Castro relinquishes power before surgery

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HAVANA - Fidel Castro, who took control of Cuba in 1959, rebuffed repeated U.S. attempts to oust him and survived communism's demise almost everywhere else, temporarily relinquished his presidential powers to his brother Raul on Monday night because of surgery.

The Cuban leader said he underwent surgery after suffering gastrointestinal bleeding, apparently due to stress from recent public appearances in Argentina and Cuba, according to a letter read live on television by his secretary, Carlos Valenciaga.

"The operation obligates me to undertake several weeks of rest," said the letter. Extreme stress "had provoked in me a sharp intestinal crisis with sustained bleeding that obligated me to undergo a complicated surgical procedure."

Castro said he was temporarily relinquishing the presidency to his younger brother and successor Raul, the defense minister, but said the move was of "a provisional character." There was no immediate appearance or statement by Raul Castro.

It was the first time in his decades-long tenure that Castro has given up power, though he had been affected in the recent past with occasional health problems. The calm delivery of the announcement appeared to signal that there would be an orderly succession to Raul should Fidel become permanently incapacitated.

The announcement drew cheering crowds in the streets in Miami. People waved Cuban flags on Little Havana's Calle Ocho, shouting "Cuba, Cuba, Cuba," hoping that the end is near for the man most of them consider to be a ruthless dictator. Many of them fled the communist island or have parents and grandparents who did.

The elder Castro asked that celebrations scheduled for his 80th birthday on Aug. 13 be postponed until Dec. 2, the 50th anniversary of Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces.

Castro said he would also temporarily delegate his duties as first secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba to Raul, who turned 75 in June and who has been taking on a more public profile in recent weeks.

In power since the triumph of the Cuban revolution on Jan. 1, 1959, Castro has been the world's longest-ruling head of government. Only Britain's Queen Elizabeth, crowned in 1952, has been head of state longer.

The "maximum leader's" ironclad rule has ensured Cuba remains among the world's five remaining communist countries. The others are all in Asia: China, Vietnam, Laos and North Korea.

Streets in Havana, including the coastal Malecon highway where young people often congregate, were typically quiet late Monday. In Old Havana, waiters at a popular cafe were momentarily stunned as they watched the news. But they quickly got back to work and put on brave faces.

"He'll get better, without a doubt," said Agustin Lopez, 40. "There are really good doctors here, and he's extremely strong."

In the nearby Plaza Vieja, Cuban musicians continued to play for customers — primarily foreign tourists — sitting at outdoor cafes. Signs on the plaza's colonial buildings put up during a recent Cuban holiday said, "Live on Fidel, for 80 more."

"We're really sad, and pretty shocked," said Ines Cesar, a retired 58-year-old metal worker. "But everyone's relaxed, too. I think he'll be fine."

When asked about how she felt having Raul Castro at the helm of the nation, Cesar paused and said one word: "normal."

A leading Cuban government opponent in Havana said she believed Castro must be gravely ill to have stepped aside temporarily.

"It's almost the same as death," Martha Beatriz Roque said in a telephone interview. "No one knows if he'll even be alive Dec. 2 when he's supposed to celebrate his birthday."

In Washington, White House spokesman Peter Watkins said: "We are monitoring the situation. We can't speculate on Castro's health, but we continue to work for the day of Cuba's freedom."

Castro rose to power after an armed revolution he led drove out then-President Fulgencio Batista. The United States was the first country to recognize Castro, but his radical economic reforms and rapid trials of Batista supporters quickly unsettled U.S. leaders.

Washington eventually slapped a trade embargo on the island and severed diplomatic ties. Castro seized American property and businesses and turned to the Soviet Union for military and economic assistance.

On April 16, 1961, Castro declared his revolution to be socialist. The following day, he humiliated the United States by capturing more than 1,100 exile soldiers in the Bay of Pigs invasion.

The world neared nuclear conflict on Oct. 22, 1962, when President John F. Kennedy announced there were Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. After a tense week of diplomacy, Soviet leader Nikita Krushchev removed them.

Meanwhile, Cuban revolutionaries opened 10,000 new schools, erased illiteracy, and built a universal health care system. Castro backed revolutionary movements in Latin America and Africa.

But former liberties were whittled away as labor unions lost the right to strike, independent newspapers were shut down and religious institutions were harassed. Over nearly five decades, hundreds of thousands of Cubans have fled Castro's rule, many of them settling just across the Florida Straits in Miami.

Castro continually resisted U.S. demands for multiparty elections and an open economy despite American laws tightening the embargo in 1992 and 1996.

He characterized a U.S. plan for American aid in a post-Castro era as a thinly disguised attempt at regime change and insisted his socialist system would survive long after his death.

Fidel Castro Ruz was born in eastern Cuba, where his Spanish immigrant father ran a prosperous plantation. His official birthday is Aug. 13, 1926, although some say he was born a year later.

Talk of Castro's mortality was long taboo on the island, but that ended June 23, 2001, when he fainted during a speech in the sun. Although Castro quickly returned to the stage, many Cubans understood for the first time that their leader would one day die.

Castro shattered a kneecap and broke an arm when he fell after a speech on Oct. 20, 2004, but typically laughed off rumors about his health, most recently a 2005 report that he had Parkinson's disease.

"They have tried to kill me off so many times," Castro said in a November 2005 speech about the Parkinson's report, adding he felt "better than ever."

But the Cuban president also said he would not insist on remaining in power if he ever became too sick to lead: "I'll call the (Communist) Party and tell them I don't feel I'm in condition ... that please, someone take over the command."

Source: AP

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This is crazy to me. I knew that this time would eventually come, but Fidel is like the fuckin’ Highlander to me.....lol. The thought of him giving up power and dying has just not been a reality to me. I heard he was supposed to have been grooming his son as his successor, but he feared he would be to soft and that the US would immediately get control of Cuba if that happened.
 
I see the Cuban community in Little Havana (Miami) were jumping up and down and cruising with joy at the news ... and he's not gone, yet. Wonder if they will do a little "Reverse Migration" in the future?

QueEx
 
You have to wonder ...

- Castro has Always made announcements affecting Cuba himself, personally;

- His Brother Raul has yet to make a public appearance, saying anything; and

- There is so very little coming out of Cuba on the state of Fidel's health.

<font size="4">Is Fidel already dead or near death ???</font size>

`
 
QueEx said:
You have to wonder ...

- Castro has Always made announcements affecting Cuba himself, personally;

- His Brother Raul has yet to make a public appearance, saying anything; and

- There is so very little coming out of Cuba on the state of Fidel's health.

<font size="4">Is Fidel already dead or near death ???</font size>

`

You really have to wonder.

Do we still have an aircraft carrier in the gulf, from Katrina?
 
Makeherhappy said:
Do we still have an aircraft carrier in the gulf, from Katrina?
I didn't get the significance or implication of the statement above.

QueEx
 
Why an aircraft carrier? Isn't the land base called Gitmo enough of a platform for fomenting insurrection, if not invasion? Or, is that the next theory without a basis?

`
 
QueEx said:
Why an aircraft carrier?

Don't know, maybe air superiority.

QueEx said:
Isn't the land base called Gitmo enough of a platform for fomenting insurrection, if not invasion?

Maybe, Assuming that the cuban army doesnt have missile pointing at Gitmo.

QueEx said:
Or, is that the next theory without a basis?

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

With that said,

Originally Posted by Makeherhappy

Do we still have an aircraft carrier in the gulf, from Katrina?
 
Makeherhappy said:
For our forceful democratization of another?
Cuba's not the threat it once was to the U.S.

The only thing that will change that is if Cuba allows terror networks to significantly establish there. And the only way that will happen is if the networks pay Castro.

The problem with that is that the U.S. is watching Castro so closely that any significant financial changes with Castro/Cuba will send the spooks into overdrive finding out what's going on.

Castro's not the most slick cat in the world but he's smart enough to know not to cross certain lines with the U.S.

So, to put it plainly, the U.S. doesn't have an immediate need to force a democracy in Cuba. In fact, if anything, it wouldn't be forced if it ever happened. It would be done with a subverse internal insurrection like they tried before. But this time it would be done with specific certainties in place long before implemented.

Way too much to lose if it goes wrong.

D-Nice 1 (The Nice One)
 
Frankly D-N1,

Cuba is probably not at threat at all - but, as you say, if Castro were to play host to terror networks, it would be dealt with. In my opinion, the embargo against Cuba should have been lifted, long ago. <u>IF</u> democratization is the way to go, trying to foster a more open relationship with Cuba would have been the way. Shunning Cuba hasn't proved or gained shit -- except "Peferential" refugees/voters flooding South Florida for one political party or another to pursue in the name of "I'm tougher on Castro than the other guy."

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
Frankly D-N1,

Cuba is probably not at threat at all - but, as you say, if Castro were to play host to terror networks, it would be dealt with. In my opinion, the embargo against Cuba should have been lifted, long ago. <u>IF</u> democratization is the way to go, trying to foster a more open relationship with Cuba would have been the way. Shunning Cuba hasn't proved or gained shit -- except "Peferential" refugees/voters flooding South Florida for one political party or another to pursue in the name of "I'm tougher on Castro than the other guy."

QueEx
I agree, the embargo is some leftover b.s. from the Cold War and should've been dismantled by now.

I just think folks need to keep an eye on this Castro thing as the years go on. Cuba is a country that's ripe for the picking when it concerns those that have ill will towards the U.S.

I mean, it's one thing to have Castro calling all the shots and keeping loyalist close to the chest but when he's gone, there will be all kinds of cats clamoring for power and brokering God knows what kind of deals with God knows who around the world.

That's when it's gonna get tricky.

You've definately got me thinking more about this latest news about Castro and what it could mean down the road.....

D-Nice 1 (The Nice One)
 
D-Nice 1 said:
Cuba's not the threat it once was to the U.S.


Castro's not the most slick cat in the world but he's smart enough to know not to cross certain lines with the U.S.


Cuba never was a threat to this country. This country was ALWAYS
a threat to Cuba. Castro never tried to do anythig to this country
All he did was lead a revolution against a racist and class society....

Cuba was a cash cow for this country. Castro ended all that. He
nationalized the economy for the people of Cuba. The only threat
he posed was that people would see how that kind of economy could
actually work and that the MUTHAFUKKAS in power in this country
would be out of a job. Hence the bullshit embargo

and the country STILL perservered. Until this very day
Now them BASTARDS are chomping at the bit to get back in there
and reclaim all that land they STOLE from everyday people
 
DuB 6 said:
If the US infiltrate Cuba and impose a democracy, what will become of Assata Shakur?


Damn I didnt even think about that?? Hopefully she'll get to Venzuela b4 the CIA comes up wit a plan to get her.
 
First. America is supposed to be a republic. That is what them slaveowners made it. They feared democracy taking over cause it always led to bullshit, that's why they put the checks and balances all up in here BUT they are getting eroded.

A democracy soon turns to tyranny by the masses and then flat out tyranny. A republic has checks and balances to let the minority be heard.

That being said what the fuck is wrong with cuba that isn't wrong with israel????????????

Or saudi arabia which isn't a bullshit democracy but we love them.

This castro shit is blown out of proportion, maybe its racist, naw it probaly is racist.

No reason we cannot have great relations with castro when we love israel and get nothing but terror attacks for arming them.

Nuff with castro letting terrorists in there. He has all the power and money he wants why loose that????? He isn't stupid.

Spreading democracy means giving corporate america more money, nothing else.

Why should we care how castro runs his country if he keeps it in check????? What are we liberators with the worlds largest prison pop?

I don't care if he runs shit by drawing straws, can't be no worse then israel.

Thing is castro said fuck america and the greedy bankers and corporations that run it. Otherwise there is no reason for embargos and other shit.

His only crime is wanting to run shit without the corporations and banks that control america AND he is right next to america and really can't do shit.

Can't even smoke a good cuban over here.

Anybody please tell me how we put cuba through hell yet support israel, if that don't tell you bout how some shit is run you're crazy.

Castro aint destro off gi joe, take the embargo off and treat him like a saudi and that will be that.

Bankers and corps that control america don't care bout arabia being a democracy cause they had a record year in profits.

Arabia can be run by flipping coins for all they care as long as they still get a large piece of that oil money.

But that poor bastard castro needs democracy. hahahahhaha
 
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