Cuba Confidential
Published May 07, 2003
An ajiaco is a spicy Cuban stew. Cuba Confidential: Love and Vengeance in Miami and Havana is just such a book, filled with myrid tasty insights, bubbling quietly in hidden corners.
Written by the experienced and thoughtful journalist Ann Louise Bardach, Cuba Confidential helps shed some light on what, to an outsider, is one of the most puzzling political stews leftover from the twentieth century.
Taking the recent Elian Gonzalez case as its starting point, the author delves into the intricacies and byzantine political machinations of the both the Cuban exile community and the stolid and enduring dictatorship of Castro, recasting what many see as a Cold War leftover into a bitter family feud that divides Cubans on both sides, sundering relationships and tearing deeply personal scars. The author's expertise and long-relationship with both sides of the Cuban coin reveals the depth of political intrangience that cripples both sides, preventing both true discourse and productive change - trapping both countries in a mutually destructive relationship that neither encourages nor rewards finding common ground.
Bardach is particularly chilling when she digs into the role of Miami's imbittered and politically powerful Exile community of Calle Ocho (the so-called Third Rail of Florida politics (as in, the rail that will electrocute you if you touch it)), the control and dominence they have established over South Florida, the strings they pull and influence they wield. Filled with vivid glimpses of the inside wheels of power and personal motives (Janet Reno, the Miami-born US Attorney-General under Clinton weeping in her office over the vicious characterizations and personal attacks that exploded in the wake of the Elian affair; the particular callous disregard for the well-being of Elian by his exile relations; the manipulation of the press....and so on. Read the book for a full view.), the book in particular highlights two constrasting characters - the greying Fidel Castro and the Exile leader Mas Canosa and CANF.
- Cuba Confidential
- Published: May 07, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: History, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Politics and Affairs
- Writer: Deano
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Very interesting Deano, thanks. My father just got back from Cuba, and is going again in July. He is tied in with their Olympic community. Though he loves the people he says it is absolutely clear the system doesn't work. His main contact there is a respected college professor and Olympic official who lives in a shack with a tin roof.