Brothers in arms: Raúl, right, and Fidel are at odds on how to run Cuba. (Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva takes their picture.) Ricardo Stuckert / AFP-Getty Images
Fidel Castro Is Back In Charge -- Newsweek
After his convalescence, the ailing dictator reimposed his authority—quashing hopes of internal reform and détente with the United States.
When Raúl Castro became president of Cuba in 2006, he raised hopes, at home and abroad, that he would usher in a new era of reform. His brother, El Comandante Fidel, was struck with some sort of intestinal illness and rendered incapable of governing. So in stepped Raúl with promises to undertake "structural" change in the country. He distributed parcels of idle land to farmers. He encouraged young people, many of whom feel restive about their country's system, to "fearlessly debate" the country's problems. He decreed that Cubans could finally buy cell phones and computers, and could stay at tourist hotels that had previously been off-limits to them. When it came to relations with the United States, he said last April, "We are prepared to discuss everything—human rights, freedom of the press, political prisoners—everything, everything, everything."
Read more ....
COMMENTARIES, OPINIONS, AND EDITORIALS
The Last Surge: Is Afghanistan ready to take its fate into its own hands? Not yet. -- Andrew Potter, Macleans
The Dubai police chief's outlandish claims -- Jackson Diehl, Washington Post
To Pakistan, almost with love -- David Ignatius, Washington Post
Putin and Europe on the Same Crisis Page -- Boris Kagarlitsky, Moscow Times
The blackmail of America: How the United States became Albania's enforcer -- Julia Gorin, Washington Post
What can Argentina gain from another Falklands dispute? -- Washington Post editorial
Pragmatic Asia can bolster global stability -- Kishore Mahbubaniand and Simon Chesterman, Japan Times
The Great British Economy Disaster -- John Lanchester, London Review of Books
Is The Banking Crisis A Crisis For Globalization? -- Peter Mandelson, Forbes
No comments:
Post a Comment