Sunday, September 4, 2011

Cuban defense minister dies at 75

Posted on Sunday, 09.04.11

Cuban defense minister dies at 75
By PAUL HAVEN
Associated Press

HAVANA -- Gen. Julio Casas Regueiro, an accountant who fought in Cuba's
revolution, then used his training to run the military's lucrative
economic enterprises for two decades before becoming defense minister,
has died, state television reported. He was 75.

Casas was the most important figure from the revolution to die since
Juan Almeida Bosque in 2009, and his death on Saturday of heart failure
was sure to focus renewed attention on the fragility of the island's
aging leadership, many of whom are in their 80s.

State television announced three days of national mourning in honor of
Casas, who besides being defense minister was also a vice president of
the Council of State, Cuba's supreme governing body.

Casas served under Raul Castro in the rebel army that ultimately pushed
out the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista in early 1959. Trained as an
accountant, he later ran the financial operations of Cuba's
Revolutionary Armed Forces.

"In the past 50 years I don't remember ever criticizing comrade Julio
Casas, save that, as we Cubans say, he's very cheap," Raul joked on Feb.
24, 2008, after he was elected to replace his ailing brother Fidel as
president.

Among the first things the younger Castro did in the top job was to name
Casas defense minister, the post the new leader had held for nearly a
half-century under Fidel. In April, Casas was also elected a member of
the Communist Party's powerful 15-member Politburo, which is led by Raul.

Casas' financial discipline was the source "of his successes on the
economic front, among other activities" in the armed forces, Raul Castro
said. Casas also effectively led the ministry in the 19 months that the
younger Castro served as Cuba's interim president after Fidel Castro
underwent emergency intestinal surgery and temporarily ceded power.

Born in eastern Cuba on Feb. 18, 1936, Casas was an accountant working
in a food warehouse when he joined the rebel forces.

Under Raul Castro's command in the eastern Sierra Maestra mountains,
Casas fought numerous battles against Batista's troops.

He received additional military training in the Soviet Union and fought
in Ethiopia during the years that Cuba sent troops to support African
struggles for independence.

Beginning in 1990, Casas ran the Defense Ministry's Business
Administration Group, which includes a host of efficient and profitable
enterprises designed to generate the hard currency Cuba has needed to
buy critical imports.

One key company imports computers and other electronics. The armed
forces also manage a chain of hundreds of small consumer goods stores
and a tourism company that runs more than 30 hotels, with subsidiaries
that provide domestic tourist travel by air and land. The military also
has a large operation producing basic foods for the general population.

The military's role in the economy has only grown during Raul's
presidency, with trusted generals placed in command of several large
state enterprises. In 2010, a military-run company paid some $700
million to buy out Telecom Italia's stake in state phone company Etecsa,
a move that raised eyebrows because it came even as the government
complained it was desperately short on funds.

The armed forces are one of the island's strongest and most respected
institutions and historically have been solidly loyal to the Castro
brothers. Cuba under the Castros, unlike many Latin American countries,
has never experienced a military coup or rebellion.

Casas' death is sure to renew questions about the health of the rest of
the Cuban leadership. Raul Castro turned 80 this year, and No. 2 Jose
Ramon Machado Ventura is the same age. Fidel Castro, who has retired
from all public roles, is 85 and has not made a public appearance since
April.

State television said that Casas' body was cremated in accordance with
his wishes, and that his remains would be placed in the Defense Ministry
headquarters on Havana's Revolution Plaza for public viewing on Monday.
A large procession of people was expected to turn out. It was not clear
if Raul or Fidel Castro planned to attend.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/09/04/2389948/cuban-defense-minister-dies-at.html#storylink=misearch

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