The Political End of "President" Urrutia
The Political End of "President" Urrutia
Fidel Castro, by Robert E. Quirk 1993
After returning from his trip on May 7. Fidel Castro's treatment of
President Urrutia changed. He became disrespectful, interrupting the
president's speeches and dominating every session. Unable to
defend himself, Urrutia began to arrive late and leave early, saying
nothing. And he instituted a campaign of passive resistance. He
delayed signing decrees that had been voted in the cabinet. In turn
Castro began to meet the ministers in his suite at the Hilton. The
president ceased to play any part in the legislative process. Instead,
Urrutia made speeches and gave interviews in which he expressed
his concern that the communists had begun to infiltrate the
government. The revolution was humanist, he stressed, not Marxist.
Elections
Castro blew hot and cold on the question of holding general elections.
One day he would promise that within months - or within two or
four years at the most - the country would be ready to go to the
polls. At other times he would insist that the people did not want
elections, that, in any event, they would vote for July 26 candidates.
Fidel Castro did not want elections. He distrusted the people, as
individuals, to make informed decisions. He saw the restoration of
political democracy in 1959 as a return to the old discredited system,
to parties that had been corrupted, that had cooperated with, or at
least acquiesced in, the fraudulent balloting of the Batista era.
A reinstated congress and presidency, even with free elections,
would have taken decision making out of his hands and brought back
a regime of checks and balances. It would have curbed his
freewheeling operations, short-circuited his charismatic ties to the
masses. Economic freedoms would have dictated responsible action
on the part of his government, acceptance of international rules of
behavior, cost accounting, the inviolability of contracts, and
efficiencies in operation. He would not accept that. He saw no need
for elections.
Convenient Marxism
If Fidel Castro would not allow a Western-style democracy, with
representative institutions freely chosen by the people, or an
economic system characterized by private enterprise, competition,
and profit incentives, there seemed to be no alternative but Marxism.
It had become clear too that the communists, no democrats
themselves, were perfectly willing to see Fidel Castro continue as
Maximum Leader for the rest of his life. They praised him
unconscionably. They never criticized or complained, and if the
United States refused to aid the Cubans, the Soviets could provide
both economic and military assistance. Before the end of 1959 Castro
was willing to believe that the road map to Cuba's New Jerusalem
might be found in the covers of Das Kapital.
Defection(s)
Major Pedro Luis Diaz Lanz
Once a pilot for Batista's air force, Diaz Lanz had flown weapons for
Castro's guerrilla army from Costa Rica. Now he commanded the
country's air force. During the first months of 1959 he had grown
increasingly uneasy about what he identified as "communist
elements" in the revolutionary government. On June 29 he
expressed his fears to reporters and sent a letter to Urrutia in which
he detailed his charges. "We all know, Mr. President," he said,"who
they are." That night he left the country in a small sailboat, reaching
the Florida coast without incident. Urrutia gave a statement to the
press in which he branded Diaz Lanz a traitor. But at the same time
he insisted that, as president, he "absolutely" rejected "communist
ideology." Diaz Lanz was granted permanent-resident status.
Urrutia Condemns Diaz Lanz and Communists
In Havana, Manuel Urrutia went on television to criticize the United
States for giving asylum to a deserter. He denied reports of friction
between him and Fidel Castro. They were following the "same road,"
he said. Asked by the interviewer, Luis Conte Aguero, about his own
views on communism, the president replied that he had not wanted
to touch on "that subject. " But then he launched a vigorous attack on
the leaders of the PSP. The communists, he said, were "doing
irreparable harm to Cuba." Their newspaper Hoy promoted the
interests of the Soviet Union. Anibal Escalante, in a recent article, had
called the president disloyal. Disloyal to whom? he asked. He did not
understand the charge. He, at least, had not sold himself to the
Russians. Urrutia reminded Cubans that when he visited Washington
in 1958 to ask the Americans to halt weapons shipments to Batista,
"those same communist gentlemen were alleging the insurrectional
policies [ of the July 26 movement] were wrong." If the Cuban people
had heeded those words, he said, "we would still have Batista with us
... and all those other war criminals who are now running away." he
reminded the Cubans that the PSP was the same party that had
cheered and said "Well done!" when Hitler invaded Poland in 1939
and the Russians treacherously attacked that unfortunate country
from the rear. And Juan Marinello had described the Western war
efforts as a "dirty business." You may be sure, he said, that Fidel
Castro was not one of those communists. Castro watched the
interview in his suite at the Hilton. He told an associate: "All this
criticism of communism makes me tired."
The Prime Minister "Resigns" & The President "Defects"
Castro resigns his position as Prime Minister. Carlos Franqui printed
over 1 million copies of a special edition of Revolucion with large
headlines. Castro counted on a groundswell of support across the
island in his confrontation with the president. Franqui's editorial
stated, "It is understood that very serious and justifiable reasons have
led to this decision of one who has always been characterized by the
resolution, firmness, and responsibility of his action . . . . Trusting in
his intelligence, his integrity, and his position as undisputed and
indisputable leader of our people, we await with anxiety, perhaps,
but also with serenity, his always clarifying and always appropriate
words."
At 8:20 in the evening of July 17 Cuba was immobilized, as Castro
began to speak from the privacy of a television studio. He had no
choice but to give up his position as prime minister. Because of their
many and frequent disagreements, he found it impossible to work
with Urrutia, disagreements that were both moral and civic.
He accused Urrutia of everything under the sun including treason.
Cuba faced a grave international crisis threatened on one side by
Trujillo, and betrayed on the other by Diaz Lanz. Yet Urrutia had
chosen this moment of peril to accuse the goverment, "with no proof
whatsoever," of being communist. This attitude "bordered on
treason." "Like that traitor he had launched a campaign against the
communists. "I am not communist," Castro said, "and neither is the
revolutionary movement. But we do not have to say we are
anti-communist, just to curry favor with foreign governments." what
was a prime minister to do? Wait until the president of Cuba had
committed treason? He was certain, he said, that Urrutia could find
any number of "American agents" willing to serve in his cabinet.
Shortly before midnight, as Castro wound up his speech, Urrutia sent
his resignation to the cabinet. He recognized the changes that had
taken place in Cuba since the first of the year. Certain that he would
be arrested, though he had committed no crimes, and perhaps
charged with a capital offense, he donned a guayabera and left the
building inconspicuously by way of a small backdoor. He sought
asylum in the Venezuelan embassy. Castro did not rescind his
resignation at once, explaining that he wanted to wait until July 26,
the anniversary of the Moncada attack. He continued, in the
meantime to govern the country, meeting his cabinet and enacting
laws.
Castro replaced Urrutia with Osvaldo Dorticos, the minister of
revolutionary laws, as president. A competent attorney from a
wealthy family, who as a youth had flirted with Marxism, he proved
willing, when the opportune winds blew in Cuba, to become a full-
fledged communist.