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Cuba's Growing Crisis
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12076 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
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12 / 1987 |
5,709 Words |
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Kenneth N. Skoug, Jr. Kenneth N. Skoug, Jr., is director of the Office of Cuban
Affairs in the U.S. Department of State. |
Thirty years ago, two remarkable revolutionary figures were struggling for existence in the Caribbean region. It was an era when the democratic ideals of the wartime and postwar period were challenging military dictators and oligarchical, tradition-based societies.
One of these individuals, Romulo Betancourt, was eluding the grasp of the Perez Jiminez dictatorship in Venezuela, a state that had known the rule of strongmen throughout most of its century and a half of existence. On January 23, 1958, with the help of progressive military officers, the regime in Caracas was overthrown and parliamentary democracy rapidly introduced. Betancourt was elected president, served a five-year term, and then permanently left office, living modestly thereafter as a leader of the social democratic political party and as a symbol of limited, constitutional government until his death in 1981. His legacy has been six free elections, four peaceful transitions of the party in power, a military subordinate to civilian authority, an independent judiciary, freedom of the press and assembly, human rights, and the rule of law.
Betancourt's spirit lives on in Latin America today. Brazil's President Jose Sarney told the UN General Assembly in September 1985 that Latin America's extraordinary effort to create a democratic order is the most stunning and moving political fact of recent years. There is, in fact, a trend running in that direction. It stems from that legacy of the democratic path breakers of the 1950s and 1960s, like Betancourt, who demonstrate that freedom and self-government flourish after all on Latin American soil.
The other chief revolutionary
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