Thursday, January 26, 2006

Cuba: US Interest Section's Ticker Shanigans and Reuters


Castro visited the "mysterious" construction site in front of the US Interests Section in Havana last night. He said he did not want to "ruin the suprise" by discolosing what is being built. But my bet is something very witty.

Reuters has sullied themselves with it's speculative headline, "Cuba Moves to Block US Electronic Message Board." Despite evidence to the contrary (you don't need to dig up a whole area to construct a wall) and direct confirmation from Cuban workers (and now Castro) of a "suprise" project, Reuters chose to run this headline, which found its way onto every Cuban-American website in a few hours. Reuters needs to answer why it implies that Cuban workers are lying about this when the results will be seen soon enough? They need to answer why a headline asserts something that their own reporting does not? And is it ok to rely on a spokesman from the US Interests Section as a single source for this headline? It is probably not even possible to block the messages, as the anti-Castro Cubans point out amongst their giddiness over the "US Scoring a Run."

This is all a very well thought out plot by the Americans. Try to provoke Castro to make him look like a bad guy. But Castro knows this game, he's seen it a million times. He is not about to fall into this stupid trap. Remember (as I pointed out below) even though Castro never called for a march because of this stupid "ticker," and did not mention it, except for acknowledging that they turned it on right when he was about to speak - the US State Dept., Interests Section and most mainstream press went straight into their prepared lines about Castro being scared of MLK and UN speech. Give me a break. Cubans probably know more about MLK and the UN's conception of human rights than Americans.

State Dept. Briefing 1/24/06
QUESTION: On the messages -- on the messages in the Cuban embassy, do you have any update on anything -- how the situation is evolving in Havana?

MR. MCCORMACK: I think there was -- I saw on the television that there were some protests down in Havana organized by the Castro regime, monitored by the secret police there. I find it ironic that they are -- the Cuban Government is organizing these protests against these messages that are being put up on the US Interests Section in Havana concerning -- with quotes "Freedom" from Martin Luther King and other topics. I don't see why that should be a matter -- such a source of concern for the Cuban Government, but nonetheless they have seen it fit to organize these large protests in -- against, essentially, freedom. So I think it's more of the same from the Cuban Government.

Update: I sent the Reuters reporter Anthony Boadle an email expressing my views on this. Maybe I was a little nicer due to reading some of his decent previous articles, (like this on AIDS and this on US lies over Angola) but still firm on wanting an explanation. Here is how he replied to me:

No question the ticker is a carefully-planned provocation. What
exactly the workers are building out there remains to be seen and Fidel is
not spilling the beans. He doesn't give his enemies anything for free.
But it will surely spoil the view. As for the march, it was ostensibly
about Posada, but clearly the protest was called to rebuff the U.S.
ticker. Fidel is pissed off. I do believe he will finesse this one by
building a monument, maybe with very tall flagpoles.

Cheers,

Anthony Boadle


As you can see, he retains his paradigm of skepticism regarding Cuba, saying "it will surely spoil the view" and that the march was "clearly... called to rebuff the US ticker." but then maybe he backtracks and says it will be a monument, maybe with flagpoles. I know the headline was not his, but it was surely irresponsible. Even the Miami Herald had the sense to write "may be blocked." It seems increasingly apparent to me now that perhaps this is all designed for Florida consumption. With all the praises Bush is getting in Cuban-American bloggerland, after weeks of increasing frustration (over baseball and "Wet Foot, Dry Foot"), maybe this is Karl Rove election strategy in motion??

3 Comments:

Blogger jsb said...

"Reuters has stooped to a new low with it's fabricated headline, "Cuba Moves to Block US Electronic Message Board." Despite evidence to the contrary (you don't need to dig up a whole area to construct a wall)"

Oh, you naive young man.

"He (Castro) plans to mount huge flags on the stage to block the ticker from view, a construction ministry source said."

http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=1547843&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312

7:25 AM  
Blogger jsb said...

When it does prove to block the ticker, will you for once...just say you were wrong and that in fact the censorship you were so sure wouldn't happen did, indeed, happen. And explain to your readers why Castro feels it's necessary to keep his people from reading the news and or the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Your on thin ice as far as whatever credibility you might have left.

7:37 AM  
Blogger leftside said...

We'll see if the ticker is actually blocked by the supposed flag project. I believe Cuba would be within its rights to do this, but I do think it would be a mistake by playing into the US' hands here. But they are justified, not because they are scared of "human rights" quotes or news, but because of the potential for serious mis-use by the Americans. Would any country allow an Embassy to be used as a command center aimed at fomenting an uprising and provoking the overthrow of the government... particularly next o a main public square?

I never claimed for sure what Cuba would or wouldn't do. My only prediction was "something witty." I was asking journalistic questions of Reuters, as to what was clealy an irresponsible headline at the time.

To think Castro is scared of letting his people read the UN Declaration is absurd. His people know it well. And they know the US has no authority to speak in this regard when we are subverting its authority at every turn. The US completely ignores several sections, including Article 5 (inhumane treatment) 25 (rights to food, housing, health care) and the entire section on development rights.

Today they are flashing Voltaire's quote on freedom. I wonder if they'll post any of his far more numerous quotes on the evils of inequality? Same with MLK.

10:48 AM  

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