"A Soviet Cleansing in Cuba."
"A Soviet Cleansing in Cuba."- Mary Anastasia O'Grady, Wall Street Journal, Nov.13, 2017
A Soviet Cleansing in Cuba
The Russians used their experience at home to annihilate dissident peasants.
By
Mary Anastasia O’Grady
Wall Street Journal
Nov. 12, 2017
Most
Americans have never heard of the anti-Castro uprising in Cuba’s
Escambray Mountains, which began in 1959 and took Fidel and the Soviet
Union six years to put down. At the 100th anniversary of the Bolshevik
Revolution, the episode is worth revisiting. If not for 400 Soviets sent
to Cuba under the command of the Red Army and the KGB in 1961, it is
unlikely that Castro would have prevailed.
What
happened in the Escambray pokes a giant hole in Castro’s narrative that
his revolution was a justified power grab supported by working-class
and rural Cubans. The fact is that when Cubans began to understand that
Fidel planned to replace Fulgencio Batista as the next dictator and to
impose communism, many rebelled. None fought harder than central Cuba’s guajiros—small land owners and tenant farmers.
Forty
years after Castro took power, a protégé named Hugo Chávez was elected
president of Venezuela and allowed to consolidate power. Today that
once-rich country is an authoritarian hellhole where toilet paper is a
luxury and malnutrition is widespread.
Venezuelans
did not see what was coming in part because of the failure of
historians, journalists, lawyers, academics and politicians throughout
the Americas to expose the atrocities committed in the 1960s against
the guajiros and other dissidents.
Castro
understood the importance of controlling the press, foreign as well as
domestic. He used that control to popularize his version of events. He
framed the resistance—those who rejected his communist takeover—as a
white, urban aristocracy unhappy because it was losing its privilege
under his new justice. Meanwhile, he wiped out whole farming communities
with Stalinesque ruthlessness, and he did it with guidance from the
Kremlin, which exported its experience in intelligence gathering and
repression.
Agapito
Rivera was born in 1937 in central Cuba, one of seven children in a
poor family that cut sugar cane on a large estate. He told me in an
interview in Miami earlier this year that when he first started cutting
cane he was so small that his older brother had to throw the shoots onto
the cart for him. By the time Castro took power, Mr. Rivera was 22 and
married. That year a daughter was born. The young family lived in a
small house Mr. Rivera had built himself.
Many
peasants opposed Batista. When he fled, they celebrated. But they
quickly recognized Castro’s ambitious plan to betray the revolution.
Ironically it was the takeover of a large sugar plantation called
Sierrita that confirmed their worst suspicions. Sierrita had been an
excellent employer. The owners paid well and treated workers with
dignity. Yet it was the first property seized in the area.
I
wondered why Mr. Rivera had objected, since Castro was promising
“social justice” for the poor. “I looked at that,” he said, referring to
the confiscation of Sierrita, “and I said to myself, if he can do that
to them, what future do I have?”
Mr. Rivera went into combat with other guajiros and alongside former Castro guerrillas who had fought in the Sierra Maestra to restore the constitutional democracy.
In
his 1989 book, “And the Russians Stayed: The Sovietization of Cuba,”
Cuban-born Nestor Carbonell uses the testimony of a former Castro
intelligence officer to describe how the Soviets crushed the Escambray
rebellion, which at one point numbered 8,000 insurgents. Castro had sent
12,000 soldiers and 80,000 militia to the region in late 1960, but
they’d made no headway. So in January 1961 the Kremlin stepped in. It
sent a contingent of Soviet coaches to a military compound near the city
of Trinidad. That compound became a “KGB redoubt,” Mr. Carbonell
explains. “From there, the Soviets secretly directed a major offensive
to quash the insurgency.”
The
operation mobilized 70,000 Cuban soldiers and 110,000 militia. They
“uprooted most of the peasant families living in the area, and dragged
them into concentration camps” in the far western part of the country.
More than 1,800 prisoners were executed, according to Mr. Carbonell.
“The obsessive goal was total extermination,” so the government forces
“destroyed crops, burned huts and contaminated springs as they
systematically combed the region for rebels or suspects.”
The U.S. made secretive attempts to get supplies to the resistance, but poor coordination hampered operations. When
President John F. Kennedy withdrew support for the Bay of Pigs Invasion
in April 1961, the U.S. also abandoned the Escambray.
The rebels were outnumbered and outgunned but they did not give up
easily. It wasn’t until 1965 that they were entirely defeated.
Mr.
Rivera was captured in 1963, spent 25 years in prison, and was exiled
in 1988. And the story of the Soviet campaign in Cuba to annihilate
farmers and peasants—who rejected the collectivization of agriculture
just as they had in Russia—never made it into popular culture.
Write to O’Grady@wsj.com.
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