Hollywood's Mindless Love Affair With Castro
By Jim Burns
HUMAN EVENTS
Posted Apr 18, 2005
Humberto Fontova will never be interviewed on CNN's
"Larry King Live." Chris Matthews will never want to talk to him on
"Hardball." The reason: Fontova has written a book titled Fidel:
Hollywood's Favorite Tyrant (published by Regnery, a HUMAN
EVENTS sister company) that dramatically explains Hollywood's love affair with
Fidel Castro, Cuba's "maximum leader."
Why do Hollywood and the mainstream media so love him? Why do hordes of
American lawmakers and business executives flock to him? Castro is a murderous
dictator. Would these Hollywood and liberal types who wine and dine with him
have wined and dined with Adolf Hitler?
This book answers those questions with hard-hitting detail on what a societal
misfit Castro is. Fontova, a Cuban exile, has done a beautiful job telling the
story of the America-hating paranoiac. He has documented his findings from
extensive research and interviews with many of those who were connected with
the repressive Castro regime. It will be hard for this book to make the New
York Times bestseller list because it is so truthful and in many ways
frightening that many Americans might shy from reading it.
After observing Cuba for several years and listening to Radio Havana broadcasts
to North America, I can believe Castro is Tinseltown's favorite tyrant. The
actor Jack Lemmon was praised by the Castro government at his death for being
"a friend of Cuba." America-bashing filmmaker Oliver Stone was
treated like royalty by the dictator during a visit to Havana. Danny Glover
travels there quite a bit, as do Ed Asner, Harry Belafonte, Gina Lollobrigida
and others. It is a wonder that Castro doesn't have his own Hollywood colony.
Or maybe he does have one and is not telling his state-run media about it.
Film director Steven Spielberg accepted an invitation in 2002 from Cuba's film
institute to attend a Cuban film festival featuring Spielberg's work. His
movies E.T., Schindler's List, Saving Private Ryan, Raiders of the Lost
Ark, Empire of the Sun, Jaws and Duel were shown at four Havana
theaters--at least if the Castro government propaganda is to be believed.
Omar Gonzales, Castro's director of the Cuba School of Film and Television,
gushed over Spielberg. He said at the time, "Steven Spielberg is a
filmmaker whose work is well known and widely admired in Cuba, by filmmakers
and audiences alike."
In Their Own Words
It is amazing how Castro has caused so many liberals and Hollywood types almost
to swoon. Hitler in Berlin would have been hard-pressed to have done it better.
Fontova has compiled many astounding quotes about the brutal dictator from
those who have been snowed:
Decades of Tyrannical Reign
Fontova shows clearly how the New York Times--through
its biased "reporting" back in the 1950s--helped propel Castro to
overthrow the Batista leadership and seize control of the country. HUMAN
EVENTS, however, was reporting as early as 1957 that Castro was a Communist and
complaining about how American officials refused to acknowledge this fact.
HUMAN EVENTS was disbelieved until Castro took over and viciously spread
communism throughout Cuba. At the time, HUMAN EVENTS' reporting was tantamount
to Britain's Winston Churchill warning his countrymen to read Mein Kampf
to determine what Hitler was really like. Not many Brits read it and they paid
for their ignorance during World War II.
Fontova talks with people you won't read about in the New York Times
or hear about on CNN. He describes how New York City almost had a
Castro-perpetrated terrorist attack in 1962 that could have been equal to or
worse than 9/11. He explains how Castro operatives working out of the UN
mission were plotting to blow up buildings and even the Statue of Liberty after
the Cuban missile crisis was allegedly resolved. He writes that if the FBI had
not infiltrated some of the Castro organizations, New York City might have been
heavily damaged.
Fontova contends that Castro has imprisoned more people than even Hitler or
Stalin. His firing squads have killed thousands of Cubans. Fidel
illustrates convincingly why so many people get on any semi-seaworthy craft,
fly any type of aircraft and do anything humanly possible to escape Cuba and
its repressive regime.
This book makes the point many of us who have watched Cuba have known for
years: Castro is intent on destroying or seriously harming the United States
and, Fontova says, actually has the nuclear weapons to do it. A Cuban version
of Saddam Hussein, he is only 90 miles away from the United States.
One very interesting part of the book is Fontova's conversations with the
Diaz-Balart family. He explains how Castro betrayed the father of Florida
Congressmen Lincoln and Mario Diaz-Balart, a classmate of Castro at University
of Havana, and how the family had to flee the country. You also learn why both
Diaz-Balarts have bitter feelings about Castro and what he did to their home
country.
United States weakness has kept Castro at the helm. It seemed that the only
time Castro became afraid of America was when President Reagan sent troops into
Grenada in 1983 to topple Castro's puppets in charge there. Indecisiveness by
President John F. Kennedy at the Bay of Pigs and an incompetent Central
Intelligence Agency kept Castro as a thorn in the side for all these many
years.
The book highlights how even the Soviet Union's Nikita Khrushchev had his
problems with Castro, which is why the Soviets retreated during the Cuban
missile crisis while Kennedy gave away our bases in Turkey.
The Elian Gonzalez case is not overlooked. Fontova describes how Greg Craig,
President Bill Clinton's lawyer during his impeachment, stage-managed Dan
Rather's "60 Minutes" interview with Elian's father, feeding the
questions to Rather.
Fidel
is a must read for those who want to learn about the tensions between the
United States and Cuba and why it is an American issue and not just a Cuban
exile and South Florida issue. The book is not for a weak stomach, as it
documents how a repressive dictator has snowed many Hollywood actors and
actresses, validating the old P.T. Barnum maxim that "There's a sucker
born every minute."
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