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about Fidel Castro |
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FIDEL CASTRO RUZ political leader of Cuba (from
1959) who transformed his country into the first communist state
in the Western Hemisphere. Castro became a symbol of communist revolution
in Latin America. He held the title of premier until 1976, when
he became president of the Council of State and the Council of Ministers.
His father, Angel Castro y Argiz, an immigrant from Spain, was a
fairly prosperous sugarcane farmer in a locality that had long been
dominated by estates of the American-owned United Fruit Company.
Angel Castro had two children by his first wife and five more children.
Fidel was one of these five children.
Fidel Castro attended Roman Catholic boarding schools
in Santiago de Cuba, Oriente province, and then the Catholic high
school. In 1945 he entered the School of Law of the University of
Havana, where organized violent gangs sought to advance a mixture
of romantic goals, political aims, and personal careers. Castro's
main activity at the university was politics, and in 1947 he joined
an abortive attempt by Dominican exiles and Cubans to invade the
Dominican Republic and overthrow Generalissimo Rafael Trujillo.
After his graduation in 1950, Castro began to practice
law and became a member of the reformist Cuban People's Party (called
Ortodoxos). He became their candidate for a seat in the House of
Representatives from a Havana district in the elections scheduled
for June 1952. In March of that year, however, the former Cuban
president, General Fulgencio Batista, overthrew the government of
President Carlos.
After legal means failed to dislodge Batista's new
dictatorship, Castro began to organize a rebel force for the task
in 1953. On July 26, 1953, he led about 160 men in a suicidal attack
on the Moncada military barracks in Santiago de Cuba in hopes of
sparking a popular uprising. Most of the men were killed, and Castro
himself was arrested. After a trial in which he conducted an impassioned
defense, he was sentenced by the government to 15 years' imprisonment.
He and his brother were released in a political amnesty in 1955,
and they went to Mexico to continue their campaign against the Batista
regime. There Castro organized Cuban exiles into a revolutionary
group called the 26th of July movement.
On December 2, 1956, Castro and an armed expedition
of 81 men landed on the coast of Oriente province, Cuba, from the
yacht Granma. All of them were killed or captured except for Castro,
Ernesto ("Che") Guevara, and nine others, who retreated into the
Sierra Maestra of southwestern Oriente province to wage guerrilla
warfare against the Batista forces. With the help of growing numbers
of revolutionary volunteers throughout the island, Castro's forces
won a string of victories over the Batista government's demoralized
and poorly led armed forces. Castro's propaganda efforts proved
particularly effective, and as internal political support waned
and military defeats multiplied, Batista fled the country early
on January 1, 1959. Castro's force of 800 guerrillas had defeated
the Cuban government's 30,000-man professional army.
As the undisputed revolutionary leader, Castro became
commander in chief of the armed forces in Cuba's new provisional
government, which had Manuel Urrutia, a moderate liberal, as its
president. In February 1959 Castro became premier and thus head
of the government. By the time Urrutia was forced to resign in July
1959, Castro had taken effective political power into his own hands.
Castro had come to power with the support of most
Cuban city dwellers on the basis of his promises to restore the
1940 constitution, create an honest administration, reinstate full
civil and political liberties, and undertake moderate reforms. But
once established as Cuba's leader he began to pursue more radical
policies: Cuba's private commerce and industry were nationalized;
sweeping land reforms were instituted; and American businesses and
agricultural estates were expropriated. The United States was alienated
by these policies and offended by Castro's fiery new anti-American
rhetoric. His trade agreement with the Soviet Union in February
1960 further deepened American distrust. In 1960 most economic ties
between Cuba and the United States were severed, and the United
States broke diplomatic relations with the island nation in January
1961. In April of that year the U.S. government secretly equipped
thousands of Cuban exiles to overthrow Castro's government; their
landing at the Bay of Pigs in April 1961, however, was crushed by
Castro's armed forces.
Cuba also began acquiring weapons from the Soviet
Union, which soon became the island nation's chief supporter and
trade partner. In 1962 the Soviet Union secretly stationed ballistic
missiles in Cuba that could deliver nuclear warheads to American
cities, and in the ensuing confrontation with the United States,
the world came close to a nuclear war. The Cuban Missile Crisis
ended when the Soviet Union agreed to withdraw its nuclear weapons
from Cuba in exchange for a pledge that the United States would
withdraw the nuclear-armed missiles it had stationed in Turkey and
no longer seek to overthrow Castro's regime.
In the meantime Castro created a one-party government
to exercise dictatorial control over all aspects of Cuba's political,
economic, and cultural life. All political dissent and opposition
were ruthlessly suppressed. Many members of the Cuban upper and
middle classes felt betrayed by these measures and chose to immigrate
to the United States. At the same time, Castro vastly expanded the
country's social services, extending them to all classes of society
on an equal basis. Educational and health services were made available
to Cubans free of charge, and every citizen was guaranteed employment.
The Cuban economy, however, failed to achieve significant growth
or to reduce its dependence on the country's chief export, cane
sugar. Economic decision-making power was concentrated in a centralized
bureaucracy headed by Castro, who proved to be an inept economic
manager. With inefficient industries and a stagnant agriculture,
Cuba became increasingly dependent on favourable Soviet trade policies
to maintain its modest standard of living in the face of the United
States' continuing trade embargo.
Castro remained premier until 1976, when a new constitution
created a National Assembly and Castro became president of that
body's State Council. He retained the posts of commander in chief
of the armed forces and secretary-general of the Communist Party
of Cuba--the only legal political party--and he continued to exercise
unquestioned and total control over the government. Castro's brother,
minister of the armed forces, ranked second to him in all government
and party posts.
Castro's early attempts to foment Marxist revolutions
elsewhere in Latin America foundered, but Cuban troops did eventually
serve as proxies for the Soviet Union in various Third World conflicts.
From 1975 to 1989 Cuban expeditionary forces fought in the Angolan
civil war on the side of the communistic Popular Movement for the
Liberation of Angola. In 1978 Cuban troops assisted Ethiopia in
defeating an invasion by Somalia. In the 1980s Castro emerged as
one of the leaders of the Third World and the nonaligned nations,
despite his obvious ties to the Soviet Union. He continued to signify
his willingness to renew diplomatic relations with the United States
if that nation would end its trade embargo against Cuba. In 1980
Castro released a flood of immigrants to the United States when
he opened the port of Mariel for five months. The 125,000 immigrants,
including some criminals, strained the capacity of U.S. immigration
and resettlement facilities.
In the late 1980s, when the Soviet Union under Mikhail
Gorbachev began to undertake democratic reforms and eastern European
countries were allowed to slip out of the Soviet orbit, Castro retained
a hard-line stance, espousing the discipline of communism. The collapse
of the Soviet Union in 1991 took him by surprise and meant the end
of generous Soviet subsidies to Cuba. Castro countered the resulting
economic decline and shortages of consumer goods by allowing some
economic liberalization and free-market activities while retaining
tight controls over the country's political life.
In late 1993 Castro's daughter sought asylum in
the United States, where she openly criticized her father's rule.
The following year, economic and social unrest led to antigovernment
demonstrations, the size of which had not been seen in Cuba in some
35 years. Shortly thereafter Castro lifted restrictions on those
wanting to leave the country, and thousands headed for the United
States in the largest exodus since the 1980 Mariel "freedom flotilla."
In 1998 Castro allowed Pope John Paul II to visit the island nation
for the first time.
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