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Castro’s Ever-Faithful Lapdogs

Good BOY, Media!..Now keep doing exactly as I say and heres a little treat!

Good BOY, Media!..Now keep doing exactly as I say and here's a little treat!

" In all essentials Castro's battle for Cuba was a public relations campaign fought in New York and Washington. (British historian Hugh Thomas)

Fought and handily won, I might add.

But even after the victory, Castro's U.S. public relations auxiliaries remained on call and primed for duty. "The Cuba of Fidel Castro today is free from terror." That's from blond bombshell Dickey Chapelle in a Reader's Digest (yes, even the normally sensible R.D. proved susceptible to Castro-mania) story of April 1959. Close to a thousand men and boys had been murdered by firing squads without trial by this time. And hundreds of Cuban women were locked up, mostly for the political crime of being the wives, daughters, and mothers of the executed men. Most of these women were of humble background, and many were black. This Stalinist horror of jailing and torturing women and girls was utterly unknown in our hemisphere until it was installed by the man gushed over by Barbara Walters, Andrea Mitchell, Diane Sawyer and Oriana Fallaci. (Yes, even the subsequently sensible Fallaci, a lifelong leftist, had her youthful fling with Castro-mania.)

Entire intransigence here .

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3 comments to Castro’s Ever-Faithful Lapdogs

  • Larry Daley

    Ay!!!

    Poor doomed Dickie Chapelle

    I translated for her in Central Oriente in December 1958

    she asked me about communists and as I recall I answered with deliberate evasions. She should have picked up on that but apparently she did not ...

    Still she was a brave woman

    a woman who went into the midst

    of battle

    and died in my view a heroe

  • paul vincent zecchino

    Isn't this a 'then as now' object lesson in the way in which history repeats itself, and in particular when the media in which altogether too many people still sadly place their trust is stuffed with intergenerational commies and their sympathizers?

    Ever see on TV or read in the NYSlimes, a real no-holds barred expose on castro's atrocities? Neither have I.

    Then again, to be fair, I wouldn't have as for years I've relied on the net, talk radio, and conservative publications as well as eyewitness accounts for credible news.

    Yeah, I know, how very 'racist' of me to not be a good little serf and watch Trotsky's tele-poodles quack the 'news'.

    See ya at the werkkamp!

    Paul Vincent Zecchino
    Manasoviet Key, Florida
    31 October, 2009

  • Larry Daley

    Humberto I woke up in the middle of the night to the question of loyalty of Dickie Chapelle. My role was a translator was limited, and it was not with any of the bigwigs. This I do not have a clear memory of any details.

    We talked a little she asked those question about communists and that was that is all detail memory returns, except for a pass I made at her, which was refused.

    That I believe was the same day at Central Oriente when I was used as a decoy for the U.S. citizen said to be a sniper sent to kill Castro (the resemblance was poor, for being much shorter than Castro, but I used those horn-rimmed glasses (the British Embassy had sent me replacements with a Haitian agent when I was a the Minas del Frio), I had a Springfield 1903 (without telescopic sight, Castro at least at first used a Remington with that kind of optics, although in those days he may have had a FAL which is a bit heavier), and my straggly beard.

    At that time I knew there were communists in the July 26 Movement, but was not aware that it was riddled from “foot to toe” with them as came out later. It seems in retrospect that at that time those who were known to me as communists were only: Raul Castro because that was open knowledge: Lorente a leader of a group of escopeteros rival to my group leader Amelio Mojena in the first months of participation, because that was also common knowledge and because he tried to get our “Mojena” group wiped out on a least two occasions; and Aldo Santamaria who had tried to indoctrinate me at the Minas del Frio, I had refused and was sent to eat watercress from the stream after some kind of bombing and perhaps that is where I caught dysentery.

    Still in those days the communists in the July 26 Movement were beginning to scare me badly and make me very cautious. After all Chapelle could (but I don’t think she was) have been trying to “false flag” me into talking about such … Remember then Castro rebels were subject to the Draconian “Ley de la Sierra…” And some excuse could have been made up to have me shot.

    Chapelle has a photograph in one of her books of “Cypriano” firing a weapon at (the descascaradora at?) Maffo this is apparently Cipriano Beaton brother to Manuel. Remember these were those accused of killing Cristino Naranjo at the gate in Columbia, and then ran to the Sierra to try and fight back.

    In early 1959 apparently Tad Szuc interviewed Fabio Grobart, and thus Chapelle may have known of this … I have a copy of the interview from the Stanford archives of Georgie Geyer.

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