Castro's
True Wealth
by
Humberto Fontova
by Humberto Fontova
When Forbes
magazine named him among the world's richest heads of state in 2005
a furious Fidel Castro denounced it as "infamy!" "Do they think
I'm some kind of Mobutu!" he raged. At the time Forbes estimated
his fortune at $550 million
This year Forbes
raised his ranking to the world's 7th richest head of state, with
an estimated fortune of $900 million. "Repugnant slander!" Castro
thundered on Cuban television (all twelve of them) this week. The
"President" of Cuba's National Bank, Francisco Soberon, also chimed
in:
"The Cuban
revolution and its Maximum Leader are an example of honesty and
ethical conduct in this chaotic and corrupt world into which the
empire has cast humanity," he added.
Actually, Castro
has a point. He has no business being lumped in with measly millionaire
chumps like Mobutu Sese Seko and Queen Elizabeth. Forbes admits
that its estimate of Castro's wealth is "more art than science,"
and is based on his partial ownership of state enterprises, among
them the Havana Convention Center, the Cimex retail conglomerate
and Medicuba. But as Cuban-American scholar Eugenio Yanez asks:
why not include many other, and much larger, Cuban state enterprises
like Cubatabaco, Artex, Cubacatricos, Cubatecnica, Gaviota, Acemex,
Cubatur, Antex, Caribat, Cubatur, and many more? The list is much
longer than those singled out by Forbes.
Another method
used by Forbes was calculating that Castro owns roughly ten per
cent of the Cuban GDP. Why only ten per cent?
All enterprises
in Cuba are state enterprises, including so-called "joint-ventures"
with foreign investors, as shown by a Miami Herald headline
from June of 2005: "Many Foreign Investors Being Booted Out of Cuba"
it read.
"It's outrageous!"
the Herald quoted a Spanish businessmen leaving Cuba. ''I've gone
through endless meetings for more than a year with no result in
terms of recovering our investment!"' he whimpered.
"What I can't
accept," wailed another European businessman, " is simply being
booted out of here with no solid guarantee I will ever get my money
back!''
Our hearts
bleed for these unfortunate gentlemen. Also notice: the investors
were being booted out of Cuba. But the investments remained, as
did those of the 5,911 businesses valued at close to $2 billion
stolen at gunpoint from U.S. owners and investors in 1960. A few
owners who resisted like Howard Anderson, who had his Jeep dealership
stolen, and Tom Fuller, whose family farm was stolen, were promptly
murdered by Castro and Che's firing squads.
Interestingly,
new Bolivian president Evo Morales had a lengthy meeting with Fidel
Castro just last week. Immediately upon returning to Bolivia, Morales
announced the "nationalization" (looting) of all the foreign-owned
(primarily Brazilian) natural gas companies in Bolivia. Rafael Dausa,
Cuba's brand new ambassador to Bolivia, is among Cuba's highest
ranking intelligence officers.
Fidel Castro
is officially Cuba's Chief of State, Head of Government, Prime Minister,
First Secretary of the Cuban Communist Party, and Commander in Chief
of the armed forces. Bank President Francisco Soberon didn't refer
to him as the "Maximum Leader" for nothing. So why does Forbes only
estimate his control of Cuba's GDP at ten-per-cent? "The right to
enjoy and to dispose of things in the most absolute manner as he
pleases," is how a legal dictionary defines property. To "dispose"
is the key phrase in the legal definition of property. In brief:
something is genuinely yours only if you have the right to sell
it. As such, Castro owns 100 per cent of Cuban enterprises along
with the full fruits of the labor of his 11 million subjects.
Article 33.1.
of the Cuban "Constitution" states: "The workers in joint ventures
who are Cuban shall be contracted by an employing entity proposed
by the (Cuban) Ministry of Foreign Investment and Economic Cooperation,
and authorized by the (Cuban) Ministry of Labor and Social Security.
Article 33.4.
states: "Payments to Cuban workers in Cuba shall be made in national
currency, which must be obtained beforehand from convertible foreign
currency.
In other words,
say the Cuban Ministry of Labor decides that the salary for your
Cuban laborers (who are forbidden under penalty of prison or firing
squad from striking) is 100 pesos a week. Then you would pay 100
dollars or Euros per laborer to the Cuban government (of which Castro
is Maximum Leader.) The government stashes this currency and pays
the hapless Cuban worker 100 worthless Cuban pesos, which varies
in value from 15-20 per U.S. dollar. In the Dark and Fascistic Batista
Age the Cuban peso was always interchangeable one to one with the
U.S. dollar. Elsewhere they call this chattel slavery. Neither Red
China nor Red Viet-Nam have such mandates for foreign investors.
A Cuban resident
is most valuable to Castro when he wants to escape Cuba. This writer's
family paid $15,000 to get a cousin out of Cuba in the early 60's.
This was not an easy amount for destitute refugees to round up at
the time, but the firing squads were working triple shifts and Cuba's
prisons were filled to suffocation. You weren't only paying for
a loved ones' freedom, you might also be paying for his (or her)
life. Armando Valladares, who somehow escaped the firing squad but
spent 22 torture-filled years in Cuba's Gulag, described his trial
very succinctly: "not one witness to accuse me, not one to identify
me, not one single piece of evidence against me." Valladares had
been arrested in his office for the crime of refusing to display
a pro-Castro sign on his desk.
One day in
early 1959 one of Che's Revolutionary Courts actually found a Cuban
army captain named Pedro Morejon innocent of the charge of "war-criminal."
This brought Che's fellow comandante, Camilo Cienfuegos to his feet.
"If Morejon is not executed," He yelled. "I'll put a bullet through
his head myself!" The court reassembled frantically and quickly
arrived at a new verdict. Morejon crumpled in front of a firing
squad the following day. As Castro's chief executioner, Che Guevara,
explained it: "Judicial evidence is an archaic bourgeois detail."
So you can see the sense of urgency of getting a relative out, especially
if the authorities had set their sights on him as a counter-revolutionary.
Elsewhere they call such a judiciary process at the hands of dictators,
"death squads."
Most Cuban-exile
families can relate similar cases of ransoming relatives. Elsewhere
they call this "kidnapping and extortion."
Cuba's campesinos
(country folk) were among the first to learn the bitter lesson of
ownership in Castro's Cuba and consequently rise in arms against
Castroism. In 1959 with cameras rolling, flashbulbs popping and
reporters scribbling, Castro's much-lauded "Institute of Agrarian
Reform" made a big show of handing out land "titles" to thousands
of beaming campesinos.
Soon these
new "owners" learned they were prohibited from selling "their" land.
More interestingly, the produce grown on "their" land could only
be sold to the government. More interesting still, the price paid
for "their" produce was the government's whim. Elsewhere they called
this "serfdom."
Castro quickly
ended the charade and all agricultural laborers were herded into
granjas, i.e. collective farms identical to Soviet kolkhozes. Indeed,
Soviet agricultural "advisors," still flush from their success in
the Ukraine, had been advising Cuba's INRA (Institute of Agrarian
Reform) from day one. The Cuban campesino's desperate, bloody and
lonely rebellion against their enslavement spread to the towns and
cities and lasted from late 1959 to 1966. Castro himself admitted
that his troops, militia and Soviet advisors were up against 179
different "bands of bandits" as they labelled these freedom-fighting
rednecks. Tens of thousands of troops, scores of Soviet advisors,
and squadrons of Soviet tanks, helicopters and flame-throwers finally
extinguished the lonely Cuban freedom-fight. Elsewhere they call
this "an insurgency."
This ferocious
guerrilla war, waged 90 miles from America's shores, might have
taken place on the planet Pluto for all you'll read about it in
the MSM and all you'll learn about it from those illustrious Ivy-League
Academics. To get an idea of the odds faced by those rural rebels,
the desperation of their battle and the damage they wrought, you
might revisit Tony Montana during the last 15 minutes of "Scarface."
Enrique Encinosa documents this heroic rebellion in his superb book,
Unvanquished. "We fought with the fury of cornered beasts,"
was how one of the few surviving rebels described their insurgency.
In 1962 the
Kennedy-Khrushchev swindle that "solved" the Missile Crisis not
only starved these freedom-fighters of the measly aid they'd been
getting from Cuban-exile freebooters (who were rounded up for violating
U.S. neutrality laws) it also sanctioned the 44,000 Soviet troops
in Cuba. Elsewhere they call this "foreign occupation."
A few years
earlier, with Castro's rebels skirmishing against (mostly bribing,
actually) Batista's army, U.S. reporters had swarmed into Cuba's
hills lugging cameras and tape recorders for fawning interviews
with the gallant Fidel and his strutting rebel comandantes. Print
reporters from Herbert Matthews of the New York Times to
Jules Dubois of the Chicago Tribune, TV figures from Robert
Taber of CBS to Ed Sullivan, all interviewed (soft-soaped) the Cuban
Robin Hood for the folks back home. Even a reporter for Boy's Life
magazine made the scene.
All this coming
and going by foreign press agencies was somehow managed while Cuba
suffered under "a stifling and murderous dictatorship!" or so these
reporters and commentators constantly reminded their gaping audience.
To accommodate the media mob, Castro's people camp finally assembled
a separate building at his campsite with a sign "Press Hut."
Came a genuine
rebellion against a genuine dictatorship and one involving ten
times the number of rebels (and casualties) as the one against Batista
as well as lasting twice as long and nary an intrepid reporter
was to be found anywhere near Cuba's hills. Not that these "valiant
crusaders for the truth," as Columbia School of Journalism hails
their noble profession, weren't in Cuba. From Laura Berquist of
Look Magazine to Jean Daniel of The New Republic to Lee Lockwood
of Life they were all in Havana lining up for fawning "interviews" not
with the rebels this time but with their jailers and assassins,
Fidel Castro and Che Guevara.
If the Britain
in V for Vendetta bordered Castro's Cuba she'd be mobbed
with grateful political refugees who'd scale walls to bask in her
relative freedom. At one point in 1961 one of every 18 Cubans was
a political prisoner, a higher ratio than in Hitler's Germany and
Stalin's Russia.
Castro can
dispose of every business on his captive island in any manner he
chooses. He can do the same with his every Cuban captive. He can
just as easily rent them out as slave labor, as sell them for ransom,
as jail them, as shoot them. Forbes lists only the tiny-tip of the
Castro-wealth iceberg.
May
18, 2006
Humberto
Fontova [send him mail]
is the author of Fidel;
Hollywood's Favorite Tyrant,
described as "absolutely devastating. An enlightening read you'll
never forget." By David Limbaugh. Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart
says, "Humberto Fontova has done a great service to all those who
wish to discover the truth about the only totalitarian dictatorship
in the Western Hemisphere."
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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