Friday, January 23r 1970. THE MIGHICAN DAILY Page Five Friday, January 23, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five . The bi. 0. 0 k S b 0 0 k S 0 0.a.;. t . new anatomy of socialism in Cuba # By BRUCE LEVINE The tone of the first book on Cuba by Leo Huberman and Paul Sweezy - 'Cuba: Anatomy of a Revolution," published in 1960 -was frankly enthusiastic about the revolution, the new regime, its character and its prospects. With'this book Huberman and Sweezy established themselves as champions of the Fidelista revolu- tion; and the book itself has be- come a sourcebook for the re- ' gime's protagonists. - , It is for this reason that Huber- ' man and Sweezy's second book on Cuba - "Socialism in Cuba". (Monthly Review Press, 1969) -- is all the more remarkable. For this book, coming as it does from well-known advocates of the re-I gime, has done almost as much to undermine apologists of Cuban "socialism" as "Cuba: Anatomy of a Revolution" did to prop them "Socialism in Cuba." the pro-:. duct of subsequent visits in 1961,' 1965, ,and 1968, is for two hundred' pages little ,ore than an extended appendix to "Cuba: Anatomy." ' We read here of the successes in health and education, of the dif- Castro's Cubfu ficulties in industry and agri- culture, faced in the last eight good providers: ". . . the neglect years. Then, in the last chapter, and exploitation to which Cuba Huberman and Sweezy drop their had been subjected in the past bombshell. Cuba, they tell us, has slow came to the aid of the Re- reached a dear-catastrophic im- volution. Everywhere there were passe, socially-politically as well as unused resources - unemployed industrially. men, uncultivated land, accumul- The author's problem is that ated stocks of raw materials and this impasse is inexplicable in the finished products - which now context of the revolution.and re- turned into precious reserves gime which their first book de- which could be drawn upon to in-, scribed. This last chapter, there- crease output and raise living! fore, begins 'with some delicate standards . . . The result was the "re-working" pf recent Cuban his- inculcation in the masses of over- t'ory, whelming feelings of devotion, of The first idol to topple is the loyalty to the new government one they had dedicated to the and its supreme leader Fidel Revolution's mass base, Huberman Castro." and Sweezy now concede that But those precious reserves are Che's own version is the correct exhausted now, and expectations one, that "only a very small per- go unfulfilled. The authors of this centage of the Cuban people had book wonder aloud how much the opportunity to learn the in- gonger Castro's "paternalistic re- valuable lessons of initiative, in- lation" to the people can stand novation, and self-reliance which up in the face of the resulting comes with participation in a peo- "disillusionment and cynicism." ple's war of liberation." I Historically, revolutions involv- , The Cuban government is re- ing "only a very small percentage" sponding to the new popular un- of populations have rarely given ease with increased sensitivity to birth to regimes involving a much criticism. In early 1968, for exam- larger p rcentage: Cuba has prov- pie, the Castro regime 'staged Sweezy tlemselves set down a rule course, .except to the extent that, of thumb as useful now as then: they simply represent speed-ups ox "The question we must ask about already overworked clerical work- Cuba, therefore, concerns not the ers but the problem we're discus- motives of those who made, and sing right now isn't bureaucratic are making the Revolution, but waste but bureaucratic power. < rather the objective characteristics We said before that the names: of the social order which is emer- of systems ought to tell us some-z ging from their labors." ' thing about who rules them, and; We learn the class nature of we noted that our system is called' Cuban society-or any other so- capitalism because, when we lo- ciety-not by guessing what goes cate the "levers of power" in our on in the rulers' heads. but by society, we find them controlled analyzing, objectively, the rela- by the capitalists. The capitalists. tionship between the rulers and :compose the ruling class. Under' the people: by identifying who .socialism, if only by definition, all" rules and how. the levers of power will be in the Which brings us :back to our hands of the people, or at least, book review. For Huberman and in the hands of those whom.the Sweezy do, in fact, provide us with people directly.control. a very careful description of the And in Cuba? There are no Cuban governing apparatus, its capitalists: it is not capitalism. nature, its dimensions, and its re- The people? They go about their lationship to the exploited classes. business. Who holds "all the levers This they do when they discuss of power in their hands?" The. the social nature of Castro's government and Party bureaucrats. "paternalism": they call it "bur'- Instead of being controlled by the eaucratic rule." people, the people are controlled But wait! That's ridiculous! by theni. To call this system so- Isn't apposition to creeping bu- cialism is about as justifiable asI reaucracy one, of Casti'o's own calling capitalism "socialism." watchwords? How can so vigilant' As for the ,Huberrma n-Sweeny ' an opponent of bureaucracy as solution to Cuba's problem -- That Castro be himself a bureaucratic theare "be an attempt to chang'' :ruler? Answer: "Up to now, cam- the character of the relationshiD paigns against bureaucracy in between the leader and the peoole Cuba have been concerned for the to the sharing of power and re- most part with reducing swollen sponsibility, in other words a turn and largely unproductive office to the left"-it is clearer, now. staffs inherited from capitalism." why they themselves conclude that Such campaigns are fine, of "this would certainly at be e'a'.j ATTENTION AL UNDERGRAD WOMEN! ! Historically conditioned halbs on both sides wopld have io be broken." "Both sides" of course, refers to the bureaucrats and the working class. The habits to be broken are two: c1 The people's habit of allowing themselves to be ruled,' and 2> the bureaucratic r e - gime's habit of ruling. We already Toay~x'. 's wrier . BRUCE LEVINE is a junior history major. He is also the star punter on The Daily libels. know that the Cuban people are breaking their habit. That, we re- call, is what is making Castro so uneasy. What about habit number two? That is, what about the regime?' Are the bureaucrats ready to gave up "all the levers of power"? Are they preparing to "share power and responsibility" with the peo- ple? Judging by everything we have read in "Socialism in Cuba," the answer is no. Rather, the re- gime's response to popular "mal- aise" is to tighten its grip on the society and to lash out more often and more savagely at those who suggest any other course. In short,. the bureaucrats are solid- ifying their class rule, So what is to be the fate of the suggested "turn to the left?" One thing seems certain: it will not be initiated from above. If it comes at all, it will come at the initiative of the Cuban workers. Whether the Cuban people w iIll choose to res'ume their old "hab- it" or "assist" their rulers in breaking theirs -- that is a ques- tion -we can't answer. It is the sanie as asking whether C u b a will have a socialist revolution .. only the people can decide. x: Now crisis? i I anyone critical of, governmentt policies or leaders." In fact, such an attitude is not new to Cuba. The authors' first Cuba book describes the way in which, responding to early charg- es of pro-Communism, "the lead- ership has responded by treat- ing any public' raising of the is- sue as prima facie evidence of counter-revolution to be dealt with accordingly." What Huberman' and Sweezy seem to find remark- able is not merely the attitude, but the scope of this newer cam- paign: In other words, the honeymoon is over. "Cuban socialism" is be- coming (if it has not already be- come) as authoritarian as the capitalism it 1eplaced. But, au- thoritarian or not, it is still social- ism to Huberman and Sweezy, and as good socialists they therefore feel obliged to embrace it-even if with tear-filled eyes. It might be relevant for us, however, to inquire just exactly what in the portrait "-of Cuba painted here, justifies titling it "socialism" at all? Nor is this just quibbling: one purpose of labeling social system is to give some idea which problems they have solved and which remain. Socialism's crisis today lies pre- cisely in its definition: the word is used too indiscriminately as to be useless to someone trying to analyze the systems sporting that title. We have thus far taken at face value the phrase "Cuban -o- cialism." Let's stop, now, and re- examine It. Socialists. have never before been satisfied with allowing rulers to appraise themselves; why start 'now? 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Thus: "The revo- what the authors describe as a lutionary government which .came "show trial" of a microfaction in to power in the early days of the Cuban Communtnist .Party. January 1959 . . found itself in "We are left with only one pos- a paternalistic relation to the Cu- sible conclusion tHuberman and banp people - not through choice Sweezy continue), that the warn- but because of the very nature of ing was addressed to any Cu- the situation." The paternalism bans who might feel disposed toI has proved durable, has, "contin- take positions or express viws ued to exist to this day . . ." whic could, rightly or wrongly, What has beep the secret. of be construed as aligning t h e'm - this paternalism's longevity? ;.serves with the iicrofaction. And Bluntly - consumption.' 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