Skip to main content

Human Rights

Cuba's repressive strategy ahead of Nov. 15th protest

President Miguel Díaz-Canel will have to pay a high price if his approach toward next week's demonstration fails.

November 9, 2021 5:39pm

Updated: November 9, 2021 5:39pm

I have not been able to find out, for sure, why Raúl Castro authorized the appearance of Carlos Lage asking for “deep changes.” Lage is the former Cuban vice president purged a few years ago along with former Foreign Minister Felipe Pérez Roque. I have asked the experts in the Cuban nomenclature.

Dr. Pedro Roig attributed it to Raúl’s arteriosclerosis and that he has never been accused of being intelligent. It was, of course, a boutade. If anyone is aware that the general doesn’t do anything for anything, it’s this historian and lawyer, former Director of Radio and TeleMartí.

The inquiry led me to another point. It was a proxy target. The real target was Miguel Díaz-Canel. The Cuban president is in trouble. He’s being scared by Lage’s presence. If his repressive strategy against the boys of Nov. 15 goes wrong, he will have to pay a high price. He is not backed by any individual or institution. The Party doesn’t want him. Neither do the generals.

“The puppeteer Raúl Castro showed him that if he can make Lage reappear, he can make Miguel Díaz-Canel disappear.” It may be true, but that is evident. If Raúl asks Díaz-Canel to resign, he has to resign, even though he disguises himself as a patriot.

“It has to do with something absolutely different – the Vatican.” Cuba has penetrated (no pun intended) Pope Francis. There are cardinals who report to Havana. The pope didn’t learn that a peaceful Cuban who prayed on his knees in the square would be expelled from the Vatican. It was an intrigue of the Cuban services in collusion with Vatican Security. The pope is surrounded. At stake is a continuation of the triangle that brought Obama to Havana – the Catholic Church, represented by Cuban Cardinal Jaime Ortega Alamino, Washington and Raúl Castro. The Cuban Church is no longer part of the equation. When Ortega Alamino died, and another Cuban cardinal was appointed, any vestige of “raulism” disappeared in the ranks of the Cuban clergy.

The Havana regime has a huge interest in continuing the exchange and in having President Biden lift the sanctions imposed by Donald Trump. They invited Cardinal Patrick O’Malley to Cuba, despite his friendship with Xavier Suárez, former mayor of Miami and father of Francis Suárez, the current mayor of the city.

However, to hide the ultimate reason for the trip, they first took him to the Dominican Republic, as if it were a regular route. O’Malley, who is no fool, knows the Cuban security game, and knows that Obama was wrong to give so many concessions without receiving anything in return. He wouldn’t recommend anything like that to Joe Biden.

The Cuban regime is so interested in lifting the U.S. sanctions against the island that it is willing to campaign to have Felix Varela declared a saint. Varela was a 19th-century Cuban priest, exiled, wise, and independentist, who was a parish priest in New York during the height of the exodus of Catholic Irish as a result of poor potato harvests.

Raúl Castro doesn’t have the same aversion against the Catholic Church his brother Fidel had. When his daughter Mariela asked priest Carlos Manuel de Céspedes to bless her marriage to an Italian, Raúl Castro agreed … as long as it was something public and well-known. He didn’t want it to be a secret ceremony.

Clearly, the trigger is the Nov. 15 protest. Otherwise, they wouldn’t have complained in CubaDebate, an electronic brochure that collects the “legacy” of the Castros.