Voice of the dark corners


Voice of the dark corners 
 
Fidel Castro
Thursday March 6, 2003
The Guardian

These are hard times we are living in. In recent months, we have more than 
once heard chilling words and statements. In his speech to West Point 
graduating cadets on June 1 2002, the United States president declared: 
"Our security will require transforming the military you will lead, a 
military that must be ready to strike at a moment's notice in any dark 
corner of the world."

That same day, he proclaimed the doctrine of the pre-emptive strike, 
something no one had ever done in the political history of the world. A few 
months later, referring to the unnecessary and almost certain military 
action against Iraq, he said: "And if war is forced upon us, we will fight 
with the full force and might of the United States army."

That statement was not made by the government of a small and weak nation, 
but by the leader of the richest and mightiest military power that has ever 
existed, which possesses thousands of nuclear weapons, enough to obliterate 
the world's population several times over - and other terrifying 
conventional military systems and weapons of mass destruction.

That is what we are: dark corners of the world. That is the perception some 
have of the third world nations. Never before had anyone offered a better 
definition; no one had shown such contempt. The former colonies of powers 
that divided the world among them and plundered it for centuries today make 
up the group of underdeveloped countries.

There is nothing like full independence, fair treatment on an equal footing 
or national security for any of us; none is a permanent member of the UN 
security council with a veto right; none has any possibility of being 
involved in the decisions of the international financial institutions; none 
can keep its best talents; none can protect itself from capital flight or 
the destruction of nature and the environment caused by the squandering, 
selfish and insatiable consumerism of the economically developed countries.

After the last global carnage in the 1940s, we were promised a world of 
peace, a reduction of the gap between the rich and poor and the assistance 
of the highly developed to the less developed countries. It was all a huge 
lie. We had imposed on us an unsustainable and unbearable world order.

The world is being driven into a dead end. Within hardly 150 years, the oil 
and gas it took the planet 300 million years to accumulate will have been 
depleted. In just 100 years, the world population has grown from 1.5 
billion to over 6 billion people, who will have to depend on energy sources 
that are still to be researched and developed. Poverty continues to grow 
while old and new diseases threaten whole nations with annihilation. The 
world's soil is being eroded and losing its fertility; the climate is 
changing; the air that we breathe, drinking water and the seas are 
increasingly contaminated.

Authority is being wrenched away from the United Nations, its established 
procedures are being obstructed and the organisation itself destroyed; 
development assistance is being reduced; there are continuous demands on 
the third world countries to pay a $2.5 trillion debt that cannot be paid 
under the present circumstances, while $1 trillion dollars are spent in 
ever more sophisticated and deadly weapons. Why and for what?

A similar amount is spent on commercial advertising, sowing consumerist 
longings that cannot be satisfied in the minds of billions of people. Why 
and for what? For the first time the human species is running a real risk 
of extinction due to the insane behaviour of the very same human beings, 
who are thus becoming the victims of this "civilisation".

However, no one will fight for us, that is, for the overwhelming majority, 
only we will do it. Only we can save humanity ourselves with the support of 
millions of manual and intellectual workers from the developed nations who 
are conscious of the catastrophes befalling their peoples. Only we can do 
it by sowing ideas, building awareness and mobilising global and North 
American public opinion. No one needs to be told this. You know it very 
well. Our most sacred duty is to fight, and fight we will.

© Fidel Castro Ruiz 2003

------------------

Fidel Castro is president of the Republic of Cuba. This is an edited 
version of a speech delivered to the Non Aligned Movement summit in Kuala 
Lumpur



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