Castro in 2004 |
Fidel Castro, the Cuban despot who famously proclaimed after his arrest in a failed coup attempt that history would absolve him, has died aged 90.
Castro's brother and the nation's President of several years, Raul, announced his death Friday on Cuban TV.
At
the end, an elderly and infirm Castro was a whisper of the Marxist
firebrand whose iron will and passionate determination bent the arc of
destiny.
"There are few individuals
in the 20th century who had a more profound impact on a single country
than Fidel Castro had in Cuba," Robert Pastor, a former national
security adviser for President Jimmy Carter in the 1970s, told CNN in
2012.
"He reshaped Cuba in his image, for both bad and good," said Pastor, who died in 2014.
Castro was born August 13, 1926, in
Oriente province in eastern Cuba. His father, Angel, was a wealthy
landowner originally from Spain. His mother, Lina, had been a maid to
Angel's first wife.
Educated in
private Jesuit schools, Castro went on to earn a law degree from the
University of Havana in 1950 and became a practicing attorney, offering
free legal services to the poor.
In 1952, at the age of 25, he ran for
the Cuban congress. But just before the election, the government was
overthrown by Batista, who established the dictatorship that put Castro
on the road to revolution.
On July
26, 1953, Castro led a group of about 150 rebels who attacked the
Moncada military barracks in Santiago in an unsuccessful attempt to
overthrow Batista. Most of the attackers were killed. Castro and a
handful of others were captured.
The attack made him famous throughout Cuba, but it also earned him a 15-year prison sentence.
At his sentencing, Castro told the court, "Condemn me, it doesn't matter. History will absolve me."
He was released in 1955 as part of an
amnesty for political prisoners and lived in exile in the United States
and Mexico, where he organized a guerrilla group with brother Raul and
Ernesto "Che" Guevara, an Argentine doctor-turned-revolutionary. They
named themselves the July 26 Movement, after the date of the failed
Moncada attack.
In 1956, Castro and
a few dozen rebels headed for Cuba aboard an old yacht called the
"Granma." Off course and long overdue, they beached the craft off the
coast of Oriente province.
Batista's soldiers were waiting for them, and, again, most of Castro's followers were killed.
The
Castro brothers, Guevara and a handful of other survivors fled into the
Sierra Maestra mountains along the nation's southeastern coast, where
they waged their guerrilla campaign against Batista.
Leading the 1959 Cuban Revolution |
Castro lived long enough to see a
historic thaw in relations between Cuba and the United States. The two
nations reestablished diplomatic relations in July 2015 and President
Barack Obama visited the island earlier this year.
President
Raul Castro -- who took over from his ailing brother more than eight
years earlier -- announced that breakthrough to the nation, but
observers noted Fidel's silence on the matter.
Castro's
stage was a small island nation 90 miles from the underbelly of the
United States, but he commanded worldwide attention.
"He was a historic figure way out of
proportion to the national base in which he operated," said noted Cuba
scholar Louis A. Perez Jr., author of more than 10 books on the island
and its history.
"Cuba hadn't
counted for much in the scale of politics and history until Castro,"
said Wayne Smith, the top U.S. diplomat in Cuba from 1979 to 1982.
Castro became famous enough that he could be identified by only one
name. A mention of "Fidel" left little doubt who was being talked about.
It was a bearded 32-year-old Castro and a small band of rough-looking
revolutionaries who overthrew an unpopular dictator in 1959 and rode
their jeeps and tanks into Havana, the nation's capital.
They were met by thousands upon
thousands of Cubans fed up with the brutal dictatorship of Fulgencio
Batista and who believed in Castro's promise of democracy and an end to
repression.
That promise would soon
be betrayed, though, and Castro held on to power for 47 years, until an
intestinal illness that required several surgeries forced him to
temporarily relinquish his duties to younger brother Raul in July 2006.
Castro resigned as president in February 2008 and Raul took over
permanently.
One Castro or another
has ruled Cuba over a period that spans seven decades and 11 U.S.
presidents. Fidel Castro outlived six of those presidents including Cold
War warriors John F. Kennedy, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan.
At
the height of the Cold War, Castro used a blend of charisma and
repression to install the first and only Communist government in the
Western Hemisphere, less than 100 miles from the United States.
Cuba and the Soviet Union established
diplomatic relations on May 8, 1960, further eroding the relationship
with the United States. Castro, who had long blamed many of Cuba's ills
on American influence and resented the U.S. role in hemispheric
politics, quickly intensified cooperation with the Soviet Union, which
began sending large subsidies.
"Fidel
Castro came to power with a conviction that he was going to have a
major revolution in Cuba, that he was going to stay in power
indefinitely, that he was going to fight American imperialism and that
he needed a 'daddy' and his 'daddy' was the Soviet Union," said Jaime
Suchlicki, the director of the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American
Studies at the University of Miami.
In doing so, Castro defied a hostile
U.S. policy that sought to topple him with a punishing trade embargo
that started in 1962 and continued for the rest of his life.
"He
taunted, antagonized and irritated the United States for more than a
half-century," said Dan Erikson, a senior adviser for Western Hemisphere
affairs at the U.S. State Department and author of "The Cuba Wars:
Fidel Castro, the United States and the Next Revolution."
Castro also survived numerous
assassination attempts by the Central Intelligence Agency and
anti-Castro exiles in the early 1960s. He took delight in pointing out
how none of them succeeded, not even the plot that called for explosives
to be placed in the ubiquitous cigars he later would quit smoking for
health reasons.
"I have never been afraid of death," Castro said in 2002. "I have never been concerned about death."
Until
his last breath, Castro held tightly to his belief in a socialist
economic model and one-party Communist rule, even after the Soviet Union
disintegrated and most of the rest of the world concluded state
socialism was a bankrupt idea whose time had passed.
"The most vulnerable part of his persona
as a politician is precisely his continued defense of a totalitarian
model that is the main cause of the hardships, the misery and the
unhappiness of the Cuban people," said Elizardo Sanchez, a human rights
advocate and critic of the Castro regime.
But
Castro's defenders in Cuba point to what they see as social progress,
including racial integration, universal education and health care.
Instead of blaming an inept socialist system, they fault the U.S.
embargo for the country's economic woes.
"What
Fidel achieved in the social order of this country has not been
achieved by any poor nation, and even by many rich countries, despite
being submitted to enormous pressures," said Jose Ramon Fernandez, a
former Cuban vice president.
In the end, Castro's declaration decades ago that history would issue
the final verdict was accurate. Time will tell, but at the end of his
long life, it appeared he would not be absolved.
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