Oman Daily Observer

Raul Castro leaves the political stage, his legacy yet to be written

- SARAH MARSH

Raul Castro, who is retiring from high public office, for most of his life toiled in the shadow of his older brother, Fidel Castro. Yet he also played a key role in Cuba’s 1959 leftist revolution and the preservati­on of Cuban socialism.

While Fidel was the charismati­c leader who rallied Cubans to defend the revolution and defy the United States, Raul, 89, built the military into a formidable fighting force that saw off enemies including a Us-backed invasion at the Bay of Pigs.

Later, after the fall of former benefactor the Soviet Union sent Cuba into an economic tailspin and left it politicall­y isolated, he launched market-style reforms to its centralise­d economy and sought to normalise relations with Western powers.

But he leaves office amid an economic crisis that has caused shortages of even basic goods and is threatenin­g the universal access to quality healthcare and education hailed by supporters of Cuban socialism as among the most important achievemen­ts of the revolution.

Former US president Donald Trump unravelled a detente Castro reached with his predecesso­r Barack Obama and tightened the decadesold US trade embargo. The rollout of Internet has fuelled internal dissent.

Still, some thirty years after the end of the Cold War, Cuba remains one of the last Communist-run countries in the world. “Always preferring the supportive role to his brother and carrying out that role brilliantl­y, Raul eventually had to take on Fidel’s leadership himself at a time when the revolution showed every sign of faltering,” said Hal Klepak, a Canadian historian living in Havana who wrote a book on Raul’s military life.

“That it is still there, wounded and shaken but still there, in the face of massively powerful forces out to destroy it, is no small part a result of his leadership.”

Raul backed Fidel in his revolution against the Us-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista since the beginning in 1953, when they led a failed assault on the Moncada military barracks. An early admirer of communism, it was Raul and Ernesto “Che” Guevara, the Argentine-born doctor turned Marxist revolution­ary, who persuaded Fidel to seek support from the Soviet Union.

But he was also quick to launch reforms to move Cuba away from a Soviet-style command economy after the fall of the Berlin Wall plunged the Caribbean island nation into economic crisis.

First he establishe­d thriving enterprise­s within the armed forces — which now control much of the economy.

RAUL CASTRO LEAVES OFFICE AMID AN ECONOMIC CRISIS THAT HAS CAUSED SHORTAGES OF EVEN BASIC GOODS

 ?? — Reuters ?? Cuban President Raul Castro waves as he arrives to attend a speech from former US president Barack Obama at the Gran Teatro in Havana, Cuba, on March 22, 2016.
— Reuters Cuban President Raul Castro waves as he arrives to attend a speech from former US president Barack Obama at the Gran Teatro in Havana, Cuba, on March 22, 2016.

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