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Killing of Kennedy may have
derailed Cuba pact
Sydney Morning Herald [possibly originated in the *Guardian*] ^
| November 27, 2003
| By Julian Borger in Washington
Posted on 12/01/2003 3:33:13 PM PST by archy
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Looks like the Cuban exile leaders who claimed JFK was looking to cut a deal with Castro called it.
1
posted on
12/01/2003 3:33:15 PM PST
by
archy
Comment #2 Removed by Moderator
To: archy
Dr. Castro? I'm highly suspicious of an article which pawns off this two-bit dictator as "Dr."!
To: seamole
The Left's theory for decades ... And don't forget that it was the "right-wing atmosphere of hate" here in Dallas that prompted Lee Harvey Oswald and/or others (take your choice) to kill Kennedy. I've never figured that one out. Even if there were a "right-wing atmosphere of hate" here in Dallas it wouldn't have inspired Oswald because he was sympathetic, at the very least, to communism.
To: archy
So it't "Doctor" Castro now.
Another happy graduate of Patrice Lumumba University?
5
posted on
12/01/2003 3:54:27 PM PST
by
tet68
To: tet68
So it't "Doctor" Castro now. Another happy graduate of Patrice Lumumba University?
Oh no. He was a degreed doctor of law- a lawyer, even before the *Granma* invasion and his unsuccessful attack on the Batista Army's Moncado Barracks on July 26, 1953. Graduated in 1950, IIRC.
6
posted on
12/01/2003 4:01:59 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: tet68
He is a medical doctor, I believe. Sort of like Howard Dean. As I recall he went to university in Spain, but have not doublechecked his bio to make sure. If you need to have a heart operation (remove only, not replace), give him a call.
To: seamole
Of course the notion that Cuba would be a utopia without American embargos is absurd, though I do think there must be a better way for events and policies to have unfolded. Before the communist revolution in Cuba it was a major center of American investment and tourism.
[Hasn't anyone seen Godfather II? ;-)]
To: archy
Lisa Howard, one of the first women to have her own television news show, became the central intermediary in the Kennedy-Castro dialogue. Howard had been an actress and soap opera star before she broke into journalism in 1960 by scoring the first major interview with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the United Nations. She was hired by ABC news as a reporter and subsequently became the anchor for ABC's noontime news broadcast, "The NewsHour with Lisa Howard." Her two specials on Cuba, in 1963 and 1964, were the most substantive coverage of Castro's revolution in the early 1960s. She died in 1965.
KENNEDY AND CASTRO: THE SECRET HISTORY (GWU)
9
posted on
12/01/2003 4:25:08 PM PST
by
mrsmith
To: archy
Dr. Castro? What kind of rag is this? Where, pray tell, did Castro earn his PhD?
To: walrus954
Dr. Castro? What kind of rag is this? Where, pray tell, did Castro earn his PhD? A JD, rather than a PhD, or whatever a Doctorate in Jurisprudence works out to in Spanish. Per following Bio:
Fidel Castro Ruz was born on August 13, 1926, on his family's sugar plantation near Biran, Oriente province, Cuba. His father, originally an immigrant laborer from Galicia, Spain, became owner of a 23,000-acre plantation.
As a boy, Castro worked in the family's sugar cane fields and, at 6 years old, convinced his parents to send him to school. He attended two Jesuit institutions, the Colegio Lasalle and the Colegio Dolores, both in Santiago. In 1942 he entered the Colegio Belen, a Jesuit preparatory school in Havana. He was voted the school's best athlete in 1944.
In 1945 Castro attended the University of Havana's Faculty of Law, and having earned a law degree, went into practice in 1950 in Havana with two partners. As a lawyer he devoted himself to helping the poor.
Castro intended to campaign for a parliamentary seat in the election of 1952 but General Fulgencio Batista overthrew the government of President Carlos Prio Socarras in a coup d'etat and canceled the election. Castro went to court and charged the dictator with violating the constitution. The court rejected Castro's petition. With no legal recourse left, Castro organized an armed attack by 165 men on the Moncada Barracks in Oriente province on July 26, 1953. That attack and the one on Bayamo garrison failed completely. Half the attackers were killed; Castro and his brother Raul were taken prisoner. They were released in a general amnesty on May 15, 1955.
11
posted on
12/01/2003 4:48:01 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: Edmund Burke
He is a medical doctor, I believe. Sort of like Howard Dean. As I recall he went to university in Spain, but have not doublechecked his bio to make sure. If you need to have a heart operation (remove only, not replace), give him a call. I believe you're confusing Fidel, the Doctor of Jurisprudence [a lawyer] with El Che Ernesto Guevara, a graduate of the the medical school of the University of Buenos Aires in 1947.
Physician, heal thyself....
12
posted on
12/01/2003 4:53:44 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: mrsmith
13
posted on
12/01/2003 5:07:41 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: DallasMike
Even if there were a "right-wing atmosphere of hate" here in Dallas it wouldn't have inspired Oswald because he was sympathetic, at the very least, to communism. Or that was his very well-maintained cover.
Live your cover.
-archy-/-
14
posted on
12/01/2003 5:08:55 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: fiscally_right
Of course the notion that Cuba would be a utopia without American embargos is absurd, though I do think there must be a better way for events and policies to have unfolded. Before the communist revolution in Cuba it was a major center of American investment and tourism. [Hasn't anyone seen Godfather II? ;-)]
Try the classic Our Man in Havana
Havana. *Warning* Spoilers in review *here*
15
posted on
12/01/2003 5:15:57 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: fiscally_right
Of course the notion that Cuba would be a utopia without American embargos is absurd, though I do think there must be a better way for events and policies to have unfolded. Before the communist revolution in Cuba it was a major center of American investment and tourism. [Hasn't anyone seen Godfather II? ;-)]
Try the classic Our Man in Havana too. And if feeling literary, try Steven Hunter's new novel Havana. *Warning* Spoilers in review *here*
16
posted on
12/01/2003 5:16:38 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: archy
I have read that Castro went on to appropriate his fathers 23,000 acre plantation after the revolution for the "state".
To prove that he is a Maximo commie culero.
To: gitmogrunt
I have read that Castro went on to appropriate his fathers 23,000 acre plantation after the revolution for the "state". To prove that he is a Maximo commie culero.
Wouldn't surprise me a bit. Like Hitler, he hated and feared his father. Like Hitler, he was educated as a Catholic, but it never really *took* with him. Like Hitler, he was imprisoned for a first failed attempt, but then released.
There are lessons in those similarities.
-archy-/-
18
posted on
12/01/2003 5:42:01 PM PST
by
archy
(Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
To: fiscally_right
Just to throw something out there, is it possible with normalized relation with the US Castro would not have been able to play the Enemy at the Gate card. I am sure the siege mentality played up by Castro over the years has helped him stay in power where other Communist regimes have fallen.
In my opinion an excellent way to undermine a Communist dictatorship is to show the people what they are missing under that system, free-speech, human rights and Play-stations
19
posted on
12/01/2003 5:50:55 PM PST
by
KiaKaha
To: seamole
Another part of their thory is that Vietnam would have ended early and quietly if.......
20
posted on
12/01/2003 8:01:01 PM PST
by
expatpat
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