Cuba set for military parade, waits for Castro
HAVANA, Dec 2 (Reuters)
Cuba's aging armaments will roll through Havana on Saturday in the
country's first military parade in a decade, but still unknown is
whether ailing, elderly commander in chief Fidel Castro will show up to
watch.
The parade, expected to start as early as 7:30 a.m. (1230 GMT),
closes out five days of events for Castro's 80th birthday celebration,
none of which he has attended because of his prolonged recovery from
surgery in July.
Castro's health and questions about his future have overshadowed the
military display that experts say is a show of muscle to anyone who
thinks communist Cuba is vulnerable because of uncertainty about its
longtime leader.
Castro announced on July 31 he had an undisclosed intestinal problem
and temporarily handed over power to brother and Defense Minister Raul
Castro. Since then, he has been seen by the public only in photos and
videos.
If he is unable to appear on Saturday, it will accelerate speculation
he is too gravely ill to govern the country he has run since toppling
dictator Fulgencio Batista in a 1959 revolution.
A healthy Castro would never miss a great occasion glorifying him and
his government, said Frank Mora, professor of national security strategy
at the National War College in Washington.
"I could not imagine Fidel giving up an opportunity like this. In the
past, he relished these moments," he said.
Cuban officials have not said if Castro will attend the parade. But
they have consistently said Castro is getting better and will come back,
the latest assurance coming on Friday from Vice President Carlos Lage at
a closing ceremony for Castro's birthday festivities.
Despite Castro's absence, Lage told 5,000 people at Karl Marx Theater
in Havana, "Fidel is recovering, we will have him among us, he will
continue leading."
He also talked about the future, saying socialism in Cuba was
"irreversible" because even "when there is no Fidel, there will be his
work, his ideas and his example."
If Castro does show up in Havana's massive Revolution Plaza, he will
see 300,000 civilians and soldiers marching, a replica of the Granma
yacht that brought his rebel band to Cuba from Mexico on Dec. 2, 1956,
and a lot of antiquated military equipment, experts said.
Aged tanks, rocket launchers and MiG jet fighters left over from the
Cold War when the Soviet Union supplied materiel to Cuba will be on
display.
The Revolutionary Armed Forces have lost 80 percent of their troop
strength since the demise of Soviet communism in the early 1990s and are
believed to have no more than 60,000 active-duty soldiers.
Cuba wants to let the United States, its archenemy, know it can
fight, but also send a message to any dissident Cubans who might want to
start something in this time of transition, experts said.
If Castro actually attends, the government may not have to worry
about the latter, said Mora.
"After a few months of only message and pictures, to have Fidel in
person would have an enormous positive impact for the regime. It would
give many a sense there was no reason to feel uncertain about the
future," he said. |