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GRANNY'S TREASURE ISLAND
BIOGRAFIA
Fulgencio Batista
(Banes,
Cuba, 1901-Guadalmina, España, 1973) Militar y político cubano. Nacido
en el seno de una familia humilde, ingresó en el ejército más por
necesidad que por vocación. Sin embargo, consiguió compatibilizar su
carrera militar con los estudios de periodismo, que concluyó. El año
1928 fue ascendido al grado de sargento y destinado a Camp Columbia, en
La Habana, donde entró en contacto con círculos militares opuestos a la
dictadura de Gerardo Machado, de los que se erigió en máximo
representante.
En septiembre de 1933, tras la
subida al poder de Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, articuló, junto con una
serie de organizaciones estudiantiles también descontentas con la
situación política, un motín militar que dio como resultado la
constitución de un gobierno provisional encabezado por Ramón Grau de
San Martín. Batista, verdadero hombre fuerte del país, se mantuvo en la
sombra y otorgó la presidencia a distintos hombres de confianza, hasta
que finalmente, en 1940, se hizo cargo del gobierno.
Durante
su primer mandato, que se prolongó hasta 1944, legalizó el Partido
Comunista Cubano e introdujo una serie de reformas financieras y
sociales que mejoraron parcialmente la maltrecha situación económica.
Su mejor aliado, no obstante, continuó siendo el gobierno
estadounidense, al que permitió el uso de sus bases militares durante
la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Tras acceder a ser sustituido en la presidencia por Grau de San Martín, se trasladó a Florida, donde escribió Sombras de América,
obra publicada en México en 1946. Regresó a Cuba en 1948, fecha en que
fue elegido senador, cargo desde el que se dispuso a preparar su
candidatura a la presidencia del país para las elecciones que debían
celebrarse en junio de 1952.
Sin embargo, poco
antes de esta fecha, protagonizó un golpe militar, tras el cual
disolvió el Congreso, suspendió la Constitución de 1940 e ilegalizó
todas las formaciones políticas. Erigido en dictador, consiguió
reprimir la primera intentona comunista de 1953, encarcelando a Fidel
Castro y sus seguidores. En el año 1957, con Castro al frente, la
guerrilla comunista relanzó sus ataques y la noche de fin de año de
1958, con el ejército y la población en contra, Batista se vio obligado
a huir. Se estableció primero en la República Dominicana, luego en
Madeira y por último en Guadalmina, cerca de Marbella, donde murió.
BATISTA
THE COVER OF TIME MAGAZINE (April 9 1952) showed a photo of
Batista with a Cuban flag behind him, and the caption: "Cuba's
Batista: he got past Democracy's sentries." Ironically, that was not the first
time that Batista had bypassed the process of Democracy, with the full blessing
and encouragement of its self-appointed guardians. Twenty years earlier Batista
had become the strongman that would come to symbolize the heart and soul of
Roosevelt's "Good Neighbor Policy."
Ruben Fulgencio Batista Zaldívar was born in Cuba's
Oriente Province on January 16
1901. His parents, who lived and worked in a sugar plantation, were said to be
of mixed race; Negro, white, Indian, and (it was popularly believed) Chinese.
In 1921 he joined the army as a private, and in 1932 he became a military
tribunal stenographer with the rank of sergeant.
The First Coup
In an uprising known as the "Revolt of the Sergeants,"
Batista took over the Cuban government on September 4, 1933. The coup overthrew
the liberal government of Gerardo
Machado, and marked the beginning of the army's influence as an organized
force in the running of the government. It also signaled Batista's emergence as
self-appointed chief of the armed forces, king-maker and favored U.S. strong
man.
U.S. Ambassador Benjamin Sumner Welles, sent to Cuba in
April of 1933 to mediate differences between the government and opposing
political groups, found an ally in Batista. "You're the only
individual in Cuba today who represents authority," he said to the recently
self-appointed Chief of the Military. When Batista asked what the U.S. "wanted
done for recognition," Welles replied, "I will lay down no specific terms; the
matter of your government is a Cuban matter and it is for you to decide what
you will do about it." To Batista, this was an invitation to rule.
On January 14 1934, Batista forced provisional president
Ramón Grau San Martín to resign, and he appointed
Carlos Mendieta to the presidency. Within five days, the U.S.
recognized Cuba's new government.
For the next decade Batista ran the country from the
background, using puppet presidents [Carlos Mendieta (1934-35),
José A. Barnet (1935-36), Miguel Mariano Gómez
(1936) and Federuco Laredo Brú (1936-40)] and having his way
with the government, which continued a thirty-year tradition of corruption.
Batista was well liked by American interests, who feared Grau's
liberal social and economic revolution and saw him as a stabilizing force with
respect for American interests. It was in this time period that Batista formed
a renowned friendship and business relationship with gangster
Meyer Lansky that lasted over
three decades.
Through Lansky, the mafia knew they had a friend in Cuba. Gangster
Lucky Luciano, after being
deported to Italy in 1946, went to Havana with a false passport. A summit at
Havana's Hotel Nacional, with mobsters such as Frank Costello, Vito
Genovese, Santo Trafficante Jr., Moe Dalitz and others, confirmed Luciano's
authority over the U.S. mob, and coincided with Frank Sinatra's singing debut
in Havana. It was here that Lansky gave permission to kill Bugsy Siegel for
skimming construction money from the Flamingo in Las Vegas.
Many of Batista's enemies faced the same fate as the ambitious
Siegel. One of his most bitter opponents, Antonio Guiteras (founder of
the student group Jóven Cuba) was gunned down by government forces in
1935 while waiting for a boat in Matanzas province. Others just seemed
to disappear into thin air.
Batista's chance to sit on the president's chair came in 1940.
Supported by a coalition of political parties, and by the Communists, he
defeated his old rival Grau San Martín in the first presidential
election under a new Cuban constitution. During his presidency, trade relations
with the U.S. increased, and a series of war taxes were imposed on the Cuban
population. In 1944, Grau San Martín was elected president and
Batista was forced to relinquish control.
While living luxuriously in Daytona Beach, Florida, Batista ran for
and won a seat in the Cuban Senate in 1948. Four years later he was running for
president, but a poll published in the December, 1951 issue of the popular
magazine "Bohemia" showed him in last place.
The Second Coup
On March 10 1952, almost twenty years after the Revolt of
the Sergeants, Batista took over the government once more, this time against
elected Cuban president Carlos Prío Socorras. The coup took
place three months before the upcoming elections that he was sure to loose.
Also running in that election (for a different office) was a young, energetic
lawyer named Fidel Castro. On March 27 Batista's government was
formally recognized by U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Shortly after this recognition, Batista declared that, although he
was completely loyal to Cuba's constitution of 1940, constitutional guarantees
would have to be temporarily suspended, as well as the right to strike. In
April, writes Hugh Thomas in The Cuban Revolution, "Batista proclaimed
a new constitutional code of 275 articles, claiming that the 'democratic and
progressive essence' of the 1940 Constitution was preserved in the new
law."
Batista opened the way for large-scale gambling in Havana, and he
reorganized the Cuban state so that he and his political appointees could
harvest the nation's riches. He announced that his government would match,
dollar for dollar, any hotel investment over $1 million, which would include a
casino license, and Lansky became the center of the entire Cuban gambling
operation.
Under Batista, Cuba became profitable for American business and
organized crime. Havana became the "Latin Las Vegas," a playground of choice
for wealthy gamblers, and very little was said about democracy, or the rights
of the average Cuban. Opposition was swiftly and violently crushed, and many
began to fear the new government.
Just over a year after Batista's second coup, a small group of
revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro attacked the
Moncada Army Barracks in Santiago on
July 26, 1953. The attack failed, and Batista sent General Martin
Tamayo, the military commander of the district, a note ordering him to
"kill ten rebels for every soldier killed" in the attack. This Presidential
order was quickly dubbed the "ten-for-one" law. Tamayo carried out his order,
murdering fifty-nine additional rebels (it would have taken 190 deaths to
fulfill Batista's request).
Having easily defeated the rebellion, and with Castro and most of the
others in jail or dead, business was back to normal in Cuba. Mafia boss
Meyer Lansky turned Havana into an international drug port, and Cuban
officials continued to get rich even after a few years in government. Nightly,
the "bagman" for Batista's wife collected 10 percent of the profits at
Trafficante's casinos; the Sans Souci, and the casinos in the hotels
Sevilla-Biltmore, Commodoro, Deauville and
Capri. Batista's take from the Lansky casinos, the Hotel Nacional, the
Montmartre Club and others, is said to be 30 percent. That was aside from his
fair share of Cuba's general funds that should have been going to education,
public health and city maintenance.
For a price, Batista handed contracts to dozens of U.S. corporations
for massive construction projects, such as the Havana-Varadero highway, the
Rancho Boyeros airport, train lines, the power company and a strange plan to
dig a canal across Cuba.
Due to popular unrest, and to appease his U.S. friends, Batista held
a mock election in which he was the only legal candidate. He won, becoming
president of Cuba in 1954. Cubans, however, had learned not to trust him, and
were demanding new, legitimate elections.
The distinguished Colonel Cosme de la Torriente, a surviving
veteran of the Cuban War of Independence, emerged in late 1955 to offer
compromise. A series of meetings led by de la Torriente became known as "El
Diálago Cívico" (the civic dialogue). Writes Hugh Thomas: "This
Diálago Cívico represented what turned out to be the last hope
for Cuban middle-class democracy, but Batista was far too strong and entrenched
in his position to make any concessions."
Batista was so confident of his power that on May 15, 1955, he
released Castro and the remaining survivors of the Moncada attack, hoping to
dissuade some of his critics. Within weeks it was rumored that Batista's
military police was looking to kill Castro, so the rebel went to Mexico to plan
the revolution.
The Havana Post, expressing the attitude of the U.S.
business community after a survey of the four years of Batista's second reign,
alluded to the disappearance of gangsterism and said: 'All in all, the Batista
regime has much to commend it." Hugh Thomas disagrees with that commentary. "In
a way," Thomas writes, "Batista's golpe formalized gangsterism: the machine gun
in the big car became the symbol not only of settling scores but of an
approaching change of government."
By late 1955 student riots and anti-Batista demonstration had become
frequent. These were dealt with in the violent manner his military police had
come to represent. Students attempting to march from the University of Havana
were stopped and beaten by the police, and student leader José A.
Echeverría had to be hospitalized. Another popular student leader was
killed on December 10, leading to a funeral that became a gigantic political
protest with a 5-minute nationwide work stoppage.
Instead of loosening his grip, Batista suspended constitutional
guarantees and established tighter censorship of the media. His military police
would patrol the streets and pick up anyone suspected of insurrection. By the
end of 1955 they had grown more prone to violent acts of brutality and torture,
with no fear of legal repercussions.
In March of 1956 Batista refused to consider a proposal calling for
elections by the end of the year. He was confident that he could defeat any
revolutionary attempt from the many factions who opposed him.
Batista continued to rule with his usually confident iron fist, even
after the landing of the Granma in
December of 1956 (which brought the Castro brothers back to Cuba along with
Che Guevara and marked the beginning of
the armed conflict).
Due to their continued opposition of the dictator, the University
of Havana was temporarily closed on November 30 1956. (It would not
re-open until early 1959, after a revolutionary victory.) But that did not end
the flow of student blood, including Echeverría's, who was killed by
police after a radio broadcast on March 13 1957.
Batista's police also tracked down and killed
Frank País, a coordinator with the
26th of July Movement, inciting a spontaneous strike in the three
easternmost provinces of Cuba.
That same year, in midst of the revolutionary upheaval, the 21-story,
383-room Hotel Riviera was built in Havana at a cost of $14 million,
most of which came from the Cuban government. It was Lansky's dream and crowing
achievement. The hotel opened on December 10, with a floor show headlined by
Ginger Rogers. Lansky's official title was "kitchen director," but he
controlled every aspect of the hotel. He complained that Rogers "can wiggle her
ass, but she can't sing a goddam note!"
But the seeds of the revolution had already sprouted a stronger,
determined movement that would not allow the future of the Cuban nation to
remain in the hands of gangsters and corrupt politicians.
Another fake election in 1958 placed one last Batista puppet in the
president's chair, but loosing the support of the U.S. government meant his
days in power were numbered.
On January 1, 1959, after formally resigning his position in Cuba's
government and going through what historian Hugh Thomas describes as "a charade
of handing over power" to his representatives, remaining family and closest
associates boarded a plane at 3 a.m. at Camp Colombia and flew to Ciudad
Trujillo in the Dominican Republic.
Throughout the night various flights out of Camp Colombia took
Batista's friends and high officials to Miami, New York, New Orleans and
Jacksonville. Batista's brother "Panchín," governor of Havana, left
several hours later, and Meyer Lansky, suffering from ill health, also flew out
that night. There was no provision made for the thousands of other Cubans who
had worked with Batista's regime.
Batista died on August 6 1973, in Estoril, Portugal.