Castro : 古巴不兑现美国。 关塔那摩租检查
雅虎 [通过 Granma国际]
flamesong
第20 2007年8月
美国在租支付古巴$4,085一个月有争议的关塔那摩海军基地,但古巴在几乎一次只兑现了一张支票半个世纪在星期五然后只错误地, Fidel Castro在出版的杂文写。
衰弱的古巴领导,比一年没出现公开为更多,说他拒绝兑现支票抗议“非法”美国。 occupation of the land which he said was now used for “dirty work.”
“The base is needed to humiliate and to do the dirty work that occurs there,” he said of the detention camp where some 355 terrorism suspects are still being held with no legal rights despite international criticism.
Castro, who turned 81 on Monday out of public sight, said the U.S. checks are made out to the “Treasurer General of the Republic,” a position that ceased to exist after Cuba’s 1959 revolution.
He said only one U.S. check was ever cashed — in 1959 due to “confusion” in the heady early days of the leftist revolution.
Castro’s refusal to cash the checks to protest the “illegal” occupation has been long known. In a television interview years ago, he showed the checks stuffed into a desk drawer in his office.
The final installment of Castro’s long historical essay on Cuba’s hostile relations with the United States — written for future generations — was published by the ruling Communist Party newspaper Granma.
The essay entitled “The Empire and the Independent Island” recounted Castro’s view of U.S. efforts to control Cuba since U.S. troops landed on the island in the Spanish-American War that secured Cuban independence from Spain in 1898.
The United States retained 46.8 square miles (121 square kilometers) at the entrance to Guantanamo Bay in eastern Cuba for a naval base, which has been used as a prison camp for Taliban and al Qaeda terrorism suspects since the Afghanistan war following the September 11 attacks in 2001.
The base was initially a coaling station for the U.S. Navy to protect the approaches to the Panama Canal.
Castro said the enclave was “illegally usurped” by the United States, adding that the base no longer had any strategic military purpose in the age of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers packed with fast fighter-bombers.
“If we have to wait for the collapse of the (capitalist) system, we will wait,” Castro wrote. He said Cuba was always on alert to the threat of a U.S. invasion.
Castro handed over power to his brother Raul on July 26 last year after undergoing emergency intestinal surgery. His health is a state secret, but few Cubans expect him to return to office.
The Cuban leader, the last of the major Cold War figures still alive, is seen as a Stalinist tyrant by his enemies but is widely admired in the Third World for standing up to the United States, a David-versus-Goliath role he has relished.
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