HAVANA - Fidel Castro on Monday accused President Bush of "authorizing and
ordering" an attempt on his life, although his essay on the subject provided no
details.
A man walks past a graffiti that reads in Spanish 'Long live
Fidel' in a street of Havana, Thursday, June 21, 2007. [AP]
|
American law now prohibits the US
government from ordering the assassination of foreign leaders, but declassified
US documents have shown that the CIA made numerous attempts to kill Castro in
the early years after the 1959 Cuban revolution.
Castro's essay noted that President Gerald Ford signed an order banning
official assassinations, and said he didn't believe that Presidents Jimmy Carter
and Bill Clinton ever tried to have him killed.
But Castro alleged that Bush has other ideas.
Now 80, Castro hasn't been seen in public in the 11 months since he underwent
emergency intestinal surgery. Cuba's provisional government is being led by his
younger brother Raul while he recovers. Meanwhile, he's become a prolific essay
writer. In one, on May 29, Castro accused Bush of renewing US attempts to
assassinate him.
"I'm not the first, nor will I be the last, whom Bush has ordered to be
deprived of life," Castro wrote then.
His latest essay, signed Sunday afternoon and published Monday in state
media, referred to that May 29 allegation.
"Why did I say one day in a reflection that Bush authorized or ordered my
death? This phrase can seem ambiguous and imprecise," Castro wrote. "Perhaps it
would be more exact, although even more confusing, to say that he authorized it
and ordered it."
Castro promised to explain himself, but never did, writing only that "really
it is a mystery to name those responsible for the hundreds of attempts on my
life, all the direct and indirect forms to cause my death were used."
The White House had no reaction to Castro's statement.