Using fear

By Manuel E Yepe
November 09, 2017

The mysterious case of the alleged ‘acoustic attacks’ against US diplomatic personnel in Cuba turns out to have been a media maneuver aimed at damaging tourism in terms of as part of the blockade against the island.

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One of Cuba’s greatest attractions for foreign tourism is the guarantee of security offered by the island to visitors from any part of the world. Another is the high level of public health in Cuba, one of the highest in the Western Hemisphere with health indicators comparable to those of the most developed nations.

In addition to the exceptional conditions with which the island has been endowed by nature, the popular revolution of 1959 has incorporated the social conditions of peace and harmony that the visitor appreciates from the first moment of their stay in Cuba.

More than half a century of possessive paranoia, aggravated by the economic, commercial and financial blockade, have not been able to counteract the enormous achievements of socialism, even if they have postponed or limited many revolutionary economic and social advances in the country.

Basque journalist José Manzaneda, coordinator of the Cubainformación website, a channel that broadcasts news, reports and commentaries on the island from Spain, has denounced the media’s objective against Cuba over the campaign of alleged sonic attacks.

Manzaneda remembers that it was the Argentine newspaper ‘Clarín,’ among many other media, who published a report two years ago from the Associated Press. Its focus was on an American traveler who felt “a sudden loss of feeling in his four extremities, in the same hotel where some affected diplomats were staying.”

Then there’s the growing interest among students, the sector of American visitors that has grown the most in Cuba –118 percent in the first half of the year– given that conventional tourism is still prohibited by the US blockade, Diario de Cuba, half-financed by the governments of the United States and Spain, wrote: “There are signs that students and retirees (from the US) plan to cancel their trips to the island,” since neither “Washington nor Havana have been able to prevent the attacks, which could generate an uncontrollable crisis.”

El Nuevo Herald, a mouthpiece for the extreme right-wing Cubans in Miami, assured its readers that Raúl Castro is turning a diplomatic crisis into an economic, potentially destabilizing one.

Agencies and media collaborated in this way with the objective of the White House that came to life on September 29. That was when, recognizing that ti was ‘not aware’ of the origin of the supposed acoustic attacks, it officially recommended not traveling to the island.

“Coming from the government of a country where every year 30,000 people die by firearms, more than a thousand by police, and 31 percent of the world’s mass shootings are recorded, this alarm seems like a joke in bad taste,” says Manzaneda.

The extreme-right of Cuban origin of the Republican party, which, in exchange for its vote on other matters, already manages Donald Trump’s Cuba policy. It seeks to reverse the growth experienced through the trips of Americans to the island and damage the income from them which it brings to the Cuban economy.

In line with this campaign, the conservative Washington Examiner asked the House of Representatives to demand that Cuba “evaluate security at its ten international airports.” This is an inadmissible interference that seeks to reduce the number of visitors from the US, in this case by canceling the regular flights authorized by the Obama administration.

However, RESPECT, the largest US association of travel promoters in Cuba, rejected –as unnecessary and counterproductive– the ‘security warning’ issued by the State Department, arguing that Cuba is a ‘safe destination.’

This article has been excerpted from: ‘Using Fear to Strike at Cuban Tourism.’

Courtesy: Counterpunch.org

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