Your
Honor:
Allow me to say that I share everything that has been said in this
courtroom by my four brothers in arms: Gerardo Hernández,
Ramón Labaniño, René González and Fernando
González. They spoke with dignity and courage to the Court.
Our speeches are based on the strictest truth, on the soundness
of the principles we embrace and in the honor of the heroic Cuban
people. It is only fair to say that the lawyers and their assistants
acted in a highly professional, honest and courageous manner and
that the translators, Liza, Richard and the marshals worked in a
very ethical and professional way.
At the beginning I wrote in my diary of my long days, "...
a real man does not look to see on which side one lives best, but
on which side lies duty". Those are José Martí's
words, which a century after they were written still encourage,
live and are the essence of what is most pure and altruistic.
It is often difficult
To find the exact words,
But these have been in me
Beaten
Shaken
Incubated by the truth,
Waiting to break the shell and see the light.
And the day has come.
Allow me to explain my reasons, your Honor, in the clearest and
most concise way:
Cuba,
My little country, has been
Attacked,
Assaulted,
And slandered
Decade after decade
By a cruel
Inhuman and absurd
Policy.
A real terrorist war,
Fierce and open,
The harbinger of horror
Of sabotage,
A ruin, murder maker
A grief carrier,
Of the most profound grief,
Death.
This aggression has been exposed
not only by documents and information from the Cuban government
but also by secret documents that the very government of the United
States has declassified.
This aggression has included the CIA's recruiting, financing and
training counterrevolutionary agents; the Bay of Pigs Invasion;
Operation Mongoose; pretexts for military intervention; plans to
assassinate heads of State and Government; infiltrations by armed
groups; sabotage; violations of our airspace; spy flights, spraying
with bacteriological and chemical agents; machine gun fire on our
coasts and buildings; bombs in hotels and other social, cultural,
historic and tourist centers, all kinds of cruel and vicious acts
of provocation.
And the outcome of these acts:
More than three thousand four hundred dead; more than two thousand
people left totally or partially handicapped; substantial damage
to the economy, the source of our livelihood; hundreds of thousands
of Cubans who are born and grow up under a harsh blockade and in
a hostile cold war climate. Terror, hardships and pain have been
brought over the entire population.
Where have such unceasing ruthless acts been hatched and financed?
For the most part, in the United States of America.
What has the government of this country done to avoid them?
Practically nothing.... And the aggression has not ceased...
Today, people who are responsible for some of these actions still
walk freely the streets of Miami. And radio stations and other media
give coverage to and instigate new acts of aggression against the
Cuban people.
Why so much hatred for the Cuban people?
Is it because Cuba chose a different road?
Because its people want socialism?
Because it did away with the large estates
and wiped out illiteracy?
Because it gave free education
and medical care to its people?
Because it lets
the dawn break freely over its children?
Cuba has never placed the security of the United States in jeopardy
nor committed any act of aggression or terrorism against it. It
deeply loves peace and quiet and wants the best relations between
our two countries. It has shown that it admires and respects the
American people.
"Cuba is not a military threat to the United States,"
Admiral Carroll said in this courtroom.
General Atkinson testified that Cuba presents "zero" military
threat to the United States.
It is my country's unquestionable right -like that of any other--
to defend itself against those who try to harm its people.
The job of putting a stop to these terrorist acts has been complex
and difficult because the terrorists have enjoyed the complicity
or lax tolerance of the authorities.
My country has done everything possible to warn the US government
of the danger of these acts and to do so it has used official, unofficial
and public channels. However, such cooperation has never been reciprocated.
In the nineties, fired up by the demise of the socialist camp, terrorist
groups intensified their activities against Cuba. It was, they felt,
the long dreamed hour for stirring up the final chaos, for terrorizing
the people, destabilizing the economy, damaging the tourist industry,
building up a crisis and dealing the death blow to the Cuban Revolution.
What could Cuba do to defend itself and be forewarned of the terrorist
plans against it? What could it do to avoid a greater conflict?
What options did it have to safeguard its sovereignty and the safety
of its children?
One way to prevent these brutal and bloody acts, to prevent the
suffering becoming worse because of more deaths was to move quietly.
There was no alternative but to rely on men who -out of love for
a just cause, out of love for their country and their people, out
of love for peace and life- were prepared to voluntarily agree to
carry out this honorable duty against terrorism, that is, to give
advanced warning of the danger of attack.
The reason behind my acts and the motive for doing my duty, the
same as my comrades', has been to prevent a conflict that would
bring sorrow to our peoples.
We were not moved to do what we did by money or resentment. It did
not occur to any of us to harm the noble and hard-working American
people. We did nothing detrimental to the national security of the
United States. The court records show it. Those who doubt my words
may examine them and find the truth.
The barbaric attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
last September 11 filled with indignation everyone who loves a peaceful
world. The unexpected and unwonted deaths of thousand of this country's
innocent citizens pierced our hearts with deep sorrow.
Nobody can deny that terrorism is an inhuman, ruthless and repugnant
phenomenon that must be eliminated with the utmost urgency.
"And in order to make sure that we're able to conduct a winning
victory, we've got to have the best intelligence we can possibly
have." "Unity is needed to strengthen the intelligence
agencies, so that we can learn what the plans are before they are
implemented and to discover the terrorists before they attack."
These two statements were not made by the president of the Republic
of Cuba, our Commander in Chief Fidel Castro, but by the president
of the United States, after these horrendous attacks. I have wondered
over and over again. Are these statements not valid for Cuba, which
is a victim of terrorism?
This is exactly what Cuba has done to try to put an end to this
scourge, which has also buffeted her territory for so many years
and made martyrs of her people.
Your Honor,
A "trial" took place
This courtroom knows as much,
We lived together and we lived through days full of statements
Testimony,
Circumstantial evidence,
Evidence,
Arguments,
Motions,
Commitments,
Doubts,
Slanderous allegations,
Falsehoods,
Deliberations,
I didn't come here today to justify anything,
I came to tell
The truth:
"That is the only thing I am committed to."
Accord; there was none except the commitment to be useful to the
world, to serve a valid cause called humanity and also motherland.
Intent, there was none except to prevent senselessness and crime
and to save the living flower from chance, sudden, pointless and
premature death.
There was no transgression and no offense. Nobody was insulted.
Nothing was stolen. No one was deceived. No one was cheated.
No one tried to or practiced espionage.
Nobody ever asked me to get any classified information. Here in
this courtroom the witnesses' statements confirmed that, not only
defense witnesses but also those of the prosecution itself.
Read General Clapper's, Joseph Santos' and General Atkinson's testimony,
to name but a few, and they will confirm what I say in all honesty.
And many other people could have come to this court to explain things
about my life, to say what I did every day just as Dalila Borrego,
Edward Donohue, and Tim Carey came.
On the other hand, nobody came here to speak against me, nor would
it be possible to find anyone who, in all sincerity, could point
to any failing in my conduct in this society.
I love the island where I grew up, where I was educated and where
my mother, one of my beloved children, many of the people I love
and many of my other friends live. I also love this country where
I was born, where, over the last ten years, I have given and received
real proof of love and solidarity.
I am certain that a bridge of friendship will definitely be laid
not only between these two peoples but also among all the peoples
in the world.
It falls to you, your Honor, to hand down sentence in this long
and tortuous trial.
Bring proof and evidence together!
Voices will say that they don't exist.
Take into account facts and arguments!
Voices will say they carry no weight:
Read cases and testimony!
Voices will say it is not possible
To blame these men.
Voices that arise from the heart itself.
Voices inspired by the strength of justice.
Voices which did not want to be, or which were not
Listened to by a jury
Which could not serve justice.
They were wrong! Their verdict was sacrilege. But we were aware,
from the beginning, that when it comes to Cuba, Miami is an impossible
place for justice.
This has been, above all else, a political trial.
Personally, I ask for nothing else but justice; for the good of
our countries, for the sake of truth. A fair, full sentence, free
from political strings, would have sent an important message in
this crucial moment in the fight against terrorism.
Allow me to repeat that I have never caused personal harm to anyone
not have caused any property damage. I have never tried to take
any action, which would endanger the national security of the United
States.
If I were asked to do the same thing again, I would do it with honor.
An excerpt from a letter that Cuban general Antonio Maceo, who fought
for Cuban independence in the 19th century, wrote to a Spanish general
comes to mind at this time with force and passion:
"I shall not find any reasons for having cut myself off from
humanity. I pursue not a policy of hatred but of love; this is not
an exclusionist policy but one founded in human morality".
Because of your rulings, my beloved brothers and I must be unjustly
kept in prison, but there we shall not cease from defending the
cause and the principles we have embraced.
The day will come when we will not have to live under the shadow
of fear and death, and on that historic day, the true justice of
our cause will be seen.
Your Honor,
Many days and months of an unjust, cruel and horrible imprisonment
have gone by!
I have sometimes wondered, what is time? And like Saint Agustin
I have answered myself, "If they ask me I don't know, but if
they don't ask me, I do know." Hours of solitude and hopes,
of reflection about injustice and small mindedness; eternal minutes
in which memories burn bright: There are memories that burn the
memory!
I take these verses by Martí for this last page that I write
in the diary of my long days:
"I have lived:
It was to duty that I pledged my arms
And not once did the sun drop down behind the hills
That did not see my struggle and my victory..."
(Free verses)
And here in this courtroom I quote from the Uruguayan and world
poet, Mario Benedetti:
"...victory will be there, just like me,
simply germinating"
Because, in the end, we shall rest free and victorious beneath that
sun which we are denied today
Thank you
Antonio Guerrero.
Taken
from(www.antiterroristas.cu)
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