Wikileaks 2009: Japanese ambassador complains with the Lage, Perez Roque exit

ID: 195760

Date: 2009-03-06 19:49:00

Origin: 09HAVANA153

Source: US Interests Section Havana

Classification: CONFIDENTIAL

Dunno: 09HAVANA140 09HAVANA150

Destination: VZCZCXRO3789

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C O R R E C T E D C O P Y — CLASSIFICATION PARA 4

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SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/05/2019

TAGS: PGOV, PINR, PINS, PREL, CU

SUBJECT: LAGE AND PEREZ ROQUE ADMIT “ERRORS” AND RESIGN ALL

POSTS; REMIREZ DE ESTENOZ OUT TOO

REF: A. HAVANA 140

B. HAVANA 150

Classified By: COM Jonathan Farrar for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)

 

1. (U) In virtually identical letters published in the

official media on March 5, former Vice President Carlos Lage

and former Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque admitted that

they had committed unspecified “errors” for which they

assumed full responsibility, and then resigned from their

remaining positions. In Lage’s case this included his

position as Vice President of the Council of State, Deputy in

the National Assembly, Member of the Council of State, and

member of the Communist Party Central Committee and Political

Bureau. Perez Roque resigned from all of the same positions,

except for that of Vice President.

2. (U) Although there had been no official announcement of

his departure, Fernando Remirez de Estenoz, the Communist

Party chief of Foreign Relations, was replaced by the deputy

chief Jorge Marti Martinez. This news became public when the

media published a list of attendees at a meeting between

President Raul Castro and Honduran President Zelaya which

included Marti Martinez with the title of Communist Party

Chief of Foreign Relations.

3. (C) COMMENT: The language used by Fidel to justify the

firings of Lage and Perez Roque together with the tone of the

published resignation letters (reminiscent of similar

confessions during China’s cultural revolution) have led many

observers on the island to speculate that one or both may be

brought to trial. Fidel’s comments alone amount to a virtual

charge of treason against them. The departing Japanese

ambassador told COM on March 4 that changes in the foreign

policy leadership had severely damaged Tokyo’s plans for

relations with Cuba as the GOJ had placed great hope in

personal relationships with Lage, Perez Roque and former

foreign trade minister De la Nuez–all now fired. Remirez de

Estenoz had come up frequently in diplomatic conversations as

a serious interlocutor who could improve Cuba’s relations

with the world. He is credited by some with being the

mastermind of the GOC’s very successful policy to build good

relations with the other Latin American and Caribbean

governments as a further bulwark against the U.S. These

kinds of successes, while benefiting Cuba demonstrably, may

have resulted in the downfall of their authors when they

became too closely associated with them personally.

4. (C) COMMENT CONTINUED: The changes may also be part of the

process of preparing for the Communist Party congress,

announced for later this year but for which no date has been

set. As Raul continues to consolidate his power, there is

growing evidence that the inner circle of Castro regime is

turning further inward (and backward). A longtime (20 plus

years) local observer of Cuban politics theorized last night

to COM that the changes are meant to consolidate power and to

lateral the succession away from the Lage/Remirez de Estenoz

generation and to the military and civilian generation who

cut their teeth during the Angolan war years. Speculation

runs rampant: those few who truly know are not talking with

us or with our diplomatic colleagues. End Comment.

FARRAR