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Latest update: 09/09/2010
- communism - Cuba - Fidel Castro
Fidel Castro says Cuban model 'no longer works'
Cuba's long-time communist leader Fidel Castro has told a visiting, and somewhat bemused, American journalist that the country's communist model is no longer working.
AP - Cuba’s communist economic model has come in for criticism from an unlikely source: Fidel Castro.
The revolutionary leader told a visiting American journalist and a U.S.-Cuba policy expert that the island’s state-dominated system is in need of change, a rare comment on domestic affairs from a man who has taken pains to steer clear of local issues since illness forced him to step down as president four years ago.
The fact that things are not working efficiently on this cash-strapped Caribbean island is hardly news. Fidel’s brother Raul, the country’s president, has said the same thing repeatedly. But the blunt assessment by the father of Cuba’s 1959 revolution is sure to raise eyebrows.
Jeffrey Goldberg, a national correspondent for The Atlantic magazine, asked Castro if Cuba’s economic system was still worth exporting to other countries, and Castro replied: “The Cuban model doesn’t even work for us anymore,” Goldberg wrote Wednesday in a post on his Atlantic blog.
The Cuban government had no immediate comment on Goldberg’s account.
Julia Sweig, a Cuba expert at the Washington-based Council on Foreign
Relations who accompanied Goldberg on the trip, confirmed the Cuban leader’s comment, which he made at a private lunch last week.
She told The Associated Press she took the remark to be in line with Raul Castro’s call for gradual but widespread reform.
“It sounded consistent with the general consensus in the country now, up to and including his brother’s position,” Sweig said.
In general, she said she found the 84-year-old Castro to be “relaxed, witty, conversational and quite accessible.”
“He has a new lease on life, and he is taking advantage of it,” Sweig said.
Castro stepped down temporarily in July 2006 due to a serious illness that nearly killed him.
He resigned permanently two years later, but remains head of the Communist Party. After staying almost entirely out of the spotlight for four years, he re-emerged in July and now speaks frequently about international affairs. He has been warning for weeks of the threat of a nuclear war over Iran.
But the ex-president has said very little about Cuba and its politics, perhaps to limit the perception he is stepping on his brother’s toes.
Goldberg, who traveled to Cuba at Castro’s invitation last week to discuss a recent Atlantic article he wrote about Iran’s nuclear program, also reported on Tuesday that Castro questioned his own actions during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, including his recommendation to Soviet leaders that they use nuclear weapons against the United States.
Even after the fall of the Soviet Union, Cuba has clung to its communist system.
The state controls well over 90 percent of the economy, paying workers salaries of about $20 a month in return for free health care and education, and nearly free transportation and housing. At least a portion of every citizen’s food needs are sold to them through ration books at heavily subsidized prices.
Cuba says much of its suffering is caused by the 48-year-old U.S. trade embargo. The economy has also been slammed by the global economic downturn, a drop in nickel prices and the fallout from three devastating hurricanes that hit in quick succession in 2008. Corruption and inefficiency have exacerbated problems.
As president, Raul Castro has instituted a series of limited economic reforms, and has warned Cubans that they need to start working harder and expecting less from the government. But the president has also made it clear he has no desire to depart from Cuba’s socialist system or embrace capitalism.
Fidel Castro’s interview with Goldberg is the only one he has given to an American journalist since he left office.


























Comments (7)
Fidel Castro
Castro probably wants to leave a legacy of having "seen the light" before he dies; he no longer has the old Soviet Union to turn to for financial help and Cuba's economy is continuing to go down the drain. At this point, it wouldn't be surprising if Fidel sent out some peace feelers to the Obama Administration...who knows...he may even ask for American foreigh aid!
Cuba: A failure from Day One of the Castro takeover
So, Fidel is finally admitting that his "revolution" has been, and is now, by his own admission, a failure? Even so, he and his thuggish élites have always lived well, while the Cuban "descamisados" have lived in poverty, or rotted in jail, if they dared complain about the Communist dictatorship. No wonder so many Cubans escaped, or died escaping, from that miserable island.
It's amusing to see that the régime, in order to raise hard currencies, has turned the island into a fleshpot playground for Canadians and Europeans. Cuba: a cynical, cruel charade from day one. You'll never hear any lefties in the West say that.
Fidel Castro says Cuban model 'no longer works'
That does not work for what we knew Cuba since 1969, now what we need is for Fidel and all his followers to do the suitcases and go to spain or where resivir want.For change to be peaceful
Economies
"Cuba's Economy no longer works
by jolyonwagg1 (not verified) - 09/09/2010 - 18:132"
...and I suppose the American one does?!What a role model.
How many countries have American bases in?
How much business is generated for America every time they invade another country?
Who will the US govt turn on when they can longer turn on other countries.....first their allies,then their own citizens.
no kidding?
why still so much attention paid to someone who had lied all his life
dont we ever learn?
debate
Have just viewed the "debate" progrmme and was somewhat irritated by the condescending and almost hysterical enthusiasm of the person interviewed (didn't catch his name) in reporting what looks like Castro's change of heart and admission that the economy (and therefore Castro's style of communism) is not working. Having spent so much time in Cuba, it is surprising the interviewed fellow failed to mention whether the everlasting American embargo had contributed to it. In the circumstances Castro should be given some credit for providing free healthcare and education to Cubans which they didn't have before the revolution and for the advances he made in medical research. Maybe he could have done more had it not been for the embargo. It should also be remembered that one of the reasons that the then USSR's readiness to be involved in the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis had something to do with the fact that American missiles based in Turkey were directed at the USSR. Castro's big worry is a war against Iran which he thinks (and I think he is right) would be disastrous for the world. So while he is right to criticize Ahmadinajad for his anti-semitic remarks, he may also be sending a message that such outbursts are providing the Israeli government with the argument it wants to attack Iran and it is not helping the oppressed Palestinians (also a semitic people) he pretends to be supporting. I am all for democracy and have no time for dictators (left or right they are made with the same ingredients) but as dictators go, Castro is one of the least tyrannical. The reason why he has been so demonised is the fact that he got rid of an American-supported tyrant leader (and therefore American interests) who favoured the rich at the expense of the poor. America has backed several much more brutal dictators than Castro and even did business with and provided weapons to Saddam Hussein before he fell out of favour.
Cuba's Economy no longer works
Hardly a great revelation,as everyone knows Cuba's economy as been stumbling along poorly for many years.Socialist economy's do not work or function properly; sorry France 24 we all know that already.
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