February 11, 2009 5:40 PM

Castro A No-Show At Revolution Celebration

(AP)  The ailing Fidel Castro did not show up to a huge military parade Saturday marking the 50th anniversary of the founding of Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces, fueling speculation about the severity of his condition and the possibility he may not return to power.

Acting President Raul Castro, who is Fidel's younger brother and the island's defense minister, lead the event instead, giving a speech in which he reached out for dialogue with the U.S. government, which has a decades-old trade and travel embargo against the communist-run island.

"We take this opportunity to once again state that we are willing to resolve at the negotiating table the long-standing dispute between the United States and Cuba ... as long as said resolution is based on the principle of equality, reciprocity, noninterference and mutual respect," Raul Castro said.

"In the meantime, after almost half a century, we are willing to wait patiently until the moment when common sense prevails in Washington power circles," he said.

The acting president still criticized the United States, particularly its involvement in the Iraq war and attempts to "annex Latin America" through its regional trade policies. He did not explain his brother's absence in his half-hour speech.

Cubans and Castro supporters as well as foes around the world had speculated all week whether the leader, recovering from intestinal surgery, would show. The military event, which lasted about two hours, culminated five days of events — none of which were attended by Castro — to celebrate the leader's birthday.

The Cuban leader turned 80 on Aug. 13 but delayed the celebrations to give him time to recover from surgery two weeks earlier for intestinal bleedings. He has not been seen in public since July 26, and few details about his condition have been released by Cuba's government.

Cuban officials insist Castro is recovering, but U.S. officials say they believe he suffers from some kind of inoperable cancer and won't live through the end of 2007. He has appeared thin and pale in photographs and videos released by the government since he temporarily ceded power to his brother.

Tens of thousands of Cubans marched behind anti-aircraft missiles, tanks and other armored vehicles while MiG fighter jets and helicopter gunships flew overhead at the parade. The crowd of loyalists was more subdued than in other mass events presided by Fidel Castro.

Hundreds of elderly former combatants from the revolutionary struggle sat near the podium where Raul Castro spoke. Thousands of marching troops launched the parade, including special forces in red berets, militia men in blue uniforms and horseback riders wearing the white dress uniform of 19th-century Cuban independence fighters.

The parade's most obvious purpose was to warn the United States against taking advantage of Castro's illness to attack the island. In the last 15 years the Cuban military has taken on a purely defensive role, and is trained to repel invaders.

It also commemorated what Raul Castro called "a transcendental act in our history."

Cuba's Revolutionary Armed Forces, which replaced the military that existed before the Cuban Revolution, traces its roots to Dec. 2, 1956, when 82 rebels landed on the island on a yacht — the Granma — that sailed from Mexico.

Fewer than two dozen rebels, the Castro brothers included, survived a battle with then-President Fulgencio Batista's troops after the landing. From the mountains, they launched a guerrilla war, which triumphed on Jan. 1, 1959.

Fidel Castro purportedly sent a message to those celebrating his birthday earlier this week, telling a crowd of 5,000 supporters at the opening event Tuesday at a Havana theater that he was too sick to meet with them.

"I direct myself to you, intellectuals and prestigious personalities of the world, with a dilemma," said a note read at the event. "I could not meet with you in a small locale, only in the Karl Marx Theater where all the visitors would fit, and I was not yet in condition, according to the doctors, to face such a colossal encounter.

"My very close friends, who have done me the honor of visiting our country, I sign off with the great pain of not having been able to personally give thanks and hugs to each and every one of you," the note read.

More than 1,300 politicians, artists and intellectuals from around the globe were attending the tribute to the man who governed Cuba for 47 years. Bolivian President Evo Morales, Haitian President Rene Preval, Nicaraguan President-elect Daniel Ortega and Colombian Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez were among the guests of honor.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by agnim December 3, 2006 6:20 PM EST
Posted by RonnieHM at 10:01 AM : Dec 03, 2006

We stole some from the Indians; and we stole some from the thieving Spaniards; but we didn't cleanse the Florida of the Spaniards the way we ethnically cleanse it of the Indians.
So go back to feeling bad with that piece of knowledge. LOL
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm December 3, 2006 1:01 PM EST
Gee, and I thought we stole it from the Indians. Apparently we stole it from the Spanish who stole it from the Indians. Now I don't feel so bad.
Reply to this comment
by agnim December 3, 2006 11:26 AM EST
Posted by RonnieHM at 02:04 AM : Dec 03, 2006

Even a relatively 'FEW' humans multiply over a couple of generations; plus a lot of the Spanish in South Florida result from individuals coming from ALL over the Hispanic world, AND,
the fact that Florida was FIRST predominantly Spanish (note the name of the state) until the US stole it with a multitude of Spanish speakers! Do you know your nation's history?

Anyway, Americans (from a wealthy country?) are flying off to Iraq to make a living and sleeping in body bags for good. That should concern you more than Castro's Cuba that is educating its citizens to think, unlike the US where too many of us seem to be as dumb as rock; so much so that we've elected and re-elected a certified idiot as our leader.
Castro is so brilliant that he would outshine many Americans presidents put together. No doubt we feel some envy over such brilliance in a leader? LOL
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm December 3, 2006 5:04 AM EST
Uh huh, so FEW you can hardly hear a word of Spanish in south Florida. It's practically Canada down there.
Reply to this comment
by agnim December 3, 2006 4:26 AM EST
"Posted by RonnieHM at 12:54 AM : Dec 03, 2006"

Every stop to think that a relatively FEW Cubans are risking their lives because the US is shamefully playing the big bully in trying to stifle Cuba in order to keep it poor, and keep Cubans desperate enough to risk their lives for nothing much?
Bragging over our own evil doings is no virtue.

Anyway, people from rich US of A are ALSO risking their lives in Iraq, and are being murdered and maimed in greater numbers! And when they return, they are dissed.
That you should be more concerned about if you want to think about people risking their lives.

But we shouldn't hold our collective breath waiting for Americans to tend to our own troubles at home as a priority; because trying to point out other nation's small troubles while ignoring our larger ones at home is a nice pastime for Americans who like to stick their heads in the sands of ignorance and delude themselves that everything is oh so perfect at home in the 'land of the un-free' Patriot Act.
Reply to this comment
by ronniehm December 3, 2006 3:54 AM EST
Must be why so many people risk their lives in homemade boats to reach Cuba. Yeah, he's great.
Reply to this comment
by agnim December 3, 2006 1:27 AM EST
The immensely intelligent Castro has live a hugely successful and productive life for the great benefit of his people.

However, we just have a few short decades on the planet. We all must exit the scene sometime.

Castro's slow departure from the scene is a big boon for the Cuban people. They can witness a gradual transfer of leadership with less potential for an upheaval.
Not that we expected much of an upheaval anyway.

Castro in his great wisdom has seen to the effective education and health of the citizens of Cuba as a priority.
And an educated populace is a more law abiding populace.

All the enemies of the Cuban people, who have been circling like vultures waiting for Castro's death in order to devour Cuba, are going to be very very disappointed. LOL

Cuba is not a banana republic of illiterates who are not savvy enough to know what life's priorities are, or just who their friends and enemies are.
Reply to this comment
by chicatibu December 2, 2006 10:24 PM EST
Tinker
Please tell us what war Castro started aside from joining the already functioning Cuban Revolution? Castro wasn%u2019t my choice for the leader of Cuba but neither was his predecessor
Reply to this comment
by chicatibu December 2, 2006 10:18 PM EST
Uglicoyote
Perhaps your getting your political parties mixed up usually its Democrats who get bleeped not Republicans. Or are you one of those Liberals who can%u2019t discern facts for your bias. There%u2019s nothing more amusing than a liberal trying to sound statesman like.
Reply to this comment
by tinker3478 December 2, 2006 9:56 PM EST
Interesting idea, Fidel. What would happen if someone gave a war and no one came?
Reply to this comment
See all 13 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook