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Cuba
Defiant in Face of Bush Speech
Yahoo! News. By Will Weissert,
Associated Press Writer. Thursday October
25, 8:35 am ET.
HAVANA (AP) -- Cuba on Wednesday accused
President Bush of threatening to take over
the communist island by force in response
to the U.S. leader's call for change in
the country.
In his first address focused only on Cuba
in four years, Bush spoke of a post-Fidel
Castro Cuba where people would choose a
representative government and enjoy basic
freedoms, with support from a broad international
coalition.
"Now is the time to stand with the
Cuban people as they stand up for their
liberty," Bush said at the State Department.
"And now is the time for the world
to put aside its differences and prepare
for Cuba's transition to a future of freedom
and progress and promise."
Cuban Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque
called Bush's plans the "equivalent
to the re-conquest of Cuba by force"
and said they "give an idea of the
level of frustration, of desperation and
of personal hatred toward Cuba."
He said most Cubans back the 1959 revolution
led by Castro, making the idea of an internal
uprising in the name of democracy a "fantasy"
and "politically impossible."
He added that thousands of Cubans would
take up arms to defend their homeland in
the face of a U.S. invasion.
Perez Roque's remarks echoed those of the
ailing Castro himself, who wrote in newspaper
columns this week that "Bush is obsessed
with Cuba."
The 81-year-old Castro, who temporarily
ceded power to his constitutional successor
and brother Raul in July 2006 after undergoing
intestinal surgery, has not been seen in
public for more than a year, and it is unclear
whether he will return to power.
Washington's embargo on Cuba prohibits
American tourists from visiting the island
and chokes off most trade between the two
countries. Bush asked Congress to maintain
the embargo, which has come under scrutiny
and calls for reassessment from some lawmakers.
By U.S. law, the embargo is not supposed
to be lifted as long as Fidel or Raul Castro
is in power.
The U.S. does not have an embassy in Cuba
but maintains an Interests Section in Havana.
About 20 leading dissidents, government
critics and independent journalists were
invited there Wednesday to watch Bush's
speech live.
"I really hoped for something more,"
said dissident economist Oscar Espinosa
Chepe. "Change in Cuba will never be
radical and happen overnight like President
Bush said."
He said he would like the U.S. embargo
loosened to let Cuban-Americans travel more
freely to the island and suggested it shouldn't
rule out talks with Raul Castro, who has
shown signs of being open to some economic
reforms.
"The United States negotiated with
North Korea and the results were something
positive. I don't see why they can't negotiate
with Cuba."
But another leading dissident, Martha Beatriz
Roque, said she was pleased that Bush said
Cubans themselves must bring about change
"There's no intention to invade Cuba,"
she said. "That's important, because
the Cuban government wants to make us believe
there is."
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