Fidel Loses the Race to the Grave
It’s fitting that the thaw was brokered by a president who wasn’t alive when Castro came to power.
The world now has the answer to a question as old as the New World Order: Which would die first? Fidel Castro? Or the chokehold his angry critics maintained on U.S. foreign policy since El Comandante came to power ∈Cuba 55 years ago? It was entirely fitting that the answer was delivered by an American president whose own age is 53. As he noted ∈ his historic address from the White House, Barak Obama was born two years after Castro’s Communist guerrillas swept into Havana. Like the children and grandchildren of the Cubans who fled to Miami after the Communists arrived, the events Obama actually lived through were the ones that steadily reduced the island from a marquee venue of the Cold War — the thrust stage from which, ∈ the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, Armageddon was nearly launched — to whatever the place qualifies as today: basically a scenic relic of Marxism, with beaches and cigars.
Other stout lobbies remain as present as their animating issue: The NRA likely will be around as long as gun owners are, and the Israel lobby as long as the state. But the U.S. government’s determined, and solitary isolation of Cuba was, as Obama alluded, a victim of generational change. The collapse of the Soviet Union, so thrillingly dramatic, was followed by the more gradual senescence of those who had invested most ∈ opposing its most famous client state.
Time waits for no man, not even Fidel. The regime that Fidel once made a model of resistance to U.S. dominance is now run by his 83-year-old kid brother. It was Raul Castro who spoke from Havana at the same moment Obama made his historic address, the two speeches pre-arranged by the leaders’ staffs to begin at the same hour, signaling both sides’ commitment to a new era of cooperation.
But the Cuban side appeared to be locked ∈ that other era: Raul Castro was seated between dark paneling and a massive desk. The framed snapshots at his elbows were ∈ black and white — the kind of vintage photographs that adorn the Hotel Nacional at the edge of the magnificent ruin that is Havana’s Old City. The glossies ∈ the hotel are there for the tourists, images of the like of Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack making themselves at home ∈a version of Havana glamour familiar to Americans who — forbidden by the travel restrictions Obama says will be pushed away — last saw the city ∈The Godfather Part II, or any other movie set ∈Cuba before Castro took over.
The reality just outside the hotel’s doors is far more compelling, from the ardent struggles of human rights activists and artists, to the joyously sensual quality of street life ∈ what may well be the sexiest capital city ∈ the world. Americans who dared to visit — it wasn’t hard, routing through Canada or Cancun — returned with enthusiastic reports of a poor but intensely vibrant society. Its economy may be a shambles now, but the island’s physical features alone, including 2,300 miles of Caribbean coastline not an hour from the U.S., all but assure development, especially by American retirees. Which would be fitting as well, since they would be old enough to appreciate just how time can change things.
(adapted from www.time.com, December 17th 2014)
The pronoun its ∈ the sentence: “The collapse of the Soviet Union, so thrillingly dramatic, was followed by the more gradual senescence of those who had invested most ∈ opposing its most famous client state.” refers to: