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Castro:
"Bush Could Spark WWIII"

WILL WEISSERT / AP 23oct2007

Castro:"Bush Could Spark WWIII" - WILL WEISSERT / AP 23oct2007

Mindfully.org note:
There are a lot of people who do like Fidel Castro very much. And there are a lot of people who do not like Fidel Castro at all. For the most part, his enemies are the wealthy land and business owners who were dispossessed in order to take care the masses of Cuban citizens. Also included would be the people who get the crumbs of those once elite Cubans. The US media always ignores this when commenting on Cuba and Fidel. Also ignored by US media is the fact that under Fidel, the people of Cuba enjoy being just as healthy as US citizens. They also eat better. And the music is. . . incredible. So, take what Castro's detractors have to say with a grain of salt. Listen to them, but understand that these were the minority wealthy capitalists. No government is perfect. As a prime example of dysfunctionality at its worst, take a look at the US and the adminstration of George W. Bush.

 

Fidel Castro wrote Tuesday that President Bush is threatening the world with nuclear war and famine — an attack on Washington a day before the White House was to announce new plans to draw Cuba away from communism.

"The danger of a massive world famine is aggravated by Mr. Bush's recent initiative to transform foods into fuel," Castro wrote in Cuban news media, referring to U.S. support for using corn and other food crops to produce gasoline substitutes.

The brief essay titled "Bush, Hunger and Death" also alleged that Bush "threatens humanity with World War III, this time using atomic weapons."

The White House on Tuesday brushed off Castro's comments — particularly his assertion that Bush was pursuing a forceful conquest of Cuba.

"Dictators say a lot of things, and most of them can be discounted, including that," said White House press secretary Dana Perino.

Perino said that Bush on Wednesday would urge other nations to join together in promoting democracy in Cuba.

"It is true that soon the decades-long debate about our policy towards Cuba will come to a time when we're going to have an opportunity here, when Castro is no longer leading Cuba, that the people there should be able to have a chance at freedom and democracy," she said. "That opportunity is coming."

In his essay, Castro predicted that Bush "will adopt new measures to accelerate the 'transition period' in our country, equivalent to a new conquest of Cuba by force."

Cuban officials have long denounced U.S. efforts to produce a "transition" from Castro's government to a Western-style representative democracy.

Ailing and 81, Castro has not been seen in public since undergoing emergency intestinal surgery and ceding power to a provisional government headed by his younger brother Raul in July 2006.

While he has looked upbeat and lucid in official videos, he also seems too frail to resume power.

Life on the island has changed little under Raul Castro, the 76-year-old defense minister who was his elder brother's hand-picked successor for decades.

Cuba staged municipal elections on Sunday, the first step in a process that will determine if Fidel Castro is re-elected or replaced next year as Cuban leader.

source: 23oct2007

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