Cubans Fear U.S. Attack
White House Says Talk Of Invasion Is "Absurd"
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Cuban army reservists patrol Old Havana, Cuba on Friday Aug. 4, 2006 part of a slight increase in security seen around the capital since leader Fidel Castro temporarily ceded power to his brother, Defense Minister Raul Castro earlier this week. (AP)
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Cubans interviewed on state-run media Friday said they would fight to the death any invaders from the north, while the Communist Party daily Granma said, "We Cubans are prepared for the defense" of the island.
Yet White House press secretary Tony Snow rejected as "absurd" any suggestion that the United States would militarily attack the island.
"The U.S. has absolutely no designs on invading Cuba," Snow said in Crawford, Texas, where U.S. President George W. Bush is vacationing at his ranch. "Cubans are going to have to chart their destiny. It's the one thing that they've been deprived during the dictatorship of Fidel Castro."
Cuba also expressed sympathy for the Lebanese people Friday. In the first decree to be issued since Castro's transfer of power, the foreign ministry condemned the Israeli bombing of the Lebanese village of Qana as "cowardly, vile and criminal."
"It's not unusual that Cuba would issue this statement," said CBS News correspondent Portia Siegelbaum, "It's perfectly in line with Cuba's policy. As soon as the conflict between Hezbollah and Israel and Lebanon began, they held meetings on solidarity with the Lebanese people."
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also made a statement Friday, imploring Cubans not to flee to Florida. Her message was being transmitted over U.S. government radio and television stations that are beamed to the island but have limited audiences because of Cuban jamming operations. The message was also picked up on CNN and other major media, where some Cubans were more likely to see it.
Neither Castro brother has been seen since the Monday announcement that Fidel, 79, had undergone surgery and was temporarily ceding power to his brother Raul, who is 75. No new details were provided on Castro's condition following the surgery for intestinal bleeding.
Snow said everyone at the White House was "very interested" in Castro's condition as well as his brother's whereabouts. "It tells you something about a government that seems to be in hiding at a point like this," he said.
Cuban Cabinet ministers said Castro was doing well and urged patience.
In Guatemala, Cuban Health Minister Jose Ramon Balaguer told Radio Sonora that Castro "underwent surgery from which he is recovering satisfactorily." Balaguer is a longtime Communist Party leader and physician named by Castro to watch over his pet health projects in his absence.
In Havana, Culture Minister Abel Prieto wouldn't provide any details about Castro's health but said things were running smoothly in Cuba.
"This is a society that is functioning, that is working normally," he said. "People are worried, and wanting to know more about the health of Fidel, but at the same time, they are conducting themselves appropriately."
He said everyone should wait for Castro himself to provide more information about his condition. As for the younger brother, he said, "Raul will appear in due time ... people know who Raul is."
Some Cuban exiles, seizing on the unprecedented transfer of power, called for the U.S. government to do more to encourage a democratic transition on the island.
William Sanchez, an attorney for the Cuban-American non-profit Democracy Movement, urged Bush to tell Cuba to set an elections timetable and let Cuban-Americans come to the island to help with a political transition.
The Cuban government used such statements by what it calls the "terrorist mafia" in Miami - as well as Bush's call Thursday for democratic change on the island - to justify its fears of an invasion.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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