San Francisco Chronicle

Ricardo Alarcon — Castro confidant, top Cuban envoy

- By Andrea Rodriguez Andrea Rodriguez is an Associated Press writer.

HAVANA — Ricardo Alarcon, who was for years the head of Cuba’s parliament and one of the country’s most prominent diplomats, has died in Havana, authoritie­s in Cuba said Sunday. He was 84 years old.

Alarcon was the trusted adviser to Fidel Castro, and his brother and successor Raul, for decades and was a key negotiator in difficult talks with the United States on issues including immigratio­n and the legal battle for the return of the child Elian Gonzalez to Cuba in 2000.

Alarcon did not participat­e directly in negotiatio­ns that led to the island’s thaw with Washington in 2014 under the direction of Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro, since he had by that time left public life.

However, he was heavily involved in efforts to secure the release of five Cuban intelligen­ce agents detained in Florida in 1999. Their return to Cuba coincided with the process of re-establishi­ng diplomatic relations

“To Ricardo Alarcon de Quesada, master of the diplomats of our generation, we will always keep deep respect, admiration and infinite affection. Thank you for the privilege and honor of having been his disciple, ” Deputy Minister Josefina Vidal said on Twitter.

Alarcon, who spoke fluent English, was frequently interviewe­d on U.S. television channels about the policies of the island’s communist government. He was one of the top leaders and a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party, and was even mentioned as a possible successor to Fidel Castro before his brother Raul Castro assumed the leadership of the country in 2008.

Wearing his traditiona­l guayabera, his cigar between bony hands with long fingers and his thin glasses, Alarcon used to combine harsh rhetoric and fine sarcasm to criticize U.S. policies toward Cuba, which he attributed to the influence of the Cuban exile community in Miami.

During the legal dispute over the custody of Elian Gonzalez, Alarcon was a personal adviser to the minor’s father. During the process, he compared Cuban exiles in Miami with a “banana republic” and a “wild west” where no law reached.

Alarcon, who often described the U.S. embargo as “genocidal,” was president of the National Assembly from 1993. He retired as its leader in 2013.

At the head of this institutio­n in 2002, Alarcon led efforts to inscribe the permanence of the socialist system in the Constituti­on, in defiance of growing demands for democratic reforms from opponents and some government­s.

Before becoming a parliament­arian, Alarcon served as foreign minister and twice Cuba’s ambassador to the United Nations: from 19661978 and 1990-92. There, he was vice president of the U.N. General Assembly and Chairman of the Administra­tive Council of the U.N. Developmen­t Program.

Born on May 21, 1937, Alarcon had a doctorate in philosophy and literature. As a young man, he was a staunch opponent of the Fulgencio Batista dictatorsh­ip and was part of the movement that overthrew him.

 ?? Jose Goitia / Associated Press 2001 ?? Fidel Castro and Ricardo Alarcon, then-president of the Cuban National Assembly, attend a conference in Havana.
Jose Goitia / Associated Press 2001 Fidel Castro and Ricardo Alarcon, then-president of the Cuban National Assembly, attend a conference in Havana.

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