,000 1957
4 Venezuela 1,700 1957
5 Chile 1,900 1953
6 Mexico 1,900 1956
7 Paraguay 1,900 1957
8 Brazil 2,500 1954
.. Pan American Union, America in Figures, 1960.
TABLE [6]: MORTALITY RATE PER THOUSAND PERSONS (1958)
Rank Country Mortality Rate Rank Country Mortality Rate
I CUBA 5.8 12 Peru 10.3 . '
2 Uruguay 7.0 13 Paraguay 10.6
3 Boliviat 7.7 14 Honduras 11.1
4 Venezuela 7.8 15 Mexico 11.6
5 Argentina 8.1 16 El Salvador 11.7
6 Canada 8.1 17 Chile 12.1
7 DOIninican Rep. 8.4 18 ColoInbia 12.8
8 Nicaragua 8.7 19 Ecuador 15.2
9 Costa Rica 9.0 20 Brazil 20.6
10 PanaIna 9.0 21 GuateInala 21.3
11 United States 9.4
Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1960.
t Probably due primarily to underreporting.
2-32
. TABLE [7J :INFLATIQN IN' LATIN AMERICA
(U.S.DepartmentofCommercedata)
Percent Increase in

Consumer Goods
Rank Country Prices in 1958
1 CUBA 1.4
2 DominicanRepublic 1.9
3 Honduras 2.9
4 Guatemala 3.3
5 Ecuador 3.5
6 CostaRica 4.3
7 Venezuela 4.7
8 EI Salvador 5.9
9 Panama 6.2
10 Nicaragua 6.9
11 Mexico 7.8
12 Uruguay 9.1
13 Colombia 9.6
14 Peru 12.4
15 Brazil 15.4
16 Argentina 19.8.
17 Chile 35.7
18 Paraguay 43.8
19 Bolivia 63.0
TABLE [8J: FOREIGN TRADE: VALUE OF IMPORTS IN
DOLLARS PER CAPITA (1958)'*
Rank Country Value of Imports
1 Venezuela 2,380
2 CUBA 1,320
3 Panama 1,042
4 Costa Rica 865
5 Argentina 590
6 Chile 550
7 Uruguay 537
8 Nicaragua 531
PanAmerican Union, America in Figures, 1960.
2-33

TABLE [10]: NEWSPAPERS PUBLISHED PER THOUSAND INHABITANTS


(1952-1958) I)
Rank
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Country
Uruguay
Argentina
CUBA
Panama
Venezuela
Costa Rica
Nicaragua
Peru

Number of Units
180
~
129
124
102
102
90
76
Year
1958
1958
1956
1957
1956
1958
1957
1957
I) Pan American Union, America in Figures, 1960.
* * * * * *
.*
TABLE [11]: TELEVISION SETS PER 1,000 INHABITANTS (1959) I)
1 CUBA ~
2 Venezuela 29
3 Argentina 19
4 Mexico 17
5 Brazil 13
6 Colombia 10
7 Uruguay 5
8 . Dominican Republic 5
Pan American Union, America in Figures, 1960.
2-34
*
*
* * * * *
TABLE [12J: INFANT MORTALITY. IN LATIN AMERICA 1958: (DEA'!HS
DURING FIRST YEAR PER '!HOUSAND BIR'!HS-SOURCE:
Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1960)
Rank Country Infant Mortality Rate

1 CUBA 37.6
2 Paraguay 55.3
3 Panama 57.9
4 Argentina 61.1
5 Honduras 64.4
6 Nicaragua 69.3
7 Uruguay 73.0
8 Dominican Republic 76.6
9 El Salvador 79.3
10 Mexico 80.0
11 Peru 88.4
12 Costa Rica 89.0
13 Bolivia 90.7
14 Venezuela 91.2
15 Colombia 100.0
TABLE [13J: AVERAGE SIZE OF FARMS IN CERTAIN LATIN AMERICAN
COUNTRIES (1958)
Average Size of Farm&
Country
in hectares
CUBA
56.7
United States 78.5
Mexico 82.0
Venezuela
335.0
* * * * * * *
2-35
TABLE [14];U.S. INVESTMENTS IN LATIN AMERICA
(inmillions of dollars)
Increase or
Country or Area 1956 1958 Decline
All LatinAmerica 7,059 8,730 1,671
1 Venezuela 1,829 2,722 893
2 Brazil 1,218 1,345 127
3 CUBA 777 1,001 224
4 Mexico 690 781 91
5 Chile 676 736 60
6 CentralAmerica 630 737 107
7 Argentina 466 517 51
8 Peru 343 429 86
9 Colombia 298 289 -9
All Other 132 173 41
Percent representedby
Cuba 11.0% 11.5% 13.4%
* * * * *
* *
TABLE [15] :PHYSICIANS PER THOUSAND INHABITANTS, A WORLD
COMPARISON (LATE 1950s)'*
Physicians Population Physicians per
Country (thousands) (millions) 1,000 Population
Italy (1958) 69.9 48.5 1.44
WestGermany (1959) 72.8 51;5 1.41
United States (1958) 217.1 171.2 1.27
Japan (1960) 97.3 90.9 1.07
France (1959) 44.4 44.1 1.01
CUBA (1960)t 6.4 6.4 1.00
UnitedKingdom (1959) 42.5 51;5 0.83
'* Figures for physicians from Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1962,
pp. 935-936. Population data from UNESCO, op. cit.
tTheratioof physiciansto populationwas exactly thesamein1957.
* * * * * * *
2-36
Percent
41.5
0.5
16.6
3.3
0.4
11.7
5.0
20.1
0.9
100.0
TABLE [16] :GAINFULLY EMPLOYED POPULATION OF CUBA (1958)

Category No.
Agriculture, hunting & fishing 818,706
Mining and quarrying 9,618
Manufacturing 327,208
Construction 65,292
Public utilities 8,439
Commerce 232,323
.Transport & communications 104,003
Service 395,904
Other 10,773
TOTAL 1,972,266
* * * * * * *
TABLE [17]: HIGH SCHOOLS, SPECIAL SCHOOLS AND UNIVERSITIES
Total in Created by Created by
Type of Institution 1958 Batista Others
Universities 13 9 4
High Schools 21 15 6
Schools for Teachers 19 11 8
Home economics schools 14 8 6
Commercial schools 19 10 9
Art Schools 7 2 5
Technical Schools 22 15 7
Schools of Journalism, etc. 6 6 0
-
- -
TOTALS 121 76 45
PERCENTAGES 100% 63% 37%
TABLE [18]: SUGAR PRICES, PRODUCTION AND EXPORTS
Crop USA Price World Price Exports
Year (Mils.LongTons) ($ Mils.}
1954 4.75 4.93 3.49 431.5
1955 4.40 4.80 3.42 472.6
1956 4.60 4.86 3.31 523.2
1957 5.51 5.33 5.12 645.0
1958 5.61 5.22 3.45 587.5
1959 5.99 5.40 2.96 491.7
1963t
o The first year of the Communist regime in Cuba.
t 1963 = 3 Mils. or so.
2-37
Year
1939
1954
1958
Year or period
1935-1940 average
1950-1955 average
1955/56
1956/57
1957/58
1958/59
TABLE C19J: NATIONAL OWNERSHIP OF THE SUGAR INDUSTRY
Cuban Mills U.S. Mills Other Ownership
No. Pet. 'No. Pet. No. Pet.
56 22.4% 66 55.1% 52 22.5%
116 57.8% 41 41.0% 4 1.2%
121 62.1% 36 36.7% 4 0.3%
TABLE [20J: SUGAR OUTPUT IN CUBA, U.S.A. AND U.S.S.1\,
Sugar Production in Thsds. Short Tons:
USA USSR CUBA
1,901 2,761 3,183
2,351 3,010 6,078
2,313 4,200 5,229
2,529 5,000 6,252
2,735 5,800 6,372
2,820 6,100 6,600
SUMMARY OF LABOR LEGISLATION IN CUBA
1878 Law restricting child labor..
1909 Arteaga Law, requiring that wages be paid in legal tender,
not in scrip.
1910 Law authorizing construction of houses for workers.
1910 Regulating closing hours of stores.
1913 Commission to study an Employment and Social Security
Code.
1916 Worker's Compensation Law.
1921 Regulation of hours for banks and pharmacies.
1924 Labor commissions set up at Cuban ports.
1931 Establishment of an unemployment fund.
AFTER THE REVOLUTION OF SEPTEMBER 1933:
1933 Law requiring that 50% of every labor force be Cuban.
1933 Trade Union Law.
1934 Law protecting women workers.
1934 Law of collective labor agreements.
1934 Law establishing the right to paid vacations.
1934 Law protecting workers and employees against arbitrary
discharge.
1934 Law affirming the right to join unions and the right to strike.
1934 Eight-hour day law.
2-38

1934 Health and maternityprotection for workers.
1934 National Minimum Wage Commission.
1935 Employment Exchanges Law.
1936 Superior Carmcil onSocial Security.
1936 Organization of an institutetoretrain disabled workers.
1936 National Institute of Prevention and Social Reforms.
1937 Central Board on Maternityand Health.
1941 CompulsoryArbitrationLaw.
1943 National Commission of Social Cooperation.
1945 Regulationofworkinghours insummer.
1948 Lawrequiringbanks to close on Saturdays.
1948 Lawon healthstandards in places of employment.
1952 FinancingofPalaceofLabor.
1953 Labor-Management Technical Committees. 4
1953 Compulsory paymentofuniondues providedbycheckoff.
1955 Law eliminating Communists from the trade unions and
from public employment.
DURING THE FIRST YEAR OF CASTRO COMMUNISM:
1959 Abolition of the rightto organize unions.
1959 Strikes outlawed.
1959 Minimumwagelaws repealed.
1959 Collectivebargainingabolished.
1959 Right to jobsecurity terminated.
1959 Paid vacations abolished.
1959 Compulsoryworkfor theState instituted.
1959 Paymentofwagesinscripauthorized. .
DISABILITY, OLD AGE, RETIREMENT AND DEATH BENEFITS
Number of Funds Beneficiaries
Category in 1958 in 1958
Workers 21 1,400,000
Professionals 20 8,000
Governmentemployees 11 140,000
TOTAL 1,620,000
PercentofCubanlaborforce insured. . . 90%
2-39
Collections in 1955
Collections in 1958
Increase
Consolidated Balance 1955
Expenditures
Contribution to Capital
Total Assets in 1955
Number of Industrial Unions
Number of Union Locals
No. of Collective Contracts in Force
SOCIAL SECURITY: CONSOLIDATED DATA FROM 21 RETIREMENT FUNDS

$ Millions
56.6
68.0
11.4
99.0
74.1
14.9
212.2
TRADE UNIONS IN CUBA: CONFEDERATION OF CUBAN WORKERS (CTC)
Oct. 1944 Dec. 1958
30 33
1,560 2,490
2,624 7,638
.. Havana Province only.
TABLE [21 J: LATIN AMERICAN MONETARY RESERVES OF GOLD AND
CONVERTIBLE FOREIGN EXCHANGE IN MILLIONS OF
DOLLARS
Country
1 Venezuela
2 Brazil
3 CUBA
4 Mexico
5 Uruguay
6 Colombia
7 Argentina
1958
1,050
465
373
372
205
160
129
1960
558
428
144
393
213
153
658
TABLE [22J : CUBA AS A MINERAL PRODUCER (1958)
2-40
Mineral
Cobalt
Nickel
Chronium
Manganese
Copper
Cuba's Po.s/tion in:
The World Americas
First First
Second Second
Eighth Second
Eighth Second
Eleventh Sixth
-------.-

Section IV. WAR AND THE PEASANT POPULATION

To live in a continual state of war and to adapt to this new


phenomenon creates an attitude of mind in the popular conscious-
ness. The individual must undergo an adaptation to enable him to
resist the bitter experience that threatens his tranquility. The Sierra
Maestra and other newly liberated zones had to undergo this bitter
experience.
The situation in the rugged mountain zones was nothing less
than frightful. The peasant, migrated from afar, eager for freedom,
working to root out his sustenance from the newly dug land, had
by dint of his labors coaxed the coffee plants to grow on the craggy
slopes where creating anything new entails sacrifice-all this by his
own sweat, in response to the age-old longing of man to possess his
own plot of land, working with infinite love this hostile crag, an
extension of the man himself.
Soon after, when the coffee plants began to blossom with the
fruit that represented his hope, the lands were claimed by a new
owner. It might be a foreign company, a local land-grabber, or some
other speculator taking advantage of peasant indebtedness. The po-
litical caciques, the local army chieftains, worked for the company
or the land.grabber, jailing or murdering any peasant who was
unduly rebellious against these arbitrary acts. Such was the scene of
defeat and desolation that we found, paralleling our own defeat at
From pages 192-195, Reminiscences 0/ the Cuban Revolutionary War by Che Guevara. Copyright C
1968 by Monthly Review Press; reprinted by permission of Monthly Review Press at USACGSC and may not
be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
2-41
2-42

Alegda de pro, the product of our inexperience (our only misad-


venture in this long campaign, our bloody baptism of fire).
The peasantry recognized those lean men whose beards, now
legendary, were beginning to flourish, as companions in misfortune,
fresh victims of the repressive forces, and gave us their spontaneous
and disinterested aid, without expecting anything of the defeated
ones.
Days passed and our small troop of now seasoned soldiers sus-
tained the victories of La Plata and Palma Mocha. The regime re-
sponded with all its brutality, and there were mass assassinations of
peasants. Terror was unleashed in the rustic valleys of the Sierra
Maestra and the peasants withdrew their aid; a barrier of mutual
mistrust loomed up between them and. the guerrilleros, the former
out of fear of reprisals, the latter out of fear of betrayal by the fear-
ful. Our policy, nevertheless, was a just and understanding orte, and
the guajiro population began to return to their earlier relati9nship
with our cause.
The dictatorship, in its desperation and criminality, ordered the
resettlement of thousands of guajiro families from the Sierra Ma-
estra in the cities.
The strongest and most resolute men, including almost all the
youth, preferred liberty and war to slavery and the city. Long cara-
vans o(women, children, and old people took to the roads, leaving
their birthplaces, going down to the llano, where they huddled on
the outskirts of the cities. Cuba experienced the most criminal page
of its history for the second time: the Resettlement. The first time
it was decreed by Weyler, the bloody general of colonial Spain, this
time by Fulgencio Batista, the worst traitor and assassin known to
America.
Hunger, misery, illness, epidemics, and death decimated the peas-
ants resettled by the tyranny. Children died for lack of medical at-
tention and food, when a few steps away there were the resources
that could have saved their lives. The indignant protest of the
Cuban people, international scancllll, and the inability of the dic-
tatorship to defeat the rebels obliged the tyrant to suspend the re-
settlement of peasant families from the Sierra Maestra. And once
again they returqed to the land of their birth, miserable, sick, deci-
mated. Earlier they had experienced bombardments by the dictator-
ship, the burning of their hoMos, mass murders; now they had ex-
perienced the inhumanity and barbarism of a regime that treated
them worse than colonial Spain' treated the Cubans in the war of
Independence. Batista had surpassed Weyler. The peasants returned
with an unbreakable will to struggle until death or victory, rebels
until death or freedom.
Our little guerrilla band, of city extraction, began to don palm
leaf hats, the people lost their fear, decided to join the struggle and
proceed resolutely along the road to their redemption. In this
change, our policy t ~ w r the peasantry and our military victories
coincided, and this already revealed us to be an unbeatable force
in the Sierra Maestra.
Faced by the choice, all the peasants chose the path of revolution.
The change of mental attitude, of which we have already spoken,
now showed itself fully. The war was a fact-painful, yes, but
transitory, a definitive state within which the individual was obliged
to adapt himself in order to exist. When the peasants understood
this, they made the adjustments necessary for the confrontation
with the adverse circumstances that would come.
The peasants returned to their abandoned plots of land; they
stopped the slaughter of their animals, saving them for worse days;
they became used to the savage machine gunning, and each family
built its own shelter. They also accustomed themselves to periodic
flights from the battle zones, with family, cattle, and household
goods, leaving only their boMos for the enemy, which displayed its
wrath by burning them to the ground. They accustomed themselves
to rebuilding on the smoking ruins of their old dwellings, Uncom-
plaining but with concentrated hatred and the will to conquer.
2-43
2-44
When the distribution o cattle began in the struggle against the
dictatorship's food blockade, they cared for their animals with lov-
ing solicitude and they worked in groups, establishing what were
in effect cooperatives in their efforts to move the cattle to a safe
place, giving over all their pasture land and their mules to the
common effort.
It is a new miracle of the Revolution that the staunchest indi-
vidualist, who zealously protected the boundaries of his property,
joined-because of the war-the great common effort of the strug-
gle. But there is an even greater miracle: the rediscovery by the
Cuban fleasant of his own happiness, within the liberated zones.
Whoever has witnessed the timorous murmurs with which our
forces were received in each peasant household, notes with pride
the carefree clamor, the happy, hearty laughter of the new Sierra
inhabitant. That is the reflection of his self-assurance which the
awareness of his own strength gave to the inhabitant of our liberated
area. That is our future task: that the concept of their own strength
should return to the Cuban people, and that they achieve absolute
assurance that their individual rights, guaranteed by the Constitu-
tion, are their dearest treasure. More than the pealing of the bells,
it will be the return of the old, happy laughter, of carefree security,
lost by the Cuban people, which will signify liberation.
Section V. WAS ASOCIAL REVOLUTION NECESSARY IN CUBA?

T
o explain and justify Fidel Castro's journey toward com-
munism it has often been said that Cuba was an under-
developed country and that in all underdeveloped countries
the economic and social structure must be changed to meet
the people's needs for food, housing, clothing, education, and
other things that are taken for granted in the United States,
Western Europe, and even in Soviet Russia.
Prerevolutionary Cuba is painted as a backward, semicolo-
nial country, in which impoverished and miserable Cuban
peasants were exploited by reactionary large landowners and
big United States corporations which opposed industrializa-
tion and agricultural diversification.
It is indeed true that Cuba needed social and economic
reform, a fact admitted officially by the United States gov-
ernment in a 36-page white paper on Cuba, issued on April
3, 1961, by the Department of State, but written in the White
House by Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., former Harvard his-
torian and one of President Kennedy's closest assistants. Yet
the picture of Cuba painted by Castro's propagandists was
false. Cuba was a long way from being a typically underde-
veloped country. Prior to Castro's take-over, Cuba was a
From pages 64-81, Castro's Cuba by Nicholas Rivero. Reprinted by permission Rohert B. Luce Campa\"
ny, Inc. at USACGSC and may not be further reproduced in whole Or in part without express permission of
the copyright owner.
2-45
country undergoing development. Its wealth was increasing
from year to year; new were being established; the
livestock industry had attained maturity and constituted an
impressive source of wealth; mining was developing at a
rapid pace. And at the time of Batista's coup of March 10,
1952, the greatest desire of the Cubans was to have an "hon-
est" government. Public pressure for integrity had prompted
the government of President Carlos Prio Socarras to entrust
to honest men the cleanup of two major departments-Edu-
cation and Treasury. And in the abortive elections of 1952
the presidential candidate of the Cuban Revolutionary party
the government party, was an honest man,
Carlos Hevia, an Annapolis graduate of the class of 1919; the
principal opposition party candidate, Professor Agramonte,
also was an honest man.
Dr. Manuel A. de Varona, fonner prime minister of Cuba,
and coordinator-general of the anti-Castro Cuban Democratic
Revolutionary Front, recently stated that it is totally untrue
that Cuba needs a socialist regime to solve the poverty among
underprivileged classes.
In a letter refuting a statement by Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt
in her column "My Day," that Cuba needed a socialist regime,
Dr. Varona said:
Only fifty years after the birth of Cuba as an independent re-
publiC, free enterprise placed Cuba among the countries with the
highest standard of liVing in the Americas.
In 1952, Cuba occupied third place in per capita income in
Latin America; was second in meat consumption per capita (only
surpassed by Argentina); second in miles of paved roads per
1,000 square miles of territory; second in ratio of doctors to popu-
lation, and third in standard of wages paid to 500,000 sugar work-
ers, surpassed only by Canada and the United States.
In exports, Cuba surpassed all combined Central American 1\e-
2-46

publics and the peso was one of the strongest world currencies on
par with the American dollar.
Our labor laws w ~ among the most advanced in the world,
granting workers certain rights and benefits which cannot be
found even in the United States.
The Cuban people neither want nor need a Socialist regime.
What they desire is a political stability and honesty in public
administration within a democratic free enterprise framework.
The proof of this is that the revolutionary program against Batista,
to which Fidel Castro later pledged himself, was based on these
popular aspirations together with restoration of our democratic
process interrupted by Batista in 1952.
It was also admitted by the International Bank for Recon-
struction and Development that Cuba was not a land of
oppressive poverty in which the common man had practically
nothing. In its "Report on Cuba," 1951, the technical mission
of the IBRD stated:
The general impression of members of the Mission, from obser-
vations and travels all over Cuba, is that living levels of the farm-
ers, agricultural laborers, industrial workers, storekeepers, and
others are higher all along the line than for corresponding groups
in other tropical countries. This does not mean that there is no
dire poverty in Cuba, but simply that in comparative terms
Cubans are better off, on the average, than people of these other
areas.
And the Department of Commerce in a 1956 report on
Cuba, stated: "Cuban national income has reached levels
which give the Cuban people one of the highest standards
of living in Latin America." 1
Cuba's organized labor movement was one of the most
advanced in Latin America, even during Batista's regime.
1 U.S. Department of Commerce, Investment in Cuba (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1956), p. 184. .
2-47
Salaries were high, and even unskilled labor was paid as
much as $6 or $7 a day. Concerning labor conditions in Cuba,
Ernst Schwarz, the executive secretary of the Committee on
Latin-American Affairs of the CIO, said:
The Cuban Confederation of Labor has successfully weathered
the latest political storm caused by the Batista coup in March,
1952. It has been able so to preserve its unity and strength as a
powerful Cuban institution that even the new dictatorial regime
has not dared to touch or eliminate it. The CTC 2 has enabled the
Cuban workers to set an example to others of what can be
achieved by labor unity and strength. Wages are far, above those
paid in many other parts of the Caribbean or, for that matter,
Latin America. In addition, the eight-hour working day forms the
basis for everyone of the collective contracts concluded by the
CTC's affiliated organizations. Modern types of social protection
and insurance are provided in laws, public statutes, or union con-
tracts; while funds maintained and administered in common by
labor, employers, and the authorities provide adequate means to
put them into practice. The sugar workers' union alone, to cite
one example, disposes of such a fund in the amount of half a bil-
lion dollars, and its insurance covers medical attention, sickness,
and accidents during and out of work. The CTC, moreover, has
taken up a place of full responsibility within the Cuban com-
munity as a whole, and at present develops its own economic
program to compensate for the seasonal nature of employment
and production in the sugar industry. Today, the Cpnfederation
counts more than a million members-with its 500,000 sugar work-
ers constituting the most powerful of the thirty-five national federa-
tions affiliated with it and representing every branch of industry
and agriculture on the island. The Confederation has drawn every
fifth Cuban into its ranks, and has thus obtained a .much higher
numerical degree of organization in proportion to population
than, for example, the much larger movement in the United
States.
2 Confederaci6n de Trabatadores de Cuba (Cuban Confederation of
Workers).
2-48
The labor movement in Cuba'is now under the complete
control of the Communists a.nd all the unions have become
instruments of the Ministry of Labor. Months ago free ele-
ments of Cuba's organized labor movement broke relations
with Castro, and many leaders are now in prison. Others
have taken refuge in embassies of countries which have not
as yet broken diplomatic relations with Castro, and a great
number have fled into exile in the United States. David Sal-
vador, one of Castro's closest collaborators in the 26th of.
July Movement against Batista, is at present in prison, and
it has been rumored that he will be executed.
Many of the labor leaders in exile are now united in the
Cuban Revolutionary Democratic Labor Front (Frente Ob-
rero Revolucionario Democratico Cubano ), known by its ini-
tials, FORD. This FORD group belongs to the Cuban Revo-
lutionary Democratic Front, headed by Dr. Manuel A. de
Varona. What makes FORD especially significant is that it
includes some of the most highly qualified trade unionists
with first-class revolutionary credentials. Most of them had
risked their lives in the revolt against Batista, and they are
now taking steps which might lead to action against Castro.
Among these exiled leaders are many who only last Decem-
ber led demonstrations of the powerful electrical workers in
front of the presidential palace, shouting "Cuba yes, Russia
"
no.
Free trade unionism in Cuba is dead. In its place the Cas-
tro regime has introduced factory committees, workers' coun-
cils-Cuba-style soviets-which establish the work norms, the
schedules, the incentives, and the wage scales. Hard-won
labor standards achieved by trade unions through collective
bargaining have been cut 50 per cent. Now discipline is the
key word. Workers are exploited and local leadership is
2-49

scared to death. To impel the workers to higher productivity,


Cuba's economic czar, Guevara, introduced a plan known in
Russia as the StakhanoVite system-a modern Marxist term
for the outmoded capitalist practice known as the speedup.
The communist-dominated movement is officially headed
by Jesus Soto, a 26th of July Movement member, who has
been a tool of the Communists from the very beginning of
Castro's take-over in 1959. The real power, however, is Laz-
aro Peiia, an old communist boss who/was the secretary-
general of the CTC and one of its founders. Peiia, who was
the most important boss of the CTC during the first Batista
regime, has been for a long time the vice-president of the
communist CTAL (Confederaci6n de Trabajadores de Amer-
ica Latina) which is controlled by the well-known procom-
munist leader, Vicente Lombardo Toledano.
During the 1940's Lombardo Toledano became the kingpin
in the communist trade-union aCtivities in Latin America, but
he refused to join the official Communist party of Mexico,
with whom he had fought many bitter battles in the past
years. Instead, he organized his own People's party (Partido
Popular) in 1947, which did not apparently lessen his posi-
tion vis-a.-vis the top leaders of the international communist
movement. Lombardo Toledano and former President of
Mexico Lazaro Cardenas, are the two main supporters of
Castro and communism in Cuba.
Under Batista the forgotten man of Cuba was not the
laborer but the peasant. ~ most backward people of Cuba
were the peasants of the Sierra Maestra region. In the rest
of the island, however, the peasants were much better off as
laws protected them from eviction by the big landowners
and the thousands who worked in the sugar industry be-
longed to one of the most powerful labor unions of Cuba,
2-50
the Federation of Sugar Worbrs. They were protected by
advanced social legislation and they were not communist
dominated. Even now the boss of the Cuban sugar workers,
Conrado Becquer; is llot a Communist, although he is one of
the few labor leaders who has backed down before commu-
nist infiltration and has become a tool of the Reds.
In order to understand the strength of the Sugar Workers'
Federation it should be kept in mind that those who work
for wages make up the bulk of the rural population of Cuba.
In other words, Cuba is one of the few countries where there
is in the countryside a highly developed working class com-
posed of the workers in the 161 sugar mills located in the
middle of the cane-growing areas all over the island.
Cuba before Castro was by no means a paradise. There
were ugly things too, in additio:q. to the terror of Batista. Al-
most a fourth of the Cuban population over the age of 10
was illiterate in 1953 and only 11 per cent of the population
had had more than 6 years of schooling.
s
The lack of educa-
tion of the masses, particularly in the rural regions, meant
that millions of Cubans could easily fall prey to unscrupu-
lous demagogues such as s ~ r o and his associates.
Although Cuba is considered one of the healthiest coun-
tries in Latin America, with no yellow fever or typhus and
with malaria. practically eliminated, malnutrition and para-
sitic infection continue to be major health problems in rural
areas.
The major drawback of Cuba, however, was not educa-
tion or health but an unhealthy economy which failed to give
employment to about 25 per cent of the Cuban labor force.
Cuba'sgreatest single problem was unemployment, and b o v ~
s Cuban census data reported in Investment in Cuba, pp. 178, 182.
2-51
,
all, seasonal unemployment caused by the annual layoff of
thousands of men after the close of the sugar-grinding season
-a situation which Fidel Castro intended to correct through
agricultural diversification and industrialization.
According to a 1953 census, only about 75 per cent of the
Cuban labor force was employed on an annual basis. This
meant that on an average day one out of four Cubans who
were able to work and wanted to work could not find a job. It
is safe to say that this one-out-of-four unemployment figure
was normal in prerevolutionary Cuba. As a comparison, it will
be recalled that in the worst year of the worst depression in
United States history there were about 25 per cent unem-
ployed, which is the normal unemployment percentage for
Cuba.
The main reason for this .large Cuban unemployment was
the country's economy, dependent on the fluctuation of a
single crop, sugar, which accounted for more than 75 per
cent of Cuba's exports and the employment of a half million
sugar workers for the short period of three or four months
out of the year.
To realize the importance of sugar in Cuba's economy it
should be remembered that two-thirds of the national income
stems directly or indirectly from sugar. Before nationalization
in the autumn of 1960, the sugar industry represented an
investment of $650 million, of which the United States
shared in some $300 million. Of Cuba's 161 sugar mills 30
were controlled by a dozen or so United States interests,
which accounted for 37 per cent of the island's production.
In 1939 American enterprises produced 55 per cent of the
crop, the Cuban 22 per cent. By the 1950's the proportion
was reversed-62 per cent. of the crop was produced by the
Cubans, 36 per cent by the Americans.
2-52
,Another negative aspect of C-rlba's prerevolutionary econ-
omy was its chronic condition of semistagnation. The rate of
economic growth-close to per cent-was one of the lowest
in the world. Unemployment, that old enemy of the working
class and friend of communism, was a permanent source of
frustration for hundreds of thousands of boys and girls who
each year reached the working age. As far as these young
people were concerned, Cuba's old economic order had little
to offer them but unemployment or a low-paid government
position. To them, both Fidelism and communism had great
appeal, but especially the former because of its nationalistic
and patriotic fervor. Thousands and thousands of these
young men and women are now in the People's Militia, Fidel
Castro's most important military force.
Cuba's one-crop sugar economy-responsible for the
chronic unemployment that Fidel tried to solve through agri-
cultural diversification, land reform, and industrialization-
was almost entirely dependent on the United States.
Since the establishment of the republic in 1902, Cuba sold
at least 70 per cent of its exports of sugar, tobacco, and other
products to the United States. During all those years Cuba
has, in return, purchased from the United States about 80
per cent of its machinery, chemicals, new materials, and thou-
sands of other items required by a nation which has never
been able to produce even its own food.
From the time Fidel Castro marched into Havana in Jan-
uary, 1959, following the fall of the Batista regime, the
bearded young revolutionary leader-Lider Maximo (max-
imum leader), as Fidel prefers to be called-he has re-
peatedly said that he would make Cuba "economically and
politically independent of the United States." Unhappily he
has accomplished it-not by creating an economically inde-
2-53
pendent nation but by making it a nation entirely depend-
ent on the Soviet Union a.nd the communist bloc.
In the autumn of 1959 it became clear to a growing num-
ber of Castro's assistants, including Dr. Felipe Pazos, interna-
tionally respected top Cuban economist, that Fidel Castro's
policy had no other aim than that of establishing conditions
favorable to a rapid communization of Cuba.
During the first six months of the Cuban revolutionary
regime Castro had not only the admiration of the world but
the absolute loyalty of Cubans of every class. Even land-
owners recognized the distortions in the country's economy
and the need for reforms. All Cubans, including those af-
fected by the sweeping reforms, approved Fidel Castro's
efforts to rid the country of chronic unemployment through
agricultural diversification and giving land to the landless.
Castro used to say that after giving the land to the landless
he would then make available low-cost loans, equipment,
technical assistance, marketing service, so that the peasants
would become prosperous small farmers. They would thus-
according to Fidefs plan-be able to buy all sorts of goods
that heretofore had been imported from the United States
but would now be manufactured by industries newly created
in Cuba. In the creation of these new industries both do-
mestic and foreign private capital was welcomed by the rev-
olutionary government. During his United States tour in the
spring of 1959 Castro denied any plans for the expropriation
of private property and called for foreign private capital in-
vestment in Cuba for the industrialization of the country.
It is interesting to recall that during the first part of his
regime many of the wealthy people in Cuba were ready to
make personal sacrifices to help accomplish the reforms;
many offered their advice, personal service, and even their
2-54
money; 'others were ready to make any investment in ac-
cordance with the government's new economic trends.
Castro was not at all interested. He not only avoided peo-
ple of wealth and prominence but refused to make use of
men with wide experience in business. He would have no
one in his official family except his barbudos or those who
had demonstrated an unfailing loyalty to the revolution and
to himself. From the very beginning his devotion was to the
masses, and he felt at ease only when he was among his gua-
jiros (farm hands).
Since the advent of the Castro regime on January 1, 1959,
Cuba has experienced far-reaching social and economic
changes. During the first year and a half those structural
changes were carried out under a semicapitalist economic
system and apparently were not aimed at an over-all change
in the social structure of the Cuban society. Apart from na-
tionalization, the most striking change in Cuba during this
period was the large shift in income to wage earners. This
was brought about by a rise of 20 per cent in wages. The
large increase in income of workers led to a corresponding
increase in their consumption, despite a reduction in total im-
ports. Although wages had risen, businessmen did not raise
prices for fear of being considered counterrevolutionary, and
in the hope of escaping nationalization they maintained pro-
duction.
The Cuban government officially labeled 1959 "The Year
of Liberation," but the o n o ~ i s t s should call it "The Year of
Consumption." In 1959 there was a shift of more than $250
million from private investment to private and government
consumption. Although there was a large volume of govern-
ment investment, it was scattered among many small projects,
most of them of a welfare character. Even investment was
2-55
.
mainly oriented to immediate increases in consumption
(beaches, parks, low-cost housing, schools, etc.). The year
1959 was a boom year for Cuba and what is more important,
it was for the first time a boom not based on a world market
demand for sugar. Itoccurred in spite of a sharp drop in
private construction, which traditionally has been one of
the main economic activities of the country. The picture in
1960 and the first half of 1961 is completely different. This
period could be called "the transition period," from the cap-
italist system to socialism or communism. This has been car-
ried out at a faster tempo than in the so-called people's re-
publics of Eastern Europe.
Given the fast tempo at which the Cuban economy is being
socialized and the large proportion of producing capacity
that has already passed from private to government manage-
ment, one essential question in the Cuban situation is the
effect on production of this rapid and widespread change in
ownership and management. Ordinarily the fast pace of
socialization would be expected to bring about a fall in pro-
duction in both the socialized and the still-private enter-
prises-in the former because of the inexperience of the new
managers and in the latter because of the inhibiting effects
of impending expropriation. Production has not fallen, as a
rule, in socialized farms and industries, in spite of the inex-
perience of the new managers. The printing press has put vast
sums at the disposal of the socialized enterprises, bookkeep-
ing has been set aside as a hindrance,
and inefficiency has only resulted in highly increased costs,
rather than in decreased production.
By the summer of 1961 the process of socialization had
been completed. Cuba is in word and deed a socialist re-
public, just as any of those that compose the Soviet Union.
2-56
Cub'a should already be considered a socialist society; the
upper classes have been destroyed and the middle class has
been uprooted.
Opposition to communism has appeared in all classes, in-
cluding the peasantry. The guajiro had been promised his
own plot of land; instead, with relatively few exceptions, he
finds himself working for a collective or a state farm, and
consequently he feels cheated. It should be stressed that
many of the anti-Castro freedom fighters in the Escambray
Mountains and Oriente Province were peasants.
The core of the opposition to the communist regime is
among the teachers, students, writers, doctors, lawyers, en-
gineers, priests, storekeepers, office workers, in general, the
white-collar class-the same class that fought Batista's dicta-
torship and contributed to Castro's victory.
It is certain that these people would not have given their
support to Fidel if they had had the slightest indication of
what was going to happen under him.
Fidel Castro could not have won without the support of
this class of Cubans; the guerrilla warfare waged by him in
the mountains would never have brought about the defeat
of the Batista regime. He succeeded only because thousands
of civilians behind the lines supported him. It was precisely
the kind of promises Castro made to the Cuban people that
enabled him to get their overwhelming support, and the
record shows that these promises were neither socialist nor
communist.
As early as September, 1953, during the Moncada trial,
Fidel Castro promised, as before stated, that the first revolu-
tionary law would proclaim the Constitution of 1940 as "the
supreme law of the land." In this and in subsequent state-
ments Castro promised "absolute guarantee of freedom of
2-57
information of newspaper and radio, and of all the individual
and political rights guaranteed by the Constitution." He
also promised, upon the overthrow of Batista, a provisional
government that within a year would call for a general and
unfettered election.
In the summer of 1957, following meetings held in the
Sierra Maestra with Dr. Felipe Pazos and Raul Chibas,4
Castro came out with his first political declaration from the
Sierra Maestra, which contained a previous promise of a gen-
eral election at the end of one year and an absolute guarantee
of freedom of infonnation, press, and of all individual and
political rights guaranteed by the 1940 Cuban Constitution.
At the end of the same year (December 14, 1957), in a
letter addressed to the Cuban Liberation Council in Miami,
Fidel Castro said that the "prime duty" of a post-Batista
provisional government should be the celebration of general
elections within a year and the right of all political parties
and groups, even during the tenure of the provisional gov-
ernment, to put forward programs, organize themselves, and
participate in a general election under the provisions of the
1940 Constitution and the Electoral Code of 1943.
5
It should
be noted too that in an article in Coronet magazine of Feb-
ruary, 1958, Castro wrote of fighting for a "genuine repre-
sentative government," "truly honest" general elections
within twelve months, "full and untrammeled" freedom of
public infonnation and all communication media, and the
establishment of all personal and political rights set forth in
4 Raul Chibas, who is now one of the leaders of the anti-Castro MRP
(People's Revolutionary Movement), is a brother of the late Senator Eduardo
Chihls, who had been a candidate for the presidency and was famous for
his fight against corruption and graft in high places.
5 The Electoral Code of 1943 was widely considered by Cubans to be a
most efficient instrument for keeping elections honest.
2-58
the Cuban Constitution of 1940. It is worth pointing out
. , .
that in that article Castro defended himself against charges
made by some anti-Batista Cubans that he was "plotting to
replace a military dictatorship with a revolutionary dicta-
torship."
In the same Coronet article Castro said that he favored a
land reform to benefit the landless peasant, and he clearly
stated that the peasant would be given title to the land. He
further stated that just compensation for such expropriation
would be made to the owners. Just as important, however, in
the same article Castro said that he had no plans for ex-
propriation or for nationalizing foreign investments in Cuba,
and that he had changed earlier ideas to extend government
ownership to public utilities. Itwill be recalled that in his
Moncada trial speech Castro suggested that public utilities
should be operated by the government.
On the nationalization issue Castro wrote in the same
article:
I personally have come to feel that nationalization is, at best,
a cumbersome instrument. It does not seem to make the state any
stronger, yet it enfeebles private enterprise. Even more impor-
tantly, any attempt at wholesale nationalization would obviously
hamper the principal point of our economic platform-industriali-
zation at the fastest possible rate. For this purpose, foreign invest-
ments will always be welcome and secure here.
Time and again Castro repeated that his goals were politi-
cal freedom, free elections, and social justice. In May, 1958,
he told Jules Dubois, top Latin-American correspondent for
the Chicago Tribune and author of the book Fidel Castro,
that never had the 26th of July Movement talked about so-
cializing or nationaliZing industries, adding that all the gossip
was "simply stupid fear of our revolution." In short, Castro
2-59
promised a free and democratic Cuba dedicated to social
justice and economic growth of the country's wealth in order
to ensure stable employment tb the majority of the people.
Such were the promises Castro made to the Cuban people.
It was to assure these goals that the rebel army maintained
itself in the hills, that the Cuban people turned against Ba-
tista, and that all elements of the revolution in the end sup-
ported the 26th of July Movement. Because of all this, Castro
had the wholehearted support of the people when Batista
fled.
Another contributing factor was the faith of the Cuban
people in his promise to give Cuba an honest government.
The Cuban people did not want Batista nor the kind of repre-
sentative government symbolized by the administrations of
Prio and Grau. They did want a government that would for-
ever end corruption in government and that would correct
some of the main failures of the Cuban economic system-
chronic unemployment, economic stagnation, and an econ-
omy dependent on the fluctuation of a single crop.
A revolution was indeed a necessary step in Cuba given
the fact that there was no other alternative to rid the country
of the Batista dictatorship. From the time of Batista's seizure
of power in 1952 various efforts were made to find a peaceful
solution to the situation created by the military coup, but
without success, for the results of these efforts always nar-
rowed down to the need for holding honest elections.
The elections held by Batista in the fall of 1958 were not
accepted by the Cuban people in general, and they were held
in a situation of tension and civil war throughout the island.
The revolutionary change was the only way to bring back
constitutional government to Cuba. Shortly after these rigged
elections, which resulted in Batista's candidate, Dr. Andres
2-60
l
k:
!. Rivero Agiiero, being elected, the Cuban Army made several
"
: attempts to unseat Batista.
Another evidence that Batista's rigged elections were no
solution was the effort made by former Ambassador William
D. Pawley to get Batista to resign. On December 9, 1958,
Pawley flew to Havana secretly to try to persuade his old
friend of thirty years' standing to step out and let a "care-
taker" junta take over, which would be both anti-Castro and
anti-Batista.
On December 17, the American ambassador in Havana,
fj
i Mr. Earl E. T. Smith, on instructions of the State Depart-
,
i ment, told Batista that "the United States, or rather certain
I'
influential people in the United States, believed that he could
believed it would avoid a great deal of further bloodshed if
he were to retire." 6
I This brings us back again to the question of the need for
a revolution in Cuba to put an end to the corrupt and brutal
dictatorship of General Fulgencio Batista. But what kind of
revolution? There are indeed different kinds of revolutions.
The bolshevik revolution in Russia in 1917 was not the same
as the French Revolution in 1789 or the American Revolu-
tion in 1776; and the revolutionary wars for independence in
. South America were not the same as the Revolutionary War
of the United States.
Cuba verily needed a revolution or a military coup to
overthrow the Batista regime. According to the most con-
servative anti-Batista Cuban leaders, the country needed only
the re-establishment of constitutional government and the
end of corruption and graft In the opinion of this group
6 Senate Internal Security Subcommittee, Communist Threat to the United
States through the Caribbean, Part 9 (Aug. 27, 30, 1960), p. 687.
2-61

economic and social reforms were not needed, for they be-
lieved that Cuba was already becoming less of an export
economy and that she ,":as already on the road toward indus-
trialization through foreign capital investment, which would
gradually solve the problem of chronic unemployment.
On the other hand, there were the radicals who thought
Cuba needed deep economic and social changes in order to
find a solution to the problem of unemployment and a colo-
nial economy based on a one-crop system. This radical group
was also in favor of a sweeping reform in the land-tenure
system of Cuba, a country where nine out of ten rural homes
(boMos) 7 of the guajiros have only kerosene lamps and less
than 3 per cent have water piped into their homes. But no
one, even the radicals, visualized a totalitarian soviet-type
solution for the land problem and for the improvement of the
lowest strata of the Cuban population.
There were of course a few Communists who were at-
tracted by the "wonderful achievements" of communist totali-
tarian economies. But the truth is that, prior to the triumph
of Fidel Castro, practically no one in Cuba ever thought or
spoke of the need for a communist, statist or, more discreetly,
"socialist" economy to promote the economic development
of Cuba.
7 The boMos cannot be compared with the peasant homes of Europe.
They are actually huts with dirt floors and roofs thatched with dried palms.
2-62
CHAPTER 1
16 J.I, IISJ.THE BEGINNING
'-o<lon [. BI"II of a H."". Enriqu. Men.... _
II. Moncada_Qui.,tlc Gtur W.l<lo Frank_
1II. Cnlro-In Pri..,n ar<l Mulco. Enrlqu" Men.... _
,.,
,.,
3_13
On 26 July 19$3. Fld.l Cn'"" fir"" 'b" tiro"",. 'b.>' trillerad 11I.IIl_fM"" rai.d
.. III" Moncada !tImta,.,. Barracu In Sanlla..o d" Cui>o.. If "deflnlt" lH>pnn&"ll of 'II"
Cllb.n [n.ur...ncy <10.. In facl .>CIal. the only lopeal coole. mu.t b. the raid on the
1I.0l>C:0<I.. Barrack. 11 w... on 'bl" day lIIat Cn're and Ill. follo.. "r. ".n< lH>l'Ond the
l.aw 10 cha"ll. tile altltlldea and actlonl of Ihe Cuban Gove",m..,t. B.li""llll Ib"y bad
.. othor m.an. of rodr.... 'lI.y r..oriod to wh.t tlley eapcu.od wa" til" 1"...1 ril'lIl
of ""urr...,llon "Coin,. Ballat"'a 'llee"" oppreaalon.
Th" raid [tutU' wa mI."rabl" fall.. r" [n 'b. cold 'erma of military ...eurnll1\!.
n" p.:rclloloC[cai "ffect or lIIe raid. I>o."""r, .u an ..np.....lIeled.nd objectlvoly
1.<:Iplieabluco.....
CUlre'. "ubaequ..n e[al. Irnprioo"",,,n and r.l.... frem prl...n or" di""....""
Ie lhh chapter. Addltionolly. ltia uaocialion with eh" Guevara and IlIrir Pl,na for a
Nn> to Cuba In 1956 an , ..mmarhed.
SeetloR I. BIRTH OF A HERO

A little before five in the morning on the 26th July 1953, the
streets of Santiago de Cuba were more crowded than they
normally are at that hour. The previous day had been a fiesta in
honour of the local saint and quite a few people were still cele-
brating. So nobody was surprised when a convoy of twenty-six
vehicles drove by towards the intersection of Avenida Trocha
and Avenida Garz6n. There they divided into three groups and
continued down the Avenida de las Enfermeras. In the last
group, a tall man fixed his myopic gaze on the vehicles ahead
and gripped a sub-machine gun. The man was Fidel Castro, and
with his 200 companions he was about to write his name into
modern history.
The expedition, advancing cautiously through the streets of
Santiago, proposed to attack the garrison at Bayamo and the
barracks in Santiago itself. Thirty men were already deployed
opposite the unsuspecting garrison at Bayamo and another 170
were moving on the Moncada barracks in Santiago, the second
most important army post in Cuba. Fidel Castro had foreseen
two possible results ofthe attack: either it would succeed, and a
notable victory would be scored against the Batista regime; or
it would fail, and the rebels could make capital out of the
attention the assault would arouse throughout Cuba. Either
way the boldness of the attack would payoff.
The whole action had been thought out over a period of
months. In the elegant Havana suburb of Vedado, at a house on
the corner of Calle 25 and Calle 0, Fidel Castro had planned the
operation down to the smallest detail together with his most
trusted friends. All of them were members of the Ortodoxo
From pages 21-28. Fidel Castro by Enrique Meneses. 1966 by Enrique Meneses. Published in the
U.S. 1968 by TaplingerPublishing Co., Inc. Reproduced at USACGSC by special permission and may not
be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
3-2
Party founded by Eduardo Chibas, and felt angry and frustrated
by Batista's seizure of power on the.10thMarch 1952, which had .
deposed President .Prio Socarras. This coup had shattered the
hopes of all those who had been impatiently waiting for the
elections on the 1st June.
In spite of belonging to the Partido Ortodoxo, Fidel Castro,
Abel Santamaria, Jesus Montane, Rene Guitart and many
others who were the 'young lions' of the party, did not have the
complete support of the senior members-perhaps because the
latter were of an older generation, were already known to the
new government, and so ran greater risks.
The rebels spared no effort in preparing the attack. They
raised funds by borrowing, begging from their families, and
even-according to their opponents-by forging signatures on
cheques. Arms and ammunition were sent to a farm in the
Siboney district, near Santiago, where they were hidden away
by the owner, Ernesto Tizol, with the help of Abel Santamaria's
sister, Haydee.
Why had Fidel Castro chosen Santiago de Cuba for this trial
of strength with the Batista Government? One of the main
reasons was that he had taken into account the traditional dis-
content of the population of Oriente, which had always been
convinced that Cuban Governments were more interested in
Havana than in the country's second city. The Province of
Oriente, according to its inhabitants, was simply a part of the
island which was expected to provide minerals and agricultural
products without aspiring to the standard of living enjoyed by
the citizens of the capital. It is much harder to find support for a
rebel movement among a satisfied and apathetic population
than from one which is obsessed by injustice and neglect. It is
also a point worth mentioning that many of the rebels were
themselves Orientales and knew the region well.
At three in the morning on the 26th July Fidel Castro had
given his final orders. The Bayamo men were already at their
posts, ready to attack. In Santiago, Pepe Suarez, Montane and
Guitart were to take the sentry at Moncada barracks by surprise.
For this they were relying on the public holiday, since their
3-3
rebel uniforms could be mistaken for those of soldiers with late
passes on their way back to barracks.
Raul Castro, Fidel's brother, although only twenty-one, had
orders to occupy the Palace of Justice, opposite the barracks,
and to station his men on the roof with a machine gun.
Abel Santamaria, with the group under his command, was to
occupy the Saturnino Lora Hospital, directly opposite the main
entrance to the barracks.
Another group was to occupy a radio station which, in the
event of victory, would broadcast a tape-recording Of the last
speech made by Eduardo Chibas before he committed suicide in
front of the television cameras in the studios of station CMQ.
Also due to be read was a proclamation by Fidel Castro, con-
sisting of nine points, in which the rebel chief set out his plans
for reshaping Cuban society, and stressing the fact that the
rebellion was motivated solely by the desire of all Cubans to
re-establish the 1940 Constitution, which had been violated by
Fulgencio Batista when he took power by force.
Abel Santamaria, Dr. Munoz, JulioTrigo, Haydee Santamaria
and Melba Hernandez, the last two dressed as nurses, penetrated
the hospital without difficulty. Their mission, and that of Dr.
Munoz, was to care for the wounded.
At 5.15 in the morning the first shots were fired. They came
from Fidel Castro, who was forced to give covering fire to dis-
tract attention from some of the rebels whose car had acciden-
tally overturned. Thjs incident destroyed the element of surprise
on which Fidel Castro had been careful to insist. Another
mistake arose from the attackers' lack of knowledge of the
internal lay-out of the barracks. In the courtyard of Moncada,
heading for the armoury, they found themselves instead in the
barber's shop.
Those in the middle of the courtyard came under heavy fire
with no idea which way to turn. Guitart was killed. Fidel Castro
gave orders to retreat. The rebels took to their heels, pulling off
their uniforms as they ran and revealing the civilian clothes they
wore underneath in case of just such an eventuality. Castro's
men fled in three directions: some to hide in the hospital occu-
3-4
pied by Santamaria, others to the homes of friends in the centre
of Santiago, and the third group went first to the Siboney farm,
and then to the Sierra Maestra.
Those who so.ught refuge in the hospital very quickly regretted
it. Disguising themselves as bandaged patients to escape the
search the Army was bound to make, they climbed into un-
occupied beds. The soldiers did not take long to arrive, and were
already leaving again, satisfied there was nobody there but
patients, when a hospitial orderly gave the rebels away. The
Army seized the twenty men and the two bogus nurses. On the
way out of the hospitial, a soldier killed Dr. Munoz by shooting
him in the back.
Those who had hidden in Santiago de Cuba were equQ,lly
'.
unfortunate. One ,by one they were discovered by the Batista
police, who searched every house in the city.
General Martin Diaz Tamayo hurried to Santiago. He
brought orders from Havana to act with maximum severity.
For every soldier killed in the attack, ten rebel prisoners were
to be shot. Fidel Castro, in the meantime, had withdrawn
with some of his companions to the slopes of the Sierra
Maestra.
The Archbishop of Santiago, Monsignor Enrique Perez
Serantes, had a meeting with Colonel Alberto del Rio Chaviano,
and begged him to respect the lives of rebels who gave themselves
up.
The Army was now searching in the Sierra Maestra for the
remaining survivors of the attack on the Moncada. Lieutenant
Pedro Sarria, who knew Fidel Castro personally, was chosen to
lead a patrol charged with finding the rebel leader. Exhausted,
hungry, and without ammunition, Fidel Castro and two of his
men stumbled into Sarria's patrol. Pretending not to recognize
him, the lieutenant whispered in Castro's ear as he searched
him, telling him not to identify himself as his life was in danger.
Instead of taking the prisoners to the Moncada barracks, or
executing them on the spot, as he had been ordered to do, Pedro
Sarria took them to the municipal prison in Santiago where,
although Fidel Castro's identity was known, he was in no
immediate danger. As a consequence of his action, Lieutenant
Pedro Sarria was later dismissed the service.
Colonel Chaviano then made-a public announcement in which
he referred to the men who had attacked the Moncada as
criminals (maleantes). He also stated that many of the men who
followed Castro had been misled, and when they realized their
mistake and tried to get away, Fidel Castro and his friends had
shot them in the back. Accused under Case 37, as the rebels'
trial came to be known, were 120 men and two women. Others
could not be tried because they had been killed in their cells or
so badly tortured that they could not be allowed to appear in
court. The accused were locked away in Boniato Prison until
the trial in Santiago on the 21st September 1953.
A thousand soldiers guarded the route which the prisoners
had to take to reach the court. It was feared that the more
important prisoners would be killed 'while attempting to escape',
but the whole country was anxiously awaiting the trial, es-
pecially in Santiago de Cuba, where the police had been guilty
of excesses in searching houses for fugitives.
At the trial, the public prosecutor attempted to prove that
the attack had been financed from Miami by ex-President Prio
Socarras, but Fidel Castro, conducting his own defence, des-
troyed his argument by pulling out of his pocket a complete
account of the expenses for the unsuccessful revolt. The 16,480
pesos which the attack had cost had all been contributedcby the
participants themselves.
After a two-day adjournment, the trial was resumed on the
26th September in the absence of Fidel Castro. When the police
alleged that the prisoner could not appear due to illness, Melba
Hernandez, who was also a barrister and conducting her own
defence, unpinned her bun and took a small roll of paper from
it which she handed to the President of the Court. The President
read aloud a message in Fidel Castro's handwriting in which he
declared he was in perfect health and that the Government was
planning to eliminate him. He asked the court to nominate
someone to investigate his 'illness', and also to supervise the
movement of prisoners between the jail and the court so that
th.ey 'would not be 'shot while trying to escape'. The judge
accepted the petition, and asked for a medical report on the
rebel leader.
On the 28th September the prosecution charged the rebels with
using knives to kill soldiers, but experts appointed by the court
testified that the wounds of the dead soldiers were not consistent
with stabbing.
When .her turn came, Haydee Santamaria denounced the
murder of Dr. Muiioz, and that of twenty-five other prisoners,
among them her brother Abel. She told the court that the police
had brought one of her brother's eyes to her cell, asking her to
avoid further suffering for Abel by admitting to Prio Socarras's
complicity in the rebel movement. When Haydee refused to do
this, they brought her the other eye.
Fidel Castro based his own defence on the fact that the
rebels could not be accused of attempting to overthrow the
constitutional Government, since Batista himself had done
precisely that on the 10th March when he had overthrown the
previous Government. As for challenging Batista's unconstitu-
tionality by legal means, Fidel Castro stated plainly and forcibly
that he had already tried to do so twice: before the Court of
Constitutional Guarantees and at the Emergency Court in
Havana with no success.
Despite the impact of Fidel Castro's defence on those who
heard him, the trial caused no instant repercussions in the rest
of the country, for the simple reason that Batista had imposed
complete censorship and suspended all constitutional guarantees
the day after the attack on the Moncada.
During the last five hours of Fidel Castro's speech in his own
defence, he spoke of the tortures inflicted by Batista's police and
Army, of his own plans for the future of Cuba, of imperialism
and of unemployment among the workers. He spoke for the
illiterate guajiro, the Cuban peasant; for the idealistic student;
for the 'just judges' ; for all the angry and dissatisfied people of
the island. He asked for no favours when the time came for him
to be sentenced, and ended by shouting: 'Condemn me! I don't
care! History will absolve me!'
3-7
He was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment on the Isle of
Pines, of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island, off the
south-west coast of Cuba.
Two hundred men had taken part in the attacks at Bayamo
and on the Moncada. Seventy had died in combat or while in
police or Army custody. Fidel Castro had failed in his attempt
at rebellion, but he had sowed the seed for later harvesting.
Through these martyrs, their martyrdom still fresh upon them,
he had awakened the dormant hatred for the regime, jolted the
opposing political groups out of inertia and created a climate
favourable to civil war.
3-8

Section II. MONCADA-QUIXOTIC GESTURE
r
W AS not the assalllt on the Moncada Barracks a failure? The
odds were great enough: 800trained men and the fortress walls
against 168 youths. But the odds became hopeless when half
the cars with half the arms never reached the barracks. Over
four-fifths of the total were captured, tortured, go were killed.
Might one not say, a complete fiasco? Yet Castro named his
revolution for that lost day: Movimiento 26 de Julio, Cuba's
Fourth of July. This is not easy for pragmatic minds to under-
stand. This must be understood, ifCastro and his partners are
to be understood.
Other safer plans had been considered. They might have
taken the government radio station by surprise and called on
the people everywhere to rise againstthe oppressor. They might
have picked off Batista's leaders, one by one, in their homes.
They preferred a wild blow, which could be snuffed out-as it
was-with the heavily censored press stifling the news. The
news was stifled. Yet Castro counted on its getting around: news
of the assault and the failure. But could not the lesson of the
failure, when it was all known, have been the contrary of Cas-
tro's wishes; could not the lesson have been the necessity of
submission, the hopelessness of rebellion?
The Cubans are bearers of the Hispanic culture, whose hero
is Don Quixote, the knight who assails windmills and frees a
gang of brutish convicts in the desperate effort to bring justice
to the modem world. The Cubans move within what Unamuno
called "the tragic sense of life." Of course, Castro did not con-
SCiously think out the pOSitive, symbolic meaning of his act: the
appeal of its impossibility to a people whose centuries had been
CUBA: PROPHETIC ISLAND by Waldo Frank. Marzani and Monaell. 260 W. 21st St. NYC 100Il. Pagea
115-118 reproduced at USACGSC by specialpermisaion and may not be further reproduced in whole or in
part without express permission of the copyright owner.
3-9
violence, oppression and neglect. He acted it out, with his fel.
lows, freely offering their lives to make the impossible come
true. Marti had already said it: "To act is agony." Castro could
not know that when he was captured, Batista would not quite
dare, quite want, to destroy him. He did know that if he was
destroyed, his equals would spring up like grain from the buried
seed. Castro could not know that Monsignor Enrique Perez
Serantes, archbishop of Santiago, would intercede with Batista
against more bloodshed, thereby saving Castro's life. He did
know that his people understood the language of his deed: the
message of Don Quixote, in whose absurdity love stands cruci
fied and yet living; the message of the mystery that human life,
under all its joys, is tragic. Much intuitive knowledge, running
counter to much common sense, contributed to Castro's naming
his successful revolution after that day of death.
For seventy-six days Castro remained in solitary confinement.
But news of the assault, despite the silent press, began to seep
through Cuba. The people were becoming vaguely aware of
the young lawyer, Fidel Castro. And the dictator, uncomfort-
ably, was aware of the people.
On October 16, Castro had his day in court. The trial was held
in the hall of the school for nurses in the City Hospital of San-
tiago. Three judges sat. To preserve the fiction of decorum, a
select small public was admitted, and six reporters. Castro con-
ducted the defense. It took the form of a speech, later entitled
History Will Absolve Me, which one of the reporters secretly
recorded in shorthand and which, as a clandestine pamphlet of
sixty pages, was soon in the hands of thousands. .
Castro's argument was succinct. Flouting the law of the land,
the 1940 Constitution, Batista had seized power and made him-
self President. Castro as a citizen of the republic, had gone be-
fore the courts and accused Batista and argued for his arraign-
ment. The courts had refused to act. Therefore, finally, having
no other means of redress, he and his friends had exercisedihe
right of insurrection against illegal tyranny and oppression,
which right lay "upon the essential base of political liberty." To
prove his point, Castro the young Cuban lawyer, quoted Milton,
Locke, Rousseau, Paine and finally Thomas Jefferson. "Our
logic" said Castro, "is the simple logic of the people." And Cas-
tro went on, addressing the three judges, to outline-as if it
were relevant to the case before them-plans for reform, pri-
marily agrarian, which prove that already in 1953 he was work.
ing on methods for bestowing the rich land of Cuba to the
Cubans.
This may have sounded, at that hour, like demagoguery to the
liberals. Events were to show in it a basic principle of Castro's
conduct: that no value shall be proclaimed abstractly without
its immediate practical implementation.
The man already visible in the speech is indeed a man of heat
(as the General Assembly of the United Nations was to find
him), but of light also.
He began his fifteen-year term in the penitentiary on the Isle
of Pines. The prison chief, Jesus Yanez Pelletier, received secret
instructions that Castro be slowly poisoned, so that his eventual
death could be ascribed to illness. Yanez did not obey, and was
thrown out of the army. Meanwhile, the Moncada assault was
becoming a myth among the people . . . a quiet, unassuming
myth. The courage and thelove within the courage, the failure
and the fulfillment within failure, operated in the people as by
a digestive process. As Batista's insecurity tightened and en-
fevered his hold on the island, the Moncada myth grew stronger.
What the young heroes, ninety of them dead, had done was
romantic and it appealed; their act was ethically prophetic, and
this appealed more deeply.
Batista in 1953 still had hopes of winning the favor of the
3-11
people; therefore, he had listenedto the archbishop pleading
no morebloodshed; and therefore now, inMarch 1954, he pro-
claimed an amnesty which opened the prison doors for Castro
andhis surviving friends. Declaring that he and his colleagues
abjured none of their convictions, Castro returned to Havana,
andsoonlearnedhecoulddonothingtherewithinthecrueliron
ring of Batista's soldiers. He went to New York, and found it
too remote; finally to Mexico, where he began to study plans
forthedeliveryofCubatotheCubans.
*
* * * * * *
3_12
Section III. CASTRO-IN PRISON AND MEXICO
In October 1953 Fidel Castro was sent to the Isle of Pines,
where he joined tM rest of his companions who had been tried
before him. Among them was his brother Raul, who had been
sentenced to thirteen years..
As soon as he arrived at the prison, Fidel proceeded to
organize a school in which he was to be the sole instructor. This
'educational establishment' he christened the Abel Santamaria
Academy. It passed the time and gave him an excellent oppor-
tunity to use his improvised lecture room for studying ways to
carryon the struggle in the future. Fidel's lessons or talks
ranged from philosophy to history, taking in contemporary
politics on the way. Not all Castro's fellow prisoners were
University men, and among the poor and uneducated he found
it easy to form a nucleus of disciples. He fomented such revolu-
tionary feelings in the prison that the authorities finally separ-
ated him from his companions and put him in solitary confine-
ment.
While the prisoners were serving their sentences, Batista, re-
assured by his victory, lifted the censorship and restored consti-
tutional guarantees. At last, very belatedly, Cuban newspapers
and magazines were able to spread themselves on complete and
detailed accounts of the attack on the Moncada and the subse-
quent trial. The whole of Cuba learned from the Press how, why
and by whom the attack on the Santiago garrison had been
mounted, as well as the accusations made by Fidel Castro during
the trial against the police and the armed forces. True, the
papers did not give much space to the torture and killing of
prisoners, but it must be remembered that many organs of the
From pages 39-43. Fidel Castro. by Enrique Meneses. Published in the U.S. 1968 by Taplinger Publish-
ing Co., Inc. Reproduced at USACGSC by special permission and may not be further reproduced in whole or
in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
3-13
Cuban Press received monthly envelopes containing money
direct from the Presidential Palace.
At this point Batista announced that new elections would be
'held on the 1st November 1954 and offered himself as a
candidate with his own electoral platform. This angered many
Cubans who had just learned for the 'first time what had hap-
pened on the 26th July 1953.
The opposition candidate was Grau San Martin, who re-
ceived a subsidy from Batista to finance his election campaign.
He gave up the idea of standing when he became convinced that
Batista had no intention of holding elections as clean as those of
1944. With no opposition, Batista won easily, and on the 24th
February 1955 he began a new four-year term of office as
President.
With Batista's position once again triumphantly assured,
there were numerous demands that the President should grant
an amnesty to political prisoners. The House of Representatives
was in favour of the amnesty, but Batista turned a deaf ear.
However, once the House had voted for it, Batista changed his
mind and granted the amnesty on the 13th May 1955.
Two days later, on the 15th, the families of the prisoners
began to gather at the gates of the prison. But Fidel Castro's
wife and his son Fidelito were not among them. Relations be-
tween Fidel and Mirtha had deteriorated, partly because Fidel
could not keep a family in the state to which Mirtha had been
accustomed, and partly because she was the sister of Rafael
Diaz Balart who was a close friend and colleague of Batista. Of
all the Castro family, only Fidel's sister Lidia was there to meet
him on the Isle of Pines.
In Nueva Gerona, the capital of the island, the men of Mon-
cada were warmly welcomed by the population and it was the
same the following day when the newly-released men arrived at
the railway station in Havana. There they were met by all the
major figures of the Ortodoxo Party,. including the party leader,
Raul Chibas, brother of the late Eduardo.
Everyone wanted to see and hear Fidel Castro. Both the radio
and television services were after him with flattering offers, but
3-14
the Minister of Ram6n Vasconcelos, saw
to it that he did not appear on the screen. This manreuvre re-
inforced Castro's conviction that it was impossible to have a
fair fight with Batista, and that he must take the road to exile.
His decision had in fllct already been taken on the Isle ofPines,
and a few days after returning to Havana he left for Mexico,
where his brother Raul and other veterans of the Moncada were
waiting for him. They were already engaged in preparing to
invade Cuba from Mexican territory.
In Mexico City, Raul Castro introduced his brother to an
Argentine doctor he had just met, Ernesto Guevara. Due to the
common use and abuse of the word 'cM'-roughly speaking
'mate'-in the River Plate Republics, the Cubans soon nick-
named the Argentine 'CM' Guevara.
Guevara, although he had been born in the Argentine pro-
vincial city of C6rdoba, had spent most of his life in Buenos
Aires, where his father practised law. He studied medicine in the
Argentine capital, but before finishing his studies he hitch-hiked
his way to the north, arriving in Guatemala in 1954. The left-
wing Government of Jacobo Arbenz offered him the chance of
working as a medical officer in the armed forces, but Guevara
had to flee the country a few days later when Arbenz was over-
thrown by Colonel Castillo Armas. He crossed the border into
Mexico, where he got to know Raul Castro and the group of
Cuban exiles. In contrast to Fidel, CM Guevara was a man of
action rather than words. He was silent and thoughtful, but had
what can only be called a fiendish gift for organisation and
planning.
Another friend Fidel Castro made in Mexico was ex-Colonel
Alberto Bayo, an exile from Spain who had been born in
Camagiiey, Cuba, in 1892. He had studied at the Infantry
Academy in Spain, and had fought for eleven years in MoroccO,
so that in Mexico he was regarded as an expert in guerrilla war-
fare. Forgetting the fact that he had been the unsuccessful
leader of an abortive landing on the Balearic Islands during the
Spanish Civil War, the Cubans considered him the ideal person
to train an expeditionary force for the reconquest of Cuba. So
Bayo, after winding up his business in Mexico City, rented a
farm in Chalco, 40 kilometres from the volcano ofPopacatepetl.
The wild and mountainous country made an ideal training
ground.
While Bayo started instructing the Cubans, Fidel Castro
scoured Miami, New York and Chicago raising money from
other exiled compatriots.
In Chalco the daily route-marches grew longer. Bayo was
eventually making his men march for fifteen hours without a
halt. Fidel Castro took part in some of these exercises, although
his search for funds, the need to keep up to date with Cuban
domestic politics, and the purchase of arms took up almost all
of his time.
Batista meanwhile was keeping his eye on the rebels. His
agents, in one way, and his diplomats, in another, continually
harassed them and made life on Mexican soil difficult for
them.
In Cuba, the Ortodoxo Party had split into two after the
attack on the Moncada: those who believed in an electoral
struggle at the polls and those who, like Fidel Castro, saw an
armed insurrection as the only possible solution. Since the two
groups could not come to any agreement, Fidel Castro broke
completely with the Ortodoxo Party and founded his own rebel
movement called the Twenty-Sixth of July, after the date of the
attack on the Moncada barracks. In making this decision public,
Castro emphasized that he had no intention of becoming asso-
ciated with any political party, asserting that the Cuban people
were fed up with the chatter of politicians and would prefer
action by the rebels.
In Cuba, unrest grew. The anxiety of the authorities to inter-
cept Castro agents and contain the activities of the Twenty-
Sixth of July in Mexico kept the police in a state of constant
alert. A military plot was discovered in Havana and nipped in
the bud. AnorganizationcalledMonteCristi, oneof theinnumer-
able small insurrectionary organizations which were springing
up all over Cuba at the time, attacked the fort of Goicuria,
using Fidelista tactics. A state of uncertainty was spreading
3-16
, .
through the island, which entirely suited Castro's plans to make
a landing in Cuba before the end of the year.
In Mexico itself the Mexican police stopped Castro's car by a
chance mistake-And uncovered a veritable arsenal. As a result,
the Chalco base was discovered and the Mexicans took the view
that Fidel Castro and his men were abusing the country's
hospitality. As soon as the men had been able to replace the
stock of weapons that had been confiscated, a second blow hit
the Twenty-Sixth of July. The Cuban police tipped off the
Mexican police who once again seized the Castro arsenal. The

men were now thoroughly trained but without equipment.
When Castro tried to acquire a landing-craft in the United
States, the vendors checked with the Cuban Embassy in Wash-
ington with the result that in a matter of days Batista knew of
Castro's intention to invade Cuba.
In face of this danger Batista got tougher. Luis Orlando
Rodriguez, editor and proprietor of the newspaper La Calle, for
which Castro had written articles, had his business confiscated,
lock, stock and presses, and had to take refuge in Mexico, where
he joined up with the rebels.
Finally, and with great difficulty, Fidel managed to get hold
of a boat, and arms for his men. The boat was a yacht called
Gramma, designed to carry ten passengers. Castro intended to
load it with 82 men plus their arms and ammunition. The pur-
chase of the yacht, although many people deny it, was made
with money provided by Prio Socarras' Autentico Party, accord-
ing to statements made later by party members.
3-17

1957_TIl! lllSUllG(IITS GA'" ST1lEllCTll


I. Yur of Arm-.l M"'U:I., Ch. ely....,. and
Fl.d.ICutro. _
II. no BanIa of El 1,;"''''' CJr,.O_n. - _
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V. 110. \,_ra:_. Hoben Tabor. __ _ -
.-.
._J4

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.. 10 been on u.. fo"'..too! __ _ of tIM u......._. I' all ._Iab!.
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....T. arw:l by lb. _ 01 IU1, tIM .annUl wo. In lila hand. of
.n.

Section I. 1951-0NE YEAR OF ARMED STRUGGLE


By the beginning of .1958 we had been fighting for more than a
year. A brief recapitulation is necessary-of our military, organiza-
t o n ~ and political situation, and our progress.
Concerning the military aspect, let us recall that our troops had
disembarked on December 2, 1956 at Las Coloradas Beach. Three
days later we were taken by surprise and routed at Alegrfa de PlO.
We regrouped ourselves at the end of the month and began small-
scale actions, appropriate to our current strength, at La Plata, a small
barracks on the banks of the La Plata river, on the southern coast of
Oriente.
During this period between the disembarkation and prompt
defeat at Alegda de Pio and the battle of El Uvero, [l] our troop was
composed primarily of a single guerrilla group, led by Fidel Castro,
and it was characterized by constant mobility. (We could call this
the nomadic phase.)
Between December 2 and May 28, the date of the battle ofEI
Uvero, we slowly established links with the city. These relations,
during this period, were characterized by lack of understanding
on the part of the urban movement's leadership of our importance
as the vanguard of the Revolution and of Fidel's stature as its
leader.
Then. two distinct opinions began to crystallize regarding the
[lSee chap 4, sec II.J
Reproduced from pages 196-227 of Reminiscences ofthe Cuban Revolutionary War by Che Guevara.
Copyright c 1968 by Monthly Reveiw Press; reprinted by permission of Monthly Review Press and may not
be further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
4-2
tactks to be followed. They corresponded to two distinct concepts
of strategy, which were thereafter known as the Sierra and' the
Llano. Our discussions and our internal conflicts were quite sharp.
Nevertheless, the fundamental concerns of this phase were survival
and the establishment of a guerrilla base.
The peasantry's reactions have already been analyzed many times.
Immediately after the Alegria de PlO disaster there was a warm
sentiment of comradeship and spontaneous support for our de-
feated troop. After our regrouping and the first clashes, simul-
taneously with repressive actions by the Batista army, there was
terror among the peasants and coldness toward our forces. The
fundamental problem was: if they saw us they had to denounce
us. If the Army learned of our presence through other sources, they
were lost. Denouncing us did violence to their own conscience and,
in any case, put them in danger, since revolutionary justice was
speedy.
In spite of a terrorized or at least a neutralized and insecure
peasantry which chose to avoid this serious dilemma by leaving the
Sierra, our army was entrenching itself more and more, taking
control of the terrain and achieving absolute control of a zone of
the Maestra extending beyond Mount Turquino in the east and
toward the Caracas Peak in the west. Little by little, as the peas-
ants came to recognize the invincibility of the guerrillas and the
long duration of the struggle, they began responding more logically,
joining our army as fighters. From that moment on, not only did
they join our ranks but they provided supportive action. After .that
the guerrilla army was strongly entrenched in the countryside,
especially since it is usual for peasants to have relatives throughout
the zone. This is what we call "dressing the guerrillas in palm
leaves."
The column was strengthened not only through aid given by
peasants and by individual volunteers but also by the forces sent
from the National Committee and by the Oriente Provincial Com-
4-3
mittee, which had considerable autonomy: In the period between
the disembarkation and. El Uvero, a column arrived consisting of
some fifty men divided into five fighting squads, each with a
weapon, although the weapons were not uniform and only thirty
were of good quality. The battle of La Plata and El Arroyo del
Infierno took place before this group joined us. We had been
taken by surprise in the Altos de Espinosa, losing one of our men
there; the same thing almost happened in the Gaviro region, after
a spy, whose mission it was to kill i e ~ led the Army to us three
times.
The bitter experiences of these surprises and our arduous life in
the mountains were tempering us as veterans. The new troop
received its baptism of fire at the battle of EI Uvero. This action
was of great importance because it marked the moment in which
we carried out a frontal attack in broad daylight against a well-
defended post. It was one of the bloodiest episodes of the war, in
terms of the duration of the battle and the number of participants.
As a consequence of this clash the enemy was dislodged from the
coastal zones of the Sierra Maestra.
After EI Uvero I was named Chief of Column Two, later called
Column Four, which was to operate east of Turquino. It is worth
noting that the column led by Fidel personally was to operate
primarily to the west of Mount Turquino, and ours on the other
side, as far as we could extend ourselves. There was a certain
tactical independence of command, but we were under Fidel's
orders and kept in touch with him every week or two by mes-
senger.
This division of forces coincided with the July 26th anniversary,
and while the troops of Column One, the Jose Marti Column, at-
tacked Estrada Palma, we marched rapidly toward Bueycito, a
settlement which we attacked and took in our column's first
battle. Between that time and January 1958, the consolidation of
rebel territory was achieved. The Army, in order to penetrate this
4-4

'territory, had to concentrate forces and advance in strong columns;
preparations were extensive and results limited, since they lacked
mobility. Various enemy columns were encircled and others deci-
mated, or at least stopped. Our knowledge of the zone and our
maneuverability increased, and we entered the sedentary, fixed-
encampment period. In the first attack on Pino del Agua we used
subtler methods, hoodwinking the enemy completely, since we were
by then familiar with their habits. It was as Fidel had anticipated:
a few days after he let himself be seen in the area, the punitive
expedition would arrive, my men would ambush it; meanwhile
Fidel would pop up elsewhere.
At the end of the year the enemy troops retreated from the Sierra
again, and we remained in control of the territory between Caracas
Peak and Pino del Agua, on the west and east; on the south was
the sea, and the Army occupied the small villages on the slopes of
the Maestra to the north.
Our zone of operations was to be broadly extended when Pino
del Agua was attacked for the second time by our entire troop under
the personal command of Fidel. Two new columns were formed,
the "Frank Pals," commanded by Raul, and Almeida's column.
Both had come out of Column One, commanded by Fidel, which
was a steady supplier of these offshoots, created for the purpose
of establishing our forces in distant territories.
This was a period of consolidation for our army, lasting until
the second battle of Pino del Agua on February 16, 1958. It yvas
characterized by deadlock: we were unable to attack the enemy's
fortified and relatively easily defended positions, while they did not
advance on us.
We had suffered the deaths of the "Granma" martyrs; we
mourned the loss of all of them but especially of Nico Marquez.
Other fighters who, because of their intrepidity and their moral
qualities, had acquired great prestige among the troops had also
lost their lives during this first year. Among them we can men-
4-5
tion Nano ~ Julio Dfaz, not brothers, botn of whom died in the
battle of El Uvero; Ciro Redondo, who fell at Mar Verde; Captain
Soto, who met his death in the battle of San Lorenzo. In the
cities, among the many mattyrs of our struggle, the greatest loss to
the Revolution until that time was Frank Pafs, who died in Santiago
de Cuba.
To the list of military feats in the Sierra Maestra must be added
the work carried out by the Llano forces in the cities. There were
groups fighting against the Batista regime in the principal towns
of the nation, but the two focal points of the struggle were Havana
and Santiago.
Full liaison between the Llano and the Sierra was always lack.
ing, due to two fundamental factors: the geographical isolation of
the Sierra, and tactical and strategic divergencies between the two
groups. This latter situation arose from differing social and political
conceptions. The Sierra was isolated because of natural conditions
and also because the Army's cordon was sometimes extremely dif
ficult to pass.
In this brief sketch of the country's struggle during the course
of a year we must mention the activities, generally fruitless and
culminating in unfortunate results, of other groups of fighters.
March 13, 1957, the Student Directorate attacked the [Presidential]
Palace in an attempt to bring Batista to justice. [2) In that action a
choice handful of fighters fell, headed by the president of the FEU
[Federaci6n Estudiantil Universitaria]-a great fighter, a real
symbol of our young people, "Manzanita" Echeverria.
A few months later, in May, a landing was attempted. It had
probably already been betrayed before setting out from Miami, since
it was financed by the traitor Prio. It resulted in a virtual massacre
of all its participants. This was the "El Corintia" expedition, led by
Calixto Sanchez, who was killed together with his comrades by
Cowley, the assassin from northern Oriente, who was later brought
to justice by members of our Movement.
[2See chap 4, sec Ill,)
4-6

Fighting groups were established in El Escambray, some of them
led by the 26th of July Movement and others by the Student
Directorate. The latter groups were originally led by a member of
the Directorate who betrayed first them and then the Revolution
itself-Gutierrez Menoyo, today in exile. The fighters Joyal to the
Directorate formed a separate column that was later commanded
by Major Chom6n; those who remained set up the Second National
Front of Escambray.
Small nuclei were formed in the Cristal and Baracoa mountains
which were sometimes half guerrilla, half belly-soldiers; Raul
cleaned them up when he invaded with Column Six. Another in-
cident in the armed struggle of that period was the uprising at the
Cienfuegos Naval Base on September 5, 1957, led by Lieutenant
San Rom:in, who was assassinated when the coup failed. The Base
was not supposed to rise alone, nor was this a spontaneous action.
It was part of a large underground movement among the armed
forces, led by a group of so-called pure military men, untainted by
the crimes of the dictatorship, which was penetrated by-today it is
obvious-yanqui imperialism. For some obscure reason the rising
was postponed to a later date but the Cienfuegos Naval Base did
not receive the order in time and, unable to stop the rising, decided
to go through with it. At first they were in control but they com-
mitted the tragic mistake of not heading for the Escambray moun-
tains, only a few minutes distant from Cienuegos, at a time when
they controlled the entire city and had the means to form a solid
front in the mountains.
National and local kaders of the 26th of July Movement par-
ticipated. So did the people; at least they shared in the enthusiasm
that led to the revolt, and some of them took up arms. This may
have created moral obligations on the part of the uprising's leaders,
tying them even closer to the conquered city; but the course of
events followed a line characteristic of this type of coup, which his-
tory has seen and will see again.
4-7
Obviously an important role was played by the underestimation
of the guerrilla struggle by Academy-oriented military men, by
their lack of confidence in the guerrilla movement as an expression
of the people's struggle. Thus it was that the conspirators, probably
assuming that without the aid of their comrades-in-arms ~ y were
lost, decided to carryon a fight to the death within the narrow
boundaries of a city, their backs to the sea, until they were virtually
annihilated by the superior forces of the enemy, which had mobilized
its troops at its convenience and converged on Cienfuegos. The
26th of July Movement, participating as an. unarmed ally, could
not have changed the picture, even if its leaders had seen the out-
cQme clearly, which they did not. The lesson for the future is: he who
has the strength dictates the strategy.
Large-scale killing of civilians, repeated failures, murders com-
mitted by the dictatorship in various aspects of the struggle we have
analyzed, point to guerrilla action on favorable terrain as the best
expression of the technique of popular struggle against a despotic
and still strong government, the least grievous for the sons of the
people. After the guerrilla force was set up, we could count our
losses on our fingers-comrades of outstanding courage and tenacity
in battle, to be sure. But in the cities it was not only the resolute
ones who died, but many among their followers who were not total
revolutionaries, many who were innocent of any involvement at all.
This was due to greater vulnerability in the face of repressive ac-
tion.
By the end of this first year of struggle, a generalized uprising
throughout the country was looming on the horizon. There were
acts of sabotage, ranging from those which were well-planned and
carried out on a high technical level to trivial terrorist acts arising
from individual initiative, leaving a tragic toll of innocent deaths
and sacrifices among the best fighters, without their signifying any
real advantage to the people's cause.
Our military situation was being consolidated and the territory
4-8
we' occupiedwas extensive. Wewe;e inastate ofarmed truce with
Batista; his men did not go up into the Sierra and ours hardly
ever went down. Their encirclement was as effective as they could
makeitbutourtroopsstillmanagedtoevadethem.
Organizationally, our guerrilla army had developed sufficiently
to have, by the year's end, elementary organization of provisions,
certain minimal industrial services, hospitals, and communications
services.
Theguerrillero's problems were very simple: to subsist as an in-
dividual he needed small amounts of food, certain indispensable
items of clothing and medicaments; to subsist as a guerrilla force,
thatis, as anarmedforce instruggle,heneeded arms and ammuni-
tion; for his political development he needed channels of propa-
ganda. In order to assure these minimal necessities, a communica-
tionsandinformationapparatuswasrequired.
In the beginning the small guerrilla units, some twenty men,
would eat a meager ration of Sierra vegetables, chicken soup on
holidays; sometimes the peasants provided a pig, for which they
were scrupulously paid. As the guerrilla force grew and groups of
pre-guerrilleros were trained, more provisions were needed. The
Sierra peasants did not have cattle and generally theirs was a
subsistencediet.Theydependedonthesale oftheircoffee to buyin-
dispensable processed items, such as salt. As an initial step we ar-
ranged with certain peasants that they should plant specified crops
-beans,corn, rice, etc.-which we guaranteed to purchase. At the
sametimewecametoterms withcertainmerchantsinnearby towns
for the supplying of foodstuffs and equipment. Mule teams were
organized, belonging to the guerrilla forces.
As for medicines, we obtained them in the cities, not always in
thequantityorqualityweneeded; butatleastwewereabletomain-
tainsomekindoffunctioningapparatusfor theiracquisition.
Theproblem ofsupplying ourselves with arms was another story.
It was difficult to bring arms from the llano; to the natural dif-
4-9 .
4-10

ficulties of geographical isolation were added the arms requirements


of the city forces themselves, and their reluctance to deliver them
to the guerrillas. Fidel involved in sharp ,discussions
in an effort to get equipment to us. The only substantial shipment
made to us during that first year of struggle, except for what the
combatants brought with them, was the remainder of the arms used
in the attack on the Palace. These were transported with the co-
operation of a large landowner and timber merchant of the zone,
Babun, whom I have already mentioned.
Our ammunition was limited in quantity and lacking in the
necessary variety, but it was impossible for us to manufacture it or
even to recharge cartridges in this first period, except for bullets for
the .38 revolver, which our gunsmith would recharge with a little
gunpowder, and some of the 30-06's which were used in the single-
shot guns, since they caused the semi-automatics to jam and inter-
fered with their proper functioning.
Certain sanitary regulations were established at this time, and the
first hospitals were organized, one of them set up in the zone under
my command, in a remote, inaccessible place, offering relative
security to the wounded, since it was invisible from the air. But,
since it was in the heart of a dense forest, its dampness made it
unhealthy for the wounded and the sick. This hospital was or-
ganized by Comrade Sergio del Valle. Drs. Martbez Paez, Vallejo,
and Piti Fajardo organized similar hospitals for Fidel's column,
which were improved during the second year of the struggle.
The troop's equipment needs, such as cartridge boxes and belts,
knapsacks, and shoes were met by a 'small leather-goods workshop
set up in our zone. When we turned out the first army cap I took it
to Fidel, bursting with pride. It caused quite an uproar; everyone
claimed that it was a guaguero's* cap, a unknown to me until
then. The only one who showed me any mercy was a municipal
Cuban (and Caribbean) slang for "bus driver."
councillor from Manzanillo, who \vas visiting the camp in order
to make arrangements for joining us and who took it with him as
a souvenir.
Our most impdrtant industrial installation was a forge and armory,
where defective arms were repaired and bombs, mines, and the
famous M-26 [Molotov cocktail] were made. At first the mines were
made of tin cans and we filled them with material from bombs
frequently dropped by enemy planes which had not exploded. These
mines were very faulty. Furthermore they had a firing pin, which
struck the detonator, that frequently missed. Later a comrade had
the idea of using the whole bomb for major attacks, removing the
detonator and replacing it with a loaded shotgun; we would pull
the trigger from a distance by means of a cord, and this would
cause an explosion. Afterward, we perfected the system, making
special fuses of metal alloy and electric detonators. These gave better
results. Even though we were the first to develop this, it was given
real impetus by Fidel; later, Raul in his new operations center
created stronger industries than those we had during the first year
of war.
To please the smokers among us we set up a cigar factory; the
cigars we made were terrible but, lacking better, we found them
heavenly.
Our army's butcher shop was supplied with cattle which we con-
fiscated from informers and talifundisla!. We shared equitably, one
part for the peasant population and one part for our troop.
As for the dissemination of our ideas, first we started a small
newspaper, Et Cubano Libre, in memory of those heroes of the
jungle.* Three or four issues came out under our supervision; it
was later edited by Luis Orlando Rodrfguez. After him, Carlos
Franqui gave it new impetus. We had a mimeograph machine
brought up to us from the llano, on which the paper was printed.
A newspaper by this name was published by the Mambis, independence
fighters against Spain in 1868-1878, and 1895.
4-11
By the en'd of the first year and the e ~ n n i n g of the second,
we had a small radio transmitter. The first regular broadcasts were
made in February 1958; our only listeners were Palencho, a peasant
who lived Qn the hill facing the station, and i d e ~ who was visiting
our camp in preparation for the attack on Pino del Agua. He
listened to it on our own receiver. Little by little the technical quality
of the broadcasts improved. It was then taken over by Column One
and by December 1958 had become one of the Cuban stations with
the highest urating" [in English in the original].
All these small advances, including ourequipment-such as a
winch and some generators, which we laboriously carried up to
the Sierra so as to have electric light-were due to our own con-,
nections. To cope with our difficulties we had to begin creating a
network of communications and information. In this respect Lydia
Doce played an important part in my column, Clodomira in Fidel's.
Help came in those days not only from the people in the neigh-
boring villages; even the city bourgeoisie contributed equipment.
Our lines of communication reached as far as the towns of Con-
tramaestre, Palma, Bueycito, Las Minas de Bueycito, Estrada Palma,
:lara, Bayamo, Manzanillo, Guisa. These places served as relay
stations. Goods were then carried on muleback along hidden trails
in the Sierra up to our positions. At times, those among our men
who were in training but were not yet armed went down to the
nearest towns, such as Yao or Las Minas, with some of our armed
men, or they would go to well-stocked stores in the district. They
carried supplies up to our retreat on their backs. The only item we
never--<>r almost never-lacked in the Sierra aestra was coffee.
At times we lacked salt, one of the most important foods for survival,
whose virtues we became aware of only when it was scarce.
When we began to broadcast from our own transmitter, the
existence of our troops and their fighting determination became
known throughout the Republic; our links began to become more
4-12
extensive and complicated, even reaching Havana and Camaguey
in the west, where we had important supply centers, and Santiago
in the east.
Our information service developed in such a way that the peasants
in the zone hnmediately notified us of the presence, not only of the
Army, but of any stranger; we were easily able to detain any such
person while investigating his activities. Thus were eliminated
many Army agents and spies who infiltrated the zone for the
purpose of prying into our lives and actions.
We began structuring a legal service, but no law of the Sierra
was yet promulgated. Such was our organizational situation at the
beginning of the last year of the war.
As for the political struggle, it was very complicated and con-
tradictory. The Batista dictatorship was supported by a Congress
elected by so many frauds that it could count on a comfortable
majority to do its bidding.
Certain dissident opinions were allowed expression-when there
was no censorship-but official spokesmen for and officials of the
regime, calling for national unity, spoke with powerful voices and
the networks transmitted their messages throughout the island.
The hysterical voice of Otto Meruelo alternated with the pompous
buffooneries of Pardo Llada and Conte Aguero. The latter, repeat-
ing in writing what he had broadcast, called on "brother Fidel" to
accept coexistence with the Batista regime.
The opposition groups were varied and dissimilar, even though
most had as a common denominator the wish to take power (read:
public funds) for themselves. This brought in its wake a sordid
internal struggle to win that victory. The groups were all infiltrated
by Batista agents who, at key moments, reported their main activ-
ities. Although these groups were often characterized by gang-
sterism and opportunism, they also had their martyrs.
In effect, Cuban society was in such total disarray that brave and
4-13

honest men were sacrificing their lives to maintain the comfortable
existence of such personages as Prfo Socarras.
The Student Directorate tgok the path of insurrectional struggle,
but their movement was independent of ours and they had their
own line. The PSP [Partido Socialista Popular] joined with us in
certain concrete activities, but mutual distrust hampered joint ac-
tion and, fundamentally, the party of the workers did not under-
stand with sufficient clarity the role of the guerrilla force, nor Fidel's
personal role in our revolutionary struggle.
In fraternal discussion I once made an observation to a PSP leader
which he later repeated to others as a true characteri"zation of that
period: "You are capable of creating cadres who can silently en-
dure the most terrible tortures in jail, but you cannot create cadres
who can take a machine gun nest" As I saw it from my vantage
point as a guerrillero, this was the consequence of a strategic con-
cept: the decision to struggle against imperialism and the excesses
of the exploiting classes, together with an inability to envision the
possibility of taking power. Later, some of their men, of guerrilla
spirit, were to join us, but by then the end of the armed struggle
was near; therefore its .influence on them was slight.
Within our own movement there were two quite clear-cut tend-
encies, which we have already referred to as the Sierra and the
Llano. Differences over strategic concepts separated us. The Sierra
was already confident of being able to carry out the guerrilla
struggle, to spread it to other places and thus, from the country-
side, to encircle the cities held by the dictatorship; by strangulation
and attrition to provoke the breakup of the regime. The Llano took
an ostensibly more revolutionary position, that of armed struggle in
all the towns, culminating in a general strike which would topple
Batista and allow the prompt taking of power.
This position was only apparently more revolutionary, because in
that period the political development of the Llano comrades was
4-14
incomplete and their conception of a general strike was too narrow.
A general strike was called on April 9 of the following year, secretly,
without warning, without prior political preparation or mass ac-
tion. It ended in tlefeat.
These two tendencies were represented in the National Com-
mittee of the Movement, which changed as the struggle developed.
In the preparatory stage, until Fidel left for Mexico, the National
Committee was constituted by: Fidel, Raul, Faustino Perez, Pedro
Miret, Nico L6pez, Armando Hart, Pepe Suarez, Pedro Aguilera,
Luis Bonito, Jesus Montane, Melba Hernandez, and Haydee San-
tamarfa-if my information is exact. My personal participation at
that time was very limited and documentation is scarce. Later, for
reasons of incompatibility, Pepe Suarez, Pedro Aguilera, and Luis
Bonito withdrew; while we were in Mexico the following people
joined the committee: Mario Hidalgo, Aldo Santamaria, Carlos
Franqui, Gustavo Arcos, and Frank Pals.
Of all these comrades the only ones to go to the Sierra during
the first year and remain there were Fidel and Raul. Faustino Perez,
member of the "Granma" expedition, was put in charge of work
in the city, Pedro Miret was jailed a few hours before we were to
leave Mexico. He remained there until the following year, when he
arrived in Cuba with an arms shipment. Nico L6pez died only a
few days after the landing; Armando Hart was jailed at the end of
that year (or early in the next); Jesus Montane was jailed after the
landing; so was Mario Hidalgo; Melba Hernandez and Haydee
Santamarfa worked in the cities; Aldo
,
and Santamarfa Carlos
Franqui joined the struggle in the Sierra the following year; Gustavo
Arcos remained in Mexico, in charge of political liaison and sup-
plies; and Frank Pals, assigned to political work in Santiago, died
in July 1957.
Later, the following were to join us in the Sierra: Celia Sanchez,
who was with us during all of 1958; Vilma Espin, who had first
4-15
worked in, Santiago and afterward, until the end of the war, with
Raul Castro's column; Marcelo Fern:S.ndez, coordinator of the Move-
ment, who replaced Faustino after the April 9 strike, stayed with
us only a few weeks, s i n ~ his work was in the towns; Rene Ramos
Latour, assigned to the organizing of the militia in the Llano came
up to the Sierra after the April 9 fiasco and died heroically as a
major, during the second year of the struggle; David Salvador, in
charge of the labor movement, on which he left the imprint of his
opportunist and divisive actions. He was later to betray the Revolu-
tion and is now in prison. Some of the Sierra fighters, such as
Almeida, were to join some time later.
As can be seen, during this stage the Llano comrades constituted
the majority, and their political background, which had not been
very much influenced by the process of revolutionary maturation, led
them to favor a certain type of "civil" action, and to a kind of
resistance to the caudillo they saw in Fidel and to the "militarist"
faction represented by us in the Sierra. The divergencies were al-
ready apparent, but they were not yet strong enough to provoke
the violent discussion which characterized the second year of the
war.
It is important to point out that the fighters against the dictator-
ship in both the Sierra and the Llano were able to sustain opinions
on t ~ t i s that were at times diametrically opposed without allow-
ing this to lead to an abandonment of the insurrectional struggle.
Their revolutionary spirit continued to increase until the moment
in which, victory having been won and followed by the first ex-
periences in the struggle against imperialism, we all united closely
in one organism, led indisputably by'Fidel. This group then joined
together with the Directorate and the PSP to form the PURSC
[Partido Unido de la Revoluci6n Socialista Cubana, which in
October I5 became the Communist Party of Cuba]. When we
encountered pressures from outside our movement, attempts to
divide or infiltrate it, we always presented a Common front; even
4-16

those comrades who at that moment saw the Cuban Revolution
with imperfect perspective were wary of opportunists

When Felipe Pazos, availing himself of the name of the 26th of


July Movement, took over for himself and for the most corrupt
oligarchical interests of Cuba the positions offered by the Miami
Pact, including the post of Provisional President, the entire Move-
ment turned out to be solidly united against such an attitude and
supported the letter that Fidel sent to the organizations involved in
the struggle against Batista. We reproduce this document here in
its entirety. It is a historic document. Itis dated December 14, 1957
and was copied out by Celia Sanchez, since during that period it
was impossible to print it.
CUBA
December 14, 1957
To THE LEADERS OF:
THE REVOLUTIONARY PARTY
THE PARTY OF THE CUBAN PEOPLE
THE ORGANIZATION OF Autenticos
THE FEDERATION OF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
THE REVOLUTIONARY DIRECTORAtE

THE REVOLUTIONARY WORKERS DIRECTORATE
It is my o r ~ patriotic, and even historic duty to address this
letter to you; the events and the circumstances which have pro-
foundly troubled us during this time, which have been, furthermore,
the most disturbing and the most difficult since our arrival in Cuba,
have made the drafting of this statement indispensable. Wednes-
day, November 20th, a day when our forces sustained three battles
during six consecutive hours, a day which suggests the sacrifices and
the efforts which, without the slightest aid from other organiza-
tions, our men have made, was the very day when we received in
our area of operations the surprising news and the document con-
4-17

taining the public and the secret terms of a so-called Unity Pact
which,itappears, has been signedin Miami by the July 26th Move-
ment and the organizations

to whom I am addressing myself. The


arrivalofthese papers-onehas to see in this the ironyoffate, since
what we needed was arms-eoincides with the strongest offensive
thedictatorshiphaslaunchedagainstus. .
In conditions of struggles such as ours, communications are dif-
ficult. In spite of everything, it was necessary to convene, right out
in the field, the leaders ofourorganization todiscuss this matter, in
which not only the prestige butthe historic justification of the July
26thMovementis atstake.
For those who struggle against an enemy incomparably superior
in number and in weapons, and who for a whole year have not
been supported by anything other than the dignity with which one
mustfight for atruly cherished cause and the conviction that it is a
cause worthdyingfor; for these menbitterly isolated by the neglect
of their comrades who, even when they had the means, have sys-
tematically, not to say criminally, refused all aid; for these,comrades
who have witnessed at close range daily sacrifice in its purest and
most disinterested form, and have so frequently suffered the pain
of seeing the best among them fall, at a moment when one asks
withanguishwho will be the next victim in thenext and inevitable
holocaust; in this dark hour, when one cannot even see the day of
triumph for which we struggle with such steadfastness, with no
other hope or solace than that of not sacrificing ourselves in vain-
how can one not understand that the news of a pact, deliberately
broadcast, which commits the Movement to afuture course without
that consultation by the signatories with the leaders and fighters
which propriety, notto saysimple courtesy, demands ... ~ this
news can only wound us to the quick andprovoke our indignation.
To act in an improper fashion always brings with it the worst
consequences. And those who consider themselves capable of over-
throwing a tyranny and of the even harder enterprise of achieving
4-18

the reorganization of a country after the revolutionary overturn-


they would do well not to forget it.
The July 26th Movement has never appointed a delegatibn nor
granted authority to anyone to participate in the negotiations in
question. The Movement, however, would not have ~ opposed
to such a step if it had been consulted on this, and it would have
been concerned to give concrete instructions to its representatives
on a matter so important to the present and future activities of our
organization. Instead, our information concerning relations with
these various groups was limited to a report by Sr. Lester Rodriguez
-whom we had commissioned exclusively to settle with them cer-
tain problems of a military nature-who told us the following: "I
can report to you on the subject of PrIO and of the Directorate
that I have had a series of conferences with them exclusively for
the purpose of coordinating military plans right up to the formation
of a provisional government guaranteed and respected by the three
groups. Of course, I pointed out that it was necessary first of all to
accept the principles of the Sierra Letter, which specifies that this
government should be formed in accord with the will of the politi-
cal forces of the country. First hitch.
"During the general strike, we had an emergency meeting. I
then proposed that considering the circumstances we utilize all the
forces at hand in an effort to resolve Cuba's problem once and for
all. PrlO answered that he did not have enough forces to go into
the enterprise with assurance of victory, and that it would be mad-
ness to go along with my proposal. To which I retorted that he
should please let me know when everything was in readiness to
weigh anchor; then we would be able to speak of the possibility of
pacts. That he should be so kind, in the meanwhile, to let me work
-me and consequently those whom: I represent as part of the 26th
of July Movement-with complete independence. My firm opinion
is that there is no way to come to an understanding with these gen-
tlemen and that it is better even to refrain from trying to do so in
4-19

the future b ~ c u s e at the moment when Cuba most needed it, they
denied having the material which they had never stopped accumu-
lating and with which they are glutted."
This report needs no commentary, and confirms our suspicion;
we could not expect any outside aid.
We recognize that the organizations that you represent have
considered it advisable to discuss the terms of unity with certain
members of our Movement: it was inconceivable that you should
publicize these as settled agreements without having advised the
national leaders of the Movement and without their consent, all
the less so since these agreements changed the very institutional
foundations to which we had subscribed in the Sierra Manifesto.
To behave so is to make a pact for publicity purposes, and to
usurp the name of our organization.
The situation is paradoxical to say the least: at the very moment
when the national leadership, with its underground headquarters
somewhere on the island, is preparing to oppose, from the outset,
the terms which are publicly and privately proposed as the basis for
an agreement, this leadership learns through underground circulars
and through the foreign press that it had been shouted from the
rooftops that these very terms constituted the basis for agreement.
It thus found itself presented with a public fait accompli, and com-
pelled either to deny it, with all the confusion and injury to morale
which that would involve, or to accept it without even having ex-
pressed its opinions. And, as might be expected, a copy of the docu-
ment only reached us in the Sierra several days after it had been
published.
Faced with this dilemma, the national leadership, before making
a public denial concerning the agreements in question, asserted to
you the need to return to the principles of the Sierra Manifesto;
meanwhile holding a meeting in rebel territory where the views of
each member of the leadership were expressed and analyzed, and
4-20
.
where as a result a unanimous resolution was adopted which forms
the basis for this letter.
It goes without saying that any unity agreement must be well
received by national and international public opinion. Because,
among other reasons, the real situation of the political and revolu-
tionary anti-Batista forces is not known; because in Cuba itself the
word unity possessed great prestige in the days when the relation-
ship of forces was really very different from what it is today; and
finally because it is always best to unite all efforts, from the most
enthusiastic to the most lukewarm.
However, what is important for the Revolution is not unity in
itself, but the groundwork of this unity, the form it assumes, and
the patriotic intentions which animate it.
To decide in favor of this unity on terms that we have not even
discussed, to have them ratified by people who are not qualified to
do so, and to proclaim unity without further ado, from the com-
fortable refuge of a foreign city, and thus to put the Movement
under the necessity of confronting a public opinion which has been
deluded by a fraudulent pact, that is a dirty trick of the worst sort
-one which, however, will not destroy a truly revolutionary or-
ganization; it is a fraud against the country, a fraud against the
world.
And here is what made the operation possible: while the leaders
of the various organizations which subscribed to this pact met
abroad and made an imaginary revolution, the leaders of the 26th
of July Movement were in Cuba, leading a very real revolution.
These lines are superfluous? So be it. I would not have written
them were it not for this bitterness and this mortification that we
feel because of the way you tried to associate the Movement with
this pact, even given the fact that differences over procedure should
never prevail over the essential. We would have accepted it in
spite of everything, for the positive value that unity always offers,
4-21
for the value of certain projects of the Liberation Junta, for the aid
offered us which we really need, if we did not find ourselves in
pure and simple disagreement with some of its essential principles.
Even ifour situation .were to become desperate, ifthe dictator-
ship were to mobilize as many thousands of soldiers as they wanted
in an effort to annihilate us, we would never accept the sacrifice of
certain fundamental principles and of our conception of the Cuban
Revolution.
And these principles are clearly stated in the Sierra Manifesto.
To suppress, in a unity declaration, the principle of hostility to-
ward foreign intervention in the internal affairs of Cuba is an act
of the most lukewarm patriotism and of manifest cowardice.
To declare that we are opposed to such intervention, is not only
to oppose it on behalf of the Revolution-for it would be an offense
against our sovereignty and, let it be said, against a principle dear to
all the peoples of Latin America-it is equally to oppose interven-
tion in support of the dictatorship, in the form of shipments of
planes, bombs, modern tanks and weapons, thanks to which it
maintains itself in power and by reason of which no one, with the
exception of the peasant population of the Sierra, has suffered more
than we. Finally, to enforce respect for the principle of non-inter-
vention would in itself overturn the dictatorship. Are we going
to be so cowardly concerning this point as not to dare demand the
withdrawal of pro-Batista foreign intervention? Or so insincere as
to make a behind-the-scenes request for our chestnuts to be pulled
out of the fire? Or so feeble as not to risk pronouncing a single word
on the question? How, under these conditions, can we have the
temerity to declare ourselves revolutionaries and endorse the claim
to historic significance of this unity declaration?
The unity declaration has likewise eliminated the formal com-
mitment to reject any form of military junta as the provisional gov-
ernment of the Republic.
4-'-22
.
The worst thing that could befall the nation this moment,
however much it may let itself be deluded by the false illusion that
Cuba's problem will be resolved by the elimination of the dictator,
would be the of Batista by a military junta. And cer-
tain civilians of the worst sort, who were actually accomplices on
March roth"" and who subsequently broke away, perhaps because of
their consuming ambition and their immoderate fondness for the
blackjack, envisage a solution of this nature, which only the enemies
of our country's progress could view with favor.
American experience has proved that all military juntas slip to-
ward autocracy; the worst of the evils which have martyrized this
continent is the entrenchment of military castes in countries which
have fewer wars than Switzerland and more generals than Prussia;
one of the most legitimate aspirations of our people at this crucial
hour when its democratic and republican destiny is being either
salvaged or destroyed for many years to come is to preserve, as the
most precious legacy of its liberators, the civilian tradition which
was born in the struggles for emancipation and which would be
trampled underfoot at the very instant when a uniformed junta put
itself at the head of the Republic (something that none of our gen-
erals in the independence struggle, not even the most vainglorious
among them, was tempted to do, neither in wartime nor peace-
time). If all this is so, then just how far shall we have gone along the
road of renunciation if, out of a fear of wounding sensibilities (more
imaginary than real among the honest military men who may sup-
port us), we devote ourselves to suppressing the statement of so
important a principle? Or is it, then, that one does not understand
that a timely statement would avert the danger of a military junta
which would certainly prolong the civil war? Well: we have no
hesitation in stating that if a military junta replaces Batista, the
July 26th Movement will resolutely continue its liberation cam-
March 10, 1952, date on which Batista carried out a coup d'etat.
4-23
paign. We prefer to struggle harder today rather than fall into
new bottomless abysses tomorrow. No plaything for the military:
neither a military junta nor-a puppet governmentI
Are we perhaps waiting for the generals of March 10, before
whom Batista would gladly give way once he felt himself strongly
menaced, seeing in this step the most viable means 'of effecting the
necessary transfer of powers with a minimum of damage to his own
interests and those of his coterie? To what delusions this lack of
foresight, lack of an ideal, lack of will to fight, lead the Cuban
politiciansI
If you do not have faith in the people, if you do not count on
their great reserves of energy and combativeness, you do not have
the right to lay hands upon their destiny in order to block and
frustrate it at the most heroic and hopeful moment for its Repub-
lican existence. Let the politicos, with their deals, their puerile m ~
bitions, their desperate greed, their advance division of the spoils, not
meddle with the revolutionary process, because in Cuba men are
dying for something more than that. Let the hack politicians be-
come revolutionaries, if they wishl But let them not transform the
Revolution into degenerate politics, because too much of our p o ~
pIe's blood is being spilled today and too many enormous sacrifices
have been made to deserve such a worthless deception tomorrow;
Aside from these two fundamental principles which were omitted
from the unity document, we are likewise in disagreement on other
points:
If we are to accept sub-section B of secret clause II, relating to the
powers of the Liberation Junta, which provides for naming "the
President of the Republic who will fill that office in the Provisional
Government," then we cannot accept sub-section C of the same
clause, which includes among those powers: "To approve or dis-
approve, in its totality, the Cabinet to be named by the President of
the Republic, as well as the changes that may arise in the case of a
total or partial crisis."
4-24
. How can it be imagined that ~ President's right to appoint
and remove his collaborators should remain subject to the approval
of a body not connected with the state power? Is it not clear that
inasmuch as the Jqnta is composed of representatives of different
parties and sectors and, consequently, of different interests, the ap-
pointment of Cabinet members would be nothing more than the
search for the least common denominator, as the only means of
reaching agreement on diverse questions? Is it possible to accept a
. clause which implies the establishment of two executives within
the state? The only guarantee that all the sectors of the country
must demand of the Provisional Government is that it base its mis-
sion on a minimum fixed program and that it play its role of mod-
erator with absolute impartiality during the transitional stage lead-
ing to complete constitutional normality.
To attempt to interfere in the appointment of each minister
is tantamount to wanting to control the public administration
so as to subjugate it to political interests. This procedure has
meaning only for the parties and organizations which, lacking mass
support, can expect to survive only within the canons of traditional
politics, but it is incompatible with the exalted political and revolu-
tionary goals pursued by the 26th of July Movement for the Repub-
lic.
The mere existence of secret agreements referring not to organi-
zational questions of the resistance nor to plans for action, but to
problems concerning which the nation should have its say-such as
the structure of the future government-and which for this reason
should be publicly proclaimed, is in itself unacceptable. Martf said:
"In the Revolution, methods are secret but the ends must always be
public."
Another point which is equally inadmissible for the July 26th
Movement is secret clause VIII, which says: "The revolutionary
forces, with their weapons, will become part of the regular armed
institutions of the Republic."
4-25

First of all, what is meant by revolutionary forces? Does this
mean that one accepts into the police force, or as a sailor or soldier,
those whose arms are today carefully hidden, but who will not hesi-

tate to brandish them on the day of victory, and who fold their
arms while a handful of compatriots fight against ~ organized
forces of the tyranny? Are we thus going to shield, in a revolu-
tionary document, the very virus of gangsterism and anarchy which
was the scourge of the Republic in a still-recent past?
Experience in the territory which we occupy has taught us that
the maintenance of public order is an important problem for the
country. Facts have proved to us that from the time the existing
order is suppressed, a number of bonds are dissolved and delin-
quency, if it is not stopped in time, flourishes everywhere. It is by
the timely application of stringent measures, with the full and total
approval of the population, that we have put an end to the first
manifestations of banditry. The peasants, formerly accustomed to
consider an agent of authority as an enemy of the people, used to
offer protection from prosecution to a fugitive who had problems
with the authorities. Today, they see our soldiers as the defenders of
their interests and order reigns solidly, its best guardians being the
citizenry itself.
Anarchy is the worst enemy of the revolutionary process. To com
bat it he,nceforth is a fundamental necessity. He who does not
understand this should not concern himself with the fate of the
Revolution; it is natural that those who have not sacrificed them-
selves for it should not care about its survival.
The nation must know that justice will be done and that crime
will be punished, wherever it appears.
The July 26th Movement claims for itself the duty of maintain-
ing public order and reorganizing the armed institutions of the Re-
public.
I) Because it is the only organization possessing disciplined
militia throughout the country and an army in the field which has
won more than twenty victories over the enemy.
4-26
.
2) Because our fighters have given proof a thousand times of
their generosity and the absence of hate toward the soldiers by
always sparing their lives, by caring for those wounded in battle,
by never torturing an opponent even if it were known that he had
important information. And they have maintained this wartime
conduct with a magnanimity which commands admiration.
3) Because it is necessary to infuse the armed institutions with
that spirit of justice and nobility which the July 26th Movement
has spread among its own soldiers.
4) Because the equanimity which we have displayed in this
war is the best guarantee that honorable military men have noth-
ing to fear from the Revolution, and they will not have to pay for
the misdeeds of those who, by their crimes and their shame have
brought disgrace to the military uniform.
Certain other aspects of the unity declaration remain difficult to
grasp. How is it possible to achieve agreement without having
defined a strategy of struggle? Were the autenticos still thinking of
a putsch iIi. the capital? Were they going to continue accumulating
arms and more arms which would surely sooner or later fall into
the hands of the police, rather than pass them on to the fighters?
Lastly, have they accepted the proposition of the general strike
as advocated by the July 26th Movement?
In addition, we have the impression that the military importance
of the Oriente struggle has been woefully underestimated. Today
in the Sierra Maestra, we are no longer making guerrilla war but a
war of confrontation. Our forces, inferior in number and armament,
take as much advantage as possible of the terrain, of constant
surveillance of the enemy, and greater rapidity of movement. Itis
superfluous to stress the unique importance of the moral factor in
this struggle. :The results have been astonishing and some day they
will be known in detail.
The entire population is in revolt. Ifit were armed, our detach-
ments would not have to worry about the smallest corner of the
country; the peasants would not allow a single enemy to pass. The
4-27
defeats of the dictatorship, which persists in "sending large-scale rein-
forcements, could be turned into disasters. Anything I might say to
you concerning the way in which the courage of the people has
been aroused would fall snort of the reality. The dictatorship is en-
gaging in barbarous reprisals. The mass murder of peasants rivals
the butchery perpetrated by the Nazis in Europe. They make the
defenseless population pay for each of their defeats. The com
muniques of the General Staff announcing rebel losses are always
preceded by a massacre. Such practices have awakened a spirit of
fierce revolt among the people. And the heart bleeds, the spirit is
afflicted at the thought that no one has sent this people a single
gun; at the thought that while here the peasants wait, powerless,
for their homes to be burned down and their families to be mur-
dered, and call for guns with all the strength of despair, arms caches
exist in Cuba which are not being used to destroy even one misera-
ble lackey, and which await seizure by the police or the collapse
of tyranny or the extermination of the rebels.
The conduct of many of our fellow citizens could not have been
more ignoble. There is still time to change and to aid those who
are struggling. From our personal point of view, this has no im-
portance. You should not think that it is self-interest or pride that
dictates these words: our fate is sealed and we are not afflicted with
doubts. Either we will die here, to the last rebel, and in the cities
an entire young generation will perish, or else we shall triumph
over the most incredible obstacles. For us, defeat is not possible.
The year of sacrifices and of heroic deeds which our men have
experienced will not be obliterated by anyone or anything. Our
victories are also real, and cannot easily be erased. Our men, more
resolute than ever, will fight to the last drop of their blood.
It is those who have refused to help us who will suffer defeat;
those who were with us at the beginning and have abandoned us;
those who, having lacked faith in dignity and ideals, squandered
their time and their prestige in shameful deals with the Trujillo
despotism; those who, possessing arms, were led by their own
4-28
cowardice to hide them at the moment of combat. They are the
ones who blundered, not we.
There is one thing that we can say, loudly and clearly: if we had
seen other u b n ~ fighting for freedom, pursued and on the point
of being exterminated, if we had seen them resisting day after day
without surrendering or weakening in their resolve, we would not
have hesitated for a moment to fly to their assistance and to die
with them if necessary. Because we are Cubans and Cubans cannot
remain unmoved by the struggle for liberty, even in any other coun-
try of Latin America. The Dominicans were mustering their island
forces to liberate their people? For each Dominican there were ten
Cubans. Somoza's followers invaded Costa Rica? The Cubans
hastened there to join the battle. To think that today, when their
own country is undergoing an arduous battle for liberty, there are
some Cubans in exile, expelled from their fatherland by the dicta-
torship, who deny their aid to their brothers who fight!
Or, if they are to aid us, will they set unfair conditions? Perhaps,
in order to repay their aid, we should offer them a plateau of the
Republic as booty? Or else, should we renounce our ideals and
make of this war a new art of killing one's fellow men, plunging
the country into a useless blood bath which does not redeem the
promise with the reward which the country expects from such a
sacrifice?
The leadership of the struggle against tyranny is, and will con-
tinue to be, in Cuba itself and in the hands of revolutionary fight-
ers. Those who, now or later, wish to be considered leaders of the
revolution must be inside the country and must accept directly the
responsibilities, risks, and sacrifices required by the situation in
Cuba today.
The exiles have a role to play in this struggle, but it is absurd that
they should attempt to tell us from abroad which peak we should
storm, which sugar plantation we are permitted to burn, which
acts of sabotage we can carry off successfully and at which moment,
under which circumstances, and in what form we can call a gen-
4-29
eral strike. This is more than absurd, 'it is ridiculous. Help us
abroad by collecting funds among Cuban exiles and emigres, by
leading a publicity campaign for the Cuban cause, denounce from
there the crimes of which we here are victims; but do not try to
lead from Miami a revolution that is taking shape in all the cities
and the fields of the island, amid struggle, tumult, sabotage, strikes,
and a thousand other forms of revolutionary activity which the
fighting strategy of the July 26th Movement has set into motion.
The national leadership is ready, as it has repeatedly made
known, to enter into talks in Cuba with the leaders of any opposi-
tion organization whatsoever, for the purpose of coordinating
specific plans and carrying out concrete activities deemed to be use-
ful in the overturning of the dictatorship.
The general strike will take place with effective coordination of
efforts among the Movimiento de Resistencia Crvica [Movement for
Civic Resistance], the Frente Nacional Obrero [National Workers'
Front] and. any other group which has rejected the spirit of
sectarianism and entered into contact with the July 26th Movement,
which today finds itself to be the only opposition organization
fighting within the country.
The Workers' Section of the July 26th Movement is noworganiz-
ing strike committees in every labor and industrial center, together
with those opposition elements who show support for a work
stoppage and who do not seem likely to disappear at the crucial
moment. These strike committees will constitute the Frente
Nacional Obrero, which will be the only representative of the pro-
letariat which the July 26th Movement will recognize as legitimate.
The overturn of the dictator necessarily implies the removal of
an inglorious Congress, of the leadership of the Confederaci6n de
Trabajadores Cubanos [Confederation of Cuban Workers], and of
all the mayors, governors and other functionaries who, directly or
otherwise, relied on the "elections" of November I, 1954 or on the
military coup d'hat of March 10, 1952 to win their posts. It likewise
implies the immediate freeing of political prisoners, whether civil
4-30

or military, as well as bringing to trial all the accomplices of the
crimes,ofthedictatorship'sdespotism.
The new government shall rest on the Constitution of 1940 and

will guarantee all the rights recognized by it and will hold itself
alooffromallpoliticalsectarianism.
TheExecutiveshallassumethelegislativefunctions thatthe Con-
stitutionassigns to the Congress of the Republic and shallhave for
its principal task the holding of general elections in accordance
with the Electoral Code of 1943 and the Constitution of 1940, and
putting into e1tect the teh-point minimum program of the Sierra
Manifesto.
The present Supreme Court shall be declared dissolved on ac-
count of its inability to resolve the illegal situation created by the
coup d'etat; this does not preclude the subsequent re-appointment
of some of its present members who have always defended con-
stitutional principles or have maintained a firm attitude toward
thecrimes, the absolutism,and the abuses ofthese years oftyranny.
The President of the Republic shall determine the manner of
constituting the new Supreme Court and it shall, in its turn, be
charged with reorganizing all the courts and autonomous institu-
tions, dismissing all those who are convicted of involvement in the
shady dealings of the dictatorship. The appointment of new func-
tionaries shall be done according to the law. The political parties,
under the provisional government, shall enjoy this sole right:
namely, the freedom to defend their program before the people,
to mobilize and organize the citizens within the framework of our
Constitution,andtoparticipateinthegeneralelections.
The necessity of appointing the person called on to occupy the
presidency of the Republic has already been elucidated in the
Sierra Maestra Manifesto, and our Movement has declared that
in its opinion said person should be chosen by all civic institutions.
Be that as it may, although five months have passed this question
has not yet been resolved and it is becoming increasingly urgent
to give the nation the answer to the question: Who shall succeed
4-31
.
the dictator? and it is not possible to wait one more day in the face
of this large question mark. The July 26th Movement is answering
the question. It presents its proposal to the people, as the only
possible- formula for guaranteeing legality and the development of
the preconditions for unity and provisional government. This man
must be that upright magistrate of the Oriente Court of Justice,
Dr. Manuel Urrutia LIeo. Itis not we, but his own conduct, that
singles him out, and we expect that he will not refuse this service
to the Republic.
The grounds for appointing him are:
I) He has been the member of the judiciary who has most re-
spected the Constitution by declaring, in court chambers after the
trial of the "Granma" expeditionaries, that to organize an armed
force against the regime does not constitute a crime and was per-
fectly licit, in accordance with the spirit and the letter of the Consti-
tution and the law-a declaration unprecedented for a magistrate in
the history of our struggles for freedom.
2) His life, dedicated to the true administration of justice, as-
sures us that he is professionally and personally sufficiently equipped
to maintain the balance among all legitimate interests at the mo-
ment when the t y ~ y is overturned by the people.
3) No one is as free of party spirit as Dr. Manuel Urrutia. In
fact, by virtue of his role of judge, he does not belong to any politi-
cal group. And there exists no other citizen of equal prestige who,
without active involvement, is so much identified with the revolu-
tionary cause.
Ifour conditions-the disinterested conditions of an organization
that has assented to the greatest sacrifices, which has not even been
consulted before its name was used in a unity manifesto it has not
ratified-are rejected, we shall continue the struggle alone, as we
have always done, with no other arms than those we take from the
enemy in each battle, with no other aid than that of the sorely
tried people, with no support other than our ideal.
4-32

For, after all, itis the July 26th Movement and it alone that has
struggled actively throughout the country and continues to do so.
It is the militants. of the Movement and nobody else who have
brought the revolt from the rugged mountains of Oriente all the
way to the western provinces; it is they alone who have carried
outsabotage, burned sugar cane fields, executed the political thugs;
it is the July 26th Movement alone which has been able to organize
the workers of the nation in a revolutionary way; it alone has co-
operated in the organization of the movement for civil resistance
in which all civic groups from virtually every region of Cuba are
united.
Wewouldhave you knowthatwe havewithdrawnfrom bureau-
cratic entanglements and from participation in the government;
but you must understand once and for all that the July 26th mili-
tantshave notgivenupandwill nevergive up guidingand leading
the people-fromunderground,from theSierraMaestraorfrom the
graves where the enemy may fling our dead. We will not give it
up becauseit is notwe butanentiregeneration which has promised
the people of Cuba to give concrete solutions to their momentous
problems.
Weshallconquerordie,alone. Thestrugglewill neverbe harder
than it was when we were.only twelve men, when we did not
have the support of a people inured to war and organized in all
theSierra,when we did not have as we have today a powerful and
disciplined nationwide organization, when we could not count
on tremendous support from the masses, such as that which was
displayedonthedayourunforgettableFrankPaisdied.
Inordertodiewithdignity,companyisnotnecessary.
FIDEL CASTRO Ruz
SierraMaestra
December14,1957
4-33

Section II. TH.E BATTLE OF EL UVERO

* * * * *
It was near the lumber camp of Pino del Agua that we killed the
magnificent horse which the imprisoned corporal had been riding.
The animal was useless to us in such craggy terrain, and we were
low on food. In any case, our customary diet was such that we could
not afford to disdain fresh meat, horse or otherwise. An amusing
touch was provided by our prisoner. As, unaware, he drank his
horse soup and ate his portion of horse meat, he explained that the
animal had been lent him by a friend whose name and address
he gave us, urging us to return it to him as soon as possible.
That day on the radio we learned of the sentencing of our
comrades from the "Granma." In addition, we learned that a
magistrate had cast his personal vote against the sentence. This was
Magistrate Urrutia, whose honorable gesture later brought him the
nomination as provisional President of the Republic. The personal
vote of a magistrate was no more than a worthy gesture-as it
clearly was at that time-but its subsequent consequences were more
serious: it led to the appointment of a bad president, a man in-
capable of understanding the revolutionary process, incapable of
digesting the profundity of a revolution which was not made for
his reactionary mentality. His character and his reluctance to take
a definite stand brought many conflicts. Finally, in the days
celebrating the first post-revolutionary July 26, it culminated in his
From pages 105-125, Reminiscences 0/ the Cuban Revolutionary War, by Che u e ~ a r a Copyright c 1968
by Monthly Review Press; reprinted by permission of Monthly Review Press at USACGSC and may not be
further reproduced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
4-34
resignation as President when faced with unanimous rejection by
the people.
On one of those days a contact from Santiago arrived. His name
was Andres, and

he had exact information about the weapons:
they were safe, and would be moved shortly. A delivery point was
fixed in the region of a coastal lumber camp operated by the Babun
brothers. The arms would be delivered with the full knowledge
of these men who felt they could doa lucrative business by helping
the Revolution. (Subsequent developments divided the family, and
three of the Babun sons have the questionable privilege of being
among those captured at the Bay of Pigs.)
It is curious to note that in that period many people tried to use
the Revolution for their own ends by doing small favors for us in
order later to reap rewards from the new government. The Babun
brothers hoped later to have a free hand in the commercial ex-
ploitation of the forestS, all the while pitilessly expelling the peas-
ants, thereby increasing the size of, their latifundia. It was around
that time that we were joined by a North American journalist, the
same type as the Babun family. He was Hungarian by birth, and
his name was Andrew Saint George.
At first he only showed one of his faces, the better one, which was
simply that of a Yankee journalist. But in addition to that he
was an FBI agent. Since I was the only person in the troop who
spoke French (in those days nobody spoke English), I was chosen
to take care of him. Quite frankly, he did not seem to me as dan-
gerous as he turned out to be in our s o n ~ interview, when he
was already openly showing himself as an agent. We were walking
on the edge of Pino del Agua toward the source of the Peladero
river. These were rugged areas and we all carried heavy packs.
On the Peladero river there is a tributary, the Arroyo del Indio.
Here we spent a couple of days, getting food and moving the arms
we had received. We passed through a few peasant settlements
and established a kind of extra-legal revolutionary state, leaving
4-35

sympathizers who were to inform us of anything that happened and
to tell us of the Army's movements. But we always lived in the
wooded mountains; only occasionally, at night, did we urtexpectedly
reach a group of houses ahd then some of us slept in them. But the
majority always slept under the protection of the mountains, and
during the day all of us were on guard, protected by a roof of trees.
Our worst enemy at that time of year was the macagiiera, a
species of horsefly which hatches and lays its eggs in the tree
called Macagua or Macaw tree. At a certain time of year it
reproduces prolifically in the mountains. The macaguera bites
exposed areas of the body; as we scratched, what with all the dirt
on our bodies, the bites were easily infected and caused abscesses.
The uncovered parts of our legs, our wrists, and our necks always
bore proof of the presence of the macagiiera.
Finally, on May 18, we received news of the weapons and also a
tentative inventory. This news caused great excitement in the camp,
for all the men wanted better weapons. We also heard that the
film made by Bob Taber had been shown in the United States
with great success. This news cheered everyone but Andrew Saint
George, who, in addition to being an FBI agent, had his petty
journalist's pride, and he felt somewhat cheated of glory. The next
day he left in a yacht for Santiago de Cuba.
That day we also found out that one of our men had deserted.
Since everyone at the camp knew of the arrival of the weapons, this
was especially dangerous. Scouts were sent to look for him. They
returned with the news that he had managed to take a boat to
Santiago. We assumed that it was to inform the authorities, al-
though later it came out that the desertion was simply brought
about by the man's physical and moral inability to endure the hard-
ships of our life. In any case, we had to double our precautions. Our
struggle against the lack of physical, ideological, and moral prepara-
tion among the men was a daily one; the results were not always
encouraging. The weaker men often asked permission to leave for
4-36
the most petty reasons, and if they were refused, they would usually
desert. We must remember that desertion was punishable by death
directly upon capture.
That night the w ~ p o s arrived. For us it was the most marvelous
spectacle in the world: the instruments of death were on exhibition
before the covetous eyes of all the men. Three tripod machine
guns, three Madzen automatic rifles, nine M-I carbines, ten Johnson
automatic rifles, and a total of six thousand rounds were delivered.
Although the M-I carbines had only forty-five rounds apiece, they
were highly prized weapons, and they were distributed according
to the acquired merits of the men and their time in the Sierra. One
of the M-I'S was given to the present-day Major Ramiro Valdes, and
two went to the advance guard which Camilo commanded. The
other four were to be used to cover the tripod machine guns. One of
the automatics went to Captain Jorge Sotus' platoon, another to Al-
meida's and the third to the General Staff (I had the responsibility
for operating it). The tripods were distributed as follows: one for
Raul, another for Guillermo Garda, and the third for Crescencio
Perez. In this way, I made my debut as a fighting guerrilla, for until
then I had been the troop's doctor, knowing only occasional combat.
I had entered a new stage.
I shall always remember the moment I was given the automatic
rifle. It was old and of poor quality, but to me it was an important
acquisition. Four men were assigned to help me with this weapon.
These four guerrillas have subsequently followed very different
paths: two of them were the brothers Pupo and Manolo Beat6n,
executed by the Revolution after they murdered Major Cristino
Naranjo and fled to the Sierras de Oriente, where a peasant captured
them. Another was a boy of fifteen who was almost always to carry
the enormous weight of the equipment for the automatic. He was
Joel Iglesias, and today is the President of the 16t1enes Rebeldes and
a major in the Rebel Army. The fourth man, today a lieutenant, was
named Onate, but we affectionately labeled him CantinBas.
4-37
The arrival of the weapons did not mean 'lin end to our attempt
at instilling greater ideological and fighting force in the troop. A
few days later, on May 23, Fidel ordered new discharges, among
them an entire squad, and,our force was reduced to 127 men, the
majority of them armed and about eighty of them well armed.
From the squad which, along with its leader, was dismissed,
there remained one man named Crucito who later became one of
our best-loved fighters. Crucito was a natural poet and he had long
rhyming matches with the city-poet, Calixto Morales. Morales had
arrived on the "Granma" and had nicknamed himself "nightingale
of the plains," to which Crucito in his guajiro ballads always an-
swered with a refrain, directed in mock derision at Calixto: Soy
guacaico de la Sierra: "I'm an old Sierra buzzard."
This magnificent comrade had written the whole history of the
Revolution in ballads which he composed at every rest stop as he
puffed on his pipe. Since there was very little paper in the Sierra, he
composed the ballads in his head, so that none of them remained
when a bullet put an end to his life in the battle of Pino del Agua.
In the timber belt we received the invaluable help of Enrique
L6pez, an old childhood friend of Fidel and Raul, who was at
that time employed by the Babuns and served as a supply contact.
He also made it possible for us to move through the entire area
without danger. This region was full of roads used by army trucks;
several times we prepared unsuccessful ambushes aimed at captur-
ing some trucks. Perhaps these failures contributed to the success
of the approaching operation. This victorious battle was to have
greater psychological impact than any other in the history of the
war. I refer to the battle of EI Uvero.
On May 25, we heard that an expeditionary force led by Calixto
S:inchez had arrived in the boat "El Corintia" and had landed at
Mayari; a few days later we were to learn of the disastrous result
of this expedition: Prio [Socarr:is] sent his men to die without ever
bothering to accompany them. The news of this landing showed us
4-38

the'absolute necessity for diverting the enemy forces in order to
allow those men to reach some place where they could reorganize
and begin their actions. We did all this out of solidarity with the
other group, although we did not even know its social composition
oritstruegoals.
Atthis point we had aninterestingdiscussion, led principally by
myself and Fidel. I was of the opinion that we ought not lose the
opportunity of capturing a truck and that we should devote our-
selves to ambushing them on the roads where they passed un.
concernedly. ButFidel had already planned the action at EI Uvero,
and he thought thatit would be much more important and would
bringus amoreresoundingsuccess if we captured the Armypostat
EI Uvero. If we succeeded, it would have a tremendous moral
impactand would be spoken of throughout thecountry; this would
not happen with the capture of a truck, which could be reported
as a highway accident with a few casualties and, although people
would suspect the truth, our effective fighting presence in the
Sierra would never be known. This did not mean that we would
totally reject the idea of capturing a truck, under optimum con-
ditions; but we should not convert this into the focal point of our
activities.
Today, several years after that discussion (which at the time did
not convince me) I must recognize that Fidel's judgment was
correct. It would have bc:en much less productive for us to carry
out an isolated action against one of the patrols which travelled in
the trucks. At that period, our eagerness to fight always led us
impatiently to adopt drastic attitudes; perhaps we could not yet
see the more distant objectives. In any case, we began the final
preparationsforthebattleofEIUvero.
4-39
* * * * :Ii
Having decided on the point of attack, we then had to work
out exactly the form it would take; we had to solve such im-
portant problems as ascertaining the number of soldiers present,
the number of guard posts, the type of communications they used,
the access roads, the civilian population and its distribution, etc.
In all of this we were admirably served by Comrade Caldero, today
a major, who was, I believe, the son-in-law of the administrator of
the lumber camp.
We assumed that the Army had more or less exact data on our
presence in the area, for two informers had been captured and they
carried Army identification documents and confessed to being
sent by Casillas to ascertain our position and our customary meet-
ing places. The spectacle of the two men begging for mercy was
truly repugnant, but at the same time pathetic. However, the laws
of war, in those difficult times, could not be ignored, and both spies
were executed the following day.
That same day, May 27, the General Staff met with all the officers
and Fidel announced that within the next forty-eight hours we
would be fighting. He ordered us to have our men and their
weapons ready for the march. We were not given details at that point.
Caldero would be the guide, for he knew the post of El Uvero
well: its entrances and exits, and its roads of access. That night we
4-40

started walking; it was a long march of some sixteen kilometers,


but all downhill on the roads which had been specially constructed
by the Babun Company to reach its sawmills. However, we took
about eight hours to walk it, for we were slowed by the extra
precautions which we had to take, especially as we got nearer the
danger zone. Finally we were given our orders, which were very
simple: we were to take the guard posts and riddle the wooden
barracks with bullets.
We knew that the barracks had no major defenses apart from
some logs scattered in the immediate vtcinity. Its strong points
were the guard posts, each with three or four soldiers and strate-
gically placed around the outside of the building. Overlooking the
barracks was a hill from which our General Staff would direct

m
:nr
@
CD
@
CD
DIAGRAM OF COMBAT POSITIONS'
1_ Enemy POltl 1. Rebel Staff Headquarters
II - Sugar Plant 2. a ~ Caltro
III _ Barracks 3. Juan Almeida
IV - Lumber Company Installations 4. Jorge S o t ~ s
5. Guillermo Garda
6. Camllo Clenfuegos
7. Eflgenlo Amellelras
8. Crescenclo P're&
9. Che Guevara
4-41
4-42

the battle. We were to approach the building through the thickets


and station ourselves a few meters away. We were carefully in-
structed not to fire on the outlying buildings since they sheltered
women and children, inc1udlng the administrator's wife who knew
about the attack but preferred to stay there in order to avoid sus-
picion later. As we left to occupy our attack positions, we were
most of all concerned about the civIlians.
The barracks of EI Uvero was located close to the sea, so that
we needed only to attack it from three sides in order to surround
it completely.
The coastal road from Peladero was commanded by one guard
post in the barracks; the platoons led by Jorge Sotus and Guillermo
Garda were sent to attack that post. Almeida was to take charge
of liquidating a post located in front of the mountain, more or
less to the north. Fidel would be on the hill overlooking the barracks
and Raul would advance from the front with his platoon. I was
assigned an intermediate post with my automatic rifle and my
adjutants. Camilo and Arneijeiras were to advance from the front,
. between my position and Raul's. But they miscalculated because
it was dark and they began shooting from my left instead of my
right. Crescencio Perez' platoon was to advance alon$ the road
to Chivirico and hold back whatever Army reinforcements were
sent.
We expected the element of surprise to make' the battle quite
short. However, the minutes passed and we were not able to place
our men in the ideal positions we had hoped for. Our guides,
Caldero and another from the region named Eligio Mendoza,
brought whatever news there was. The night would soon end
and the dawn would creep in before we could surprise the soldiers
in the manner we had planned. Jorge Sotus advised us that he was
not at his assigned position but that it was too late now to move.
When Fidel opened fire ,With his telescopic rifle, we were able to
locate the barracks from the answering shots which came from it.
I was on a small elevation and I had a perfect view of the barracks;
but I was very far from it and my men and I advanced to find
better positions.
Everyone advanced. Almeida moved toward the post which de-
fended the entrance to the little barracks. To my left I could see
Camilo wearing his beret with a handkerchief on his neck like the
hats of the French Foreign Legion, but his of course sported the
Movement insignias. We advanced cautiously amidst the general
exchange of fire.
The smaII squad was joined by men. who had been separated from
their own units; a comrade from Pil6n named Bomba, Comrade
Mario Leal, and Acuna joined what already constituted a smaII
combat unit. The resistance had been great and we had arrived at
a flat open space where we were forced to advance with infinite
precautions, for the enemy fired continuously and accurately. From
,
my position, hardly fifty or sixty meters from the enemy outpost,
I saw two soldiers run out of the foremost trench, and I fired at
both of them, but they hid in the nearby buildings and these
were of course sacred to us. We continued advancing, although
there was now nothing more than a narrow, sparsely grown strip
of land between us and the enemy, whose bulIets whistled
dangerousl)' near. At that moment I heard a groan near me, and
then some shouts. I thought it must be a wounded enemy soldier,
and I dragged myself forward, shouting to him to surrender. It
turned out to be Comrade Leal, who was wounded in the head. I
hastily examined him and found that hoth entrance and exit
wounds were in the parietal region. Leal was losing consciousness,
and the limbs on one side of his body were becoming paralyzed. The
only bandage I had on hand was a piece of paper which I put
on the wounds. Later, Joel Iglesias went to watch over him, while
we continued the attack. Then Acuna was wounded also. We
advanced no more, and continued to shoot at the trench in front
of us. Our fire was efficiently answered. We were just mustering
our courage again, and had decided to capture the warehouse and
end the resistance, when the barracks surrendered.
4-43
This description has taken only a few minutes, but the actual
battle lasted about two hours and forty-five minutes from the first
shot until the barracks surrendered. At my left, some of the men
from the vanguard, Victor Mora and three others I believe, took the
last resisters prisoner. From the trench emerged a soldier holding
his gun above his head. From all sides came shouts of surrender.
We advanced rapidly on the barracks and we heard one last rattle
of machine gun fire which I later found had killed Lieutenant
Nano Dfaz.
We reached the warehouse where we made prisoners of the two
soldiers who had escaped my shots, and also the post doctor and his
adjutant. The doctor was a quiet, grey-haired man; I do not know
whether he is part of the Revolution today. A strange thing hap-
pened with this man: my knowledge of medicine had never been
very extensive; the number of wounded was enormous and at that
moment I was not able to attend to them. When I brought the
wounded to the Army doctor, he asked me how old I was and
when I had finished my training. I explained that it had been some
years ago, and then he said frankly: "Look, kid, you'd better take
charge of all this because I've just graduated and have had very
little experience." What with his lack of experience and his fright
on finding himself a prisoner, he had forgotten all his medical
training. So I had once again to change from soldier to doctor,
which in fact involved little more than a handwashing.
After the battle, which was one of the bloodiest of the revolu-
tionary war, we pooled our experiences, and I can now give a more
general picture of the, action. The battle proceeded more or less as
follows: When Fidel's shot gave the signal to open fire, everyone
began to advance on the barracks. The Army responded with full
fire, in many cases against the hill from where our leader directed
the battle. After a few minutes, Julito Dfaz died at Fidel's side
when he was hit in the head by a bullet. The minutes passed and
the resistance continued; we were unable to frighten the soldiers
to the point of surrender. The most important task in the center
4-44
was Almeida's: he was in charge of liquidating the post at all
costs in order to allow his and Raul's troops to march on the
barracks.
The men later recounted how Eligio Mendoza, the guide, had
taken his rifle and flung himself into the battle; a superstitious man,
he had a "Santo" who protected him, and when he was told to
take care, he had answered contemptuously that his "Santo" would
defend him from anything; a few minutes later he fell, hit by a
bullet which literally shattered his body.
The well-entrenched enemy troops drove us back, causing us
several casualties. It was very difficult to advance through the
central area; from the road to Peladero, Jorge Sotus attempted to
flank the position with an adjutant nicknamed "EI Polida," but
the latter was immediately killed by the enemy and Sotus had to
throw himself into the sea in order to avoid being killed also. From
that moment he was practically useless in the battle. Other members
of his platoon attempted to d v ~ n c e but they too were forced back.
A peasant named Vega, I believe, was killed; Manals was wounded
in the lung; Quike Escalona received wounds in the arm, the
buttock, and the hand. The post, well-protected by a wooden
palisade, fired automatic and semi-automatic rifles, devastating our
small troop.
Almeida ordered a final assault in which he would attempt by
any means to reduce the enemy he faced; Cilleros, Maceo, Hermes
Leyva, Pena, and Almeida himself were wounded (the latter
in the shoulder and the left leg), and Comrade Moll was killed.
Nevertheless, this push forward overcame the post and a path to
the barracks was opened. From the other side, Guillermo Garda's
sure machine gun shots had liquidated three of the defenders; the
fourth came out running and was killed in flight. Raul, with his
platoon divided into two units, advanced rapidly on the barracks.
It was the action of Captains Garda and Almeida which decided
the battle; each one destroyed the assigned guard post and thus made
the final assault possible. Another individual who deserves special
4-45
mention is Luis Crespo, who came down frotn the General Staff
position to participate in the battle.
Enemy resistance was crumbling. A white handkerchief had
been shown and we took the barracks. At that moment someone,
probably one of our men, fired again and from the barracks came
a burst of fire which took Nano Diaz through the head. To the
very end, Nano's machine gun caused many enemy casualties.
Crescencio's platoon hardly participated in the battle, because his
machine gun had jammed; so he guarded the road from Chivirico.
There he stopped some fleeing soldiers. The battle had lasted two
hours and forty-five minutes and no civilian had been wounded,
despite the great number of shots which had been fired.
When we took inventory we found the following situation: On
our side there were six dead: Moll, Nano Diaz, Vega, "El Polida,"
Julito Diaz, and Eligio Mendoza. Badly wounded were Leal and
Cilleros. Wounded more or less seriously were Maceo in the
shoulder, Hermes Leyva with a surface wound on the chest, Almeida
in the left arm and left leg, Quike Escalona in the right arm and
hand, Manals in the lung, Pena in the knee, Manuel Acuna in the
right arm. In all, fifteen comrades hors de combat. The enemy had
nineteen wounded, fourteen dead, another fourteen prisoners, and
six escapees, whicl;J. made a total of fifty-three men, under the com-
mand of a second lieutenant who had shown the white flag when
he was wounded.
If you consider that we were about eighty men and they were
fifty-three, a total of a hundred and thirty-three men, of whom
thirty-eight, that is to say more than a quarter, were hors de combat
in a little over two and a half hours of fighting, you will under-
stand what kind of battle it was. It was an assault by men who had
advanced bare-chested against an enemy which was .protected by
very poor defenses. It should be recognized that on both sides
great courage was shown. For us this was the victory which marked
our coming of age. From this battle on, our morale grew tremen-
dously, our decisiveness and our hopes for triumph increased also.
4-46
Although the months which lollowed were difficult ones, we were
already in possession of the secret of victory. This action at El
Uvero sealed the fate of all small barracks situated far from
major clustars of enemy forces, and they were all closed soon after.
One of the first shots of the battle hit the barracks telephone,
cutting communication with Santiago. Only a couple of small planes
flew over the battlefield, but the Air Force did not send reconnais-
sance planes until hours later, when we were already high in the
mountains. We have been told that, apart from the fourteen dead
soldiers, three of the five parrots which the guards had in the
barracks had been killed. One has only to remember the small size
of this bird to be able to picture what kind of attack the building
underwent.
My return to the medical profession had a few moving moments.
My first patient was Comrade Cilleros. A bullet had severed his
right arm and, after piercing a lung, had apparently embedded
itself in his spine, paralyzing both legs. His condition was critical,
and I was only able to give him a sedative and bind his chest
tightly so that he could breathe more easily. We tried to save him
in the only way possible at that time: we took the fourteen prisoners
with us and left the two wounded guerrillas, Leal and Cilleros, with
the enemy, having received the doctor's word of honor that they
would be cared for. When I told this to Cilleros, mouthing the
usual words of comfort, he answered me with a sad smile that
said more than any words could have, and expressed his con-
viction that it was all over for him. We knew this too and I
was tempted at that moment to place a farewell kiss on his
forehead; but such an action on my part would have signified
our comrade's death sentence, and duty told me that I must not
further spoil his last minutes by confirming something which
he already knew. I said good-bye, as affectionately as possible and
with great pain, to the two men who remained in the hands of
the enemy. They cried out that they would prefer to die among
their comrades; but we also had the duty to fight to the end for
4-47
their lives. There they remained, with the nhteteen wounded
Batista soldiers who had also been cared for as well as conditions
allowed. Our two comrades were decently treated by the enemy
Army, but Cilleros did not reach.Santiago. Leal survived his wound,
was imprisoned on the Isle of Pines for the rest of the war, .and
today still bears the indelible marks of that important episode in our
revolutionary war. .
In one of Babun's trucks we carried the largest possible quantity
of every kind of equipment, especially medical. We left last,
moving toward our hideout in the mountains which we reached
in time to care for the wounded and take leave of the dead, who
were buried by a bend in the road. We realized that persecution
would now be great, and we decided that those men who could
walk ought to move on quickly, leaving the wounded behind in my
care.. Enrique L6pez would undertake to furnish me with trans-
portation for the wounded, a hiding place, some adjutants, and all
the necessary contacts through whom we could receive medicines
and cure the men properly.
Almost no one slept that night as we heard from each man
about the incidents which he had seen during the battle. Out
of curiosity I took note of all the enemy soldiers supposedly killed
during the battle. There were more enemy corpses than there had
been. enemy soldiers. This kind of experience taught us that all
facts must be validated by several persons; being exaggeratedly
careful, we even demanded physical proof, such as items taken from
a fallen soldier, before we accepted an enemy casualty. Preoccupa-
tion with the truth was always a central theme in reports from the
Rebel Army, and we attempted to imbue our men with a profound
respect for truth and a feeling of how necessary it was to place
truth above any transitory advantage.
In the morning, we watched the victorious troop leave us, bidding
farewell sadly. My adjutants Joel Iglesias and Oiiate stayed with
me, as well as a guide named Sinecio Torres and Vilo Acuiia, today
a major, who stayed to be with his wounded uncle.
4-48

..
* * * '..
The day after the battle of EI Uvero, t
dawn. Our farewells to the departing column We
devoted ourselves to effacing the traces of our entry;'iiitl:i" the
forest. We were a mere hundred meters from a truck roaclllnd We
waited for Enrique L6pez and the trucks which would take us td
our hideout.
Almeida, Pena, and Quike Escalona could not walk; I had td
urge Manals not to walk either because of the wound in his lung;
Manuel Acuna, Hermes Leyva, and Maceo could all walk on their
own. To protect, nurse, and transport them, there were Vilo
Acuna, Sinecio Torres, Joel Iglesias, Alejandro Onate, and myself.
The morning was well advanced when a messenger came to tell us
that Enrique L6pez could not help us because his daughter was ill
and he had to leave for Santiago; he left word for us saying he
would send us some volunteers to help, but they never arrived.
The situation was difficult, for Quike Escalona's wounds were
infected and I could not determine exactly how serious Manals'
wound was. We explored the nearby roads and found no enemy
soldiers, so we decided to move the wounded to a hoMo three or
four kilometers away. The hoMo had been abandoned but the
owner had left behind several chickens.
On the first day two workers from the lumber camp helped us
4-49
with the tiring job of carrying the 'Youncied in hammocks: At
dawn the next day, after eating well, we quickly left the place, for
we had stayed there a whole day immediately after the attack, close
to highways on which soldiers could arrive. The place where we
were was at the end of one of those roads constructed by the Babun
Company to reach deeper into the forest. With the few available
men we started on a short but difficult trek down to the small
ravine called Del Indio. Then we climbed a narrow path to a small
shack where a peasant named Israel lived with his wife and brother-
in-law. It was exceedingly difficult moving our wounded comrades
over such rugged terrain, but we did it. The two peasants even
gave us their own double bed for the wounded to sleep in.
We had left behind some of our older weapons and a variety of
equipment constituting minor war booty, for the weight of the
wounded increased with each step. Evidence of our presence always
remained in some boMo; because of this and since we had the time,
we decided to return to each campsite and efface all these traces,
since our security depended on it. At the same time Sinecio left
to find some friends of his in the region of Peladero.
After a short time Acuna and Joel Iglesias told me that they had
heard strange voices on the other slope. We really thought that the
time had come when we would be forced to fight under the most
difficult circumstances, for our obligation was to defend to the
death the precious burden of wounded men with which we had
been entrusted. We advanced so that the encounter would take
place as far as possible from the boh/o; some prints of bare feet on
the path indicated that the intruders had gone along the same way.
Approaching warily, we heard an unconcerned conversation among
several persons; loading my Tommy gun and counting on the as-
sistance of Vilo and Joel, I advanced and surprised the speakers.
They turned out to be the prisoners from EI Uvero whom Fidel
had freed and who were simply looking for a way out of the
forest. Some of them were barefoot; an old corporal, almost un-
4-50
conscious, hoarsely expressed his. admiration for us and our famil-
iarity with the forest. They were without a guide, and had only a
safe-conduct signed by Fidel. Taking advantage of the impression
our surprise appearance had made on them, we warned them not
to enter the forest again for any reason.
They were all from the city and they were not used to the hard-
ships of the mountains and the means of coping with them. We
came into the clearing where the boMo was and we showed them
the way to the coast, not without first reminding them that from
the forest inward was our territory and that our patrol-for we
looked like a simple patrol-would immediately notify the forces
of that sector of any foreign presence. Despite these warnings, which
they heeded carefully, we felt it prudent to move on as soon as
possible.
We spent that night in the sheltering bahia, but at dawn we
moved into the forest, first asking the owners of the house to bring
some chickens for the wounded. We spent the whole day waiting
for them, but they did not return. Some time later we found out
that they had been captured in the little house and that the next
day the enemy soldiers had used them as guides and had passed
by our camp of the day before.
We kept a careful watch and no one could have surprised us, but
the outcome of a skirmish under those conditions was not difficult
to foresee. Near nightfall Sinecio arrived with three volunteers: an
old man named Feliciano, and two men who would later become
members of the Rebel Army: Banderas, a lieutenant killed in the
battle of EI Jigiie, and Israel Pardo, the oldest of a family of revolu-
tionaries, who today holds the rank of captain. These comrades
helped us to move the wounded speedily to a boMo on the other side
of the danger zone, while Sinecio and I waited for the peasant
couple until nightfall. Naturally, they couldn't come because they
were already prisoners. Suspecting a betrayal, we decided to leave
the new house early the next day. Our frugal meal consisted of some
4-51
4-52
fruits and vegetables picked in the vicinity of the boMo. The fol-
lowing day, six months after the landing of the "Granma," we
began our march early. These treks were tiring and incredibly short
for anyone accustomed to long marches in the mountains. We could
carry only one wounded comrade at a time, for we had to carry
them in hammocks hanging from strong branches which literally
ruined the shoulders of the carriers. They had to spell each other
every ten or fifteen minutes, so that under those conditions we
needed six or eight men to carry each wounded man. I accom-
panied Almeida, who was half dragging himself along. We walked
very slowly, almost from tree to tree, until Israel found a short-cut
through the forest and the carriers came back for Almeida.
Afterward, a tremendous rainstorm prevented us from reaching
the Pardos' house immediately, but we finally got there close to
nightfall. The short distance of four kilometers had been covered
in twelve hours, in other words at three hours per kilometer.
At that time Sinecio Torres was the most important man in the
small group, for he knew the roads and the people of the region
and he helped us in everything. It was he who two days later
arranged for Manals to go to Santiago to be cured; we were also
preparing to send Quike Escalona whose wounds were infected.
In those days contradictory news would arrive, sometimes telling
us that Celia Sanchez was in prison, other times that she had been
killed. Rumors also circulated to the effect that an Army patrol
had taken Hermes Caldero prisoner. We did not know whether or
not to believe these at times hair-raising things. Celia, for example,
was our only known and secure contact. Her arrest would mean
complete isolation for us. Fortunately it was not true that Celia
had been alrested, although Hermes Caldero had been captured,
but he miraculously stayed alive while passing through the dun-
geons of the tyranny.
On the banks of the Peladero river lived David, the overseer of
a latifundio. He cooperated greatly with us. Once, David killed a
cow for us and we had to go out 'llnd get it. The animal had been
slaughtered on the river bank and cut into pieces; we had to move
the meat by night. I sent the first group with Israel Pardo in front,
and then the sec;ond led by Banderas. Banderas was quite undis-
ciplined, and he let the others carry the full weight of the carcass,
so that it took all night to move it. A small troop was now being
formed under my command, since Almeida was wounded; con-
scious of my responsibility, I told Banderas that he was no longer
a fighter, but was' now merely a sympathizer, unless he changed .his
attitude. He really changed then; he was never a model fighter
when it came to discipline, but he was one of those enterprising and
broad-minded men, simple and ingenuous, whose eyes were opened
to reality through the shock of the Revolution. He had been cultivat-
ing his small, isolated parcel of land in the mountains, and he had
a true passion for trees and for agriculture. He lived in a small
shack with two little pigs, each with its name, and a dog. One day
he showed me a picture of his two sons who lived with his es-
tranged wife in Santiago. He also explained that some day, when
the Revolution triumphed, he would be able to go some place where
he could really grow something, not like that inhospitable piece of
land almost hanging from the mountain top.
I spoke to him of cooperatives and he did not understand too
well. He wanted to work the land on his own, by his own efforts;
nevertheless, little by little, I convinced him that it was better to
cultivate collectively, that machinery would also incre:rse his pro-
ductivity. Banderas would today have been a vanguard fighter in
the area of agricultural production; there in the Sierra he taught
himself to read and write and was preparing for the future. He was
a diligent peasant who understood the value of contributing with
his own efforts to writing a page of history.
I had a long conversation with the overseer David, who asked me
for a list of all the important things we needed, for he was going
to Santiago and would pick them up there. He was a typical over-
4-53
seer, loyal to ~ boss, contemptuous of the peaSants, racist. How-
ever, when the Army took him prisoner and tortured him bar-
barously on learning of his relations with us, his first concern on
returning was to convince us that he had not talked. I do not know
if David is in Cuba today, or if he followed his old bosses whose
land was confiscated by the Revolution, but he was a man who in
those days felt the need for a change. However, he never imagined
that the change would also reach him and his world. The history
of the Revolution is made up of many sincere efforts on the part
of simple men. Our mission is to develop the goodness and nobility
in each man, to convert every man into a revolutionary, from the
Davids who did not understand well to the Banderas who died
without seeing the dawn. The Revolution was also made by blind
and unrewarded sacrifices. Those of us who today see its accom-
plishments have the responsibility to remember those who fell by
the wayside, and to work for a future where there will be fewer
stragglers.
4-54
Section III. ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT
ON MARCH 11, ~ 5 7 as I was leaving a children's festival in
a public school, where I had been handing out the prizes, some-
one approached me and in a whisper informed me that an
attack on the Presidential Palace was planned for the next day.
Later this individual told me why they also planned to murder
my wife, who was pregnant at the time, and my children: The
attack was to sweep away everyone so that "not even the seed
of Batista would survive." The forces of law and order were
trying to ascertain more details. At midnight of the 12th, I sent
a message to Congressman Candido Mora through the Chief
of the Bureau of Investigations, Col. Orlando Piedra, to please
try and dissuade his brother Menelao and the other plotters
from going through with their criminal plan. My message
showed that we wished to avoid bloodshed.
The night hours were peaceful, but the next afternoon was
to be tragic and mournful. I went to bed almost at dawn, as
usual. As was also my habit, before turning off the light I read
a few pages of a book. This time it was the last chapter of The
Day Lincoln Was Shot, by Jim Bishop. The unfortunate re-
semblance of the plot against my life and the lives of many
civilian and military employees in the area to the Lincoln
tragedy was significant in that he also was called dictator, at-
tacked by his opponents, and finally assassinated.
The guard had been alerted against possible attack, but the
public was still permitted access to the Presidential Adminis-
trative offices. Traffic on the streets around the building had
From pages 59-64, Fulgencio Batista, Cuba Betra,yed (New York, Vantage Press, Inc., 1962). Reprinted
with permission of the publishers at USACGSC and may not he further reproduced in whole or in part without
express permission of the copyright owner.
4-55

not been halted. Buses, trucks and other vehicles continued
moving through the neighborhood.
To the many usual p r o ~ m s confronting the Chief of State,
was added the condition of my wife. She was five months preg-
nant, and our youngest child, 4, was sick and had a high fever,
so that he could not be moved. This aggravated his mother's
emotional state. How was she to be warned? She knew that
there had been previous plots to kill me at a charity theatre affair
and again at the Palace of Fine Arts while we were attending
the Biennial Spanish Art Exhibition. I talked with her at about
noon. Her duties as First Lady gave her little free time. Also,
she personally looked after the children and worked at institu-
tions for the sick, the handicapped, and the needy. The only
opportunities for us to speak privately were usually at lunch or
in the early morning.
At 10:30, having done my morning exercises and taken my
bath, I went to the room of Fulgencito, our son, knowing that
she was there with the doctor. When the examination was over,
and while she was telling me the results of the doctor's visit,
I guided her affectionately to her private study. Without telling
her exactly why she should be cautious, I tried to prepare her
for the worst. She told me that the older children were at school
and that she would give orders for them to lunch out, adding:
"In any case, I shall not leave the Palace today to accompany
you." As much as I tried to soften the impact of my words, I
knew she was disturbed and that, as the hours passed, her
nervous tension would grow. This heightened my concern and
I decided toremain with her in my study rather than to return
to my office.
Personal and Political Preoccupation
By one o'clock I had not yet received any information re-
garding the message I had sent Representative Candido Mora
4-56
the previous dawn. I was anxioUS' to have this contact effected.
I profoundly desired that our efforts to give permanent demo-
cratic direction to our country would materialize. Terror was
reaching its height'Wld bombs, set even by minors and students
paid to do so, had taken lives, mutilated human beings, and
caused irreparable damage.
We were doing everything possible to avoid more bloodshed.
In such efforts, the Chief of State would fulfill his duty as Pres-
ident of all the Cubans. If the crime was committed my con-
science would be clear.
And the crime was committed. Although the attackers knew
the layout of the interior of the Presidential Palace very well-
as sketches and plans in their possession proved-they appar-
ently were not well-informed as to how I organized my working
hours during the day and most of the night. I generally took
my afternoon meal between 2:30 and 4. I always handled more
urgent affairs on the third floor and did not descend to the
Presidential office and the reception rooms on the second floor
until about 5 o'clock. I altered this program only if I had
diplomatic conferences or special interviews. That day-the
13th-my wife, the Secretary of the Presidency, Dr. Andres
Domingo, and I lunched alone in my private office. At 3 o'clock
I was still helping my wife in a study of children's clinics, re-
cently established and already functioning in various municipal-
ities, and in the extension of the hospitals of Rehabilitation of
the Handicapped (ONRI) -institutions which had received wide
acclaim because of the popular benefits they offered.
Attack on the Palace
We completed our work on a hospital for the physically and
mentally handicapped, and were preparing for lunch, when
we heard a shot which we at first took for a tire blow-out.
Other shots were heard and I was certain that the barbarity
4-57
had begun. 'My wife somewhat nervously kissed me and said:
"I hope it is not what 1 suspect. May God protect you." She
ran to the room of our sick child. As she disappeared through
the first door, 1 took 01I my coat and tie and put on a sport
jacket.
1 was alone. 1 rang for the Adjutant on duty, Major Rams,
and ordered him to investigate immediately. Within two minutes
he was back with the report that, after killing members of the
guard at the gate, one group, shooting and throwing hand
grenades, had penetrated the lower floor of the building. The
Adjutant held a post at the upper, open end of the corridor. The
other reserve aide, Maj. Varas, remained at the other end, in
charge of the radio transmitter and in constant communication
with military headquarters and police patrol cars. 1 remained
at the telephone, a pistol by my side, in communication with
the Chiefs of the Army, Navy and Police, at the same time try-
ing to maintain contact with the Chief of the Palace Military
Guard.
The explosions of the grenades and shots created a deafening
noise. The telephone operator kept me informed of the action.
The shooting had intensified and the explosion of the h n ~
grenades, on the second floor could be felt. Here-as 1 have
said-were the office of the President and the Administrative
offices. Minister Andres Domingo and about 100 employees,
mostly women, had remained there.
Grenades exploded some 15 feet from my office on the sec-
ond floor. The assailants had reached that point, certain that
1 was at my office desk. The guard near by drove them back.
This attack on me had been badly managed because had I been
there at this hour, the guard would have been much larger.
Simultaneously with the first shots, the telephones in the
Palace began to ring without stopping. 1 thought these calls
meant the attack was already known in the ministries and news-
paper offices. But this was not so. At this hour many were
4-58
listening, to a broadcast of a popwar radio station" which an-
nounced in coarse and insulting words that the President of the
Republic had just been assassinated "in his own den" and urged
the people on to rebellion.
I was later informed that the regular announcers had been
forced out at gun point by the plotters, who had seized, the
controls and transmitted the false reports. The attackers left
the studios quickly, and coming face to face with a patrol car
of the National Police fired at it in desperation, or perhaps in
the belief that the President was dead and the police about to
be deposed. Two of the guards were wounded and Jose Antonio
Echeverria, author of the broadcast, was killed.
The Tragedy and the People
By 6:30 P.M. all firing had ceased. The capital was quiet
and complete order ruled in the rest of the nation. There were
many people at the vast patio of the Presidential Palace. Some
wounded soldiers reached out for me. Below were excited and
frantic men who had lost their buddies while carrying out their
duties. I went out on the balcony and spoke to them. Their
acclamation filled me with emotion. The immediate danger had
passed. Mine was the responsibility of calming their spirits, and
I wished to express my gratitude. A great crowd gathered in
the Hall of Mirrors which was filled beyond capacity. I spoke
with deep sorrow. I congratulated, and'lamented. I expressed
my deeply felt appreciation for their support and solidarity.
So much effort spent to create and produce good things for
the country did not deserve this unhappy response! Cuba's re-
sources had been mobilized, industrial output had grown, labor
opportunities had increased. The workers had fine contracts as
a result of the social program, and a policy of high salaries had
been established. The number of small enterprises had multi-
plied as more white-collar men, workers and peasants set up
4-59
their own shops. Hospitals, schools, asylums and public nurs-
eries had increased, as had guarantees and incentives for invest-
ments and credit. We had determined on elections in which the
people could choose their own administration. What had hap-
pened was serious; but constitutional guarantees ought to be
maintained ... and would be maintained!
The people expressed their appreciation in words and their
presence the following weeks. Industrialists and workers, large
and small hind owners, bankers and merchants, public and pri-
vate employees, institutions and societies all came to the Presi-
dential Palace to greet me and show their condemnation of the
use of violence to settle problems. These visits were climaxed
by a mass demonstration of 300,000 people in front of the
Presidential Palace, reiterating their allegiance to the President
and protesting against attacks on official centers such as the
Palace, where women and children worked and lived.
Road of Sorrow
About 9 o'clock on the night of the 13th I was at my wife's
side, explaining the attack and trying to comfort her. She con-
trolled her nerves during the shooting, looked after our chil-
dren, and visited with me, but she was depressed by this crim-
inal act. Who wouldn't be? It was natural. Not only was she a
woman, but she was going to be a mother again. Reporters were
waiting for me. I left the room but before I descended to the
conference room, the Chiefs of the Army, Navy and Police
arrived, together with some ministers and Congressmen. They
gave me the entire tragic story of the bloody event.
We did not provoke this slaughter among brothers. On the
contrary, we tried to avoid it. God and our friends know it.
It was dawn. My wife's eyes overflowed with tears. Our boy's
fever had not broken and she wanted to calm him. His innocent
imagination had taken wing, and he did not believe our explan-
4-60
ation that the tumult was due to the rockets and fireworks of
the carnival which the city had still been enjoying the day be-
fore. What irony of fate! Carnival season was coming to its end!
The events of this day were another road of sorrow which
our efforts, our democratic plans, and our healthy impulses
were powerless to avoid.
4-61
'.
Section IV. THE ATTACK ON BUEYCITO
Our new independence brought with it new problems. Now we
had to establish rigid discipline, to organize commands, and to
establish some form of General Staff in order to assure success in
any battle, a none too easy task given the men's lack of lliscipline.
No sooner had the detachment been formed than a beloved com-
rade left us. He was Lieutenant Maceo, who went to Santiago on a
mission and whom we would never see again, for he died there
in battle.
We also made a few promotions: Comrade William Roddguez to
lieutenant, also Raul Castro Mercader. By this means we tried to give
shape to our small guerrilla force. One morning we learned that
a man had deserted with his rifle, a .22-caliber weapon which was
precious in the deplorable conditions of that period. The deserter
was known as "El Chino Wong," he was from the advance guard,
and he had probably gone to his district in the foothills of the
Sierra Maestra. Two men were sent after him; but we lost hope
when Israel Pardo and. Banderas returned after a fruitless search
for other deserters. Israel, because of his familiarity with the ter-
rain and his great physical resilience, was promoted to carry out
special functions at my side.
We began to formulate a very ambitious plan, which consisted
of first attacking Estrada Palma during the night and then going
From pages 140.... 146, Reminis'cence.s of the ,Cuban Revolutionary War, by ehe Guevara. Copyright C
1968 by Monthly Review Press; reprinted by permission of Monthly Review Press at USACGSC and may not
be further reproduced.jn whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
'-62
1
I
to the nearby villages of Yara and' Veguitas to capture the small
there, returning to the mountains by the same path. In
this way we could take three barracks In one single assault, count-
ing <llways on the-element of surprise. We had some firing practice,
using bullets sparingly, and we found that all our weapons were
good, except for the Madzen automatic, which was very old and
dirty. In a short note to Fidel we outlined our plan and asked for
his approval or rejection. We did not receive an answer, but from
a broadcast on July 27 we learned of the attack on Estrada Palma
by two hundred men led by Raul Castro, according to the official
report.
The magazine Bohemia, in its only uncensored issue put out at
that time, published a report on the inflicted by our troops
at Estrada Palma, where the old barracks was burned down; it
also mentioned Fidel Castro, Celia Sanchez, and an entire roster of
revolutionaries who had come down from the mountains. Truth
was mixed with myth, as happens in these cases, and the journalists
were unable to disentangle them. In reality the attack was made
not by two hundred men but by many fewer, and it was led by
Major Guillermo Garda (captain in those days). In reality there
was no real combat, for Barreras had retreated shortly before, fear-
ing logically that there would be heavy attacks on July 26 and per-
haps mistrusting his position. The Estrada Palma expedition was
thus a wasted effort. The following day the Army troops chased
our guerrillas and, since we did not yet have a top-flight organiza-
tion, one of our men who had fallen asleep somewhere near San
Lorenzo was captured. After hearing this news, we decided to move
rapidly to an attack on some other barracks in the days immediately
following July 26 and to continue maintaining an atmosphere
appropriate to insurrection.
As we were walking toward the Maestra, one of the two men
who had gone to look for the deserter caught up with us, near a
place called La Jeringa; he told us that the other man had con-
4-63
fided that he was an intimate friend of t.l Chino Wong and
could not betray him; then the other invited him to desert and
indicated that he himself ~ not returning to the guerrillas. The
comrade ordered him to hait; but the new deserter continued walk..
ing and the comrade felt obliged to kill him.
I gathered the entire troop together on the hill facing the spot
where this event had taken place. I explained to our men what they
were going to see and what it meant; I explained once again why
desertion was punishable by death and why anyone who betrayed
the Revolution must be condemned. We passed silently, in single
file, before the body of the man who had tried to abandon his post.
Many of the men had never seen death before and were perhaps
moved more by personal feelings for the dead man and by political
weakness natural at that period than by disloyalty to the Revolu-
tion. These were difficult times and we used this man as an ex-
ample. It is not important to give the men's names here; we will
say only that the dead man was a young, poor peasant from the
vicinity.
We now passed through some familiar territory. On July 30,
Lalo Sardinas made contact with an old friend, a merchant in the
mining region named Armando Oliver. We made an appointment
in a house near the California zone and there we met with him and
Jorge Abich. We spoke of our intention to attack Minas and
Bueycito. It was risky to put this secret in the hands of other
people, but Lalo Sardinas knew and trusted these comrades.
Armando informed us that Casillas came to the vicinity on
Sundays, for, according to the inveterate habit of the soldiery, he
had a sweetheart there. Naturally we were anxious to attack
quickly before our presence was known, rather than trust to our
luck, and capture Casillas. We agreed that on the following night,
July 31, we would start the attack. Armando Oliver would take
charge of getting us trucks, guides, and a miner who would blow
up the bridges linking the Bueycito highway with that of Man-
4-64
zanillo-Bayamo. At'two in the f t ~ n o o n of the following day, we
began our march. We spent a couple of hours getting to the crest
of the Maestra, where we hid all our packs, continuing with only
our field equipment. We had to march a long time and we passed
a row of houses, in one of which a party was going on. We called
all the people together and spoke to them, making clear that we
would hold them responsible if our presence were discovered.
We hurried on. Naturally, the danger of these encounters was not
very great, for there was no telephone nor any means of com-
munication in the Sierra Maestra in those days, and an informer
would have had to run to arrive before us.
We reached the house of Comrade Santiest&an, who placed a
light truck at our disposal; we also had two other trucks which
Armando Oliver had sent us. Thus, with the entire troop in the
trucks (Lalo Sardinas in the first, Ramirito and I in the second,
and Ciro with his platoon in the third), we reached the village of
Minas in less than three hours. In Minas the Army had relaxed
its vigilance, so the main task was to make sure ,no one moved
toward Bueycito; here the rear-guard squad remained, under the
command of Lieutenant Vilo Acuna, today a major in our Rebel
Army, and we continued with the rest of the men to the out-
skirts of Bueycito.
At the entrance to the village, we stopped a coal truck and sent
it on ahead with one of our men to see if there were army guards
on watch, for sometimes at the entrance to Bueycito an army post
inspected everything coming from the Sierra. But there was no one;
all the guards were sleeping happily.
Our plan was simple, though a bit pretentious: Lalo Sardinas
would attack the west side of the barracks, Ramiro and his platoon
would surround it, Ciro with the Staff's machine gun would be
ready to attack from the front, and Armando Oliver would arrive
casually in an automobile, flashing his headlights on the guards.
At that moment, Ramiro's men would invade the barracks, taking
4-65

everyone prisoner; at the same time precautions had to be taken to
capture all the guards who were sleeping in their houses. Lieutenant
Noda's squad (Noda died later in the attack on Pino del Agua)
was charged with detaini;g all vehicles on the highway until
firing began, and William was sent to blow up the bridge connect-
ing Bueycito with the Central Highway, to detain the enemy forces.
The plan never materialized: it was too difficult for inexperienced
men unfamiliar with the terrain. Ramiro lost part of his platoon
during the night and came somewhat late; the car did not arrive;
at one point some dogs barked loudly while we were putting our
troops into position.
As I was walking along the main street of the village, a man
came out of a house. I shouted: "HaIti Who goes there?" The
man, thinking I was a soldier, identified himself: "The Guardia
RuraU" When I aimed my gun at him he ran back into the house,
slamming the door, and from within was heard the sound of falling
tables and chairs and breaking glass as he ran through the house.
There was, I suppose, a tacit agreement between the two of us:
I could not shoot, since the important thing was to take the bar-
racks, and he did not shout a warning to his companions.
We advanced carefully, and were putting the last men in posi-
tion when the barracks sentinel moved forward, curious about the
barking dogs and probably about the noise of my encounter with
the Guardia Rural. We came face to face with each other, only
a few meters apart; I had my Tommy gun cocked and he had
his Garand. Israel Pardo was with me. I shouted: "Haltl" and the
man made a movement. That was enough for 1'!1e: I pulled the
trigger with the intention of shooting him full on, but nothing hap-
pened and I was defenseless. Israel Pardo fired, but his defective
.22 rifle did not discharge either. I don't really know how Israel
came out of this alive. I only remember what I did under the
shower of bullets from the soldier's Garand: I ran with a speed
I have never again matched and turned the corner to reach the
next street. There I put my Tommy gun back into firing order.
4-66
. However, the soldier had unwittingly given the signal to attack, for
his was the first shot our men heard. On hearing shots from all
sides, the soldier, terrified, hid behind a column where we found
him at the end of the short battle. While Israel went to make con-

tact, the shooting stopped and we received the surrender. Ramirito's
men, when they heard the first shots, had moved in and attacked
the barracks from the rear, firing through a wooden door.
In the barracks there were twelve guards, of whom six were
wounded. We had suffered one loss: Comrade Pedro Rivera, a
recent recruit, was shot in the chest. Three of our men had slight
wounds. We burned down the barracks, after removing everything
that could be useful to us, and we left in the trucks, taking with
us as prisoners the post sergeant and an informer named Oran.
The villagers along the way offered us cold beer and refresh-
ments, for it was daylight now. The small wooden bridge near the
central highway had been blown up. As we passed in the last
truck, we blew up another small wooden bridge over a stream.
The miner who did it was brought to us by Oliver as a new mem-
ber of the troop and he was a valuable acquisition; his name was
Cristino Naranjo. He later became a major and was murdered in
the days following the triumph of the Revolution.
We continued on and reached Las Minas. We stopped there to
hold a small meeting. In a rather theatrical scene, one of the
Abich family, a shopkeeper in the area, begged us in the name of
the people to free the sergeant and the informer. We explained that
we held them prisoner only to guarantee that there would be no
reprisals in the village. Abich was so insistent that we agreed to
free them. So the two prisoners were released and the people's
safety assured. As we headed for the Sierra we buried our dead
comrade in the town cemetery. Only a few reconnaissance planes
passed high over us. Just to make sure we were not spotted, we
stopped in a small store, and there attended to the three wounded
men: one had a surface wound in the shoulder but it had torn the
flesh, so the treatment was somewhat difficult; the other had a small
4-67
wound in the hand from a small-caliber weapon, and the third had
a bump on his head. This he had gotten when the mules in the
barracks, frightened by the shooting, had begun to kick wildly;
at one point, according.to the man, they had dislodged a piece of
plaster which had fallen on his head.
In Alto de California, we left the trucks and distributed the
new weapons. Although my participation in the battle had been
minimal and not in the least heroic (since I had turned my back
to the few shots I encountered), I took a Browning automatic,
the jewel of the post, leaving the old Thompson, which never fired
at the right moment. The distribution was made, the best arms
being given to the best fighters, and we dismissed those men who
had shown cowardice, including the mojados [the wet ones],
a group of men who had fallen into the river while fleeing the
first shots. Among those who had performed well we can name
Captain Ramiro Valdes, who led the attack, and Lieutenant Raul
Castro Mercader who together with his men played a decisive
role in the small battle.
When we reached the hills again, we learned that a state of
siege had been declared and censorship established. We also heard
that Frank Pars had been murdered in the streets of Santiago-a
great loss to the Revolution. With his death one of the purest
and most glorious lives of the Cuban Revolution ended; the people
of Santiago, of Havana, and of-all Cuba took to the streets in the
spontaneous August strike. The semi-eensorship of the government
became total censorship, and we entered a new epoch characterized
by the silence of the pseudo-opposition, who were no more than
chattering magpies. The savage murders committed by Batista's
thugs spread through the country, and the people of Cuba prepared
for war.
In Frank Pars we lost one of our most valiant fighters; but the
reaction to his murder demonstrated that new forces were joining
the struggle and the fighting spirit of the people was growing.
4-68

Section V. THE UNDERGROUND
NoVICTORYCELEBRATIONinHavanamarkedtheendofthe
Cienfuegos uprisiIJg, [3J no grin of triumph illuminated the
saturnine features of Batista in the newsreels. The naval
mutiny hadrevealed a crackinthe dictator's armor, and a
chillwindwas blowing through the chink.
Thegovernmentvainlytriedto disguise the natureofthe
insurrection, denying that naval personnel had mutinied at
Cienfuegos. Theonlyresultwastolaythedictatorshipopen
tothegravenewchargeofhavingusedtheweaponsoftotal
war, tanks, aircraft, high explosives, to crush a mere civil
disorder. For the first time, U.S. Congressmen began to
questionthenatureofdiplomatic arrangements thatputthe
United States in the position of providing a dictator with
bombs to be hurled upon a defenseless civilian population.
TheWashington Post, summing up withfair accuracyin
aneditorialpublishedonSeptember 9th, five days after the
Cienfuegosinsurrection,declared:
Although the uprising of rebel and naval forces at the Cuban
port ofCienfuegos may now be under control, itis an ominous
portent for the dictatorship and General Fulgetrcio Batista.
The main source of Batista's power is the military forces, but
despite government denials there is good evidence that naval
troops defected at Cienfuegos and aided rebel forces.*** The
Cienfuegosuprisingaffords asign ofinternalweakness thatcan-
not be shrugged off as easily as the ragtag guerrilla army of
FidelCastrointheSierraMaestra.
In the past few months, Cuba has witnessed an assassination
attempt on the presidential palace, an abortive general strike,
police terror in Santiago, midnight bombings and shootings in
Havana, and a blackout of the Cuban press.
[3 4Sep 1957.J
From pages 184-239,M-26 Biography of a Revolu*n, by Robert Tabor. Publis.hed by arrangement with
Lyle Stuart. Inc., New York, N.Y. 10003, copyright \Q) 1961 by Robert Tabor. Reproduced at USACGSC
by specialpermission and may not be further reproducedin whole or in part without express permission of
the copyright owner.
4-69
General Batista deceives no one by blaming the unrest on the
Communists. He has pledged a free election in June of 1958,
but his repressive policies weaken faith in his promise. It seems
dear that if Batista does .not accede to an orderly transfer of
power, trouble and revolt will continue to plague the freedom-
hungry island of Cuba.
The "ominous portent" seen by the Washington Post
failed to hearten the leaders of the 26th of July movement.
If a general strike, a serious defection of the armed forces,
and the pitched battle of an entire city against the army
could not shake down the dictator, the question was-what
could?
The revolutionary leaders had relied from the beginning
on various forms of psychological warfare against the dicta-
torship, with but little apparent success. Fidel himself had
"struck the spark," but the fire refused to spread to the de-
sired quarter, nor had repeated "sparks"-the assault on the
palace, the general strike, Cienfuegos-seemed to make any
difference. The foundations of the government had no doubt
been weakened. But the dramatic collapse anticipated had
failed to come.
It was plain that a new and more powerful and concerted
effort was reqUired. On October 10th and 11th, Resistencia
'Civica and M-26 underground leaders from every province
but those of Pinar del Rio and Matanzas met at "Chantilly,"
the summer cottage of the Santos Buch family outside of
Santiago, to reorganize the entire top echelon of the move-
ment.
Dr. Angel Santos Buch was appointed national secretary
of the Resistencia. The National Direction of the 26th, here-
tofore a loose, informal, and shifting delegation of authority
rather than an executive committee, now became a formal
entity with at least nominal responsibility for making com-
mand decisions.
The word "nominal" must be stressed. Fidel subscribed
4-70
to the idea of group decision, in principle. In practice, he
continued to issue the orders, both political and military, and
to exercise his personal veto on plans of which he disap-
proved.
The principal effect of the reorganization was to accelerate
the drive for funds with which to arm the revolutionary
forces in Oriente. Chapters of the Resistencia Civica were
set up in a dozen cities in the United States, to supplement
the fund-raising and arms-purchasing activities of the 26th
of July "clubs," on a somewhat higher economic plane.
By spring, a committee of Resistencia leaders that in-
cluded Dr. Santos Buch, Raul Chibas, the former Ortodoxo
presidential candidate Roberto Agramonte, and Fidel's nom-
inee for provisional president, Dr. Urrutia, was touring the
capitals of the hemisphere, seeking contributions and diplo-
matic support.
A Washington lobby was formed, to win Congressional
support in a drive to shut off the flow of "Mutual Security"
arms to Batista.
In Cuba fund collections were put on an organized basis,
with Haydee Santamaria and later Manuel Suzarte in charge
of national finance. Bonds were issued in a variety of de-
nominations ranging upwards from one to a thousand dol-
lars. A single issue of non-redeemable "salary day" bonds
bearing the legend "For the Last 10th of March Under
Tyranny" * yielded a quarter of a million dollars. Single
private donations ranged as high as one hundred thousand
dollars (a rare instance), and contributions from business,
industry, and agriculture matched the popular donations and
the proceeds of bond sales.
It may be noted without prejudice that, although the con-
tributions in most instances reflected nothing more than
simple patriotism, a natural tendency to seek to purchase
"insurance" against strikes, sabotage, and the eventual day
*Anniversary of the Batista coup of 1952.
4-71
of reckoning' can also be detected. By the time the rebel
march on Havana began, sounding the death knell of the
dictatorship, the Movimiento 26 had three million dollars in
hand, as yet unspent. Anti by that time, contributions in the
vast territorio libre of Cuba which Batista no longer even
pretended to control had become direct taxes, imposed by a
revolutionary government the very existence of which, for
reasons worth some later consideration, remained unac-
countably unknown to the vast majority of Americans.
But this is to be beforehand. In the autumn of 1957,
Batista still had a great many unpleasant surprises ahead of
him.
One of the blows that hit him hardest was a personal
thrust: the assassination at the end of November of the
Holguin district commander, Colonel Fermin Cowley.
The author of "Batista's Christmas Gift" of the preceding
winter had long been marked for death, the order for his
execution having come directly from the Sierra. It was by
no means an easy assignment. Other problems aside, Cowley
was extremely erratic in his habits, as in his personal charac-
ter.
As to his character, it is of some interest because the
colonel was a close friend of Batista, a sometime revolu-
tionary himself, who had had a part in the Sergeants' Revolt
of 1933. At forty-seven he was slightly obese and soft from
good living, but energetic and not unattractive in appearance
and manner, capable of exercising a certain graciousness, a
charm that was not lost on women, as witness the fact that
he had acquired eight wives in twenty-five years (and had
outworn seven).
His tastes were epicurean; he enjoyed classical music and
had a large record library, flew his own airplane, dabbled in
underwater photography, played with an elaborate model
railway, and collected children's toys. His favorite toy is said
to have been a soft black teddy bear.
4-72
It is h ~ to say whether ~ r e r was also one of his pleas-
ures, or merely his business. The fact is that he was directly
responsible for the slaying of more than one hundred per-
sons. In the great majority of instances, he pulled the trigger
or tightened the noose himself.
The responsibility for carrying out Cowley's execution-
it cannot justly be called by any other name-was assumed
by the M-26 action leader in the city of Holguin, a mecbanic
by trade, then thirty-three years old. *
The action chief put a watch on the colonel, and waited
for opportunity to present itself. It came, finally, on the
morning of November 23rd. A telephone call informed the
underground leader that Cowley was at that moment in the
Holguin business section, without his bodyguard, shopping
on the premises of an air supply company.
The leader and three men who had been chosen for the
execution drove immediately to the company store and ware-
house, found the familiar blue sedan of the colonel's wife
parked outside, empty, and looked into the office. Cowley
was not there. The M-26 men drove around the corner, past
the service entrance at the side of the store, and saw Cowley
inside at a counter. They circled the block and returned to
park behind a truck that was unloading cylinders of gas and
compressed air at the loading ramp.
The squad leader got out of the car with an automatic
shotgun in his hands. There was a moment's hesitation. The
man glimpsed inside the air supply storeroom had been
wearing glasses. Cowley was not known to wear or to need
them. As the man with the shotgun mounted the loading
ramp, one of the youths behind him shouted that he was
making a mistake.
There was no mistake. The shout was heard by Cowley,
examining an air meter at the counter. He turned to the open
door as his executioner reached it. Perhaps the glare of light
* His name is withheld because of the continuing danger of reprisal.
4-73
kept the coionel from seeing what the man approaching
held in his hands. Perhaps he was too shocked to react ra-
tionally. Whatever was in his mind, he turned back to the
counter, hunching his shoulders as though to shut out an
intrusion that he resented but felt helpless to prevent.
A young clerk with whom the underground leader was ac-
quainted was standing on the other side of the counter. The
action chief took a long step to one side, so as to put the
boy out of the line of fire, raised the shotgun and, standing
on the ramp at a level slightly below the motionless colonel,
squeezed the trigger. There was no response. The colonel
still stood with his back turned. The gunman lowered his
weapon, released the safety catch, again took aim, and fired.
The charge caught Cowley full in the back of the head.
On the street outside, the roar of the shotgun was echoed
by another blast. One of the three youths waiting for the
action leader had shot the colonel's chauffeur, who had been
standing on the corner, and had turned around at the sound
of the shot that killed his superior. The rebels fled.
The fatal shotgun blast reverberated in the presidential
palace in Havana, where the news of Cowley's death brought
personal anguish to Batista. "The dictator is no longer de-
risive," wrote Time magazine in its editions of December
9th. "Last week, in Colon Cemetery in Havana, he dropped
his broad face in his hands and wept as a guard of honor
buried Colonel Fermin Cowley, 47, one of his top com-
d ...
"
man ers
Batista's tears do him more credit than most of his actions;
no one can wish to strip him of all humanity. To do so would
be to create a caricature. But comradely tears and soldiers'
teddy bears weighed little in a war that mocked all misery
and made jokes of the grim "ornaments" that Colonel Cow-
ley swung from trees on Christmas Eve in Oriente.
A photograph published in Bohemia during the first
weeks of 1959, after the liberation, shows a small boy in
4-74
Manzanillo playing with three. human skulls given to him by
his father, a lieutenant of the notorious Masferrer. This, like
tears and teddy bears, is also incidental, signifying little ex-
cept as a token, of the bitterness and despair, the cynicism,
the perversion of human values that are the by-products of
war.
For, however it may have seemed from the outside, full-
scale civil war was in progress in Oriente by the end of 1957.
And the reprisals that followed the Cowley killing, quick,
cold-blooded, and efficient, were only to be expected as part
of the quickening conflict that had spread throughout the
province and to all the cities of the island.
The "rag-tag guerrilla army" of Fidel Castro was giving
Batista more trouble than was apparent to anyone outside
of the province. Far-ranging guerrilla patrols, continuing the
hit-and-run, fight-and-hide offensive that had begun in May,
harried the government forces for a hundred miles along the
Caribbean coast, and along the northern perimeter of the
Sierra for another hundred miles, from Cape Cruz north to
Niquero and Manzanillo and east to the garrison city of
Bayamo.
One result of the reorganization of the rebel Direccion
Naf;ional was to put pressure on Fidel to take fewer personal
risks; to repress his impulse to supervise each action himself
and persuade him to delegate more authority, confining him-
self to strategic planning in the relative safety of a rear
echelon headquarters.
The effort was not entirely a success, but eventually a
more or less permanent headquarters was established, in a
bohio at La Plata, * on the southern slope of the Sierra,
within two days' march of Pico Turquino.
The responsibilities of directing, simultaneously, an am-
*Not to be confused with the coastal village of La Plata indicated on
most maps of Cuba.
4-75
bitious military campaign and a variety of 'political efforts
were enough to keep Fidel in one place much of the time, of
necessity if not by choice. A constant stream of messengers
coming and going, visitors from the cities arriving for politi-
cal consultations, unit commanders reporting for orders,
underground leaders requiring instruction, all occupied him
from early morning until far into the night.
The free-lance journalist Andrew St. George, coming out
of the mountains in November after a long sojourn, ex-
plained: "You need to have an appointment to talk with
Fidel now. It has become a big organization, and he's a
very busy man."
Fidel no longer troubled to remove his heavy horn-
rimmed glasses when his photograph was made: he was too
preoccupied to be concerned about appearance, too sure of
his position to bother striking poses, and by now too ac-
customed to being photographed to take notice.
His scraggly beard had grown untended. It is doubtful
that he would have bothered to shave, even if simbolismo
had not converted the earlier absence of razor blades and
hot water into an asset, in terms of "public relations."
The term "barbudos" was becoming a familiar expression
in Oriente as Fidel's bearded guerrillas began to strike into
the villages and towns along the edge of the Sierra. The
raids were becoming increasingly frequent. On rare occa-
sions, the army still attempted some counter-measure.
In mid-September the barbudos ambushed a column of
two hundred government troops at Palma Mocha, on the
Caribbean side of the range, as they worked their way in the
general direction of La Plata. The rebels had the advantage
of surprise. Fifty-seven soldiers were killed in the clash.
Fidel lost five men, and considered the rebel casualty rate
excessive, the price too high for the weapons and ammuni-
tion that were captured.
4-76
Thearmydid notmentionthe actioninits bulletins. But
nofurther attemptto penetratethearea.was madethrough-
,outtheremainderofthefall andwinter.
The accelerated pace of the guerrilla campaign was
matched by the efforts ofthe urban underground, and this
activity in tum by the terrorism of government security
forces andpro-Batista civilian elements, namely, the "mas-
ferristas."
Dynamite explosions temporarily cut off electric power
andwater supplies inSantiago and Havana. An armylieu-
tenant who had been accused of selling rifles to the rebels
was tortured to death. A loyalty check ofthe armed forces,
begun in the wake of the Cienfuegos uprising, continued.
Militaryrule, alreadyaconditionoflife inOriente, became
more rigorous. Road blocks were increasedin number; air-
ports, railterminals, andbus stations were closelyguarded;
.and all travelers subjected to strict surveillance. Armed
soldiers rode on all buses, both in the towns and in the
<countryside. Troops stood guard at radio stations, power
plants, and public buildings; army jeeps and micro-ondas
ceaselessly prowled the city streets; and armored cars pa-
trolledthehighways.
In Holguin, two days after Colonel Cowley's death, a
special force of one hundred fifty SIM troops under Lieu-
tenantColonelIrenaldoGardaBaez, * theassistantchiefof
the military intelligence service, arrived to conduct an in-
vestigation.
Theinquirywas carriedoutwithPrussian thoroughness.
All roads leading out of the city were blocked by the SIM
men with their distinctive red-white-and-blue shoulder
patches. Check points were established at intersections
throughout the city. Residents wishing to move from one
section to another were required to obtain specialpasses.
* Son of Pilar Garda, colonel atMatanzas, later made Brigadier and
putinchargeofNationalPoliceinHavana.
4-77

Every house and building in the city of eighty thousand


population was searched, with the aid of regular troops and
police; every citizen able tQ talk was questioned.
More than one thousand persons were taken to the 7th
District military base for further interrogation. By the first
week of December, all but eighteen suspects had been
cleared.
Eleven whose association with the Holguin underground
was uncertain were held for the courts, later released for
lack of evidence against them. One, a youth who had had
some connection with the underground but no knowledge
of the circumstances of Cowley's death, was saved by his
own good fortune and the intervention of his influential
family.
Of the remaining six, five were members of the 26th of
July movement, the sixth was a middle-aged automobile
dealer, so unfortunate as to have been on the scene at the
time of the shooting, and so unwise as to have denied it, in a
moment of panic. Testimony that he had been in an ice-
cream parlor across the street when Cowley was shot failed
to convince Garcia Baez of his innocence.
On the night of December 8th, an automobile left the
military base with the six suspects. A carload of soldiers fol-
lowed the automobile conveying the handcuffed prisoners to
the city where, presumably, they were to be lodged in the
civil prison.
En route, there was a brief halt. A short while later the
soldiers arrived in Holguin and left six bullet-riddled bodies
on the curb in front of the city hospital. The soldiers re-
ported that rebels had fired on them on the drive into the
city and had killed the prisoners-by mistake.
As it happened, none of the six had taken part in Cowley's
execution. The four men actually responsible were far from
Holguin. All four survived the revolution.
In November the call came from the Sierra for an inten-
4-78
sive campaign of economic attrition, designed to exert pres-
sure on the government in its most vulnerable quarter.
The guerrilla operation in Oriente was going well enough,
the revoluti@nary movement was being strengthened
throughout the country. More was required.
Batista, too, was reinforcing his position, both militarily
and politically. The army was being built up; the govern-
ment was emptying the reformatories and jails in order to
fill military uniforms, seeming not to care what sort of hu-
man material was employed, so long as it could shoulder a
rifle and be marched into the Sierra. Money was being
poured into armaments, with the emphasis on the specialized
weapons of mountain warfare, howitzers, mortars, rifle
grenades, machine guns, napalm.
On the political level, Batista was seeking to provide
fresh window dressing, with the cooperation of the legal
opposition parties, inc1udingGrau San Martin's autenticos,
and reactionary splinters of the no longer legal Ortodoxo
party. General elections had been called for June 1st, 1958.
Batista was willing to leave the presidential palace, as the
Constitution required that he should, on condition that it be
surrendered to a custodian of his choice. His interest was in
real rather than apparent power. Having failed to win per-
sonal popularity, he was ready to revert to his long-held
former role of president-maker.
The object was to provide a figurehead in the palace and
yet retain control. If appearances required elections, as was
beginning to appear to be the case, then, very well-he him-
self was prepared to finance the "election campaigns" of the
nominal opposition candidates, which is to say, stalking-
horses.
The political maneuvers in the capital worried Fidel far
more than the efforts of the army in Oriente. The fidelista
from the start had been conceived in terms of
psychological warfare. The sporadic and relatively harmless

sabotage of the past had been intended hirgely for psycho-
logical effect. Fifty bombs. exploded in the capital during
one brief period, the rebels poasted, produced no more than
four casualties. The trouble was that the squawking hen
continued to lay eggs. The people responded to the alarms
and excursions of the psychological campaign, and were
savagely repressed by a regime that had contempt for
weakness and respected only force and wealth. The interests
that backed Batista, seeing no imminent military threat,
feeling no tug at their purse strings, remained unmoved.
Baffled by the "business as usual" attitude that prevailed
in the capital, impatient for quick, dramatic results at a
minimal cost in lives, fearing a farcical election that would
nevertheless consolidate the position of the regime in power
under a new name, Fidel took a drastic step.
The order that came from the Sierra was: apply the torch
to the ripening sugar cane crop-some six and a half million
tons, a third of the world's entire sugar supply for the year,
with an estimated value of more than half a billion dollars,
the livelihood of seven hundred thousand Cubans employed
in the annual cane harvest and grinding, the zafra.
It was a staggering, almost sacrilegious idea-like asking
bankers to burn bank notes. Cane had been burned before,
but mainly as a device to create disorder and to distract the
attention of the government security forces; usually, also,
with an eye to the political orientation and behavior of the
mill owner. Now the cane was all to go. The call for the
torch was firm: "There will be no zatra with Batista. After
the tyrant is in the tomb . . . we will have a zatra of
liberty."
Cane was the primary target, but the order applied to all
income-producing crops and industry. The disorganized,
"psychological" sabotage of the past now gave way to pur-
poseful destruction on a broad scale.
Small guerrilla patrols from the Sierra moved into the
4-80
plains to spread fire through the canefields. Leaflets were cir-
culated giving simple instructions for the preparation of
gasoline bombs. Saboteurs crept out from the towns and
villages at nigltt to set the fields ablaze from one end of the
island to the other.
In the western provinces of Havana and Pinar del Rio, it
was tobacco that burned. Fifty tobacco warehouses went up
in smoke within a single week. A small airplane flying over
the province of Havana destroyed one hundred fifty thou-
sand tons of sugar in two days, by dropping small celluloid
capsules filled with phosphorous that spread flames across
five major sugar centrales.
The urban underground increased its effort. Huge oil re-
finery tanks on the outskirts of Santiago and Havana burned.
The Havana Aqueduct was dynamited and began to lose
five million gallons of water daily. Buses were burned in
their terminal in Santiago. There were increasing interrup-
tions of electrical power and water supplies from Guan-
ta-namo to Havana as power lines and water mains were
wrecked.
"Embattled Cuba Gay for Yuletide," was the column
heading of the Havana dispatch published in The New York
Times of December 15th. The text went on to report that
Cuban workers were earning higher wages than in many
years, sugar producers were planning to distribute wage
bonuses amounting to seventeen million dollars by govern-
ment edict, "Santa Claus has become an important person-
ality and the Christmas tree has been adopted whole-
heartedly."
Glittering white Christmas trees adorned the presidential
palace grounds where the insurgents of the March 13th
attack had lain in their blood. Stores were crowded,
cabarets and casinos were flourishing, and even motion pic-
ture houses were doing a "fair" trade, although the Times
4-81
.
notesthattherewas scarcely atheaterinCubathathadnot
been bombed.
Fidel Castro did his Christmas "shopping" in the village
of Veguitas, on the Manzanillo-Bayamo highway, disarm-
ing eight soldiers on duty at the small military barracks
there andreturning to the hills with four trucks ladenwith
food andclothingfromthevillagestores,paidforwithcash.
In his letter of December 14th, in which he proposed
Judge Urrutia as headof "acaretaker government" to suc-
ceed the Batistaregime, Fidelreportedno fewer thaneight
engagementswiththearmyintheprecedingweek. Themost
important had been near Veguitas, where the rebels, two
hundredstrong,attackedacolumnofthreehundredsoldiers
on December 11th, and-Fidelwrote-inflicted one hun-
dredseventycasualties.
There was a series of raids in the Manzanillo area. On
Christmas Eve, the rebels capturedthe Manzanillo airport,
held it briefly while taking medical stores from a nearby
hospital, andagainwithdrewintothehills.
* * * * * * *
4-82
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Section I. CASTRO DECLARES TOTAL WAR
In his New Year's message [1958] from the presidential
palace, Batista expressed hope of II continued rising prosper-
ity and happiness in allCuban homes,II and declared thatthe
people had manifested II a deep desire to live in peace ac-
cordingto Christian principles.II
The Times headed its dispatch of January 1st: "Bombs
inHavanaGreetNewYear."
There was no abatement of the sabotage campaign, nor
ofthefightinginOriente. Therebels againraidedVeguitas,
killedfivesoldiersofthereinforcedgarrisonthere,destroyed
the telegraph office, and withdrew as a motorized column
speddownthehighwayfromBayamotorelievethebesieged
soldiers. An armored car at the head of the relief column
ranoveramineinthe road andwas blown to bits.
Buses and trains were being stopped daily in the Man-
zanillo area, thepassengers set afoot, andthe buses burned.
Private automobiles were halted for inspection by rebel
From pages 197-213, 216-239,M26 Biography of a v o l u ~ by Robert Tabor. Published by arrange-
ment with Lyle Stuart, Inc., New York, N.Y. 10003, copyright \.1 1961byRobert Tabor. Reproduced at
USACGSC byspecialpermiseUon and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without specialper-
mission'of the copyright owner.
5:-2
patrols, trains were stopped' and searched for arms and
ammunition, their guards relieved of their weapons, the
passengers instructed to stay home in the future. A diesel
train was burned near Bayamo, a locomotive vanished from
a sugar mill and later was discovered to have been blown up.
Another train was sent running free along the tracks to
crash into a string of empty cars in the Guant{mamo station.
An exodus of civilians began from Manzanillo as a rebel
attack on the city of forty thousand population daily ap-
peared more imminent. The army poured reinforcements
into the city and built concrete fortifications on its outskirts
in anticipation of the assault.
More than five thousand troops had by now been com-
mitted to the Sierra Maestra zone of operations, and fresh
troops continued to arrive, air-lifted from Havana, Matan-
zas, Santa Clara, and Camagiiey.
The government forces were hopelessly inadequate for
their task, their lines far over-extended, unable to maintain
contact with the enemy, hard put to defend themselves from
lightning attacks in unexpected quarters.
The rebel tactics were simple and seldom varied. A prov-
ocation would be created. Government troops would speed
to the scene and run headlong into ambush or, avoiding the
obvious trap, would find themselves in yet another, en-
circled and attacked on their flanks or from behind. Army
commanders found it easy to enter the foothills, difficult to
get out again with their units intact.
Rebel patrols moved along the perimeter of Fidel's pro-
claimed territorio libre over a distance of more than two
hundred fifty miles on both sides of the mountain range, lay-
ing waste to the canefields and the rice crop, attacking the
garrisons at the sugar mills, entering towns to make pur-
chases of supplies and leaving at their leisure.
5-3
The army controlled the Manzanillo-Bayamo road during
daylight, the rebels controlled it at night. The central high-
way itself was threatened as the barbudos extended their
operations from Bayamo westward to the outskirts of Palma
Soriano and southward to the port of Chivirico, across the
broad bay from Santiago de Cuba.
Rebel casualties were low, one reason being that the
rebels were able to depend on the civil population for warn-
ing of the approach of government troops, and did battle
only when it seemed expedient.
It was the civilians who suffered, and the urban under-
ground. Army commanders were under pressure from
Havana to produce "victories"-and evidence of their
achievement. In many instances, they took the easiest and
safest course. On January 15th, a military bulletin issued
by the estado mayor at Camp Columbia reported that
twenty-three rebels had been killed in an encounter at Los
Hombritos, near Bayamo. No army casualties were re-
ported, for the very good reason that there had been no
"encounter." The "rebels" had been taken from jail in
Santiago, conveyed by truck to the Los Hombritos area,
marched into the hills, and shot down by the soldiers.
The bodies of four unidentified young men were found
hanging from trees outside of Guantanamo. Manuel Hevia,
nephew of former President Carlos Hevia, was kidnapped
on the street in Havana, beaten and burned on his arms and
body with lighted cigarets, and told to "stay out of it,"
meaning, stay out of politics. Saboteurs caught in the cane-
fields were shot on sight. The bodies of youths suspected of
having any connection with the underground littered the
roads. The residents of Manzanillo sent a petition to General
Chaviano, asking for military intervention to protect their
sons from a band of Senator Masferrer's vigilantes roaming
the area, killing suspected rebel sympathizers.
Although the barbudos moved in relative security within

their own free territory, to pass into the fortified cities re-
mainedahazardousundertakingforindividuals. Thosewho
were caught leaving the rebel zone and survived were the
fortunate few.
On January 10th the fugitive underground leader Ar-
mandoHartwas capturednearBayamoas hereturnedfrom
consultationsintheSierrawith Fidel. Seizedwithhimwere
Felipe Pazos' son, Javier, and Antonio Buch, a cousin of
Dr. Angel Santos Buch, the Resistencia leader. (Thelatter
hadalreadygoneintoexile, havingfled thecountryafterhis
Santiago laboratorywas searched during his temporary ab-
sence by Salas Caiiizares, the SIM chief.)
By good fortune, the arrest of the three prominent
fidelistas was reported immediatelyto the Resistencia. The
Times correspondentinHavana was notified at once, so as
to publicizethecaptureandinsurethattheprisoners would
notsimplyvanish.TheUnitedStatesviceconsulinSantiago,
Robert Wiecha, was prevailed upon to make inquiries on
behalf of thefamilies of the three men, withthe result that
General Chaviano was compelled to produce the prisoners,
unharmed, to prove that they had not been tortured or
killed.*
The foregoing is one of the several instances in which
Wiecharenderedinvaluableandhumanitarianservicetothe
Batista opposition. Similar services were performed by
other individual members of the U.S. consular and diplo-
matic corps; in some cases as a matter of natural human
sympathy,inothers, apparently, as asimpleconsequenceof
the wish to maintain some semblance of contact with the
leadership of a movement that daily seemed more certain
of taking over the reins of government in Cuba.
Such contacts were not officially sanctioned. On the
contrary, Ambassador Smith expressly ordered his staff to
* Buch and Pazos were laterfreed by thecourts. Hartwas sent to the
Isle of Pines, where he remained until the liberation.
5-5
have no dealings with revolutionary elements, and subse-
quently the commandant at the United States naval base at
Guantanamo Bay, Rear Admiral Robert B. Ellis, issued the
same order to the officer in charge of naval intelligence on
the base; i.e., learn what needs to be known about rebel
strength and military intentions, but have no contact with
the rebels.
The good offices of individual members of the consular
and diplomatic services failed to offset the unfavorable im-
pression made on the Cuban public at large by Ambassador
Smith, a millionaire stockbroker and a political appointee,
who had contributed generously to the Republican campaign
fund during the 1952 presidential elections in the United
States.
Smith lost what remained of his earlier popularity in
Cuba when he flew to Washington for "routine" consulta-
tions during the first month of 1958, and after conferring
with the State Department, issued a statement in which he
expressed it as the "hope" of the United States that Batista
would restore full constitutional guarantees, as promised, on
January 27th, and would proceed in June with elections
"acceptable to the people of Cuba."
The ambassador's remarks, coupled with an expression of
strict neutrality in the Cuban struggle, were interpreted in
Cuba as a declaration of support for Batista, the more so
since it was obvious to all-and should have been clear to
Smith-that elections conducted while the dictator remained
in power could have but one result.
A report circulated in Washington concerning certain
"off-the-record" statements said to have been made by the
ambassador at his news conference did nothing to improve
the impression.
Among other things, Smith was quoted as being of the
opinion that the United States could not possibly "do busi-
ness" with Fidel Castro's followers under any circumstances,
5-6
that rebel raids on Manzanillo had been made because of
criticism that the fidelistas had not been "active enough,"
that the cane burning had "boomeranged," and that al-
though there waS no evidence that Fidel Castro ~ a Com-
munist, there was "no doubt that he has a questionable
background."
Whatever the intention of the State Department, Smith's
statement supporting the scheduled June electoral farce and
U.S. protestations of "impartiality and non-intervention"
infuriated the Batista oppositionists, who denounced it as
"unwarranted intervention" and much else that was unfavor-
able besides.
As to the ambassador's reported off-the-cuff remarks
vis-a.-vis Fidel Castro, they were not easily dismissed. It
was all too easy to recall other diplomatic gaffes, for exam-
ple, Ambassador Arthur Gardner's characterization of
Castro as a "rabble rouser" on the occasion of the formal
delivery of seven Sherman tanks to the Cuban army, * and
the decoration of Colonel Carlos Tabernilla, son of the army
chief of staff, by a United States Air Force General, only a
few weeks after the younger Tabernilla had directed the air
attacks that had crushed the Cienfuegos uprising. t
Of even more concern to the Cuban revolutionaries than
the pronouncements of the American ambassador were the
policies actively being pursued by the United States govern-
ment with respect to the Batista regime.
* February, 1957. .
t USAF Major General Truman Landon flew to Havana to present
Tabernilla the Legion of Merit. The accompanying citation, as recorded
in the Library of Congress, reads: "Colonel Carlos M. Tabernilla y
Palmero, Chief, Cuban Army Air Force, distinguished himself by ex-
ceptionally meritorious conduct in the furtherance of amicable relations
between the Cuban Air Force and the United States Air Force from May,
1955, to February, 1957. During this period the leadership ability,
diplomacy, and good will of Colonel Tabernilla have contributed im-
measurably to the furtherance of Cuban-American friendship." The fact
that the period cited antedates the Cienfuegos insurrection was lost on
most Cubans. They were in no humor to make such fine distinctions.
5-7
The asserted neutrality of the Unitetl States could not be
a reality, according to a statement issued by Ernesto
Betancourt, a spokesman for the 26th of July movement
in Washington, "as long as there is an American military
mission in Cuba whose technical assistance is being used
by the Batista regime to increase the proficiency of its
repressive forces, and as long as planes, tanks, and ships
over which the United States government still has control,
weapons given by the American people to defend this
hemisphere, are used by Batista to unleash total war on
Cuban citizens."
An even more forceful statement carne in February from
the Sierra Maestra, where Fidel declared that a change in
the attitude of the United States government had been
noted since Ambassador Smith's Washington visit. A "secret
agreement" had been made in January, Fidel charged, in
which Batista had agreed to restore constitutional guaran-
tees, in return for firmer U.S. support, namely, a pledge to
take action against Cuban revolutionary groups soliciting
funds and buying arms in the United States.
In evidence, Fidel cited the recent arrest iri Miami of
Dr. Pdo, indicted February 13th for conspiracy to violate
the U.S. Neutrality Act. Moreover, the rebel leader de-
clared, it had been noted that the Batista air force had
started using jet aircraft in Oriente for the first time follow-
ing Smith's return from Washington, and that the Havana
government had increased its arms budget.
As to the question of arms being purchased by Batista
in the United States, the 26th of July movement was in
certain possession of the facts, having, as it happened, an
agent in the Cuban Embassy in Washington.
The agent was a Cuban army sergeant, Angel Saavedra,
secretary to the military attache, and so in a position to lay
hands on virtually every document of interest to Fidel that
passed through the Embassy-including arms purchase and
5-8
delivery orders. Photographic .copies of value to the Movi-
miento 26 were passed on to Ernesto Betancourt, its regis-
tered agent in Washington, who took care in making use
of the documents that suspicion should not fall on Saavedra.
(The sergeant, for his part, posed as an ardent batistiano,
so much so as to become a nuisance to less enthusiastic
followers of Batista. He was still at work in the Embassy
when Batista fled to Santo Domingo.)
The State Department was prompt to deny that any
"secret agreement" had been made, or that the attitude of
the United States government was other than scrupulously
neutral.
Nevertheless, as the result of the interchange, and the
lobbying of a number of eminently respectable and widely
respected Cubans aligned against Batista, rising criticism
of State Department policy began to be voiced in the
American press, and several Congressmen-notably Ore-
gon's Senator Wayne Morse and Representative Charles
O. Porter, and New York Representative Adam Clayton
Powell, Jr.-began to investigate the use to which arma-
ments sent to Cuba under the Mutual Security program
and the Mutual Assistance pact were being put.
The State Department regretfully refused to divulge the
amounts and nature of the weapons shipped to Cuba.
Within a short while, however, Powell contrived to provide
Congress with a list of such arms, complete with the
specific order numbers and delivery dates.
In so doing, the Congressman minced no words. "The
United States," he declared, "is a partner with the dictator
of Cuba, Fulgencio Batista, in the killing of close to four
thousand Cubans so far, and it is time that we should get
out and get out at once. We not only have been and are
supplying arms to Batista, but we have a military mission
established in Cuba, actively assisting the Cuban army.
There should be an immediate stoppage of the flow of arms
5-9
and ammunitionfrom this country, andthere should be an
immediate withdrawal of the mission." *
The list of arms delivered during the preceding two
years-"modest" in the opinion of the State Department
-included:
3,000M-1 caliber.30semi-automaticrifles
15,000handgrenades
5,000mortargrenades
20caliber.30machineguns
20caliber.50machineguns
100,000 caliber .50 armor-piercing cartridges for machine
guns
1,0003.5-millimeterrockets
3,000five-inchrockets
1completebatteryoflightmountainhowitzerartillery bombs
for the CubanArmyAir Force valued at $328,931.48
7M4A3 tanks with 76-millimeter guns
Onorderfor Junedeliveryweretwenty annoredcars, in
the process of being rebuilt, and for August delivery com-
municationequipmentvaluedat$89,998.66.
Requestsforwhichnocontractnumberhadbeenassigned
included 1,000rocket launchers, 24 mortars, 10,000 hand
grenades, 6,000M-1 rifles, and2,000M-1 carbines, among
otheritems.
By the time the American public had begun to get a
glimmering of what was happening in Cuba, a new crisis
was approaching.
"Nations run fever charts like individuals," Herbert
Matthews observed in one of his exceptionally perceptive
reports from Havana in the early spring of 1958t-"A
fever chart of Cuba started a year ago would show not
only a steady rise but an increase in the last six weeks so
steep and to such a height that one can only diagnose a
crisis of the gravest nature."
* CongressionalRecordofMarch20, 1958.
t March 22, 1958, The New York Times.
5-10
The developments of the late winter and early spring
came at such a furious pace and in such profusion that it
is difficult to separate the military from the political, the
action from the the significant from the spectacular
but merely incidental.
Both sides sustained losses, both suffered setbacks, both
marked positive gains. What remained after debits and
credits had been checked off, one against the other, was the
undeniable circumstance that the Revolution had gained
ground, both literally and in the political sense, and that
Batista had retreated, both on the fighting front and in the
political arena.
Only official Washington, absorbed in its own complex
calculations, weighing and checking obscure factors on a
global scale that were yet invisible to ordinary observers, or
too complicated for ordinary understanding, seemed not to
notice.
In rapid sequence, these were the salient developments:
Batista restored constitutional guarantees on January 25th
to all of the six provinces but Oriente, and ten days later,
under heavy pressure, to Oriente also.
Scarcely had censorship ended when fighting broke out
on a new front in the center of the island, in Las Villas
province, where Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo, a survivor of
the palace attack of 1957 and brother of the underground
leader slain there, had quietly been building up a strong
guerrilla force for two months past.
Fighters of EI Segundo Frente Nacional del Escambray,
trained in commando tactics by the American William
Morgan, a war veteran from Toledo, Ohio, who was de-
scribed as "particularly proficient with a knife," launched
a series of lightning attacks on small army posts in the
mountains around Sancti Spiritus and the Caribbean port
of Trinidad. There was fighting at Fomento on the cross-
island highway to the Atlantic coast and within fifteen miles
5-11
of the all-important Central Highway. A rebel truck convoy
was intercepted bringing arms to the mountains, and the
Directorio Revolucionario leader from Sancti Spiritus was
killed.
In February another veteran of the palace attack, Faure
Chaumont, landed on the Caribbean coast with another
small force and led his men into the Sierra de Trinidad, and
the fighting spread, tying up more government troops.
A landing was reported at Playa de las Coloradas in
Oriente, the scene of the original Granma landing. Fidel was
there to receive, not men, but urgently needed arms. Other
expeditions, too ambitious, met a harder fate. In March the
U.S. Coast Guard seized the seventy-foot cruiser Orion off
Brownsville, Texas, and with it thirty-five uniformed mem-
bers of the Movimiento 26 and armaments valued at thirty
thousand dollars. Since the expedition had been the subject
of discussion in every Spanish restaurant and bar in New
York City since December, the capture should have come
as no surprise.
"Some people may criticize," said Raul Chibas, in exile
in New York, "but the little trickle of arms that actually
gets to Cuba, the few pistols in a sack of flour, the sub-
machine gun in a tin of lard, counts for more than the big,
noisy expedition that everyone boasts about, and that gets
caught by the Customs the day before it sails."
Fidel was having better fortune finding his own weapons
in Oriente. The government forces had continued to fall
back. On February 16th, one of the last remaining toeholds
in the foothills of the Sierra was eliminated at Pina del Agua,
west of Bayamo. Rebel forces under the Argentine "Che"
Guevara and Fidel himself attacked the Pina del Agua
garrison at dawn. A column led by Raul Castro ambushed
the first small relief patrol to respond to the garrison's
radioed alarm. Ten soldiers were killed, three wounded,
and their officer captured. Motorized troops from Bayamo
5-12
avoided road mines planted' on their route, but failed to
force an entrance to the area. The hundred-man garrison at
Pina del Agua fled to the woods, leaving their fortified hill-
top cuartel and four dead behind, along with five machine
guns and three hundred thirteen rifles-sufficient to arm a
new rebel column. The barbudos now rode openly through
the foothills and along the edge of the plain in jeeps and
trucks, no longer stealthy commando units but a growing
guerrilla army.
Sabotage across the country began to paralyze transporta-
tion to the point where trains no longer ran on schedule east
of Camagiiey. A students' strike began in Santiago. The
"masferristas" hanged three youths near the provincial capi-
tal. Police shot down Alfredo Gutierrez, a member of the
Santiago underground, and the women of Santiago followed
his casket to the grave carrying the red-and-black flags of
the Movimiento 26 and singing "AI combate, cubanos!"
Arsonists invaded the courthouse in the city of Camagiiey
and burned the records of the Urgency Court. Armed men
raided the central clearing office of the National Bank in
Havana and applied the torch to thousands of cancelled
checks and bank drafts, spreading chaos in the business and
financial houses of the capital. Revolutionary exhortations
were heard on thousands of radios, as radio stations were
seized and regular programs interrupted by young men with
pistols and prepared recordings.
Sugar cane no longer burned in the fields. Ambassador
Smith had been right in one respect. The burning of the
canefields "boomeranged" and the Movement was quick to
respond to the outcries of campesinos whose entire liveli-
hood depended on the zafra. But fire ravaged warehouses
across the island, turning hundreds of tons of sugar to
charred caramel, and David Salvador, the M-26 labor sec-
tion leader in Havana, counted the cost of the overall
5-13
campaign to sugar producers in five'figures, estimating the
sugar loss at two million tons, a sixth part of the entire crop.
Increasingly there was talk of a paralyzing general strike,
,
to culminate the long struggle in one crushing blow. Batista
impatiently shrugged his shoulders, and turned to more
pressing business, confident of his control of the eTC and
its bullnecked secretary-general, Eusebio Mujal.
A plague of stinging buzzing mosquitoes seemed to swarm
about the dictator's head, none consequential in itself, but
collectively infuriating, maddening, and-like mosquitoes
-potentially capable of starting a fatal infection.
In the midst of all of the other threats and distractions of
the heightening campaign of harassment, a daring under-
ground "action" squad kidnapped Juan Manuel Fangio,
the world auto-racing champion and a celebrity of a magni-
tude sufficient to make headlines, where the rape of a city,
the agony of a nation, could scarcely fill a column.
Fangio was seized in the lobby of the Hotel Lincoln in
downtown Havana on the eve of the annual holiday* racing
classic, the Gran Premio, forced at pistol point to enter a
waiting automobile, and taken to an apartment where the
Argentine driver had the reassurance of being introduced
to the young wife of one of his abductors, at the moment
busy telling a goodnight to her two-year-old daughter. He
was shifted later to another apartment, and spent the night
and the following day in a third.
The underground telephoned the newspapers in the
interim, to make certain that the Movimiento 26 received
adequate credit for the action, and that its purpose-to
underscore the revolutionary boycott of all amusement and
frivolity-was understood. A later telephone call brought
the Argentine ambassador to the outskirts of Havana, to
pick up Fangio, who had been released.
* UEI Grito de Baire," February 24.
I
5-14
The Gran Premio had been run without the world
champion. An accident at the track killed fourteen persons
in his absence.
Fangio did nothing to lessen the government's embarrass-
ment. He said he had been well treated, had seen part of the
Gran Premio on television, and held no resentment against
anyone, calling the incident "another adventure in my life."
More imp0rtant developments were afoot. On the night
of the Gran Premio disaster in Havana, while Fangio still
was being guarded in a house in suburban Vedado, the first
rebel radio broadcast from the Sierra Maestra was heard,
crackling across the shortwave 40-meter band from Oriente
to Pinar del Rio: "A qui Radio Rebelde! Aqui Radio
Rebelde, transmitiendo desde la Sierra Maestra en Territorio
Libre de Cuba!"
Rebel broadcasts purporting to be from the Sierra, actu-
ally from a small portable transmitter in Santiago, had been
heard before. This one was authentic, coming from deep in
the mountains and bringing news as well as revolutionary
exhortations; in particular, the first on-the-scene report of
the recent fighting at Pina del Agua and Oro de Guisa.
A new phase of the military campaign was opening. In
early March, two small columns left the Sierra Maestra, one
led by Raul Castro, the other by Juan Almeida. Both
emerged at San Lorenzo, on the eastern side of the Sierra.
Almeida marched boldly toward Santiago, letting the word
of his advance precede him by word of mouth, spread by
the campesinos. Raul's column, carrying the best of the small
arms available, all that Fidel could spare, turned toward
the north, moving cautiously in the direction of the Central
Highway. The long-discussed second front, "EI Segundo
Frente, Frank Pals," was about to be opened, finally, in the
highlands of northern Oriente, in the Sierra Crista!.
A new and more serious and immediate threat to the
regime was suddenly posed in an unexpected quarter. In a
5-15
declaration that caught Batista completely by surprise, the
hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church called for the
formation of "a government of national union" to prepare

the way for "the restoration of normal political life" in Cuba.
The declaration-signed by Manuel Cardinal Arteaga
and all of the members of the Cuban episcopate-caused
consternation in the presidential palace, and elation else-
where.
Batista's first reaction was to ask the press, in the absence
of censorship, to withhold the news. The newspaper pub-
lishers refused. The editions of March 1st carried the
episcopal message in full.
Batista, faced with what was tantamount to a demand for
his abdication, chose to interpret the declaration as a call
for a coalition government, Le., a new cabinet. He said that
he would remain in office until the June elections had
chosen his successor. As for the cabinet, it was about to
be reorganized in any event, since a new premier was to
be named to replace Andres Rivero Agiiero, the presidential
nominee of Batista's four-party government coalition.
The political opposition, the civic institutions, and the
archbishop of Santiago, among other churchmen, rejected
Batista's interpretation. Batista, blandly ignoring ail protests,
produced a "Commission of National Harmony," also de-
scribed as a "Commission of Conciliation," headed by a
priest who had been under-secretary of agriculture in the
Batista regime before entering the priesthood. Other mem-
bers were the former Cuban vice-president of Batista's first
term, a former vice-president of the Grau regime, and the
president of the Cuban Bank Association.
It was reported that the Commission would send agents
to the Sierra Maestra to seek the basis of a compromise
with Fidel Castro. In a further effort to allay the criticism
now heard in even the most ultra-conservative quarters,
Batista announced that he would be willing to approve
5-16
elections conducted under the supervision of an interna-
tional agency.
From the Sierra, Fidel sent a demand that Cuban
journalists also be permitted to visit the zone of hostilities.
He repeated the challenge, March 9th, in a letter broadcast
the same night by Station CMKC in Santiago-an open
letter in which he also called upon the episcopate to clarify
its declaration, to state, categorically, whether it was pos-
sible "that any self-respecting Cuban is disposed to sit down
in a Council of Ministers presided over by Fulgencio
Batista."
The challenge to permit a commission of journalists to
enter the liberated zone of Oriente was stated as an ulti-
matum, setting March 11th as a deadline on which, in the
absence of a response from the government, the Movimiento
26 would make "a definitive pronouncement to the nation,
launching the final slogans of the struggle."
There was no response. On the 11th, the secretary of the
archbishop of Santiago, the Reverend Angel Rivas, replied
to the request for clarification of the episcopal declaration
with an "Open Letter to Fidel," read on the air during the
priest's evening editorial program "With the Cross and the
Star," in which he asserted that the episcopate had called
for "not a new cabinet," but a new, provisional government,
to prepare the way for honest elections.
Batista's troubles were multiplying; the gamble that he
had taken in restoring civil guarantees was lost. In Havana,
thirteen eminent jurists addressed a petition to the Chamber
of Administration of the Court of Appeals declaring that
the courts were being flouted by the very officers sworn to
serve them, that police refused to honor writs of habeas
corpus, that political prisoners who were released were shot
down on the streets, sometimes within sight of the courts
that had freed them, that police officers fattened on the
vices that they were employed to suppress, and that "violent
5-17
death (by gunfire, torture, and hanging) are daily events"
in Santiago, Guantanamo, Palma Soriano, Bayamo, EI
Cobre, Manzanillo, Niquero, and their environs.
A fearless Havana magistrate, Dr. Francisco Alabau
Trelles, took a more dangerous step. Armed with the special
authority of the Supreme Court, he signed orders for the
immediate arrest and imprisonment of Esteban Ventura,
head of the police bureau of subversive activities and by
now a major, and the naval intelligence chief, Lieutenant
Julio Laurent, on indictments of torture and murder stem-
ming from the reprisals of the Cienfuegos uprising.
On the following day, March 12th, Batista suspended
civil guarantees, reimposed censorship, and quashed the
indictments by the simple process of transferring them to
the jurisdiction of the military tribunals. Ventura, pistol in
hand went seeking Judge Alabau. The jurist hastily obtained
a leave of absence, and flew to Miami.
In the Sierra, Fidel issued a twenty-one-point manifesto,
announcing the opening of a second front, and declaring
"total, implacable war" on the dictatorship and a campaign
of extermination against all bearing arms for it, to begin,
full force, on the first day of April.
The red line on the Cuban fever chart was nearing its
apex. The crisis was at hand.
5-18

* * * * * *
A JUNCTURE has been reached at which political maneuvers
cease to be meaningful and the voice of organized public
opinion is as futile as all other voices. Masks are discarded.
A test of strength is imminent. On one side is naked force.
On the other, the people, truth, and the dragon seed of
revolutionary doctrine, implanted most securely where the
weight of military repression is most crushing, germinating
best in blood-soaked soil, sprouting rebel soldiers overnight.
By the spring of 1958, Batista had but two choices: to
get out, or to fight desperately with all of the weapons of
his arsenal-the army, the treasury, the timidity or indiffer-
ence of investors who preferred the devil they knew to the
one unknown, the careful "neutrality" of the major foreign
power whose single word of condemnation would have been
sufficient to bring the dictatorship crashing down.
He chose to fight.
~ army sent out a call for seven thousand more men,
to bring its strength to twenty-nine thousand.
The forty national institutions-"whose names," said
Congressman Porter, "read like a roster of Who's Who
Among Respectable Organizations"-added their petition
to that of the Church, abandoning all formulae of com-
promise and now demanding, in unmistakable terms "that
the present regime shall cease to hold power . . .';
Batista's reply was to send police seeking the authors of
the petition, who fled into hiding or into exile. (The presi-
dent of the Havana Bar Association, Dr. Jose Mira Cardona,
disguised himself as a priest and hid in a church.)
5-19
Ambassador Smith, insisting that he could obtain guaran-
tees from Washington to safeguard the scheduled June elec-
tions under the existing government, asked to know why
the members of the Joint Committee of Cuban Institutions
had not signed their names to their petition. There is noth-
ing to indicate that he was joking.
Batista would have found the question both grimly amus-
ing and personally reassuring. He had his problems, multi-
plying on every hand, but he must have perceived that, if
all of the pressures of Church and secular society could
not crack the foundations of the dictatorship nor alienate
his principal allies, then he had little to fear but force. And
this he did not fear.
The capital seemed secure, despite the ravages of the
revolutionary campaign in the countryside. The provincial
cities remained under control. The big military garrisons
were in safe hands, and Batista's military intelligence told
him, quite accurately, that his enemies were as yet incapable
of posing a serious military threat against him, however
much they might harass him in the hinterland.
His concern, then, was with terrorism, sabotage, civil
insurrection. Here, too, he felt confident, having leave, ap-
parently, to fight fire with fire, so long as he did it discreetly,
muffling the cries of the casualties under a blanket of
censorship, hiding the true situation behind a smoke screen
of "anti-Communist" propaganda, maintaining, above all,
the myth of his military invulnerability. (Is any further
explanation needed for the "victories" produced by slaugh-
tering peasants?)
The fidelistas, and more particularly the strategists of
the Resistencia, had hoped that a paper dragon would
frighten away Batista's backers, that to create an atmosphere
of insurrection, to threaten the economy without actually
damaging it to any great degree, to militate all segments
of society against the dictator and so discredit him, would
5-20
"
be'sufficient to destroy the regime. Now itwas being dis-
covered, bitterly, that force alone could win respect.
It is with this unhappy realization that the revolution
moves into its"final, military phase, opening indisaster and
bitter anti-climax, ending in a triumph the more surprising
and overwhelming because of what preceded it.
In March the resistance leaders in the cities were still
looking for a short-cut to their objective. It was barely
possible, at least in theory, that they might have found one.
A general strike in the Thirties had given the Machado
regime its coup de grace. *There was more recent encour-
agement to follow such a course, notably the overthrow of
Perez Jimenez, the Venezuelan dictator, in January, 1958.
Batista's position had been appreciably weakened; rebel
strength had increased throughout the island; revolutionary
sentiment was running high among the people. The National
Direction of the M-26, having better understanding of the
actual situation inthe Sierra Maestra than did Batista, anti
anxious to avoid the long campaign that seemed inevitable
if based primarily on military strategy and growth, resolved
to commit their entire resources to what they hoped would
be a final, crushing blow against Batista, a revolutionary
general strike.
Fidel was opposed. He may well have had political con-
siderations in mind. He certainly had serious doubts as to
the possibility of such a solution.
His own appraisal of the resources of the revolution and
those of the dictator told him that only the steady growth
of the process that had started in the Sierra Maestra, the
gradual extension of territaria libre, the day by day ex-
* But not before Franklin Roosevelt, in one of the happier exercises of
the Good Neighbor policy, had whisked the diplomatic rug out from
under Machado's feet and the latter's army had deserted him. In Vene-
zuela, too, military defection preceded a popular rising, It is, in fact,
difficult to find a modern instance in which a mere rising of the people,
unsupported by troops, has overthrown an entrenched regime.
5-21
pansion of the 'rebel fighting force and the elimination, one
by one, of the government outposts,' could cut the lifelines
of the dictatorship.
He did not believe that'the underground was adequately
prepared for a general uprising, despite assurances to the
contrary. He had little faith in Havana, with its large foreign
population, its Spanish merchant class, which formed the
backbone of Cuban conservatism, its traditional disaffection
from the struggles of the nation, its historical position as
the exploiter of the wealth-producing provinces.
He was well aware of the firm grip in which Batista held
organized labor, under the domination of Eusebio Mujal
and his C.T.C. and he recalled all too vividly the fiasco of
the August strike. Having had some early experience of a
similar disaster on a larger scale-as a youngster fighting
briefly on the side of insurrectionary students and police
against the Colombian armed forces in the "bogotazo" of
1947*-he had no illusions concerning such efforts.
He was nevertheless persuaded, against his better judg-
ment.
The Sierra Maestra manifesto of March 12th, agreed upon
by the National Direction of the Movimiento 26, called for
a revolutionary general strike, backed by the armed action
of the revolutionary fighting forces, as the basis of a final
"decisive" blow against Batista.
Other articles in the 21-point declaration of war tended
to support the impression that all would be gambled on a
single cast of the dice-winner take all.
Directions were given for the organization and direction
* He says that his involvement was quite accidental. He was in
Bogota, Columbia, in the summer of 1947, as a delegate of the Havana
FEU, to help make arrangements for an international student conference,
and when fighting broke out, he went along with the Colombian students
in whose company he happened to find himself at the moment, acting on
pure impulse. The uprising was put down, a truce was declared, and
Fidel, then nineteen years old, fled to the Cuban Embassy. The next day
he was flown home, with some other Cuban students.
5-22

of the strike, and for instructing the public through the


clandestine organs of the movement-Revolucion, Sierra
Maestra, Resistencia, El Cubano Libre, and Vanguardia
Obrera, the last-named being produced by the M-26 labor
section.
Cuban students, to constitute the vanguard of the strike,
were forbidden to return to their classes until Batista had
fallen.
All highway and rail traffic through Oriente Province
was forbidden, as of April 1st, and travelers were warned
that transport was liable to be fired on, indiscriminately,
from that date.
From the same date, all payment of taxes was forbidden.
All members of the judiciary, all magistrates, all prosecu-
tors, were called upon to resign before April 5th, on pain
of later losing the right to hold such posts, under the post-
revolutionary government.
The same warning was to apply to members of the armed
services, who were called upon to mutiny or desert and join
the revolutionary army, as a simple duty, and with the
assurance that they would be well received, would be
promoted in grade if they brought their rifles with them,
and would not be required to fight against former comrades-
at-arms.
Notice was served that any person enlisting in the armed
forces would be subject to court martial, as a criminal.
To continue in any responsible post in the executive
branch of government after April 5th was to be considered
"an act of treason."
The preamble written by Fidel indicted the dictatorship
on grounds of moral cowardice and military impotence for
its refusal to permit the Cuban press to visit the area of
operations. As to the reasons for that refusal:
The explanation . . . lies in the shameful defeats that the
dictatorship has suffered, in the military offensives that we have
5-23
destroyed one' after the other, in the ~ t of unprecedented
barbarism that have been committed on the defenseless civilian
population, in the real and certain fact that the dictator's troops
have been dislodged from the Sierra Maestra and that the Army
of the 26th of July is in full offensive toward the north of the
province. * * *
The dictatorship did not want the journalists to learn, on the
scene and in a manner direct and irrefutable, that more than
three hundred campesinos were murdered during the six months
of the suspension of constitutional guarantees and censorship
of the press, that in Oro de Guisa alone fifty-three campesinos
were immolated in a single day, that they finished off a mother's
nine children and her husband at a single stroke. It did not
want the journalists to see the hundreds of humble homes, built
by sacrifice, reduced to ashes in brutal reprisals, the children
mutilated by the bombing and machine gunning of defenseless
hamlets. Trying to deceive not only the people but the army
itself, they did not want the falsity of the reports of the Estado
Mayor on each single battle to be known. * * * For if all
the truth of the Sierra Maestra were to be verified by Cuban
journalists, the regime would fall, through the fearful discredit
which it would suffer before the ranks of its own armed forces.
Such details of the opening military offensive as were to
be made public were summed up in a single article of the
March 12th manifesto, announcing:
... that rebel forces of Column 6 under Comandante* Raul
Castro Ruz have invaded the North of the Province of Oriente;
that rebel forces of Column 3 under Comandante* Juan
Almeida have invaded the East of said Province; that rebel
patrols are moving in all directions through the length and
breadth of the province, and that armed patrol action will be
intensified in all of the National Territory.
The phrase "total war" carries somewhat different con-
notations in English than those intended; it had a grandilo-
* Although the rank of comandante in the Cuban army was equivalent
to that of major in other forces, the derivation is from early Spanish
military usage, where "comandante" meant simply commander, and it is
in this sense that the title was first employed by Fidel.
5-24
quent ring in the ears of-Americans who had seen two
worldwars andthedestructionofseveralhundredthousand
human lives with the explosion of a single bomb at Hiro-
shima. The American reaction, scepticism, ironic amuse-
ment, would have been even more pronounced had anyone
knownwhatFidel's"columns"actuallyconsistedof,orwhat
slightforce backedthethreat of a "campaignofextermina-
tion" against all bearingarms for Batista.
Nevertheless, it was in the brief announcement of the
military offensive rather thanin the threat of revolutionary
generalstrikethatBatistamighthavereadhis future.
The proofs were yet to come. Much depended on faith,
and moreon illusion.
InWashington, diplomatic victory was won.
On March 26th, Charles O. Porter, the Democratic
representative from Oregon, told Congress that his col-
league, Representative PowellofNew York, hadperformed
a service in reporting"thegravematter" ofthe list of arms
said to havebeensentto the Cubangovernment during the
pasttwo years.
Theweapons, said Porter, were being used by Batista to
maintain power "in violation of our most solemn Mutual
.Assistance Pact," nordid the Congressman considerthis to
beanythingless than thepatentfact:
This is not a base rumor, spread by those opposed to Batista
to compromise the position of his government with the United
States. Nor is it aCommunist-inspired rumor, intended to heap
discredituponthe UnitedStatesfor its help to dictators. Indeed,
although it may serve both purposes, it is not rumor at all.
Asevidence, PortercitedthetestimonyofRoyR. Rubot-
tom, Jr. "theable andconscientious AssistantSecretaryfor
Inter-American Affairs," before the Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee on March 5th, in response to questioning
by Oregon'sSenatorWayneMorse:
5-25
Senator Morse: Would you say, in the case of Cuba, that our
military aid strengthens the retention of that dictatorial form of
government?
Rubottom: Sir, the Cuban goyernment is certainly using the
military equipment at its disposal to beat back armed insurrec-
tion, which as you know started, I believe, in November of 1956.
And from a letter directed to Porter on January 14th,
1958, by William B. Macomber, Jr., Assistant Secretary of
State:
Cuba has received arms from the United States as grant aid,
which arms, pursuant to Section 105 (b) (4) of the Mutual
Security Act of 1954, as amended, may be used only in the
implementation of defense plans agreed upon by the United
States and Cuba, under which Cuba participates in missions
important to the defense of the Hemisphere.
This condition is also included in the Mutual Defense Assistance
Agreement with Cuba of March, 1952, which covers grant and
military assistance. Article 2 of that agreement provides that
this equipment will be used only for the purpose for which
supplied, unless the prior consent of the United States has been
obtained.
Accordingly Representative Porter argued:
Thus it follows that if Batista is using the military equipment to
beat back armed insurrection, and if both Section 105 (b) (4)
of the Mutual Assistance Pact of 1954 and the Mutual Assist-
ance Agreement with Cuba specify that United States equipment
cannot be used for such purposes, clearly the intent of Congress
is being breached brazenly, and General Batista is violating the
terms of his agreement.
Assistant Secretary Rubottom had testified, Porter said,
that United States military aid made "little difference" as
far as Batista's position was concerned.
The Congressman declared:
Be this as it may, the continued flow from the United States of
lethal weapons to Batista only serves to identify us with his
5-26
unpopular regime. If it is aileged that Batista can buy weapons
elsewhere, anyway, I say, let him try. At least we will have the
satisfaction of not being a party on any side to the deplorable
fratricide in {:uba.
On March 31st, Porter was back to extend his remarks of
March 26th, as follows:
Mr. Speaker. Last Wednesday in a special order I called, as
others have called, on our government to stop shipping arms
to Cuba. I pointed out that our arms were being used in viola-
tion of treaties between us and Cuba and were identifying us
with the vicious police state ruled by Batista.
Today the State Department has made available to me a state-
ment which declares that we have, finally, suspended shipments
of arms to Cuba. It is a fine statement, another sign of a new
and better Latin-American policy.
The statement:
In authorizing shipments of arms to other countries under the
Mutual Security Program, it has been our consistent practice
to weigh carefully those consigned to areas where political ten-
sions have developed. We wish to be assured, for example, that
the arms are destined for uses consistent with the objectives of
our Mutual Security legislation. The shipment of 1,950 Garand
rifles, purchased by the Cuban government, was temporarily
suspended to allow us the opportunity of consulting further with
the appropriate Cuban officials.
As for the situation in Cuba, it is a matter of sympathetic con-
cern to all of us as friends and neighbors. It would be entirely
contrary to our policy to intervene in its internal affairs, and
we do not intend to become involved. We hope that the Cuban
government and the people themselves will soon find a peaceful
and democratic solution. They are the only ones who can, as
well as being the only ones who should, resolve the issues.
Coming in the midst of other, more dramatic develop-
ments, the State Department announcement created scarcely
a ripple in the United States. The Times gave it two para-
graphs on March 31st, quoting Porter. On April 3rd, it
5-27
was given attention, in a Washington dispatch con-
taining the additional information that the "arms embargo"
-here ide.ntified as such for the first time--would not be

lifted so long as the "current tensions" continued to exist
in Cuba.
The latter report was attributed to unnamed "officials."
Congressman Porter was quoted in the same dispatch as
expressing-a trifle testily, one suspects-the wish that the
Eisenhower administration would "stand up and announce
its policies, instead of forcing us to infer their existence on
the basis of reliable but anonymous sources."
The 1,950 Garand rifles to which the State Department
referred had been on Representative Powell's list of March
20th, but had not yet been shipped to Cuba, as he had sup-
posed.
The Cuban government now cancelled the purchase
order, and turned to a new source of supply, namely,
Batista's sometime and pro tempore, uneasy bedfellow,
the Dominican dictator, Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo y
Molina. *
The Garands that had been lost through the United States
arms embargo were replaced by a shipment of excellent
... In the latter part of 1956, Trujillo began to plot with agents of Carlos
Prio Socarras to overthrow the Batista regime, perhaps foreseeing that
the Cuban dictator would not be able to hold off a fidelista revolution,
and preferring someone in the presidential palace In Havana with whom
he might be able to do as he surely had no hope of doing with
any radical revolutionary regime. Whatever his motives, the powerful
radio "Voz Dominicana" launched a virulent propaganda campaign
against Batista, and a group of Cuban expatriates actually began training
on Dominican soil, in preparation for an invasion of Cuba. But Prio him-
self failed to reach agreement with Trujillo on mutual objectives, and the
latter turned toward his erstwhile enemy. A rapproachment with Batista
was reached in January, 1957, the Cuban trainees were expelled, and
the radio attacks ceased. The Trujillo-Batista accord was a matter of
scandal and indignation in Cuba. Prio himself suffered a loss of prestige
by having been touched, however lightly, with the same tarbrush. An
excellent account of Cuban-Dominican relations during this period is con-
tained in Jules Dubois' well-documented book, "Fidel Castro: Rebel-
Liberator or Dictator?" Bobbs-Merrill, 1959.
5-28
,
Cristobal automatic rifles of Dominican manufacture, copies
of a weapon produced for Hitler at the end of World War II
by the Skoda works in Hungary, and reproduced by refugee
Hungarian craftsmen living in the Dominican Republic.
With the rifles came a more fearsome weapon-napalm,
the clinging, searing, explosive jellied gasoline which is the
substance of firebombs.
The State Department made inquiries through the U.S.
Embassy in Ciudad Trujillo and declared that it had re-
ceived assurances from the Dominican Government that
none of the arms being sold to Cuba had come from the
United States. The Cuban government, for its part, cate-
gorically denied that it was purchasing arms from Trujillo,
a brazen lie, in view of the fact that eleven Cuban airline
pilots had already flown to exile in the United States to
avoid being forced to ferry the arms from Santo Domingo.
The eleven civilian airline pilots-and four more who
quickly joined them-all said that they had fled rather than
be drafted into the Cuban Air Force and compelled to
transport weapons to be used against their countrymen.
Altogether, thirty-nine fliers, civilian and military, found
political sanctuary in Miami, refusing to have a part in the
transporting of arms and the bombing of civilian com-
munities in Oriente.
A school strike had begun in Cuba, starting spontane-
ously in Santiago in protest against the murder of two
sixteen-year-old boys there and spreading across the island
with the announcement of a number of private schools and
the National Confederation of Catholic Schools that school
officials could not accept responsibility for the lives of
pupils attending classes during the period of crisis ahead.
Wholesale arrests of teachers began; twenty-five teachers
were seized at a single military school near Havana, ac-
cused of spreading subversion among their pupils.
The Universities of Oriente and Havana had been closed
5-29
for many months, but the University of lIavana-with its
constitutional extra-territorial status, won under Grau San
Martin's first brief administration after the Machado revolu-
tion-eontinued to be a gathering place of students, and a
focal point of revolutionary activity. Now, contravening the
law, police raided the university to search for arms, and the
teachers who had been retained were stricken from the pay-
roll.
Two medical students suspected of revolutionary activity
were killed, their bodies left, riddled with bullets, on the
outskirts of Havana. The FEU, in retaliation, attacked a
police patrol and critically wounded two policemen, one
being Lieutenant Faustino Salas Cafiizares, a brother of the
former police chief killed in the Haitian Embassy in 1957. *
Despite earlier declarations of no further retreat on the
political front, Batista found it necessary to postpone the
scheduled June elections until November 3rd. Eleven days
later, he obtained from the captive Congress virtually un-
limited powers, under a state of "national emergency," to
impose new taxes and to take whatever steps he might con-
sider necessary to meet the threat of "total war."
The army had been organized, hundreds of soldiers trans-
ferred to police control to meet the anticipated general
strike. Pilar Garcia, who had crushed the assault on the
Goicuria Barracks in Matanzas, was named head of the
National Police in Havana, replacing Brigadier General
Hernando Hernandez, who was retired as "too soft."
* Another member of the same infamous family, the SIM chief Jose
Maria Salas Cafiizares, was paralyzed by the effects of a jeep "accident"
in Oriente. The crash was actually a desperate expedient on the part of
Salas' aide, a lieutenant named Chinea, who was suspected of having
collaborated with the fidelistas, and was being taken to the Moncada
Barracks, when, having no doubt as to his fate on arrival, he contrived
to steer the jeep full speed into a tree. Chinea survived. Salas remained
in a hospital until the following November, came out in time to partici-
pate, on crutches, in the final struggle, and fled the country when the end
came.
5-30
Hundreds of new, khaki-colored military patrol cars were
imported, and more than a thousand private vehicles were
requisitioned for the use of the police and troops during the
emergency.
The revolutionaries, too, were making preparations. The
operational headquarters of the strike in Havana was to have
a powerful long-wave radio transmitter, to instruct the
general public on the day of the strike. Underground militia
were to receive their orders through broadcasts from three
powerful short-wave transmitters and twenty small portable
units, "walkie-talkies," which had been smuggled in from
the United States, with the aid of an official of the Havana
public works department.
In an interview in his seaside home in Miramar, the "club
on First Avenue," the broker Ignacio Mendoza, one of the
architects of the Machado revolution and an advisor to the
fideUsta forces, said that the Havana underground was pre-
pared to send eight thousand members into the streets, of
which number, he said he had been told, perhaps two
thousand would be fully armed and trained "first-line fight-
ers." The remainder, according to his information, would
be youngsters armed only with pistols, or unarmed, who
would hurl gasoline bombs, build barricades, and canvass
business districts to shut down the shops and offices.
Lest such a formidable build-l1P seem too much for
belief, Mendoza expressed some personal doubt. "They
keep telling me," he said, "that they have exactly two
thousand one hundred twenty-one first line fighters, or some
such precise figure, ready to move when they are called.
Now, every day, some of these boys get arrested or killed
by the police, some leave the city, others come in from the
countryside. Then how is it that I keep getting the same
exact figure?"
Plans were also being made in Santiago, Holguin, Santa
Clara, Camagiiey. Mimeographed instruction sheets were
5-31
circulated by the underground, x p l ~ i n i n how to make
"Molotov cocktails" with four parts of gasoline and one of
motor oil, how to cripEle transport by strewing tacks and

oil on the streets, how to sabotage industrial machinery,
shop equipment, police vehicles and buses.
A letter from a Cuban visitor in Santiago to her husband
in New York, written in mid-March and posted unsigned,
suggests the atmosphere of the provincial capital as the crisis
approached:
As of today, a most intense sabotage has begun, above all in
Santiago. At about five o'clock this morning there was a fire in
the Castillo rum distillery* and it's said to have burned down
entirely. Since the suspension of guarantees began today, the
facts are not entirely known, but the smoke could be seen in
great quantity and at a tremendous height.
A wave of micro-ondas has come in. We'll see how long they
last.
People coming from Mayarl, Palma, Contramaestre, etc., say
that the fidelistas are already being seen in those places, and
that they are fighting in the towns, so that we imagine they
should be here very soon. We leamed today that they are fight-
ing and bombing near Miranda, where there is a sugar mill, and
also near Guantanamo. One of the fronts is directed by Raul
Castro, the other we don't know.
Today the ministers resigned and Batista said for the first time
that there were not going to be elections but that there will be
fighting. Since censorship began again today, there isn't much
news, but, nevertheless, Radio Bembat keeps functioning.
This afternoon the body of a boy was found behind Ferreiro (?).
The details aren't known. Every day bodies appear, but I don't
have the names.
It seems that the general strike is approaching, above all in
Havana, so that on that side it appears there's no problem. The
... Owned, as it happened, by RaUl Chibas' wife.
t Bemba: "big lips," i.e., a way of saying word-of-mouth intelligence.
rumor.
5-32
situation in general is very tense, and everyone expects some-
thing at any moment. Everyone is buying quantities of food
and provisions in general, since they don't know when the thing
begins.

The M-26-7 makes telephone calls and says "M-26-7 calling.
Don't go out on the streets. The chains are about to break."
They called here. Laureano's garage has sandbags and perhaps
three or four men visible. As to those who may be hidden, we
don't know.
They say that Masferrer's men, who rented a house near the
Colegio de Hijas de Maria (a girls' school), went up to the
roof of the school today and have taken it as an observatory,
for when the strike begins.
There was an attack at Mayari* and it was phenomenal, the
more so since I was told about it by a chivato and not one of
our own. A group of some seventy rebels came in a truck, well
armed, and the soldiers didn't fire a single shot. They jumped
out of the back of the barracks into a stream and one of them
broke a leg!
As to the politicos who came to meet here, three days ago, to
form the parties (for the subsequently-postponed June elections)
a bomb was set off, no shrapnel, just a petard, and they say
that A. was so frightened that he-well, I won't tell you what
he did.
There isn't a class in a single school, and the buses are empty.
After dark, no one. The buses stop running at 11 o'clock at
night.
We are well here. Send us your news..
The rumors of intensified fighting were correct. Fidel's
guerrillas moved in force to the very edge of Manzanillo,
attacked the jail, withdrew, and returned to attack a police
station, in a vain effort to draw out troops from the
Manzanillo garrison. The troops refused to rise to the bait.
Renewed attacks were reported at Veguitas and at Yara
on the Manzanillo highway. At the America sugar mill
Probably Mayari Arriba, south of the Sierra Cristal, taken by Raul
early in his northern campaign.
5-33
near Contramaestre, two hundred men'left their work and
fled totheTerritaria Libre.
Raul Castro had crossed the Central Highway near
Contramaestre on March 10th, and the "Second Front,
FrankPais,"inthevastmountainous areanorthandeastof
Santiago was now a reality. Rebel forces were destroying
communications on the northern edge of the new front.
There was fighting near the mines at Moa on the north
coast, fighting in the south near the Soledad sugar mill,
within an hour by jeep from Guantanamo. Raul himself
was reported to be leading a column ofa thousand men (a
great exaggeration) on Santiago, and Juan Almeida, who
had returnedto theSierraand set outagain, was saidto be
leading a column of equal strength toward the provincial
capitalfrom thewest.
Reports of the two columns supposedly converging on
Santiago reached Havana on April 3rd. On the same day,
Batistaissued aseries of unprecedenteddecrees:
1. Government ministers were empowered toissue arms
licenses to 160,000public employes and to any other
"reliable" workers, such workers being absolved, in
advance, of legal responsibility for whatever use they
might make of their weapons in resisting any effort
to keep them from theiremployment.
2. Judges wereforbidden to issue judicialrulings against
anygovernmentofficial, governmentagency, orleader
ofalegalpoliticalparty, (e.g., Masferrer) underpain
of instantdismissal.
3. Employerswereforbidden toclosetheirpremisesdur-
ing normal working hours, onpain of imprisonment.
4. Workers were forbidden to strike, on pain of perma-
nentloss ofemployment.
Fidel's orders to halt all movement of transport in
Orientehadalreadygoneintoeffect. TrainsleavingHavana
5-34
for Oriente ended their journ-ey in the city of Camagiiey,
reportedly because the train crews refused to go farther, but
actually, a railway official said, because most of the railway
bridges east of amagiiey had been blown up or destroyed
by fire.
Only military convoys and fuel and provision trucks
guarded by military vehicles moved on the Central High-
way in Oriente. Shortages of fresh vegetables, meat, and
milk were developing in Santiago.
Manzanillo and all of the other cities on the perimeter of
Fidel's zone of operations were cut off completely from
sources of outside supply, except by air. Fighting was in
progress at Baracoa, the capital of the revolutionaries during
the War of Independence, and commercial flights to that
city were halted after rebels fired on a transport plane try-
ing to land there and the pilot returned to Santiago, to re-
port that he had seen rebels and government troops fighting
on the outskirts. A subsequent order cancelled all com-
mercial flights in Oriente.
Government planes strafed the small village of Aguacate,
northwest of Santiago, killing three civilians, after a rebel
patrol ambushed an army convoy there. Rebel positions
were being bombed daily near Manzanillo. Ground troops
at Rio Cauto, north of Bayamo, killed five guerrillas in a
clash, after the rebels had burned a bridge over the Rio
Cauto, which Fidel had once called the natural line of de-
fense against any invasion from the western provinces.
Nearby a rebel platoon, fighting in formation for the first
time in the llano, the open, shelterless plain, drove a Rural
Guard force from the village of Cauto Embarcadero. Gov-
ernment aircraft, called in by the Bayamo command,
bombed and strafed the village, driving the civilian popula-
tion into the river. The Guardia returned in force, seized
seventeen campesinos, men and boys, and distributed their
5-35
,corpses along the road leading to Bayamo, as "proofs" of a
battle fought and won.
A bulletin issued by the Estado Mayor at Camp Columbia
described the slaughter thus:
Forces of Squadron 13 of the Guardia Rural of Bayamo sus-
tained an encounter with a party of outlaws . . . in the zone of
Cauto Embarcadero, killing seventeen. On our part, no casual-
ties.
As reparation for the damage caused by the air attack,
Batista personally ordered the appropriate government
agency to build twenty-two houses in the village, to replace
those destroyed.
An Easter Sunday radio broadcast from Santiago, shouted
over a telephone in an echoing room in the Casa Granda
hotel and recorded in New York, described the situation of
April 6th as follows:
Rumors of fighting within five miles of Santiago were heard
last night as the fifth day of the "total war" declared by Fidel
Castro drew to a close. Reports, still lacking official confirma-
tion, said that government troops had engaged a column of
rebels believed to be led by Castro's younger brother, Raul-
one of two columns said earlier in the week to be converging
on this provincial capital.
Here in the city, the streets are empty of motor traffic by eight
o'clock in the evening, except for the security p t r o l ~ con-
stantly on the prowl. The turrets of Moncada Barracks, against
which Castro launched his first attack in 1953, bristle with
helmeted soldiers. The few civilian vehicles leaving for nearby
suburbs are stopped at checkpoints on the outskirts of the city,
and in town, reluctant cab drivers travel the dark streets with
the interiors of their taxis lighted-just to be sure there are no
mistakes. Many of the estimated five thousand soldiers in the
city are new recruits, and with tension running high here, there
is fear that the jittery young soldiers may shoot first, and ask
. questions afterwards.
5-36
. .
There is also the very real fear that Castro's guerrillas will carry
the fight to the edge of the city, even before the anticipated
general strike call.
Oil and gasoline trucks from the big Texas Company refinery
across the bay continue to travel the main highway but they
now travel in convoy, for fear the gasoline, a dangerous weapon
in the hands of saboteurs, will be captured by the rebels.
As to measures for preventing the impending general strike,
people here are bitter about President Batista's emergency
decree, absolving of guilt any Cuban who kills in defense of his
right not to strike. They point out that this measure, which
Batista calls "mainly psychological," is in effect a hunting
license for anyone who wants to get rid of a personal or political
enemy. As one Santiagan remarked last evening-"Suppose
someone owes me some money and would rather not have me
around to collect?" *
The general strike came, finally, on April 9th, preceded
in Santiago on the night of the 8th by a shattering explosion
that wrecked three adjacent brick storage buildings, arous-
ing the entire city, and, in the early morning hours, by a
rebel attack on an army post at Puerto Boniato, just north
of the provincial capital.
The explosion was the result of an ingenious plot that
went somewhat amiss. Santiago underground members had
filled an empty compressed-air cylinder with explosives, at-
tached a time mechanism, and left it with several others like
it, in a stolen pick-up truck, parked on a side street near the
Cuartel Moncada. The underground leaders had hoped that
soldiers, finding the truck, would simply drive it into the
fortress.
The patrol that found the truck was either more or less
suspicious than had been hoped. Instead of taking the
cylinders into the military compound, the soldiers removed
them to the place from which they assumed, correctly, that
* Taber, CBS.
5-37
the tanks had been stolen: one of the three storage buildings
where several hundred other such cylinders were stored.
The ensuing explosion sent 120-pound metal cylinders hur-
tling through the roof and' walls of the buildings. One tank
wrecked the roof of a dwelling across the street. But there
were no casualties, military or civilian.
At Puerto Boniato, M-26 militia from the Santiago un-
derground attacked in sufficient force to take the small
cuartel, defended by ten soldiers, and shortly afterward
engaged troops dispatched from Moncada,. summoned by a
telephone call from the wife of an army captain residing
near the Boniato post.
The engagement lasted for an hour and a half. Three
soldiers were killed. The army claimed to have killed fifteen
rebels; the M-26 leaders put their losses at three. The clash
was inconclusive, except in lending substance to current
rumors that fidelista forces were actually fighting on the out-
skirts of the provincial capital.
Tellers and clerks in the banks of Santiago began to go
out on strike at 11 o'clock in the morning, leaving their ac-
count books untallied. The word that the strike was starting
was spread by telephone. Father Rivas, the archbishop's
secretary, was in the Cathedral talking with a foreign corre-
spondent; when his telephone rang. In a moment he re-
turned to announce: "It is beginning."
M-26 militia hurled "Molotov cocktails" that started fires
in five gasoline stations. A soldier near the city hall was
killed by a rebel sniper on a rooftop. Four youths in a car
were machine-gunned by security forces in a micro-onda,
and two blocks from the Cathedral, a boy going from shop
to shop, telling storekeepers to close their doors, was shot to
death on the sidewalk before he had reached the fourth
door.
Buses filled with soldiers hurtled through the narrow
5-38
streets, rifles protruding from the windows. By noon the city
was silent, the streets empty, except for the prowling,
ominous khaki-colored patrol cars.
Fifteen h\mdred workers failed to return to their jobs in
the Bacardi rum distillery after the mid-day rest period, and
the distillery closed down. Three foreign banks remained
open, their managers having been summoned to Moncada
and told that the army would send soldiers to replace any
absent employes. No soldiers appeared in the banks.
Sporadic shooting was heard in scattered districts of the
city as police and security troops hunted down strike agita-
tors and rebel saboteurs. In the early afternoon there was
rifle fire in the Cespedes Park area. No casualties were visi-
ble. A short while later, a khaki patrol car filled with civilians
-Masferrer's men-came careening through the street on
which the Casa Granda hotel faced, and loosed a volley of
rifle shots in the general direction of the Cathedral.
By nightfall, the death toll in Santiago had reached thirty.
Most of the dead were youths, members of the M-26 militia.
The underground, making a brave fight of it, continued to
snipe from rooftops at security patrols. There was blood
on the sidewalk outside of the Casa Granda. Hysterical
youn.g masferristas, accompanied by troops, invaded the
hotel lobby, and for an hour fired through the potted palms
at real or imagined enemies in the darkness of the park out-
side and the unfinished buildings beyond, where it was be-
lieved that rebels were lurking.
As in the strike of the previous August, Santiago became
a silent city, without industry, commerce, or movement in
the streets and public places. Soldiers going from door to
door in the morning to force open the shops found no em-
ployes to serve customers, no patrons, and often no proprie-
tors. The gasoline refinery across the bay, producing twenty-
five per cent of Cuba's motor fuel, was closed.
The strike continued. It was a useless sacrifice.
5-39
The national p i t ~ l was the pivot on' which all else
turned. The M-26 leaders had been optimistic, predicting
that it would be "all over with Batista" by the 15th of the
month. In Havana, the strike itself was "allover" within a
few hours.
It appeared to have begun well enough. Small action units
seized Radio CMQ and another commercial station at 10
o'clock in the morning and broadcast recorded announce-
ments, exhorting workers to leave their jobs, employers to
close their shops, revolutionary fighters to fulfill their mis-
sions.
On the Prado, in the heart of the city, a bomb exploded
under a gas main, setting a fire that flared high above the
street through the day, a banner of defiance streaming in the
breeze.
The banks and a few shops closed. Workers in factories
and the public utilities left their jobs, and some of them
gathered to receive arms at appointed places. But the arms
failed to come. No one arrived to direct the volunteers. Few
of the supposed "two thousand front-line fighters" came into
the streets, and those who did were quickly destroyed by the
massive, swift efficiency of the murderous machine of repres-
sion into which Pilar Garcia had welded seven thousand
soldiers and police.
More than two thousand patrol cars and civilian vehicles
carrying security agents armed with submachine guns pa-
trolled the city, instantly present at any sign of disorder, any
potential threat.
Six youths who tried to obtain arms and ammunition
from a weapons store were shot down before they reached
the door. Machine gunners in a micro-onda pursuing an
automobile that had fled from the scene of the gas fire killed
four of the occupants on the outskirts of the city.
Bomb blasts wrecked electrical conduits, and power was
cut off in downtown Havana. For a few brief hours, shooting
5-40

could be heard at scattered points throughout the capital and


its suburbs, indicating clashes between the security forces
and small groups of resistance fighters. By evening, only oc-
casional, isofated shots echoed in the streets, signaling, not
combat, but execution.
Pilar Garcia took personal command of the repression,
and his orders were carried out with brutal dispatch.
ers at several places, monitoring the short-wave radio band
used by the National Police recorded some of the chilling 11
messages* that went back and forth between patrol cars and '1
0
1/
the police dispatcher's office:
"We have a doctor here in his automobile. He has
pistol."
"Kill him." A dull detonation is heard on the air, instan-
taneously.
"We have ten prisoners."
"No prisoners. Kill them."
"We have a suspect, unarmed. Prisoner? Wounded?"
__ prisoners. No wounded.KillhiJ:ll." _
Firsfreports--puttJre"aeatli-toll for the day at forty. Pirar./
Garcia told a news conference, five days later, that thirteen
insurgents and two policemen had been killed. The probable
toll-:""still undetermined because in most instances the bodies
were buried in unmarked graves-approached one hundred.
The strike was crushed in Havana, Matanzas, Santa Clara,
Camagtiey, Holguin, and finally, after five days, in Santiago
de Cuba. Disorders continued on the eastern end of the
island, but made little difference, since the revolutionary
general strike, the supreme gamble, had failed.
No real purpose is served in seeking to analyze the causes
of the failure. FaustinoPerez, who directed the M-26 opera-
tion in the capital, said in an in.terview at "the club on First
* Among the several foreign correspondents to witness to such
incredible conversations aTe the Chilean journalist, Rafael Otero Eche-
verria, and Jules Dubois, the Chicago Tribune Syndicate reporter.
5-41
Avenue," that the failure had been the re1mlt of confusion,
attendant on an eleventh-hour change of strategy, designed
to avert bloodshed.
Whatever Fidel Castro's' initial reluctance, he seems to
have expected much of the strike. The Argentine journalist
Jorge Masetti, who was with him in the Sierra Maestra
when he received the news, says that Fidel embraced him
and danced about shouting: "The general strike has ex-
ploded! The hour of liberation has arrived! You are going
to Havana with us!" or words to that effect.
When the strike failed, he Qlamed the secrecy with which
the underground had carried out its preparations, saying
that security had been maintained to such a degree that the
various revolutionary sections had been unable to coordinate
their actions, and that insufficient confidence had been
placed in "the people," who would have risen in full
strength against the dictatorship, had they been properly
prepared.
Some merit may be found in this argument, but it does
not take account of the situation which existed in Havana,
where it was dangerous in the extreme even to use the word
"strike." Nor did anyone mention an equally grim fact: the
two thousand adequately armed and trained "front line
fighters" did not exist. It is doubtful that there were two
hundred.
5-42
Section II. PROPAGANOA AND ITS EFFECTS
A MASSIVE PROPAGANDA campaign led people to believe that
the designation of "Communist," "anti-American," and "anti-
democratic" which we applied to the acts of the "26th of July"
movement, were due to our desire to find support for our gov-
ernment. When we pointed concretely to certain comrades of
Fidel Castro, and to him, as radical individuals who favored
Russia and Communist China against the United States and her
allies, our sfucerity was doubted.... To our calls to vigilance, they
responded with the formidable weapon of their slogans, and the
world was soon filled with taunts against our regime, which
truly defended the democratic peace of the Continent. We were
not-nor are we now-anti-Communist by necessity, as are those
who follow the path of nepotism and despotism, contrary to
human dignity and the sentiments of the people. Our first aim
was to save the country from chaos, and the nation observed
with pleasure the fall of the Pdo Government, which had dis-
graced it. Then we wished to set up procedures by which the
country could decide its destiny at the polls. Vigorous opposi-
tion against the Government of the "10th of March" arose, and
the Government respected this opposition. Press, radio and tele-
... All the front-line Communists, such as Bias Roca and Lazaro
Pena, have returned to Havana. Communist leader Juan Marinello went
to Moscow to inform about the Cuban revolution and discuss future
policies. Mrs. Phillips said in her book Cuba, Island of Paradox, as
far back as 1959, that it is evident that the Communists belong to
the inner circle of the Castro regime and that their infiltration in the
labor unions has paid good dividends.
From pages 39-43, Fulgencio Batista, Cuba Betra:yed (New York, Vantage Press, Inc., 1962). Reprinted
with permission of the publishers at USACGSC and may not be further reproduced in whole or in part without
express permission of the copyright owner.
5-43
vision played important roles in the defense of ideas, in sum-
marizing objections, in criticizing, in expounding reasons and
formulating attacks. Liberty was complete, but the money plun-
dered from the Republic was used to initiate terror, and the
Communists began to recover from the injury suffered by the
expulsion of their Ambassador.
At the beginning of my last two years of government, the
campaign of terror and deceitful propaganda was intensified.
International Communism, with unheard-of audacity, began
more obviously than ever to launch its counterattack through-
out the American Continent. It tried to counteract the alertness
of the United States, which alone keeps the Russians and the
Chinese Reds in line, and which must be softened up by the
bloc behind the Iron Curtain.
Nuclei of action were organized by the terrorists in various
countries to protest and demonstrate on any excuse. They saw
to it that the news agencies reported any incident-a building
damaged by a bomb, a worker assassinated because he refused
to strike, a child destroyed by a shell burst, a young woman
mutilated by an infernal machine; a citizen blown to bits, or
a woman and her three children shot to death in their auto-
mobile on a highway blockaded by the rebels. This was routine
news in a country convulsed by terror. Atrocities were premed-
itated to represent the Cuban Government, slowly but surely,
as a dictatorial and bloody regime. Those who died or were
taken prisoners by the forces of order became victims of an
"implacable "tyranny."
The City Police and other agents of public order, the Rural
Police and the remnants of the Armed Forces, were intimidated
and always In danger of death. It did not matter whether or not
a uniformed man was on duty. An office worker going home
at the end of the day was assassinated while waiting for a bus;
a mechanic, a cook, or an orderly, would be shot down on the
street while on his way home. If a son or friend ran to his aid,
5-44
he would perish also. The terrorists, under their chieftains and
Communist leaders, were provoking reprisals by the Govern-
ment forces.
The instinct of self-preservation and the fulfillment of duty
became, naturally, instruments of this perverse plan. The wires
would carry tragic news. According to these reports the person
involved would not be the policeman or soldier who, in enforc-
ing the laws, was acting to preserve order, to protect the rights
of an individual and the security of the family, to guarantee life
and property, to defend society or to protect himself; he would
be made to appear as a man who used delegated authority to
commit a crime. One excess led to another. And for the reading
or listening public, these unfortunate events appeared to have
taken place under a "dictatorial" and "cruel" regime. Its leader
was Batista, and Batista would be presented as a dictator with-
out conscience.
As the crimes and cruelties of the terrorists grew, so did the
necessary repressive measures. New excesses would take place,
followed by another wave of slogan propaganda. Public sensi-
bility would be offended, and corrective action would be the
responsibility of the Batista Government (always in his name)
and not that of the provocateurs, bosses who acted as an insati-
able Moloch, or the agents who executed their orders. In this
way the unscrupulous groups headed by Fidel Castro, who
ordered assassinations and massacres, succeeded in being rep-
resented as fighters for the liberty which they themselves as-
saulted and mutilated. They made it appear that the tyrants
were those who opposed the destruction of Cuba by terror and
the attainment by the Communists of psychological advantages
and strong positions at the door of the giant who, democrat-
ically, remained confident or asleep. *
... "If North American officials could have seen the incidents, they
would not have abandoned President Batista in his desperate struggle
against the rebels. But Washington under the Republican Administration
5-45
.
At the beginning of autumn, 1958, through negligence,
through complicity, for financial gain, orthrough fear or cow-
ardice, Army units frequel}t1y surrendered to rebel groups.*
The replacement troops used to leave the main camps with
enthusiasm andhigh morale. Therewere company orbattalion
chiefs, like Capt. Adriano ColI Cabrera, fallen at Guisa-who
proved the exception-heading the expeditions or skirmishes
untilthey fell dead or wounded; but these were isolated cases.
Oriente Province was incommunicado. The military opera-
tionswere notefficientfor variousreasons. TheJune campaign
todestroytheguerrillasinthemountainshadbeenunsuccessful,
anditsfailuredemoralizedtheArmy.Thisfailurewasattributed
to the lackof co-ordinationbetween the General Staff and the
Chiefof Operations, with headquarters in Bayamo, as well as
to the lack of automatic arms and communications equipment
refused by Washington. The Cuban Armed Forces had been
suppliedwith arms, munitions and equipment from the United
believed sincerely, and in good faith, that Batista represented dictator-
ship, whereashis opponentssymbolized democracy Didthe United
States succeedinchanging thegovernmentofCuba? Unfortunately
Fidel Castro's regime not only uses anti-democratic methods, but its
actionsinjuretheinterests anddignityofNorthAmerica....Butthere
is still more. From the Cuban capital have come calls for the North
Americanstorise againsttheir government. They addimmediatelythat
the Cuban Government is not Communist....If, by a miracle, Fidel
CastroweretocommunicatetoNikitaKhrushchevhis desiretobecome
an open member of the Communist Party, the Kremlin chief would
immediatelyask himtodesist from his intention,becauseheis ofmore
useinhisattitudeofneutraL" ("Cuba,InconvenientNeighbor"-ABC-
Sunday, Jan. 16, 1960.)
*"CorzoandSanchez Mosqueralay the blamefor the failure ofthe
SierraMaestraoperationonCantillo. On theotherhandCorzotells me
that Fowler, Quevedo, Montero Duque (exiled in Miami) and other
commanders,battalionleaders,wereinactiveandFidelistas, andusedto
meet him in the Sierra Maestra for conspiratorial intervieWS." (Letter
of Gen. Tabernilla Palmero-April 12, 1959.)
5-46

States for training, with a view to defense in case of another


war. The prohibition of the sale of arms to the Cuban Govern-
ment weakened the faith and the will to fight in many of our

men.
The effect produced by this measure among the civilian and
the military population also favored the rebels who, until that
moment, had not commanded enough resources to be consid-
ered belligerents.
The calls for general strikes, accompanied by terrific threats,
which were launched by the head of the Anarcho-Communist
movement, failed. The attitude of organized labor, both as
individuals and as corporate bodies (about 2,000,000 mem-
bers) demonstrated that the rebels lacked popular support. The
commercial streets, the expensive and the cheaper shops, the
theaters and the movies, the hotels and cabarets were crowded
with people from all walks of life. The position taken by the
Cuban Confederation of Labor, the Federations of Industries
and other associations, as well as the manner in which society
went about its business-consuming, spending, and living a
normal and happy existence-prove that the Cuban people were
not only opposed to subversion, but that they also opposed the
violence and terror which, unscrupulously and criminally, were
carried out by the Castro group.
* The United States embargo of arms was a great victory for Fidel
Castro, says Mrs. Phillips in her book (page 351).
5-47
Section III. HOW CASTRO WON

UST WEST OF GUANTANAMO CITY lies a bend in the Central
Highway which is a text-book ambush site-a horseshoe of asphalt almost
a mile from end to end lined every yard on both sides by steep ridges
thick with jungle growth. One hot mornmg early in December, 1958, the
curve was ready for its tate. At eacn end, several 200-pound mines lay
under the road surface and near them, a hidden rebelde rested with sweaty
hands close to the plunger. Seven light m ~ i n e guns were emplaced in the
greenery of the rocky slope, the nearest 40 yards from the road and the
most distant almost on top of the ridge. More than 200 riflemen, many
with automatic weapons, were dug in, two and three to a hole, along the
rise.
But the bearded officer, Capitano Jose Valla, who before the war had
btlen a traffic clerk in an import firm, was not .satisfied.
His people had been manning this ambush site now for thirteen oays,
and in that time they had eaten thirteen .meals. So lie. did not think they
were alert any more. As he walked his lines, he told them they could ex-
pect to be hit at any hour now by a column of Batista's troops many
By Dickie Chapelle from Modem Guer.rilla Warfare ,edited by Franklin Mark Osanka, pages 325-335.
Reprinted by permission of the copyright holder. the Marine Corps Association, publisher of the Marine
Corps Gazette, professional journal for Marine officers. Copyright 1960 by Marine Corps Association.
Reproduced at USACGSC by special permission and may not be further reproduced in whale or in part with-
out express permission of the copyright holder'.
5-48
hundred strong. Other rebel forces were besieging one of the government's
fortresses, that in the town of La Maya ten miles farther west, and he
predicted a relief column would be dispatched to them from the army
garrison at Guantanamo City.
But the captain was increasingly aware that he had given these same
troops this same word every other morning on the site, too.
So today he decided to change the disposition of his forces.
He sent 40 riflemen and an LMG with its crew two miles up the road.
There was an ambush spot there, too, a bush-covered slope lining the left
of the road for a thousand yards. His orders to this advance guard he re-
peated .twice.. They were to hide in. the jungle grass, fire on the relief
column when it was at the pOint nearest them, then leapfrog in three's
and four's back through the cane fields to the main ambush area, keeping
the convoy under fire only as long as they could do it without exposing
themselves.
"That will do no harm and make enough noise so everyone will be
wide awake before we're really hit," he finished.
Just before noon, the enemy column did appear. There was a lead
jeep, an armored car, a tank, three busses heavily loaded with troops, a
rearguard jeep-and one element the captain had not thought about, air
cover. Two Cuban Air Force B-26's were flying wide figure 8's along the
road at an altitude of about 1,000 feet.
The rebels of the advance gnard, well concealed behind chunky bushes
and wide-bladed grass, opened fire. The machine gunner accounted for the
driver and the officer in the lead jeep anc;l a burst from a. BAR killed three
soldiers in the front seat of the first bus. The convoy halted dead in the
road. A handful of soldiers in the crowded busses wrestled their weapons
into firing position but they could not see a target. Neiti'.'lr could the tank
crew, slowly traversing their 77rmn.
Nor could the men in the B-26's. But they knew the fire had come
from the green hillside and they began to strafe it from end to end. They
so persistently stitched back and forth that the rebels one by one looked
quickly up, hesitated and then fell back behind their concealment. A half
dozen began to empty their. weapons at the planes. One B-26 gunner
opened fire with his 20mm. He hit downslope from the rebels, and most
of them continued to empty clip after clip aU the stalled convoy.
The men in the driverless bus panicked and fled back through the
ditches to the cover of nearby cane fields; a scorc r p ~ their rifles as
they ran and three fell wounded or dying. The drivers of the other two
busses backed them for perhaps 50 yards, loaded the men WJ;lO had
been hit, then U-turned where they were to cover the busses. Then the
whole column, leaving only the two wrecked vehicles, was grinding out,
faster and faster, to the east.
5-49
It was all over in a matter of minutes-allover, that is, but for the
verbal pyrotechnics of the rebel captain when the leader of his advance
guard reported. The captam pulled him behind the deserted building of a
cantina near the main ambush site.
"My orders were that you should fire and withdraw, fire and with-
drawl" he shouted over and over at his red-faced junior.
"We would have, we would have, my captain, but that we had no cover
from the 13-26 and-" the lieutenaht began.
"Your excuse shames our dead!" The captain interrupted. "If you had
done what I told you to do, we would have>captured the whole convoy,"
he wenton, rocking on his toes. "This way, what do we-have'! Two wrecks
and some blood on the Central Highway! And thatJs all there is to show-
for 13 days of waiting!"
He opened his hands and put them over his bearded face. The lieu-
tenant turned and walked slowly out of [he yard of the deserted cantina.
Capt Valle probably stated the net tactical gain to the rebel campaign
correctly. But to a looker-on and possibly to the historians, the action was
more significant. It was almost a vignette of the Cuban revolution, an
answer to the question: how did Castro's riflemen time and again turn
back Batista's tanks and planes?
My own conclusion was that they earned all the real estate by maKing
every mistake in the book-but one. They consistently delivered a high vol-
ume of fire. After they started shooting, they rarely let anything-the
enemy's reaction or their own commander's orders-stop them from con-
tinuing to fire until there was nothing left to fire on.
They barely aimed and they did not conserve ammunition. But they
unmistakably communicated their will to fight to an enemy whose superior
equipment was unmatched by the will to use it.
Here is a report from the Cuban fighting:
Personnel
The forc.es of Castro at the time I knew them moved and fired as an
army, not a band 01' mob. Fidel estimated there were 7300 in uniform
(blue or green cotton drill fatigues) by the third week in December. They
were directly supportt:d by an equal number of personnel under military
orders whose dunes included work in towns still policed by Batista and
who hence wore civilian clothing. One in ten of the fighters was a
non-Cuban-Dominican, Mexican, Venezuelan, Nicaraguan, Argentinian.
About one in twenty was a woman; except for one sniper platoon, the
women in uniform were non-combatan:1S who did housekeeping and supply
assignments.
5-50

The basic unit of the rebel army was a 40-man platoon commanded
by a second lieutenant. The rebels insisted there were no differences iii.
rate among the non-officer personnel; in practice, I noticed many "natural
NCO's" with their own following of from six' to a dozen men. The officer
. .
ranks were the same as U.S. ranks lip to major, or commandante, still the
highest rank in Cuban military forces. (The single star on the Cuban Prime
minister's epaulets today signifies this rank, as it did during the fighting.)
In the field, I worked with the command groups of three majors beside
the Castros. Each led about 500 men and 20-odd officers.
This simplified table of organization was reflected in the division of
responsibilities. What we consider S-l functions were almost entirely car-
ried out by the senior officer or his top aides personally. The S-2 and S-4
work was done by. men in mufti. This left the uniformed forces the single
primary concern of operations.
The staffs had no problems of pay-no pay, hence no problem-or of
recruitment, since there were more would-be Fidelistas than rifles with
which to arm them. The sure method by which the volunteer became a
barbudo! was to disarm one of Batista's soldiers (by force or purchase)
and hike into a Castro command post with his rifle, ammo and canteen.
One bOy'of 15 had to be accepted when he reported with a BAR which
he insisted he had gotten the hard way.
More than half the rebelde fighters I knew had been field hands in
the cane fields or coffee plantations of Oriente Province. But a high pro-
portion of the others had city. backgrounds and white collar. experience,
so the over-all literacy rate was very high for Cuba. Probably the most
capable battalion officers (now 0-3 of the Cuban Rebel Army) was
Commandante Antonio Lusson,whose family owns a large cane planta-
tion near to ~ Castro family's own fields.
Most of the enlisted men I knew had undergone a basic training stint
of from two to four months in the most remote reaches of the Sierra
Maestre mountains. They had learned scouting and patrolling there (one
had a copy of FM 21-75 in his pack) but the primary purpose of the
training obviously was to condition the men to extended periods of hunger
and fatigue, to find out which would literally rather fight than eat. Not
many had learned to use their weapons effectively nor to maintain them
in the field; those who had became prized men. But the barbudos almost
without exception had developed a genuine espritde corps.
The wide dissimilarity of military capability among them was prob-
ably less significant than the one common motivation. All Castro's fighting
men were terror victims to the extent that they believed they would be
killed if they went back to their homes while Batista remained in power.
I knew dozens who showed me what they said were marks of torture on
1. "Bearded one"-enrolled regular in Castro's army.
5-51
their bodies, or who told me how they had buriM the bullet-rieldied bodies
of their fathers, sons or brothers.
"I always knew Latins could hate that much, but not that they could
hate that long," is a comment 1 have heard about them. One explanation
is the conviction most of them expressed that they as individuals could
not expect to live if they did not destroy the Batistianos who were then still
policing their home communities.
. The other side of the coin-the personal motivation of government
forces-was a particular target of psychological assault from the first.
Before 1 left the United States, the Castro underground in New York
briefed me on the tactics this way: "We return prisoners without even
intimidating them. We do not exchange them, you understand; not one
of ours has ever been returned in the field. But we just disarm our enemies
when we capture them and send them back through the Cuban Red Cross."
1 was cynical about this claim and once in Cuba, 1 remarked to a rebel
officer that 1 would. be much surprised to see unintimidated, unwounded
prisoners being returned, not exchanged, in the middle of a shooting war.
This remark was a mistake..
That same evening, 1 watched the surrender of hundreds of Batistianos
from a small town garrison. They were gathered within a hollow square
of rebel Tommy gunners and harangued by Raul Castro.
"We hope that you will stay with us and fight against the master who
so ill-used you. If you decide to refuse this invitation--and 1 am not
going to repeat it-you will be delivered to the custody of the Cuban Red
Cross tomorrow. Once you are under Batista's orders again, we hope that
you will not take up arms agains us. But, if you do, remember this-
"We took you tPis time. We can take you again. And when we do,
we will not frighten or torture or kill you, any more than we are doing to
you at this moment. If you are captured a second time or even a third
by us, we will again return you exactly as we are doing now."
This expression of utter contempt for the fighting potential of the
defeated had an almost physical impact on them. Some actually flinched
as they listened.
The following day, 1 could not question that these men were returned
unharmed. I counted 242 across a border check-point marked by two
burned-out car wrecks overlooking Santiago de Cuba.
On the matter of casualty figures over all for the two years of active
fighting, 1 came to accept Castro's estimate of 1,000 rebel dead because
1 was able to verify personally that the rebel dead announced for the ac-
tions 1 saw were correct. (But an even more important and still contro-
versial casualty figure is the rebel total loss from terrorism in the cities
rather than military operations in the country. This is believed to be more
than 10,000 over a five-year period.)
.5-52

.Intelligence
The Fidelista combat intelligence was superb. The Batista command-
ers could not go to the "head" without a perspiring runner arriving a few
minutes later to Castro about it. Most of the informants were volun-
teers-farmers or villagers.
While the bulk of such reports was hardly marked by accuracy, Fidel
himself placed the greatest reliance on them. The night we met for the
first time, he and his command group were standing within 600 yards of
where ahuge enemypatrolwas searching for him.'I assumed he was there
to command an action to hit the patrol orcut It off.
"Oh, no," he explained. "It's too big. They are coming through the
woods in a body, with men in pairs on either side. When the nearest pair
is afew hundred meters away, people will tell me and we will leave."
Enemy scouts did in fact come in ten minutes after his departure. In
their asperity, they burned to the ground the farmer's house beside v.;:hiclt
he had been conferring. The farmer became a fighting Fidelista before the
ashes of his house had cooled, bringing a Springfield rifle he had kept
buried apparently for just this eventuality.
One tradition of the Castro forces had a special usefulness to their
intelligence--the matter of the beards. The nucleus of the Castro forces
grew thembecause therewere- no razors on l'icoTurquino where they hid.
Butin time the beards served as an identification device. When you saw a
manwith asix-monthgrowthofhairanawhiskers,youcouldbesurehehad
notbeen incontactwith the Batistasoldieryfor a long time, since to them
a beard was cause for summary arrest.
Operations
During the early months of the the onlymilitary tactic used
by the rebels was to ambush small J?,oVl'rnment patrols for their weapons.
As the patrols grew larger, the rebel&: underground furnished mines, and
the Fidelistas were able tofum backseveralpunitive thrusts made atthem
in mountains by ringing their strongholds with the mines.
Their experience in stopping movement along roads and trails led to
the tactic bywhich they won much of OrienteProvince. Itsgeneral objec-
tive was to isolate the government garrisons by halting all surface traffic.
The rebels blew up the railroad bridges first, then mined the side roads
andfinally themain artery across Cuba, the CentralHighway. Theyhalted
and burned every bus, car and tnlck;even today, the wreckage of this
phase of the campaign still litters the ditches. Non-combatants were
walked at gunpoint back to wherever they came from--except for those
5-53
5-54
abducted, including the U.S. servicemen and technicians held for 27 days
in July of 1958.
By early December, the roads and most of the countryside had come
under rebel control after dark; by daylight, nothing moved but Batista's
forces in not less than company strength and usually with tanks and air
cover.
But most town and village cuartels" were still fully garrisoned, and the
government controlled the built-up areas.
Against them, Castro's forces used three kinds of offensive action:
combat patrols, assault and encirclement. But each of these terms is only
correct in the most limited sense.
The patrols V(erenight marches, off the roads, of one or two platoons
with the objective of shaking up a garrison behind its concrete walls.
Weapons included rifles, BARs, Tommy guns and one or two LMG. On
one patrol, the men brought an 81mm mortar with five rounds for it. On
another, they carried a 20mm cannon recovered from a wrecked Cuban
Air Force plane. For it they had only notoriously undependphle home-
made ammo.
The patrols crept close to the cuartel walls (at Maffo, within 40 yards)
and opened fire. They sustained it no matter what came back at them
until their ammo ran low or, as happenjld twice, the garrison set fire to
their trucks. At San Luis, the garrison resisted two such raids vigorously
and the day after the second, withdrew in jeeps and a truck into the near-
est larger cuartel. Their column tore by a rebel ambush which happened
to be facing the wrong way and not a shot was fired.
The tactic which the ~ e l s called an assault was not an assault at all
as we use the word."lt meant the rebel commanders would infiltrate their
troops by dark to positions as close to an objective as they could find con-
cealment. They would then keep it under uninterrupted small arms fire 24
hours a day. But they would not advance nor would they use demolitions.
In the fortress at La Maya, they so trapped 525 people, 125 of them
the wives and children of government soldiers, for seventeen days. In
Maffo, there were 150 Batistianos Who held out for fourteen days and
then surrendered. The artillery available on either side was negligible. The
rebels used one 20mm cannon with comedy effect because of poor home-
made ammo, and the garrison at Maffo one night expended nine mortar
shells-presumably all it had-against a rebel sound truck that had been
haranguing the troops to surrender. On this occasion, the accuracy was
outstanding; four rebels were killed and 13 wounded.
In spite of the fact that small arms fire spattenngconcrete walls
hardly sounds effective, these encirclements of the Batista cuartels were
the decisive actiOlls of the revolution. In the fight for Santa Clara, the final
;2. Fllrtitled barracks.

and largest action, itwas a trainload of troops which the rebels encircled,
not, a fortress. And in this one case those who could fire from buildings
had better cover than the troops opposmg memo
However, in the fighting which I'saW, the.rebels only sought out con-
cealment and did almost without dug-in or sandbagged positions. Often
theyexposed themselves deliberately for no logical military purpose. Once,
when a whole platoon was disconsolate because their rifle grenades were
misfiring, their.battalion commander himself led a dozen in a charge out
of their concealment. An enemy blockhouse lay 150 yards away and per-
haps some of his men assumed that he planned to flank it. But without
grenades, demolitions or mortar fire, he charged out 50 yards, then dis-
posed his men behind the foot-high cover of the foundation of a wrecked
building, and from there emptied several BAR magazines into the con-
crete blockhouse walls. He then ran his people back through a crescendo
ofincoming fire from the blockhouse to their concealed positions. But for
skinned knees and elbows, no casualties resulted. The effect on morale
was excellent. But the blockhouse was no less lethal than before.
Why were the government garrisons unable to break out of their
cuartels and blockhouses?
Surely they could have broken the ring of besiegers. But there would
have beencasualties, and the countryside was actively hostile.
Why 'were the cuartels not reinforced? Or better resupplied?
Until the last weeks of the fighting, the larger were, in effect, rein-
forced by the fleeing garrisons from the smaIler.
But as to why these in turn did not hold out, purely tactical answers
are not enough. When the 525 people from the La Maya fortress sur-
rendered,theystillhadfood, waterand ammo. Therewere sevenwounded,
two of them dying, in the group. Nine people had been killed and buried
inside the walls (and seven of the rebels had been killed, two from the
air).The Cuban AirForcehad not been successful in its resupply efforts.
But it had never tried drops directly within the cuartel walls, presumably
because of the risk ofhitting some of the people with falling packages.
Which raises whatwas .0me agreatmystery ofthe actions I observed:
the astonishingly poorperformance of the B-26's. True, they bombed and
strafed the town of LaMaya twice a day atleast and the roads around it
atall hours. Buttheydidthis so badlythatI 'was able to photograph them
sometimestwice afterthey hadbegun theirruns andthen, usually leisurely,
tomove to shelter.
TheCubanAirForceB-26's-inpairsflying in echelon-usuallycom-
mitted in the adjoining county and then strafed'from an altitude of 300
to 500 feet. They proved they knew how to do better when they were
covering an unarmed DC-3 making a resupply drop; then they came in
at right angles to each other and went up the streets with wingtips at
housetop level.

5-55

I came to two conclusions about the curious B-26 performances:
First, the claims of the pilots at their subsequent trials that they did
everything short of to avoid killing non-combatants are en-
tirely valid. (Yon remember,J:'idel set aside two trials acquitting Ilyerll on
this issue and ordered a third, after which came executions and priSOI1
sentences. )
Second, the psychological impact of the B-26 operations on the people
of rurl\1 Cuba will be a major barrier to friendly U.S.-Cuban relations for
a generation to come, It is no use to point out that we sent Batista these
planes for another purpose and stopped sending them at all in March of
1958. The planes, no matter how poorly flown, utterly terrorized the
prol'ince and, moral judgments entirely aside, the fact is that we are
heartily hated because they caused such fear.
At the time, incidentally, the rebels, without aircraft or ack-ack, did
not ignore the planes but emptied rilles and BARs up at them no matter
what the range. I never saw a hit scored but the psychological effects were
dramatic.
Supply
This was a controlling factor in, the entire Castro offensive.
On the matter of food. alone, the rebels' survival as a cohesive fighting
unit was frequently in doubt. Being both guest and woman, I always had
more to eat than anyone else, but at one point I lived on raw sugar cane
for two days, and at another time I ate only one meal a day for five days
in a row. The characteristic "hot chow" of the rebels in the field was a
mush of rice with pieces of fresh"killed beef in it, served from a bucket
hung on a pole which was carried by two runners from one foxhole to
another.
Personal equipment was severely limited. Cotton drill shirts and P411ts
were issued,but good footwear, canteens and blarikelS were not, and the
rebelde's shoulder patches and insignia of rank were sewn anlt
embroidered by his wife or one of the village women.
How Castro received his arms and ammunition was a subject of acri-
monious international debate for a long time.
Before I went to Cuba, I was told that most weapons and ammo were
smuggled in by air from the United States, Mexico and Venezuela. Dic-
tator Batista's secretary of state once gave me a personal interview on a
holiday to complain bitterly that American laxity in arresting the smugglers
was the reason the government could not defeat the rebels.
But there is little evidence for this thesis. Recently I met a Cuban flier
who had flown arms from the United States to Cuba for months during
the revolution. He said he had been told in Miami that U.S. law enforce-

5-56

ment agencies were alerted in early 1958 to look for a fleet of heavily-
loaded station wagons and several DC-3's.
"So what we did was to fly the stuff in apairof Cessna 182's. We got
itoutto landing strips near Key West in an outboard fishing boat loaded
'ona trailer. Once I was driving the trailer and I had a flat. The police
helped me change the tire atthe side of the highway without ever looking
under the tarp which covered my boat. If they had folded it back, they
would have found twelve Tommy guns and the ammo for them."
AfterIhadbeenwith the Fidelistas for afew weeks, I no longer ques-
tioned their on-the-spot insistence that only about 15 Pllr cent of their
weapons were so "imported." All the rest, they said, were captured.
The weapons which I saw were not new, and the greatmajority were
ofthe type which we furnishedtoBatista-Springfields, M-l's, BARs and
Tommy guns. And Colt .45 automatics, many of the latter demonstrably
captured weapons with butt-plates still carrying the insignia of the Cubllrt
Army.
Inthe case of 30 cal. ammo, I saw itbeing capturedduring the battIe
ofLaMaya. Theaction around thetowninvolved more than 250rebeldes
actually firing on the 'line day and night for two and a half weeks. Yet
when the battIe was over, the rebel ammo inventory was fatter than when
it began. Four times during the siege a government DC-3 hadJIlade an
air drop (no parachute; they just pushed the packages out of the door)
ofammo for the fortress, and four times the rebels hadcharged outunder
heavy fire and dragged the packages back behind their own lines. From
these bundles the rebels also gained large quantities of medical supplies
and some of the bestcigarettes I ever smoked.
Two weapons widely used by the rebels were manufactured right in
Cuba itself by the underground.
One was the 200-pound land mine, made at first from explosive
salvaged out of unexploded aerial bombs that had been dropped by the
CubanAir Force. The mines usually were emplaced tobe detonated elec-
trically by a soldier on command.
The other homemade device was a rifle grenade which resembled no
other grenade of which I've ever heard. It was a firecracker shape about
eight inches long with a conical cap on one end. It was detonated by a
fuse of cotton string. To fire it, you affixed it to the end of a rifle, lit the
fuse and pulled the triggc:r. Intheory, the grenade exploded four seconds
later. I watched more than a score of these fired. Each time something
inhibitedthe clean get-away ofthe grenade from the rifle and itdetonated
within 50 yards of take-off.
A special logistic problem to the rebels was motor transport. Their
few dozen vehicles were jeeps, either captured from the government or
expropriated at gunpoint from oil and mir.ing companies. (I remember
there was a"duty ambulance" at the battIe Jiguani-a sky-blue enameled
5-57
panel truck marked EAT STAR CANDIES.) Impulsive driving and no main-
tenance" at all constantly reduced the availability of vehicles. But the
limited mileage of roads and jeepable tracks in rural Cuba probably re-
duced the importance of motor transport to both sides in the fighting.

Summary
At the climax of the revolution, the personnel in the field under Fidel
Castro's direct orders numbered about 15,000, half in uniform, including
a high proportion of men mentally and physically superior. There was
ultimate motivation throughout, and discipline within small units was good.
The men were almost totally lackh'1g in marksmanship ability, conven-
tional military know-how, and eJ[perience in fighting as a cohesive force
of any size. Their attitude toward their enemies was one of contempt
leavened with compassion.
Their combat intelligence was unexcelled in quantity and of depend-
able accuracy. It was not org-mized on any military basis but originllted
in the civilian population which felt itself a direct participant in every
action, and generally welcomed the rebels as liberators from terrorism.
The Castro defensive operations depended largely on this intelligence
and on foot mobility; the rebels simply did not remain where they were
sought.
Their offensive operations rested on tactics involving the highest degree
of surprise,. the fewest men, the lowest risk and the greatest freedom to
disengage. These included road ambushes, raiding patrols, infiltration, and
sustained siege by small arms fire. No dependence on artillery or motor
transport was developed.
Their logistics were primitive and in other than the near-ideal weather
and terrain conditions of Cuba would have been disastrous. Their food
supply 'Was not adequate by any ordinary standard. Their primary source
of arms and ammunition was the enemy, although perhaps 15 per cent
were smuggled into Cuba.
Their conspicuous military virtue was their ability to maintain a high
volume of fire under conditions which would have discouraged less moti-
vated fighters. This virtue fully exploited the major weakness of the well-
equipped government forces, which was a near-paralysis of the will to
fire at all. If there is any military lesson from the Cuban revolution 'for
all Americans, in and out of uniform, I think this is .it:
Machinery does not win wars. Men do.
5-58
Seelion IV. THE INSURGENTS EXPAND INTO LAS VILLAS PROVINCE
WE KNEW OF the daring plan to transfer rebel groups from
Oriente to Las Villas.
Individuals and even families who served the country gener-
ously and patriotically had been victimized because chiefs or
agents imprudently mentioned their names in connection with
their services. We therefore ordered the commands to omit real
names, even in private conversation when referring to their ac-
tivities or to data obtained from reliable sources. Even the Pres-
ident of the Republic was to receive his report in this new for-
mat. For example: X-3 would signify information which was
probably true, delivered by someone who could be trusted, but
who had not been in direct contact with the facts; X-4 would be
genuinely true information. Through these channels we would
be informed of the movements and important concentrations of
the enemy.
This system greatly reduced the possibility of the enemy
learning our sources of information. It permitted our leaders to
know those who might sabotage the military and political plans
of the Government from inside or out.
The reports coming from X-3 and X-4 made me certain that
the groups of saboteurs directed by Fidel Castro's lieutenants
were trying to put into effect a plan to destroy communications
(highways, roads, railways, telephone and telegraph) in the en-
tire Province of Las Villas. This plan to cut the Island in two
was to be put in operation the second half of December and was
to be completed in January.
From pages 84-91, 110-114, and 127-133, Fulgencio Batista, Cuba Betrayed (New York, Vantage
Press. Inc., 1962). Reprinted with permission of the publishers at USACGSCand may not be further repro-
duced in whole or in part without express permission of the copyright owner.
5-59
The plan included the isolation of each squadron, company
and military post defending the centers of population and the
surrounding rural areas. With rebel infiltration to the North and
to the South, the movement of our troops would be severely
limited.
Isolation of the Provinces
The Joint Chief of Staff called the commander of Las Villas
to warn him of the danger to the towns if they were cut off from
all communication. When Rio Chaviano came to Havana, I per-
sonally ratified the orders given by Gen. Tabernilla Dolz.
The section of the Central highway between Santa (;lara and
Jatibonico joins the main highways which connect the North and
the South with the Central area and, at the same time, with the
Eastern region through Camagiiey and with the Western region,
passing through Matanzas and the city of Havana. The extreme
section of Pinar del Rio Province, west of Havana, would be of
little or no importance, if the capital could not communicate
with the other provinces. This section of the Central Highway
has very important bridges which, once destroyed, would re-
quire many days of labor, under heavy guard, to repair.
When the rebels began to destroy the bridges and highways,
to cut off Oriente and isolate the capital, the former service of
Highway Patrol (Vigilancia de Carreteras) was reorganized.
For the highest efficiency, its units were given patrol cars
manned by a crew of four, each fully armed. They made their
runs in pairs, staying only one kilometer apart and communi-
cating by radio-telephone.
Preference was given to the Eastern Provinces and to Las
Villas. The General Staff ordered the cars into service as soon
as they were available, for sabotage was increasing.
5-60
* * * * * * *
THE SO-CALLED INVADING columns which had left the Sierra
Maestra for Las Villas arrived at Camagiiey almost without en-
countering the regular troops. To go f110m the Bayamo zone to
Jobabo, which formed the boundary of Camagiiey with Oriente,
the rebels had "acquired" the services of Lieuts. Rodolfo Villa-
mil and Ubineo Leon who, for money (according to statements
of enemy officers), permitted them to cross the area without dif-
ficulty. *In one of the "Kangaroo" trials, held like a Roman cir-
cus, one of the rebel chiefs is said to have declared that it cost
the invaders many thousands of dollars to get to Camagiiey
Province. Thiswas in answer to Col. Victor Duenas' statement
that he had been sympathetic to their cause.
Upon relieving Col. Duenas of his command because of in-
efficiency, the General Staff of the Army appointed Col. Leo-
poldo Perez Coujil to replace him. Under his leadership the
reinforced troops made contact with the rebel columns that had
*Capt. Humberto Olivera Perez refers to Maj. Armando Gonzalez
Finales as a double traitor who, for a fee, allowed the Castro guerrillas
to pass through territory under his command. When the Castro hordes
took over on January 1st, 1959, Gonzalez Finales was under arrest for
his treacherous conduct. He was liberated by Guevara and designated
chief of the Army purging commission.
Capt. Rodriguez Tamayo said that he had personally dealt with
Lieutenants Rodolfo Villamil and Ubineo Le6n in the purchase of the
Charco Redondo Mines Army post in Oriente province. The deal in-
cluded the arms and ammunitions, as also the soldiers. Rodriguez
Tamayo added that Castro congratulated him on the deal and that he
personally paid $50,000 to Lieutenants Villamil and Le6n who, there-
upon joined the rebel forces with 48 men and all the equipment.
"Through this office in the Department of the Adjutant General, Lieut.
Rodolfo Villamil tried more than once to set up a conspiracy. Villamil
and another officer, Lieut. Le6n, began to sound out the spirit of the
troops, with their eyes on a possible internal conspiracy ... a letter from
Fidel Castro, their old buddy of student days at Belen School and the
Alma Mater, found them at their camp in Cerro Pelado." (Bohemia,
Jan. 11, 1959.)
5-61
advanced into Camagiiey. The Field Commander of these troops
was Armando Suarez Susquet, who kept his men mobile and
showed great courage without ruthlessness. He was seriously
wounded in action. .
Despite the strategic distribution of the Rural Guard and the
reinforcements sent to Camagiiey, the rebel columns, supported
by a few rural industrialists, penetrated Las Villas Province and
took over the military posts, widening their activities into the
lowlands and along the inter-urban highways.
Itshould be noted that certain company officers, like Capt.
Abon Lee, were active and loyal and tried to prevent the cross-
ing of the Red-Black groups over the extreme end of Camagiiey
Province. The tactics used, however, failed.
* * * * * * *
To DEFEAT THE groups which the rebels now called "columns,"
new troops were sent to Las Villas. The squadrons of the Rural
Guard, and the infantry units stationed at headquarters, had
been reinforced. Some 10 companies, each composed of 100
men, were working to dislodge the rebel infiltrations operating
weakly in the mountains of the Central Range, south of Santa
Clara. These troops were reinforced by three large battalions,
each formed by more than 400 men. This contingent and the
new Highway Pj:l:trol should have been able to open an efficient
attack. Unfortunately, the leadership was inadequate and the
operation failed.
In Oriente Province it had taken the rebels almost two years
to immobilize the military detachments; in Las Villas, with Rio
Chaviano as chief of the military district, they succeeded in
weeks. The opportune warning of the plan to break the com-
*Lieut. Col. Armando Suarez Susquet was removed from the mili-
tary hospital while seriously ill, and brought to Camagiiey, where he
was shot, almost in a state of unconsciousness, under orders of "Com-
mander Huber Matos, "military chief" of the Province.
5-62

munication lines of Las Villas-given a month and a half previ-
ously-had served little purpose. By the beginning of December,
important bridges on the Central Highway, designated by the
Army Central Staff as those marked by the rebels for destruc-
tion, were being attacked and destroyed.
What seemed without basis, or merely rumors, was becoming
actual fact, and there was a growing distrust of the guilty chiefs.
To repair the bridges which had been dynamited or destroyed
with blow-torches, as well as great stretches of the Central High-
way and others, an operation was hurriedly formed which in-
cluded the Commission of National Development, the Ministry
of Public Works, important sections of the railroads, and the
Army Corps of Engineers. The Development Commission made
its budgets and arranged for the employment of workers and
technicians who would carry out the reconstruction under the
protection of numerous mobile squadrons. The Western Rail-
ways (Ferrocarriles Occidentales) prepared a train with ar-
mored cars and coaches, electric plants, and tools. The armored
train-as it was called-could move 600 men into the affected
~ e s To increase the efficiency of this service the last available
arms in the main garrisons of Havana were collected. The train
would be undel1 the command of the Chief of the Engineer
Corps, Col. Florentino Rosell y Leyva, under whose supervision
it was armored and equipped. The Chief of the Engineer Corps,
was to carry out the plan, which would effect fast reconstruc-
tion of the roads.
More Men for R,o Chaviano
At that time some of our units had been isolated due to the de-
struction of the roads. Other units had been needlessly sur-
rendered, through the strange conduct of their chiefs who let
themselves be cut off so easily.
5-63
.
One midnight, a week before the desertion of Col. Rosell, the
Chief of the Joint General Staff, accompanied by Gen. Rio
Chaviano, military chief of !--as Villas, came to see me at Ciudad
Militar. Gen. Tabernilla told me that the military chief of Las
Villas wanted to inform me personally of the serious situation
facing the territory under his command. He read a report out-
lining the situation and the urgent need for more men and arms,
although there were neither reserves of troops nor available
arms. Col. Rosell was ordered to organize immediately the train
and the 600 men for the road repairs. He was to set out at once
and work in combination with Rio Chaviano to destroy the en-
emy and regain the lost zones, and to reconstruct the highway
and railway wherever possible. The two remained in contact
with Gen. Francisco Tabernilla Dolz and informed him the next
day that the situation was most serious, that it was too late to
do battle in the provinces. This strange statement had been pre-
ceded by three weeks of continuous surrender or withdrawal of
military groups.
The following night Col. Irenaldo Garcia Baez, Chief of Mil-
itary Intelligence, visited me at the Presidential Palace. He in-
formed me that the Joint Chief of Staff had held conversations
in his office with Gen. Alberto del Rio Chaviano and Col. Flo-
rentino Rosell before departing on the mission. He said that in
his capacity as head of the SIM he had been at the headquarters
of the General Staff and had incidentally attended this meeting.
Among those present, he said, had been Gen. Eulogio Cantillo,
Gen. "Silito" Tabernilla Palmero, Chief of the Infantry Division
and Commissioner of the President's Military Office. He report-
ed to me-said Lieut. Col. Garcia Baez-because he was aston-
ished to hear the instructions which the Chief of the Joint Gen-
eral Staff gave to the military leaders who were to fight the
rebels and reconstruct ground communications. He added that,
5-64
in conclusion, Gen. TaberniHa Do1z had told them that "he
considered our cause lost," discouraging those who had the tre-
mendous task of fighting for victory. *
*"I was not present at the meeting of Gen. Tabernilla Dolz with Gen-
erals Cantillo Porras and Rio Chaviano, and Col. Rosell y Leyva and the
<>thers, in which it was agreed to come to an understanding with the
rebels. This meeting took place in the dawn of December 23, and 1 was
at home sick from Sunday, the 21st, through Tuesday. 1 learned of this
meeting later." (Paragraph from a letter of Gen. Rodriguez Avila to Col.
Estevez Maymir dealing with a letter from Gen. Tabernilla Dolz, July 12,
1959.)
"I had to tell you, for the first time in many years, that you ought not
to have attended the conversations which your father had with chiefs
and superior officers. 1 learned, through channels not the most appropri-
ate, that my Chief of the Joint General Staff had met with military lead-
ers of the Province to discuss a truce with the enemy and, later, surrender
and defeat ... you knowwho was there and what opinion Was expressed
to the two generals to whom the last available arms Were given." Letter
of General Batista to Gen. "Silito" Tabernilla, Feb. 5, 1959.)
"My presence at the meeting to which. you make reference was acci-
dental. There was no talk of coritacting the enemy in my presence. 1 did
hear for a few moments the traitor Rio Chaviano explain the seriousness
of the situation in the Province. Gen. Robaina, Lieut. Col. Irenaldo
Garcia Baez and the traitors Rio and Rosell were present." (Letter of
Gen. "Silito" Tabernilla to Gen. Batista, Feb. 13, 1959.)
* * *
*
* *
*
5-65
Seclion V. BATISTA LEAVES CUBA
ONE DAY, AS I was lunching, an aide informed me that he had
overheard an officer saying that Gen. Eulogio Cantillo had been
ordered by the Joint Chief of Staff to hold an interview with
the rebel leader Fidel Castro. * At this time, Gen. Canti1lo was
chief of a vast territory, the most vital and strategic, Oriente
Province. He was in command of more than 15,000 men with
the best armament available and most of the Army's armored
units. His headquarters were in the eastern capital and Naval
land forces and sea units were also under his control.
The same afternoon I had a visit from my son Ruben. He told
me that Lieut. Col. Jose Martinez Suarez was anxious to speak
to me about an important problem. I made an appointment for
8 that night.
Martinez Suarez informed me that Gen. Cantillo had left for
Oriente that day on orders of Gen. Tabernilla Dolz. When Can-
tillo came to the offices of the Joint Command in Havana, he
* On Dec. 22, 1958, at a meeting between several generals and colo-
nels at the headquarters of the Joint Command, it was agreed to establish
contact with the terrorist rebels to hear plans for a truce and then sub-
mit them, as they said, to the consideration of Gen. Batista. Later, al-
ready in exile in Miami, Gen. "Silito" Tabernilla told me that the order
was issued by his father, Gen. Francisco Tabernilla Dolz, anxious to
achieve a settlement. (Words of Lieut. Col. Irenaldo Garcia Baez, ex-
Chief of the S.I.M. on June 22, 1959, on a visit to the Hotel Jaragua,
Santo Domingo, when he spoke to a group of people which included
Doctors Andres Domingo and Florencio Guerra, Maj. Manuel Ator-
resagasti, Capt. Arsenio Labrada, and Lieutenants Cesar Noble and
Rogelio Gonzalez.)
5-66
never returned to his command without seeing me, and I ex-
pressed my surprise to Lieut. Col. Martinez Suarez. "He could
not see you, MI. President. His orders were to leave immediate-
ly and they placed a helicopter at his disposal in Santiago to
take him to Castro for the interview."
"In this case," I had to say it, "if what you say is true, I shall
remove the commanders of the Army this very night."
"1 am certain that Gen. Cantillo has left for Oriente to carry
out these instructions. You know that in all the commands, from
Las Villas to Oriente, the units which have not been surrounded
or surrendered are crippled or isolated. 1 beg you," Martinez
Suarez said, "not to mention my name, because it could cost me
my life; but I spoke to Gen. Cantillo before he left for Santiago
de Cuba. 1 believe, Mr. President," he continued, "that it is a
little late, because a truce has been ordered by the Chief of the
Armed Forces at Santiago de Cuba, Col. Rego Rubido, and the
Chief of the Naval District, Commodore Carnero, so that an
agreement can be reached with Fidel Castro."
I immediately telephoned the Chief of the Army General
Staff, Gen. Pedro Rodriguez Avila, to determine whether Gen.
Cantillo had really gone to Oriente. He confirmed it, stating
that the Joint Chief of Staff had issued the order, and added
that the Chief of the Air Force, Brig. Carlos Tabernilla, was
hurriedly repairing a helicopter to be dispatched without delay
to Santiago de Cuba for the use of the General. Upon asking
him the reason for the urgent departure, he answered that
he did not know. 1 told him I would call Gen. Tabernilla
DoIz on another phone, but would not tell him what I had
learned. I made the call and the Joint Chief of Staff stam-
mered out that he had authorized the departure of Gen.
Cantillo because the latter had said it was necessary to re-
group his command immediately, due to the very bad situa-
tion in the Province. I ordered him to make an appointment
5-67
with Gen. Rodriguez Avila and the Chief of the Navy, Admiral
Jose Rodriguez Calder6n, to meet at my residence in Columbia
at midnight, three hours later.'"

The Treacherous Order


Other military leaders, who occasionally made routine reports
to me, were also present at the midnight meeting. Seeking a way
to ferret out the disloyal purpose of the trip, I used the report
of an intercepted message which Castro had transmitted to
"Comrade" Guevara from Oriente to Las Villas. This message
said, almost word-for-word: "Do not accept the truce offered,
collect the arms you seize or which they surrender to you and
distribute them among the members of the movement exclu-
sively, so as to avoid future mix-ups, and advance on Ma-
tanzas."
I asked Gen. Tabernilla, in the presence of the other chiefs,
who had offered and arranged truces. He answered that he was
unaware of those efforts, and when I told him I was aware that
Gen. Cantillo had been ordered to Oriente to meet with the
rebel chieftain, he began to cough nervously while trying to
give me some vague explanation. He finally came out with the
statement that Gen. Cantillo had said he wanted to speak to
... "Gen. Francisco Tabemilla Dolz was never authorized to obtain a
truce with the enemy, and much less to come to an agreement with them,
for I remember that when Gen. Batista became aware of the interview
authorized by Gen. Tabemilla Dolz between Gen. Eulogio Cantillo and
Fidel Castro, the former was harshly castigated in our presence by the
President of the Republic, alleging all the while that he had acted in good
faith and had never wanted to betray him. Later he fell into the serious
error of soliciting and obtaining a conference with the Ambassador of
the United States in Cuba, Mr. Earle Smith; this time, also, without the
knowledge of the President; he admitted his indiscretion again, but main-
tained there was no breach of loyalty in his act." (From a letter from
Admiral Rodriguez Calder6n to Col. Estevez Maymir, in connection
with another letter from Gen. Tabemilla Dolz, July 14, 1959.)
5-68

a priest who was in contact with Fidel Castro and for that
reason had wanted to go to Santiago de Cuba; but that he-
Tabernilla-had nQt authorized any meeting. In his presence,
I gave direct orders to the Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Pedro
Rodriguez Avila, to send a radio message in code to Gen. Can-
tillo immediately, ordering him to suspend any appointment he
had made, directly or indirectly, with the rebel leaders, and to
appear at once at headquarters.
Gen. Cantillo did not reply to the dispatch, nor did he return
the next day. I ordered Gen. Rodriguez Avila to investigate
and be on the alert for the return of Cantillo. Forty-eight hours
after I had sent the radio message, the Army Chief of Staff in-
formed me that Cantillo had left Santiago de Cuba. I posted an
aide at the airport, with instructions to bring him to my private
house at my farm before communicating with anyone.
I received Gen. Cantillo in the library behind closed doors.
When I asked him why he had gone to Oriente without seeing
me, he answered that when he had informed the Joint Chief of
Staff of the problems of his command, Gen. Tabernilla had
insisted that he contact Fidel Castro. He then remembered that
a priest, Father Guzman, had sent him a message to the effect
that he could serve as intermediary for a meeting with the rebel
leader. Gen. Tabernilla had ordered him to set out immediately,
make contact with the priest and arrange a personal interview
with Fidel Castro to determine "what he wanted."'"
* "We wrote to Gen. Cantillo through Father Guzman. We did not
receive a reply. In a few days, he and Fidel met at the Oriente sugar mill.
Maj. Francisco Sierra Talavera and I participated in the conversation."
(Statement of Maj. Jose Quevedo to Bohemia magazine, Jan. 18,
1959)
** In the hospice of "EI Cobre," in the Sanctuary of the Patroness of
Cuba, in Oriente, where Fidel Castro had one of his provisional head-
quarters, the revolutionary chief held a council with his commanders.
Something was amiss. He had a foreboding of what had happened and
feared the worst.
5-69
"The attack on Santiago de Cuba, planned for Dec. 28, had been de-
ferred because of a solemn promise given by Gen. Cantillo at a secret
meeting with him.
"This history of Gen. Eulogio Cantillo's treachery goes back to a re-
cent date, Dec. 24, when the interview took place at Oriente Sugar Mill,
at Palma Soriano, between the military chief, who arrived in a helicopter,
and the top rebel leader.
"Cantillo spoke in the name of the Army, whose determination to
fight had been merely an illusion for some time. They spoke for four
hours. A Catholic priest and several officers, worn with worry for the
peace of Cuba, were present at the historical discussion. After consider-
ing all essential points, they arrived at an agreement to realize a synchro-
nized revolutionary military movement." (Bohemia magazine, Jan. 11,
1959.)
5-70

* * * * * * *
About [1] 9 that night the Army Chief of Staff reported to me
that we could not.hold Las Villas, for even the seat of the mili-
tary command of the Province was surrounded by the rebels.
He said that Lieut. Col. Carlos San Martin Fresneda had ar-
rived from Santa Clara, having made a miraculous escape at
the moment the rebels had seized the airport, their guns firing
at his military plane.
At 10, Gen. Eulogio Cantillo Porras returned and went to
"Kuquine," my farm, to report to me. Nothing could be done
to recover Oriente and much less to transfer forces to Las Vil-
las. Fidel Castro insisted that the Army and Navy forces in
Santiago mutiny, or, ifthat failed, that Cantillo surrender to
him the forces under the command of Col. Jose Rego Rubido
of the Army and Commodore Manuel Carnero of the Navy ...
"The situation is serious, Mr. President, and we must make a
quick decision." He added that Fidel Castro would enter Santi-
ago de Cuba in a matter of hours, knowing that the troops
would surrender when the report had spread. . .. *
... "On Jan. 1, at a meeting in Cespedes Park in Santiago de Cuba, Fidel
Castro said: 'The agreement with Cantillo was for a mutiny on the 31st,
at 3 in the afternoon, with the preliminary cooperation of the rebel
troops, unconditionally supported by the Army. At the moment of the
mutiny of the Santiago de Cuba garrison, several rebel columns would
enter the city and fraternize with the people. The tanks found in Santiago
would be surrendered to Castro, not for combat purposes, but in antici-
pation of the chance that the movement would fail in Havana and make
it necessary to place vanguards as close as possible to the capital. He re-
lated details of the very different conduct of Col. Rego Rubido. 'Col.
[131 December 1958.]
5-71
There was'little to discuss and no authority could be exer-
cised to apply disciplinary procedures against the Chiefs who
figured that all was lost. I had to meet with the highest echelons
with basic commands, so' I ordered them to assemble, although
the main leaders would surely be in the Executive Mansion of
Columbia to greet me in the last hours of the year 1958. I
expected the President-Elect, the Vice-President of the Repub-
lic, and the chairmen of the Senate and of the House of Repre-
sentatives. At 11: 30 the Adjutant on duty and the Army Chief
of Staff were still making calls. Other officers were calling the
leaders of the Government political parties and the Congres-
siona1leaders.
I told Gen. Cantillo to wait for me at Columbia, as he had
to attend the meeting of the military chiefs to determine the
best plan.
Reflections
While an automobile was taking me to my residence at Camp
Columbia, I pondered on how to solve the situation without
bringing chaos. I thought of the men who were still fighting and
of the wounded in the hospitals; of so many women and men
in the Government departments, the hundreds of widows and
orphans for whom we were setting up homes, pensions through
the ministries, and education in great' centers which, like the
Civic Military Institute, lodged in comfort the children of sol-
Rego Rubido, chief of the Santiago de Cuba redoubt, was as surprised as
I by the Columbia coup d'etat, which was completely separate from the
agreement.'" (Bohemia, Jan. 11, 1959.)
"Fidel suspected even more of Cantillo when the latter admitted that
Gen. Francisco Tabernilla knew the plans. During the interview Can-
tillo said that the '26 of July' Movement did not have the confidence of
the United States Embassy, which made him believe that there were con-
tacts with the North American diplomats." (RaUl Chibas to Herbert
Matthews-Bohemia, Jan. 11, 1959.)
5-72
diers, workers and peasants who had died doing their duty.
Images and ideas passed rapidly through my mind: those guilty
through negligence or disloyalty, through fear or greed; Oriente,
Las Villas and the infamy of those who had sold out our sol-
diers and surrendered their Provinces, and the valor of those
who had defended it without any hope of success....
The duty of a ruler, in such grave circumstances, is to make
decisions for the best interests of the nation. In short, the people
and history will judge .the statesman more harshly than the
father.
Personal Attendance and Forced Discretion
The upstairs living-room of the house at Columbia was full.
Relatives, military figures, friends and politicians were there.
Many ladies, also, had come to greet my wife. I arrived at 12
on the dot and greeted my wife's friends and spent a few min-
utes talking with each one. While waiting for those who had
been delayed, I spoke separately with Admiral Jose Rodriguez
Calderon; with the Joint Chief of Staff, Gen. Tabernilla Dolz;
with the Chief of the Army, Gen. Pedro RodrIguez Avila; with
Gen. Roberto Fernandez Miranda, Chief of the Military Dis-
trict of La Cabana; with the Chief of the Infantry Division, Gen.
FI)ancisco Tabernilla Palmero ("Silito"); and with the Chiefs
of Operations of the Army Staff, of the Air Force, of the Gen-
eral Army Administration, and officers of lesser commands.
The general impression was the same as Cantillo's, although
some were disposed to fight and to die if necessary. I dispatched
my aides, Lieut. Col. Cosme Varas and Maj. Atorresagasti, to
summon the chiefs to my office on the first floor.
. At this point Gen. RodrIguez Avila told me that a Dominican
mission had come to Havana to discuss military cooperation.
I asked him who had summoned this mission and with whom
5-73
they were in contact. He knew only -that the three men who
made up this unknown commission had been having talks with
the Joint Chief of Staff and with Pedraza; he did not know their
origin or why they were.in Cuba. I showed my displeasure over
such contacts, ordered that the three delegates of the Dominican
Government be sent to the camp and asked to leave tonight for
their country. Pedraza and Rodriguez Avila were appointed to
take care of this.
Representing the political groups, we had the President of the
Progressive Action Party (Accion Progresista) and the Mayor
of Havana, Justo Luis Pozo, accompanied by his son, Dr. Ro-
lando Pozo, and Senator Jorge Garda Montes; for the Demo-
cratic Party there were Senators Santiago Rey and Guillermo
Aguilera; the President-Elect Andres Rivero AgUero; Chairman
of the Senate, Anselmo Alliegro, and Chairman of the House
of Representatives, Gaston Godoy, who had been elected Vice-
President of the Republic.
They went to the dining-room, where I waited. I told them
to remain until I had finished an interview. I referred, without
letting on, to my meeting with the military chiefs.
Some relatives and friends were leaving, and I had not yet
had the opportunity to tell them of the serious situation. When
I told my wife I would be right down, she asked me if some-
thing was wrong. I answered quickly that we ought to be pre-
pared to leave, without indicating whether it was to the Palace
or "Kuquine." I had been gradually preparing her for the worst
for, if the result of the meeting were unfavorable, I did not pro-
pose to continue in power and provoke any needless spilling of
blood. Yet we had to make one last supreme effort. If we could
resist two months, until the end of my Administration, the
Republic could avoid a violent change of government with its
unfortunate consequences.
5-74
The. Decisive Meeting

The room where we met was cramped. It was 2 in the morn-
ing. The Chiefs.talked for a few moments and all agreed that
it was impossible to continue the struggle.
The Chief of the Infantry Division gave a resume of his
report of the exhausted condition of his command and the in-
ability of most of his officers to urge a small group of tired men
into battle.... The Chief of the District of La Cabana ex-
plained that the fortress and the camp could count on no more
than the minimum of troops necessary to keep them going; that
his men were ready to sacrifice themselves, but that there were
no reserves, and he was faced with the same problem as Co-
lumbia.
The Navy was more sound, although its ground units and
personnel were working without relief. The Chief was of the
same opinion as the others. Pedraza suggested that a reinforce-
ment might be possible with Dominicans, as Trujillo's unknown
delegates had proposed ... but he himself maintained the same
opinion.
In conclusion, after the disloyalties, surrenders, and treach-
eries, with only a scrap of the Army left, there was only the
prospect of a mountain of bodies, with the Red Horsemen of
the Apocalypse seizing the remains of the Republic.
Resignation and Provisional Government
The resignation and surrender of the Government to a mili-
tary junta was recommended. I preferred a constitutional form.
If the obstacle was Batista, if they desired a comparable govern-
ment which would declare an end to the civil war and rule
under the Constitution of 1940 without suspension of guarantees
or use of extraordinary measures, if the rebel chieftain pro-
5-75
claimed that 'his groups were not fightirtg the Army but Batista,
and if they were truly patriots fighting for freedom and democ-
racy-a provisional constitutional government was the correct
solution to the conflict.
When we summoned the political leaders and officials who
were asked to wait in the first-floor salon, some had already
departed.
The Vice-President of the Republic, Mayor-elect of Havana,
and President of the Liberal Party, Rafael Guas IncIAn, could
not be located. He would have been next in line of succession,
but he was not present and had thus yielded his right. Therefore,
the President of the Senate, Anselmo Alliegro, was designated
to pass on the Presidency to the oldest justice of the Supreme
Court. Thus the Provisional Government was formed in accord-
ance with the provisions of the Constitution and with Gen.
Eulogio Cantillo as Chief of the Army.
The military leaders and civilians witnessed my resignation.
I was answering the appeal to my patriotism which had once
been made by the Church, the industrialists, and the merchants,
and was now being made by the military chiefs because they
could not restore order.
In the document I implored God's favor to light the way for
the Cubans and to grant them the grace of living in peace and
'" "Justice Piedra agreed to assume the Presidency, with Cantillo as
Army Chief of Staff. They decreed a halt in the operations of the Army,
inviting the rebels to do the same. At 10 a.m., when the reporters left the
Provisional President, they said: 'Justice Piedra was accompanied by his
colleagues Alvarez Tabio and More Benitez, physicians Cuervo Rubio
and Nunez Portuondo and Dr. Raul de Cardenas. Piedra read a speech
addressed to the people of Cuba which stated that he had given the cease
fire order and hoped that those who 'invoking the principles of liberty
and the Constitution had taken up arms' would now adopt the same
measure. ' Fidel Castro refused to accept the cease fire order on the desig-
nation of Justice Piedra as Provisional President." (Bohemia, Jan. II,
1959.)
5-76
harmony. In handing over the Government to my successor, I
begged the people to be on their best behavior so that he would
not be a victim of the hatreds and passions which had disgraced
the Cuban family. In the same way I urged all members of the
Armed Forces and the agents of law and order to obey their
leaders under the authority of the new Government.
5-77
CHAPTER 6
EPILOGUE-CUBA

In 1961, the US State Department published an unclassified paper which describes


the "betrayal of the Cuban Revolution." This paper is reproduced in its entirety in
this chapter.
The present situation in Cuba confronts the
Western Hemisphere and the inter-American sys-
tem with a grave and urgent challenge.
This challenge does not result from the fact that
the Castro government in Cuba was established by
revolution. The hemisphere rejoiced at the over-
throw of the Batista tyranny, looked with sympathy
on the new regime, and welcomed its promises of
political freedom and social justice for the Cuban
people. The challenge results from the fact that
the leaders of the revolutionary regime betrayed
their own revolution, delivered that revolution into
the hands of powers alien to the hemisphere, and
transformed it into an instrument employed with
OPL9-3140-RETJ 6-1
calculated effect to suppress the rekindled hopes of
the Cuban people for democracy and to intervene
in the internal i r ~ of other American Republics.
What began as a movement to enlarge Cuban
democracy and freedom has been perverted, in
short, into a mechanism for the destruction of free
institutions in Cuba, for the seizure by international
communism of a base and bridgehead in the Amer-
icas, and for the disruption of the inter-American
system.
It is the considered judgment of the Government
of the United States of America that the Castro
regime in Cuba offers a clear and present danger
to the authentic and autonomous revolution of the
Americas-to the whole hope of spreading politi-
cal liberty, economic development, and social prog-
ress through all the republics of the hemisphere.
I. The Betrayal of the Cuban Revolution
The character of the Batista regime in Cuba
made a violent popular reaction almost inevitable.
The rapacity of the leadership, the corruption of
the government, the brutality of the police, the
regime's indifference to the needs of the people for
education, medical care, housing, for social justice
6-2
and economic. opportunity-all these, in Cuba
as elsewhere, constituted an open invitation to
revolution. .
When word arrived from the Sierra Maestra of
the revolutionary movement headed by Dr. Fidel
Castro Ruz, the people of the hemisphere watched
its progress with feeling and with hope. The
Cuban Revolution could not, however, have suc-
ceeded on the basis of guerrilla action alone. It
succeeded because of the rejection of the regime
by thousands of civilians behind the lines-a rejec-
tion which undermined the morale of the superior
military forces of Batista and caused them to col-
lapse from within. This response of the Cuban
people was not just to the cruelty and oppression
of the Batista government but to the clear and
moving declarations repeatedly made by Dr.
Castro concerning his plans and purposes for post-
revolutionary Cuba.
As early as 1953 Dr. Castro promised that the
first revolutionary law would proclaim the Consti-
tution of 1940 as "the supreme law of the land."
In this and subsequent statements Dr. Castro
promised "absolute guarantee of freedom of infor-
mation, both of newspapers and radio, and of all
the individual and political rights guaranteed by
6-3
the Constitution," and a provi;ional government
that "will hold general elections ... at the end
of one year under. the norms of the Constitution
of 1940 and the Electoral Code of 1943 and will
deliver the power immediately to the candidate
elected." Dr. Castro, in short, promised a free and
democratic Cuba dedicated to social and economic
justice. It was to assure these goals that the Rebel
Army maintained itself in the hills, that the Cuban
people turned against Batista, and that all elements
of the revolution in the end supported the 26th of
July Movement. It was because of the belief in
the honesty of Dr. Castro's purposes that the ac-
cession of his regime to power on January 1, 1959,
was followed within a single week by its acceptance
in the hemisphere-a recognition freely accorded
by nearly all the American Republics, including the
United States.
For a moment the Castro regime seemed deter-
mined to make good on at least its social promises.
The positive programs initiated in the first months
of the Castro regime-the schools built, the medical
clinics established, the new housing, the early
projects of land reform, the opening up of beaches
and resorts to the people, the elimination of graft
6-4
,in government-were impressive in their concep-
tion; no future Cuban government can expect to
turn its back on such objectives. But so far as the
expressed Political aims of the revolution were con-
cerned, the record of the Castro regime has been
a record of the steady and consistent betrayal of
Dr. Castro's prerevolutionary promises; and the re-
sult has been to corrupt the social achievements and
make them the means, not of liberation, but of
bondage.
The history of the Castro Revolution has been
the history of the calculated destruction of the free-
spirited Rebel Army and its supersession as the
main military instrumentality of the regime by the
new state militia. It has been the history of the
calculated destruction of the 26th of July Move-
ment and its supersession as the main political in-
strumentality of the regime by the Communist
Party (Partido Socialista Popular). It has been
the history of the disillusion, persecution, imprison-
ment, exile, and execution of men and women who
supported Dr. Castro-in many cases fought by his
side-and thereafter doomed themselves by trying
to make his regime live up to his own promises.
Thus Dr. Jose Mira Cardona, a distinguished
6-5
6-6
lawyer 'of Habana, was in 1958 Coordinator of
Frente Cfvico Revolucionario, the coalition of
groups opposed to the Batista regime. Dr. Castro
made him the Prime Minister of the Revolutionary
Government. As the regime embarked on its Com-
munist course, Dr. Mir6 Cardona went into exile.
T.oday he is chairman of the Revolutionary Coun-
cil, representing anti-Batista Cubans determined to
rescue the Revolution.
Dr. Manuel Urrutia y Lle6, an eminent Cl.lban
judge, had asserted in defiance of Batista and in
defense of Castro the right of Cubans to resort to
arms to overthrow an unconstitutional govern-
ment. He became a hero of the Revolution and
served as Provisional President of the Revolution-
ary Government. When he protested the spread of
Communist influence, he was compelled to resign.
Today Dr. Urrutia is under house arrest in Habana. [1]
Not only the first Prime Minister and the first
President of the Revolutionary Government but a
large proportion of the Revolution's original po-
litical and military leaders now reject Dr. Castro
and his course of betrayal. Of the 19 members of
the first cabinet of the Revolutionary Government,
nearly two-thirds are today in prison, in exile, or in

OppoSItIOn. Manuel Ray Rivero, who organized
theanti-BatistaundergroundinHabanaandserved
as Castru's Minister of Public Works, is now a
memberoftheRevolutionaryCouncil. Humberto
Sori Marin, who as Castro'sfirst MinisterofAgri-
culture called for agrarian reform in the spirit of
the 1940 Constitution, returnedto Cubaearlythis
yeartoresume hisfightforthefreedomofhispeo-
pie; according to recent reports, hehasbeenshot
andcapturedbytheforcesofCastro.
Menwhofought withDr.Castroin thehillsare
today the hunted victims of his revolutionary re-
gime. MajorHuberMatos Benitez, revolutionary
comandante of Camagiiey Province, was a hero
oftheSierra Maestra. WhenMajor Matoschal-
lenged the spreadofCommunistinfluence andre-
quested permission to resign from the Army, he
was puton trialfor conspiracy, sedition, andtrea-
son and sentenced to 20 years' imprisonment.
Major Matos is only one of the many foes ofBa-
tista who now protest Dr. Castro's perversion of
the revolution. There are many, many others:
Manuel Artime and Nino Diaz who fought val-
iantlyintheSierraMaestra;JustoCarrillo,alead-
er of the Montecristi opposition in Habana and
6-7
Castro's 'first choice for President of the National
Development Bank; Raul Chibas, who raised much
of the funds for t1}e revolution and fought with
Castro in the hills; Felipe Pazos, who represented
the 26th of July Movement on the Junta of Libera-
tion and was subsequently appointed by Castro as
President of the National Bank of Cuba; Major
Pedro Diaz Lanz, chief of the Cuban Air Force and
Castro's personal pilot; Ricardo Lode Vals, chief
of arms supply for the Rebel Army; Dr. Manuel
Antonio de Varona, leader of the Organizac;i6n
Autentica, which was formed to oppose Batista
and which supported its own revolutionary group
in the Escambray Mountains; Evelio Duque and
Osvaldo Ramirez, fighters in the Sierra Escambray
first against Batista and today against Castro.
David Salvador, the labor leader, went to jail
under Batista because of his work for Castro. After
the revolution he became the militantly pro-Castro
and "anti-Yanqui" secretary general of the Cuban
trade union federation. In November 1959, the
26th of July Movement swept the national con-
gress of the trade unions, defeated the Communist
slate, and confirmed David Salvador as secretary
general. But Dr. Castro, appearing in person at
6-8

the congress, demanded acceptanceof the Com-
munist program of "unity." Salvador continued
his fight.for a free labormovement. A yearlater
he was arrested as he tried to escape from Cuba.
Today David Salvador is back again in a Cuban
jail-thistime not Batista's but Castro's.
Editors and commentators who had fought all
their lives for freedom of expression found less of
it under Castro even thanunderBatista. Miguel
Angel Quevedo, as editor of Bohemia, had freely
attacked Batista and backed Castro; the January
1959 issueofBohemia hailingthenewregimesold
nearlyamillioncopies. But ayearandahalflater
Quevedo concluded thatit was impossible to put
out anhonest magazine in the new Cuba. When
he fled the countryin July 1960, Castro described
itas "oneofthe hardblows which the Revolution
has received." TodayBohemia Libre's datelineis
Caracas. Luis Conte Aguero, the radio and tele-
vision commentator, wrote the preface to Dr.
Castro's revolutionary exhortation History Will
Absolve Me. When Conte dared criticize Com-
munist infiltration into the regime, Castro turned
on him, angry crowds mobbed him, and he was
6-9
6-10
forced to 'seek refuge in the Argentine Embassy.
Today he is in exile. Even Jose Pardo Llada,
notorious for his vitriolic daily attacks on the
United States over the Habana radio, recently fled
to Mexico City; he declared, "1 am breaking with
Fidel Castro upon reaching the conviction that in
Cuba it is no longer possible to maintain a position
that is not in accord with the line of the Popular
Socialist [Communist] Party and that any expres-
sion of independence, even in defense of the social
program of the Revolution, is considered as devia-
tionist, divisive, or counterrevolutionary."
Never in history has any revolution so rapidly
devoured its children. The roster of Castro's vic-
tims is the litany of the Cuban Revolution. The
Rebel Army and the 26th of July Movement ex-
pressed the profound and passionate desire of the
Cuban people for democracy and freedom, a desire
sanctified in the comradeship and sacrifice of the
revolutionary struggle. When Dr. Castro decided
to betray the promises of the revolution, he had to
liquidate the instrumentalities which embodied
those promises and to destroy the men who took
the promises seriously.
II. The Establishment of the Communist
Bridgehead
In place of the democratic spontaneity of the
Cuban Revolution, Dr. Castro placed his confi-
dence in the ruthless discipline of the Cuban Com-
munist Party. Today that party is the only political
party permitted to operate in Cuba. Today its
members and those responsive to its influence dom-
inate the government of Cuba, the commissions of
economic planning, the labor front, the press, the
educational system, and all the agencies of national
power.
The Cuban Communist Party has had a long
and intricate history. For years it had a working
arrangement with the Batista government; indeed,
Batista in 1943 appointed to his cabinet the first
avowed Communist ever to serve in any cabinet of
any American Republic. Later Batista and the
Communists fell out. But the Communists were
at first slow to grasp the potentialities of the Castro
movement. When Castro first went to the hills,
the Cuban Communist Party dismissed him as
"bourgeois" and "putschist." Only when they saw
that he had a chance of winning did they try to
take over his movement.
6-11
Their initial opposItion was quickly forgiven.
Dr. Castro's brother, Major Raul Castro, had him-
self been active in the international Communist
student movement and had made his pilgrimage to
the Communist world. Moreover, Major Ernesto
(Che) Guevara, a dominating influence on Dr.
Castro, was a professional revolutionary from Ar-
gentina who had worked with Communists in
Guatemala and Mexico. Through Raul Castro
and Guevara, the Communists, though unable to
gain control either of the 26th of July Movement
or of the Rebel Army, won ready access to Dr.
Castro himself. What was perhaps even more im-
portant, the Communist Party could promise
Castro not only a clear-cut program but a tough
organization to put that program into execution.
The period since has seen a steady expansion of
Communist power within the regime. Dr.Osvaldo
Dortic6s Torrado, the present President of Cuba,
was regional organization secretary of the Commu-
nist Party in Cienfuegos as a law student and has
never publicly explained or repudiated his past
party membership. Anibal Escalante, secretary
general of the Cuban Communist Party, is a mem-
ber of the informal group which, under the chair-
6-12
inanship of Raul Castro, makes policy for the
Cuban Government. Raul Castro himself runs the
Ministry for the Revolutionary Armed Forces; and
his friend, Major Ramiro Valdes Menendez, who
accompanied him on a tour of the Soviet bloc in
1960, is chief of military intelligence. Major
Guevara is Minister of Industry and chief economic
planner. The National Agrarian Reform Institute
(INRA), with its vast power over the rural life of
Cuba, is headed by Major Antonio Nunez Jimenez,
a longtime coworker in Communist-front groups
and another frequent pilgrim behind the Iron Cur-
tain. The Bank for Foreign Commerce, which un-
til recently controlled all exports and imports, had
as its director Jacinto Torras, an oldtime Commu-
nist, who served for many years as economic editor
of the Communist daily newspaper Noticias de
Hoy. All centers of economic power have been
taken over by the state and to a considerable de-
gree delivered to the Cuban Communist Party.
This process of consolidation has been extended
inexorably to every phase of Cuban national life.
Political opposition has been extinguished, and all
political parties, save the Communist, are effec-
tively denied political activity. In recent months
6-13
the regime; by completing its purge'of the judiciary,
has perfected its control over all organized institu-
tions of political p w ~ r Justice is now the instru-
ment of tyranny. Laws have been redefined in
such a way that any manifestation of disagreement
can be branded as "counterrevolutionary" and the
accused haled before military tribunals and sen-
tenced to long prison terms or to the firing squad.
Professional groups and civic institutions have
lost their autonomy and are systematically inte-
grated into the "revolutionary" discipline of the
regime. The remaining vestiges of opposition in
the trade unions, represented by union leaders from
the 26th of July Movement, have been destroyed.
Recently the hand of the dictatorship has been
reaching out beyond the middle class to strike down
elements in organized labor. When the electrical
workers of Habana marched last December from
union headquarters to the Presidential Palace to
protest against reductions in their standard of liv-
ing, Dr. Castro himself took an early occasion to
denounce them. A power failure in Habana led to
the arrest of three workers as suspected saboteurs;
on January 18, 1961, these men were executed by
the regime as "traitors." Protest demonstrations
6-14
. by workers' wives against the executions were
broken up by civilian strong-arm squads while
police and militiamen looked on.
In characteristic Communist manner the regime
has seized control of the nation's educational sys-
tem, introduced Communist propaganda into the
schools, destroyed academic freedom, and ended
the traditional autonomy of the universities. The
director of primary education in the Ministry of
Education is Dulce Maria Escalona Almeida, a
Communist. Secondary education is in the hands
of Pedro Canas Abril, long associated with pro-
Communist groups. The director of the Depart-
ment of Culture in the Ministry of Education is a
veteran Communist, Vicentina Antuna. Well-
known Communists served on the committee
named by the Ministry of Education to rewrite the
textbooks for the public school system. Two-thirds
of the faculty of the University of Habana is today
in exile. Fermin Peinado, a former professor at
the University of the Oriente, recently published
the text of a statement issued last December by
faculty members and students of that university:
. . . In the realm of domestic politics we condemn Fidel
Castro as a traitor to the Revolution that this university
helped to organize and to win. . . . The objectives of com-
6-15
plete freedom, human rights, anddmstitutional order,
crystallized in the 26th of July Movement, have been
crushed by the Castro regime in open treason to the memory
of our martyrs Frank Pais, Pepito Tey, Eduardo Mesa, and
many others. . . . In the realm of university life we declare
Fidel Castro a traitor to the autonomy of the university,
defended to the death by a legion of student martyrs, from
Trejo to Ramirez and Jose A. Echevarria.... We de-
nounce the systematic subordination of the aims of scientific
investigation within the universitieS to the aim of consolidat-
ing and maintaining in power the totalitarian tyranny of
Castro.
In similar fashion the Castro regime has seized
control of the agencies of public communication-
the newspapers, the publishing houses, the radio
and television networks, the film industry. No
Cuban today, whether in field or factory, in school
or cafe or home by the radio, can hope to escape
the monotonous and implacable din of Communist
propaganda.
The Cuba of Castro, in short, offers the Western
Hemisphere a new experience-the experience of
a modern totalitarian state. Castro's power
touches the daily lives of the people of Cuba at
every point; governs their access to jobs, houses,
farms, schools, all the necessities of life; and sub-
jects opposition to quick and harsh reprisal. The
6-16
'Castro regime is far more drastic and comprehen-
sive in its control than even the most ruthless of
the o l t m ~ military dictatorships which have too
long disfigured the hemisphere. On January 27
last, Major Nunez Jimenez, the head of INRA,
summed up the inner logic of the Castro course.
The Cuban Government, Major Nunez threatened,
might have to replace its intended slogan for 1961,
"Year of Education," with a new slogan, "Ano del
Pared6n"-"Year of the Execution Wall" or, in
effect, "Year of the Firing Squad."
By every criterion, it is evident that the permea-
tion and penetration of political and intellectual
life by Communist influences and personalities have
reached the point of virtual domination. The
North American journalist I. F. Stone, initially
sympathetic with the Castro regime, reported after
a recent trip to Cuba: ."For the first time, in talk-
ing with the Fidelista intellectuals, I felt that Cuba
was on its way to becoming a Soviet-style Popular
Democracy."
It is for this reason that some of the most devoted
and authentic fighters for social and economic
democracy in Latin America-men who themselves
spent years in prison or in exile and who had hailed
6-17
.
the Castro uprising for its promisesofdeliverance
fortheCubanpeople-haveunitedinrejectingthe
Communistconquesiof Cuba. VictorRaulHaya
de laTorreof Perumaystandas a symbol of this
whole tradition of the democratic left. "In the
history of Latin America," Haya de la Torre re-
cently said, "there has been a series of sell-outs.
Sell-outsarenotnewtoourAmerica. Whatisnew
are sell-outs towards the left. Upuntil now they
wereonlytothepoliticalright. Wecannotconfuse
thatwhichwasidealistic, authenticandjustinthe
beginning of the Cuban Revolution with the sur-
render, submission, and homage to something
whichisanti-Americanandtotalitarianandwhich
is opposed to the traditional sense of our ideal of
breadwithfreedom."
Meeting in Lima at the end of February 1961,
representatives of APRA of Peru, Acci6n Demo-
cdttica of Venezuela, and similar political groups
inotherLatinAmericanRepublicssummedupthe
situation when they said of Cuba thatits "revolu-
tionaryprocess, justifiedinthebeginning,hasbeen
deflectedbyitspresentagents,convertingabrother
country into aninstrument of the cold war, sepa-
rating it. with suicidal premeditation, from the
6-18
,community of interests of the Latin American
people."
III. The Delivery of the Revolution to the
Sino-Soviet Bloc
The official declarations of the Cuban Govern-
ment amply document the Lima resolution and
make clear the subservience of the Castro regime
to the world Communist bloc. The joint com-
munique issued in Moscow on December 19, 1960,
by Anastas Mikoyan, Deputy Chairman of the
Council of Ministers of the U.S.S.R., and Major
Guevara, as chief of the Economic Mission of the
Revolutionary Government of Cuba, outline the
terms of surrender. After announcing a series of
trade, technical assistance, and cultural agree-
ments, the communique noted, "During the talks,
the two parties discussed problems relating to the
present international situation, and they reaffirmed
their agreement in attitude toward the principal
problems of mankind today." The Cubans agreed
that the Soviet Union is "the most powerful nation
on earth" and that every Soviet proposal and policy
represented a magnificent contribution to world .
peace. In return for a total acceptance of Soviet
6-19
leadership, Cuba received pledges of Soviet eco-
nomic assistance and of "the Soviet Union's will-
ingness to lend Cuba full assistance in maintaining

its independence against unprovoked aggression."
The joint communique amounts in effect to an alli-
ance between Cuba and the Soviet Union.
Officials of the Castro government have repeat-
~ y made clear their fidelity to this alliance.
Major Guevara, endorsing the conclusions of the
Moscow Congress of world Communist parties,
said "Cuba wants to tread the way of the Soviet
Union" and praised the "militant solidarity of the
Cuban and Soviet people." In the presence of Dr.
Castro, Faure Chom6n, the Cuban Ambassador
to Moscow, told an audience on March 13, 1961,
"We Communists together will continue forward
with our truth ... and the students of today and
the students of tomorrow will be greatly interested
in seeing how a whole people made itself Commu-
nist, how even the children, deceived by religious
schools, have become Communists, and how this is
to follow that truth which unites the Cuban people.
Very soon we shall see all the peoples of Latin
America become Communists."
6-20

.On one issue after another, the Castro regime


has signified its unquestioning acceptance of the
Soviet line on international affairs. After the

termination of diplomatic relations with the United


States, the Cuban Government turned over its
diplomatic and consular representation to the
Embassy of Czechoslovakia in Washington. In the
United Nations, Cuba votes with the Communist
bloc on virtually all major issues.
Though in 1956 Raul Roa, the Cuban Foreign
Minister, attacked "the crimes, disasters and out-
rages perpetrated" by the Soviet "invaders" in
Hungary, the Hungarian revolution, as well as the
rebellion in Tibet, are now "reactionary fascist
movements." In October 1960, Manuel Yepe,
chief of protocol for the Foreign Ministry, gave an
orientation lecture on the subject "Imperialist
Aggression and the Case of Hungary."
The last few months have seen the rapid con-
solidation of this relationship in all its aspects-
not only ideological, but military, political, eco-
nomic, and cultural. Sino-Soviet arms, equipment,
technicians, and money have moved into Cuba.
Diplomatic relations have been established with
every Communist country except East Germany;
6-21
and economic agreements have been concluded
with many Communist countries including East
Germany. Cuban leaders have visited the Soviet
Union and Communist China as honored guests,
and a long list of leaders from the Soviet Union,
China, and the Communist satellite states have
visited Cuba.
It is important to understand the detail and the
magnitude of this process of takeover. Since the
middle of 1960, more than 30,000 tons of arms
with an estimated value of $50 million have
poured from beyond the Iron Curtain into Cuba in
an ever-rising flood. The 8-hour military parade
through Habana and the military maneuvers in
January 1961 displayed Soviet JS-2 51-ton tanks,
Soviet SU-lOO assault guns, Soviet T-34 35-ton
tanks, Soviet 76 mm. field guns, Soviet 85 mm.
field guns, Soviet 122 mm. field guns. Except for
motorized equipment, the Cuban armed forces
have been reequipped by the Soviet bloc and are
now dependent on the bloc for the maintenance of
their armed power. Soviet and Czech military
advisers and technicians have accompanied the
flow of arms. And the Castro regime has sent
Cubans to Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union
6-22
for training as jet pilots, ground maintenance
crews, and artillerymen.
As a consequence of Soviet military aid, Cuba
has today, except for the United States, the largest
ground forces in the hemisphere-at least ten times
as large as the military forces maintained by previ-
ous Cuban Governments, including that of Batista.
Estimates of the size of the Cuban military estab-
lishment range from 250,000 to 400,000. On the
basis of the lower figure, one out of every 30
Cubans is today in the armed forces as against one
out of 50 in the Soviet Union and one out of 60
in the United States.
Soviet domination of economic relations has pro-
ceeded with similar speed and comprehensiveness.
A series of trade and financial agreements has in-
tegrated the Cuban economy with that of the Com-
munist world. The extent of Cuban economic
dependence on the Communist world is shown by
the fact that approximately 75 percent of its trade
is now tied up in barter arrangements with Iron
Curtain countries. The artificiality of this devel-
opment is suggested by the fact that at the begin-
ning of 1960 only 2 percent of Cuba's total foreign
trade was with the Communist bloc. The Soviet
6-23
Union; East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Poland
have permanent technical assistance missions in
Cuba; and a Communist Chinese delegation will

soon arrive in pursuance of the Cuban-Chinese
agreement of December 1960. According to Major
Guevara, 2,700 Cubans will be receiving technical
training in bloc countries in 1961.
The same process is visible in the field of cultural
relations. What is involved is not just the visit of
concert artists, dance groups, or athletic teams but
the Communist conquest of all phases of cultural
activity. This is to be seen in the comprehensive
cultural agreements with bloc countries, in the re-
construction of the Cuban educational system to
serve Communist purposes, in the impediments
placed on students wishing to study anywhere ex-
cept beyond the Iron Curtain, in the ban on books
and magazines from the free states, in the affilia-
tion of Prensa t i n ~ the official Cuban press
agency, with Tass and other Communist-bloc news
agencies. It has meant a deliberate severing of
traditional cultural ties with countries of the hemi-
sphere and of Western Europe. It has meant a
massive attempt to impose an alien cultural pattern
on the Cuban people.
6-24

In every area, the action of the Castro regime


is steadily and purposefully directed toward a single
goal-the. transformation of Cuba into a Soviet
satellite state.
IV. The Assault on the Hemisphere
The transformation of Cuba into a Soviet satel-
lite is, from the viewpoint of the Cuban leaders, not
an end but a beginning. Dr. Castro's fondest
dream is a continent-wide upheaval which would
reconstruct all Latin America on the moa.el of
Cuba. "We promise," he said on July 26, 1960,
"to continue making the nation the example that
can convert the Cordillera of the Andes into the
Sierra Maestra of the hemisphere." "If they want
to accuse us of wanting a revolution in all Amer-
ica," he added later, "let them accuse us."
Under Castro, Cuba has already become a base
and staging area for revolutionary activity through-
out the continent. In prosecuting the war against
the hemisphere, Cuban embassies in Latin Ameri-
can countries work in close collaboration with Iron
Curtain diplomatic missions and with the Soviet
intelligence services. In addition, Cuban expres-
sions of fealty to the Communist world have pro-
6-25
vided the Soviet Government a long-sought pretext
for threats of direct interventions of its own in the
Western Hemisphere. "We shall do everything
to support Cuba in' her struggle," Prime Minister
Khrushchev said on July 9, 1960, "... Speaking
figuratively, in case of necessity, Soviet artillery-
men can support with rocket fire the Cuban people
if aggressive forces in the Pentagon dare to start
intervention against Cuba."
As Dr. Castro's alliance with international com-
munism has grown closer, his determination to
export revolution to other American Republics-
a determination now affirmed, now denied-has
become more fervent. The Declaration of Ha-
bana of September 2, 1960, was an open attack on
the Organization of American States. Cuban
intervention, though couched in terms designed to
appeal to Latin American aspirations for freedom
and justice, has shown its readiness to do anything
necessary to extend the power of Fidelismo. In-
deed, Dr. Castro has plainly reached the conclu-
sion that his main enemy in Latin America is not
dictatorship but democracy-that he must, above
all, strive to discredit and destroy governments seek-
ing peaceful solutions to social and economic prob-
6-26
lems. Thus in recent months the Cuban Govern-
ment has abandoned its aggressive campaign
against the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican

Republic and has accelerated its attacks on the
progressive democratic government of R6mulo
Betancourt in Venezuela.
Cuban interventionism has taken a variety of
forms. During 1959 the Castro government aided
or supported armed invasions of Panama, Nica-
ragua, the Dominican Republic, and Haiti. These
projects all failed and all invited action by the
Organization of American States. In conse-
quence, after 1959 the Castro regime began in-
creasingly to resort to indirect methods. The
present strategy of Fidelismo is to provoke revolu-
tionary situations in other republics through the
indoctrination of selected individuals from other
countries, through assistance to revolutionary exiles,
through incitement to mass agitation, and through
the political and propaganda operations of Cuban
embassies. Cuban diplomats have encouraged lo-
cal opposition groups, harangued political rallies,
distributed inflammatory propaganda, and in-
dulged in a multitude of political assignments be-
yond the usual call of diplomatic duty. Papers
6-27
seized in. a raid on the Cuban Embassy in Lima in
November 1960 display, for example, the extent
and variety of clandestine Fidelista activities
within Peru. Documents made public by the
Government of EI Salvador on March 12, 1961,
appear to establish that large sums of money have
been coming into EI Salvador through the Cuban
Embassy for the purpose of financing pro-Com-
munist student groups plotting the overthrow of
the government. The regime is now completing
construction of a 100,000-watt radio transmitter to
facilitate its propaganda assault on the hemisphere.
Most instances of serious civil disturbance in
Latin America in recent months exhibit Cuban in-
fluence, if not direct intervention. At the time of
the November riots in Venezuela, the government
announced the discovery of high-powered trans-
mitting and receiving sets in the possession of
Cubans in Caracas. In the following weeks about
50 Cubans were x p ~ from the country. Simi-
lar patterns appear to have existed in troubles in
El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Colombia,
Bolivia, and Paraguay.
To such covert activities have been joined open
and direct attacks on the duly elected leaders of the
6-28
American states. Thus the Cuban Foreign Min-
ister has applied unprintable language to President
Frondizi of Argentina. Government broadcasts
have denounced President LOpez Mateos as "the
betrayer of the Mexican Revolution," President
Alessandri as "the corrupter of the faith of the
Chilean people," President Lleras Camargo of
Colombia as "the intimate friend of exploiting im-
perialism," President Betancourt of Venezuela as
the "revolutionary of Mercurochrome Bandaids,"
President Eisenhower of the United States as "de-
crepit" and "bottle-fed," and so on.
In consequence of Dr. Castro's campaign against
the hemisphere, seven American states no longer
have diplomatic relations with Cuba. Of the states
which retain formal relations, several have found
it necessary to ask that Cuban Ambassadors and
other official representatives be recalled because of
their flagrant intervention into domestic affairs. A
number of governments have withdrawn their own
ambassadors from Habana.
The nations of the hemisphere, including the
United States, have made repeated attempts to
dissuade Cuba from thus turning its back on its
brother Republics. Though the Cuban Govern-
6-29
ment has tried to portray the United States as the
sworn and unrelenting enemy of the Cuban Revo-
lution, Dr.. Castro was in fact cordially received
when he visited the United States in the spring of
1959. American officials made clear to him the
willingness of the United States Government to
discuss his country's economic needs. For many
months thereafter, the United States sought direct
consultations with the Castro government. The
United States took the initiative in suggesting nego-
tiations as early as the summer of 1959. That
offer and many others made subsequently were not
accepted. For a long time the United States Am-
bassador in Habana was unable even to obtain an
audience with Dr. Castro.
Dr. Castro had already made clear his contempt
for the Organization of American States and for
the entire inter-American system. Early in his
regime he declared, "I have no faith in the
OAS . . . it decides nothing, the whole thing is a
lie." Though Cuba signed the Santiago Decla-
ration of August 1959, with its enunciation of free
elections, human rights, due process, freedom of
information and expression, and hemisphere eco-
nomic collaboration, it has systematically disre-
6-30
.gardedand violated eath item in the Declaration.
In March 1960 Castro publicly stated that the
Cuban Government did not regard itself as obli-

gated by the Rio Treaty, the keystone of hemi-
spheric cooperation for defense, because "the revo-
lution" did not sign the document.
In August 1960 the Foreign Ministers of the
hemisphere, meeting at San Jose, Costa Rica,
adopted a declaration condemning the threat of
extracontinental intervention in the affairs of the
hemisphere and condemning also the acceptance
of any such threat by an American Republic; re-
jecting the attempt of the Sino-Soviet powers to
exploit the political, economic, or social situation
of any American State; and declaring that the
inter-American system was incompatible with any
form of totalitarianism and that democracy would
achieve its full scope only as all American Repub-
lics lived up to the Santiago Declaration.
After the San Jose Declaration the Cuban
regime, identifying itself as the object of these
pronouncements, launched an all-out attack on
the inter-American system. The Declaration of
Habana condemned the Declaration of San Jose.
The United States twice proposed that factfinding
6-31

and procedures created by the OAS
be used as an approach to resolving differences;
these proposals were ignored by Cuba. Cuba
refused to joinwiththeotherAmericanRepublics
in the effort to bring about economic and social
advance through the continentinthespirit ofthe
Bogota economic meeting of 1960. It refused to
supporttherecommendationsmadebytheNovem-
ber 1960 Special Meeting of Senior Representa-
tives to strengthen the Inter-American Economic
and Social Council. It has hurled insults on the
whole conception of Alianza para el Progreso. It
stands today in defiance not only of the Declara-
tions of Santiago and SanJose and the Treatyof
Riobutalso of the Charterof theOrganizationof
AmericanStates.
NoonecontendsthattheOrganizationofAmer-
ican States is a perfect institution. But it does
represent the collective purpose of the American
Republics to work together for democracy, eco-
nomic development, and peace. The OAS has
established the machinery to guarantee the safety
and integrityof every AmericanRepublic, to pre-
servetheprincipleofnoninterventionbyanyAmer-
icanStatein the internalorexternalaffairsofthe
6-32
'other American States,' and to assure each nation
the right to develop its cultural, political, and eco-
nomic life. freely and naturally, respecting the
rights of the individual and the principles of uni-
versal morality.
The Organization of American States is the
expression of the moral and political unity of the
Western Hemisphere. In rejecting the OAS, the
Castro regime has rejected the hemisphere and
has established itself as the outpost in the Americas
for forces determined to wreck the inter-American
system. Under Castro, Cuba has become the
agency to destroy the Bolivarian vision of the Amer-
icas as the greatest region in the world, "greatest
not so much by virtue of her area and wealth, as
by her freedom and glory."
V. Conclusion
I t is not clear whether Dr. Castro intended from
the start to betray his pledges of a free and
democratic Cuba, to deliver his country to the
Sino-Soviet bloc, and to mount an attack on the
inter-American system; or whether he made his
original pledges in all sincerity but, on assuming
his new responsibilities, found himself increasingly
6-33
dependent on ruthless men aromid him with clear
ideas and the disciplined organization to carry
those ideas into action. What is important is not
the motive but the result.
The first result has been the institution of a
repressive dictatorship in Cuba.
The existence of a regime dedicated to so calcu-
lated an attack on human decencies would by itself
be a sufficient occasion for intense concern within
the hemisphere. In recent years the American
family of nations has moved steadily toward the
conclusion that the safety and welfare of all the
American Republics will be best protected by the
establishment and guarantee within each republic
of what the GAS Charter calls "the essential rights
of man."
But Dr. Castro has done more than establish a
dictatorship in Cuba; he has committed that dic-
tatorship to a totalitarian movement outside the
hemisphere.
Just as the American Republics over 20 years
ago, in conferences beginning at Lima in 1938 and
culminating at Rio de Janeiro in 1942, proclaimed
that they could not tolerate the invasion of the hemi-
sphere and the seizure of the American States by
6-34
.. rents, slefvi1\g the interests of the Ger-
.<'t!i:ph;so today they reject such invasion and
~ ~ u t by Communist movements serving the in-
terests of the Sino-Soviet bloc.
The people of Cuba remain our brothers. We
acknowledge past omissions and errors in our re-
lationship to them. The United States, along with
the other nations of the hemisphere, expresses a pro-
found determination to assure future democratic
governments in Cuba full and positive support in
their efforts to help the Cuban people achieve free-
dom, democracy, and social justice.
We call once again on the Castro regime to sever
its links with the international Communist move-
ment, to return to the original purposes which
brought so many gallant men together in the Sierra
Maestra, and to restore the integrity of the Cuban
Revolution.
If this call is unheeded, we are confident that the
Cuban people, with their passion for liberty, will
continue to strive for a free Cuba; that they will
return to the splendid vision of inter-American
unity and progress; and that in the spirit of Jose
Marti they will join hands with the other republics
in the hemisphere in the struggle to win freedom.
6-35
Because the Castro regime has becbme the spear-
head of attack on the inter-American system, that
regime represents a fateful challenge to the intet-

American system. For freedom is the common
destiny of our hemisphere-freedom from domestic
tyranny and foreign intervention, from hunger and
poverty and illiteracy, freedom for each person and
nation in the Americas to realize the high poten-
tialities of life in the twentieth century.
6-36
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