# Socialism 1.01
John Molyneux
Fidel Castro – death of an icon
first published in Irish Socialist Worker
Millions of radicals, leftists, socialists and
anti-imperialists around the world will be saddened by the announcement of the
death of the leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, at the age of 90. He
will, obviously, be particularly mourned in much of Latin America, Africa and other parts of the ‘third world’ that
identified with his defiance of US imperialism
The story of the Cuban Revolution and its two main leaders,
Castro and Che Guevara, is both romantic and genuinely heroic. A group of only
82 guerrillas, led by Fidel, sailed in a small boat, the Granma, from Eastern
Mexico, and landed on the coast of Cuba on 2 December 1956. They were
immediately attacked by the Cuban air force,
suffered numerous casualties and were scattered. When they eventually
regrouped in the Sierra Maestra mountains their numbers were reduced to
12. Yet two years later in January 1959
Batista, the corrupt and brutal dictator, fled Cuba
and Castro’s revolutionary army marched in triumph into Havana .
At first Castro and his movement were democratic
nationalists not socialists or Communists but hostility from the old Cuban
ruling class and US
imperialism pushed Castro and Cuba
into nationalisation of various industries and into the Soviet camp and Castro,
in 1961, announced that the Cuban Revolution was a socialist one.
Anti-imperialist
This story alone would have been inspiring to millions at
the time of anti-imperialist revolt around the world, the Vietnam War and the
struggles of the sixties. Two other achievements also stood to Castro’s credit
and secured his status: First, his and his regime’s survival in the face of
fifty years of relentless pressure from the US
– pressure that ranged from military intervention at the Bay of Pigs
in 1961, attempted assassinations by the CIA, to economic and travel
embargos. Second, there was Cuba ’s establishment of decent public health and
education, in marked contrast to other Caribbean and Latin American states and
indeed the USA
itself.
However, there were serious problems, inherent from its
inception, in both the Cuban Revolution itself and in the Cuban Revolutionary
regime.
For socialists, as for Marx himself, socialist revolution is
the act of the working class itself – it is a process of self emancipation in
which working people take control of society and run it democratically in their
own interests. This did not happen in Cuba . Rather Castro’s small
guerrilla army acted ‘on behalf of the people’ and established, together with
the old Cuban Communist Party, their rule from above. This became, and
remained, a one-party state with no real democracy and very little political
freedom. It was state capitalist rather than a real socialist society.
Isolation
There was also a major difficulty involved in the isolation
of the Cuban Revolution and its dependence on the Soviet
Union . In this state of siege Cuba remained trapped in poverty
and unable to develop effectively. And when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991
its support for Cuba
was withdrawn and the economy was plunged into crisis, which it barely survived
and from which it has never fully recovered. This has pushed it back towards
rapprochement with the US
and western capitalism.
Again socialists, beginning with Marx, have always
understood while a revolution can begin in one country the successful building
of socialism has to be international: the revolution has to spread to other
countries. The idea of building socialism in one country was the invention of Joseph
Stalin in 1924 and used to legitimise the establishment of his own dictatorship.
Castro’s comrade, Che Guevara, understood the need to spread
the Cuban Revolution and, with great heroism, undertook the task. But the
attempt failed. Guevara’s method was to try to repeat in Bolivia the guerrilla struggle in the mountains
that had worked in Cuba .
But the US had at first
thought it could work with Castro and did not mobilise to defeat his movement
in its early stages – they did not repeat this error in Bolivia , or elsewhere in Latin
America where guerrilla struggles were launched. Che was captured
and murdered in 1967 and there was repetition of the Cuban victory.
Consequently Cuba
remained isolated and impoverished.
Today, uncritical supporters of Cuba
and those who hero-worship Castro will blame these problems on the US , which is fair enough, and compare Cuba favourably to its neighbours Haiti and
Jamaica etc. which is also reasonable. But they will also tend to turn a blind
eye to the lack of democracy and political freedom, the long standing
oppression of LGBT people, the continuing class divisions and inequality and
increasing accommodation with the US . This is mistaken.
Socialists in Ireland and the world today can
recognise Castro’s achievements while also explaining that we have a very
different conception of socialism as a real people’s democracy of equality and
freedom based on workers’ control of workplaces and communities.
Good poost
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