The U.S. government, an accomplice of terrorists, accuses Cuba of terrorism
Biden maintains brutal policy toward Cuba, following the steps of previous administrations and resorting to the most fallacious, absurd arguments to justify U.S. aggression
Author: Delfin Xiqués | xiques@granma.cu
may 28, 2021 10:05:00
The political intolerance of an empire that has witnessed a Revolution taking place under its nose has hardened to the extent that – after 62 years of Cuba’s heroic resistance – the most fallacious and absurd arguments are deployed to justify the hostility, including accusations linking Cuba to terrorism, a scourge that the island has in fact suffered at the hands of self-confessed terrorists to whom the U.S. government has provided financing, logistics and immunity. Is it really necessary to recount the criminal U.S. record against Cuba? Apparently another repetition is needed, although its promoters in the immoral north are well aware of the history.
INTENT ON DESTROYING THE REVOLUTION, AT ANY COST
One of the first terrorist attacks against the nascent Revolution occurred on October 21, 1959. On that day, a traitor pilot exiled in Miami, Pedro Luis Díaz Lanz, who had been an officer in the Cuban Air Force, flying a twin-engine B-25, bombed several Havana neighborhoods, causing 45 injuries and the death of two persons.
Diaz Lanz himself would later confirm his responsibility for the attack. With full impunity and protection from U.S. authorities, he departed from Pompano Beach, Florida, where no one created any obstacle to his plans.
Thus began the terrorist war against Cuba, sponsored by the U.S. government and conceived as state policy, fully documented and denounced by Cuba in international forums.
A wide variety of political, military, economic, biological, diplomatic, psychological, propaganda, espionage and sabotage methods have been utilized in the attacks. Armed gangs have also been organized and logistically supported, while desertion has been encouraged and plots hatched to assassinate leaders of the Revolution.
Numerous declassified secret documents provide evidence of these crimes, along with the millions of dollars approved annually for this purpose, an amount which is published in the media as just another line item in the government budget, behind the backs of taxpayers, who are largely unaware of the allocation’s final destination.
Category Archives: 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner
A political-cultural event was held on October 6, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner
Cuba will never forget
Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez presided the political-cultural event held in Havana’s Lázaro Peña Theater to commemorate Victims of State Terrorism Day october 7, 2016 09:10:14
The political-cultral act was held in Havana’s Lázaro Peña Theater. Photo: Jorge Luis González
A political-cultural event was held on October 6, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner mid-flight off the coast of Barbados, and Victims of State Terrorism Day in the capital’s Lázaro Peña Theater.
The encounter – presided by Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, a member of the Party Political Bureau and first vice president of Cuba’s Councils of State and Ministers – provided the opportunity to remember and honor those who lost their lives on October 6, 1976.
On behalf of the families of the victims, Wilfredo Pérez Rodríguez called for long awaited justice to be served.
He recounted the long list of terrorist attacks perpetrated against the country since the beginning of the Revolution.
Terrorism didn’t end with the Barbados crime, he noted, but rather the attacks continued against diplomats; bombs were places in tourist areas; Luis Posada Carriles, principle author of the crime, tortured Venezuelans, Nicaraguans; planned the planting of bombs in hotels, one of which killed the young Italian Fabio Di Celmo; and conspired to assassinate Fidel, emphasized Pérez Rodríguez.
For her part, Sucelys Morfa González, first secretary of the Young Communist League (UJC) National Committee, described the Barbados crime as one of the most brutal attacks on the Cuban people.
The authors of the crime and irrefutable evidence linking them to it were immediately discovered and revealed, she noted.
Morfa González also recalled how Fidel, speaking in Havana’s Plaza de la Revolución, condemned the role played, since 1959, by the U.S. Central Intelligence Service (CIA) in counterrevolutionary subversion, including airplane hijackings; terrorist attacks; sabotage; and destabilization attempts against foreign governments.
She also noted that Posada Carriles walks the streets of Miami publicly expressing his lack of remorse for his crimes, which he would repeat if given the opportunity again, he has said.
Meanwhile, Morfa González concluded by noting that “the youth will never cease to be revolutionaries,” because we are heirs to the legacy of Martí and Fidel, and demand that long awaited justice be served.
Also participating in the act were members of the Party Political Bureau, Central Committee Secretariat, and Councils of State and Ministers, as well as leaders of the Communist Party of Cuba, government, mass organizations, the UJC, and others.
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