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Introduction: Setting the ContextPhilip Brenner

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Abstract: This introduction describes the context in which the July 11th protests occurred. It identifies the main reference point for most Cubans as the 鈥淪pecial Period鈥 of the 1990s, and describes the 鈥減erfect storm鈥 of circumstances that led so many Cubans to take to the streets. Finally, it poses the question of whether July 11th is an inflection point in the development of the Cuban Revolution.
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It would be difficult to find a Cuban who is unaware of the protests that rocked the country on July 11, 2021. Unlike demonstrations in 2020 by artists and writers, the mid-July demonstrations took place throughout the country, not only in Havana. 聽While the artists and writers鈥 objectives were important 鈥 they sought fewer restrictions on public expression 鈥 these were not the primary concerns of the vast majority of the populace. In contrast, the demands of the July protestors focused on a broad range of grievances that had been festering for years. To some, the protests even seemed to challenge the very legitimacy of the government. Indeed, in the afternoon of July 11, President Miguel D铆az-Canel went on national television denouncing the protestors and calling on 鈥渞evolutionaries鈥 to confront those involved in the 鈥減rovocations.鈥[i] Cuba had not experienced such widespread and intensely-felt demonstrations since the overthrow of Fulgencio Batista鈥檚 dictatorship 62 years earlier.

This introduction will provide a brief history of circumstances that contributed to July 11, which historian J茅sus Arboleya aptly described as 鈥渢he perfect storm.鈥[ii] That context alone does not explain why the one-day explosion occurred 鈥 the articles in this Symposium probe particular factors that enable a reader to develop a fuller analysis. Still, the context is a starting point for such an analysis.

Points of Reference

The Special Period
Prior to 1989, 85 percent of Cuba鈥檚 trade occurred with countries in the Soviet Union鈥檚 trading bloc, the Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (CMEA), often with barter-like arrangements. When the CMEA collapsed and Soviet subsidies ended, Cubans experienced what President Fidel Castro called 鈥渁 special period in a time of peace.鈥 Between 1989 and 1993, Cuba鈥檚 economy and international trade declined by 35 and 80 percent, respectively; 50,000 Cubans temporarily lost their eyesight because of vitamin deficiencies; and by 1993 the average daily caloric intake in Cuba had fallen below the World Health Organization standard.[iii]

The Special Period is the initial point of reference for a majority of Cubans, most of whom have little or no memory of life before the 1990s when racial and gender disparities were disappearing and most people could reasonably hope that their children鈥檚 lives would be better than their own. In contrast, their vivid memory of the Special Period is one of a daily struggle for survival and suffering. Notably, as sociologist Mar铆a del Carmen Zabala explained, 鈥減overty reemerged as a social problem, and, consequently, the thesis that poverty was being eradicated in Cuba鈥egan to be questioned鈥.[iv] The government鈥檚 response to the dire circumstances 鈥 legalizing the U.S. dollar, permitting some small private businesses to open, encouraging foreign investment and re-building the tourist industry 鈥 stopped the economy鈥檚 free fall and enabled it to provide a basic social safety net. But the resulting dual currency system, reliance on remittances, and the breakdown of the previous egalitarian reward system brought about significantly greater inequality.

Anthropologist Hope Bastian reports that inequality not only created gaps in consumption. It altered social relations as local community ties began to disintegrate, which in turn generated new patterns of social stratification.[v] Importantly, economic differences emerged 鈥渁long clearly visible racial lines,鈥 as sociologist Katrin Hansing observed.[vi] A greater proportion of darker-skinned than lighter-skinned Cubans were living in substandard housing, which made them unsuitable for rent to tourists, depriving them of one source of hard (internationally accepted) currency. Darker-skinned Cubans also lacked access to capital from remittances and suffered discrimination due to racist norms in hiring for the tourism industry. Most members of the Cuban diaspora were white, and sent remittances to family members, also white. Inequality and scarcity also contributed to Cubans鈥 changing values as they came to place a greater emphasis on materialism and individualism.

In an attempt to stuff the genie back in the bottle in the early 2000s, the government reversed several of the mid-1990s economic reforms that officials considered were sources of the problems of inequality and racial disparities. For example, as a way of gaining control over the use of hard currency, the government decreed that Cubans had to use a newly created convertible peso instead of U.S. dollars. It also attempted to decrease legal self-employment by limiting the number of new licenses it granted and even withdrawing some existing ones.[vii] The reversals generated a new cynicism about the government鈥檚 commitment to reform. Moreover, the measures did little to address the problems, because Cuba continued to rely on tourism and remittances to generate hard currency, which were the main contributors to inequality.

Meanwhile, a greater openness created new spaces for expression and enabled public criticism to flourish. For example, Temas magazine expanded the borders of what was acceptable by publishing articles on topics rarely covered in the official media, and with views well outside the mainstream. Two other magazines sponsored by the office of the Archbishop of Havana 鈥 Palabra Nueva and Espacio Laical 鈥 also provided venues for open debate. Similarly, popular Cuban hip-hop artists focused on the problems of daily life. The music provided a way for the generation of the 1980s and 1990s 鈥渢o speak out about racism, prostitution, police harassment, growing class differences, the difficulty of daily survival, and other social problems of contemporary Cuba,鈥 sociologist Margot Olavarria observed.[viii]

Until the Special Period, the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Art and Industry (ICAIC) was the only distributor of Cuban films and provided most of the support for production. However, as resources for film making shrank, the government permitted filmmakers to obtain funding outside of the country. Coproduction gave them the opportunity to explore subjects previously taboo in Cuba. This was apparent in the 2010 to 2013 period, with films such as 搁别惫辞濒耻肠颈贸苍 (2010) on underground culture, Habanastation (2011) on inequality, and Melaza (2012) on the necessity to engage in petty corruption in order to survive. Cuba鈥檚 first 鈥渮ombie鈥 movie, Juan de los Muertos (2011), satirized government attempts to cover up the existence of the living dead by alleging they were dissidents trying to overthrow the revolution.

A New Era
On July 31, 2006, a gravely ill Fidel Castro handed his conductor鈥檚 baton to Ra煤l Castro. When the younger brother of Cuba鈥檚 larger-than-life revolutionary leader accepted the provisional reins of power as head of state and commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, a new era began in Cuba. Cubans had demonstrated a remarkable resilience and ability to adapt during the Special Period, but the new president could not be certain how much longer they would be patient. Their suffering had taken an enormous toll. The wellspring of hope that had nurtured Cubans鈥 belief in the future, which had given them the energy and strength to defy the odds in building a new society, seemed depleted. Increasing inequality, decreasing access to health care and a good education, and a declining sense of communal solidarity had eroded distinctive aspects of the Cuban Revolution.

Ra煤l Castro proceeded cautiously at first, making no dramatic moves. Yet he also began to prepare the country for what he hoped would be a reinvented Cuban revolution. In July 2007, in the president鈥檚 annual address commemorating the 1953 Moncada attack, he departed from his brother鈥檚 usual focus on the U.S. embargo as the source of Cuba鈥檚 problems. The main issue, he declared, was that 鈥淣o one, no individual or country, can afford to spend more than what they have....To have more, we have to begin by producing more, with a sense of rationality and efficiency, so that we may reduce imports, especially of food products....鈥 Then he warned that to achieve this goal 鈥渟tructural and conceptual changes will have to be introduced.鈥[ix]

What followed in the next five years were a series of reforms that Cubans anticipated would create a vibrant non-state sector of the economy and improve living standards. In 2008, the government began to issue licenses that allowed drivers to use private cars as taxis, and it lifted the ban on selling computers, DVD players, and cell phones. Two years later, the president announced a plan to reduce the size of the state鈥檚 workforce by nearly twenty percent. The government was strapped for cash to pay workers, and officials reasoned that some laid-off state workers might accept the government鈥檚 offer of up to forty hectares of free land on which they could increase domestic food production. A strong negative reaction from the public and state managers led Castro to reverse himself in August 2010, saying that reductions in the state workforce would come mainly from attrition. He then pressed senior officials to quicken the pace of change, a process he subsequently labeled as 鈥渦pdating the Cuban economic model.鈥[x]

The most important feature of the update was a set of 鈥淕uidelines for the Economic and Social Policies of the Party and the Revolution,鈥 known as Lineamientos.[xi] After a nationwide debate and major revisions, in 2011 the Cuban Communist Party approved 313 Lineamientos, which established a process for expanding the number of permissible private (referred to as 鈥渘on-state鈥) sector enterprises. The list included mostly service jobs, such as barber, beautician, electrician, bricklayer, plumber, photographer, waiter, truck driver, flower seller, entertainer, sports instructor, and so on.[xii]

Still, the Lineamientos provided a new orientation for the society. Previously, as Cuban analyst Juan Triana explained, the country鈥檚 leaders asserted that 鈥渟ocialism was the guarantor of achieving development.鈥 In contrast, the new view held 鈥渢hat without development it will be very hard to sustain Cuban socialism.鈥 Moreover, 鈥渄evelopment鈥 would mean a greater reliance on market factors in determining wages and even what enterprises produced.[xiii] (Notably, the 2019 constitution recognizes private ownership of productive as well as personal property, and guarantees that foreign investment is an 鈥渋mportant element for the economic development of the country.鈥[xiv])

Economist Jorge Mario S谩nchez aptly observed that the economic changes 鈥減ointed in the right direction but were insufficient to deal with the roots of dysfunctionality.鈥[xv] Cuba still had not found a way to generate enough hard currency to develop a sustainable and equitable economy. While its Gross Domestic Product had reached $100 billion by 2013, hard currency earnings amounted to only 4 percent of the total, and too much of that was spent on food. Cuba was importing about 70 percent of its food.[xvi] Given its access to fish and an abundance of arable land, it should have been able to produce about that percentage domestically. A poignant film released in 2014, , about concerts that Silvio Rodr铆guez gave in marginal barrios of Havana, highlights significant social problems seven years ago. Given the economic downturn, aggressive policies of both the Trump and Biden administrations, continued bureaucratic mismanagement of key production sectors, the virtual disappearance of tourism, and the COVID pandemic, life has not improved in the barrios. Notably, the Cuban government re-released the film in early October, in effect acknowledging the legitimacy of some of the July 11th protestors鈥 criticisms.

The Perfect Storm

By 2018, when Miguel D铆az-Canel was elected as Cuba鈥檚 new president, the country had experienced considerable change. The number of small businesses had increased substantially; greater freedom of expression contributed to an explosion of new films, music, art, literature, and commentary; international engagement 鈥 especially the opening to the United States in 2015 鈥 created several new opportunities for development; eased travel restrictions enabled Cubans to work abroad and retain their property and rights on the island; and the internet was becoming widely available. Yet the economy was stagnating, poverty was on the rise, and inequality had increased from a Gini Index of 0.24 in 1986 to 0.45 in 2017.[xvii] The most significant economic reforms remained in their planning stages, Venezuela could no longer provide the same amount of low-priced oil, and so Cuba鈥檚 ability to generate sufficient hard currency from sources other than tourism and remittances was even more problematic than it had been in 2013.

In the next three years, Cuba鈥檚 problems only deepened. Arch-conservative governments in Brazil, Ecuador, and Bolivia ended programs involving Cuban medical personnel, which resulted in Cuba losing more than one-half billion dollars. In 2018 and 2019 economic growth was anemic, which is incompatible 鈥渨ith a sustained improvement in the living conditions of a majority of Cubans,鈥 as Ricardo Torres argued.[xviii] Moreover, a drop of foreign currency earnings starting in late 2018 resulted in a significant shortage of basic necessities, including chicken, eggs, rice, beans, and hygienic products such as soap and toothpaste.

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, Cuba closed its doors to all foreign visitors. In 2020, Gross Domestic Product declined by 11 percent. By closing the island to visitors and taking preventive measures, Cuba weathered the pandemic fairly well in 2020. But shortly after it opened again to foreign visitors in late December 2020, the cases of COVID-19 began to soar. Consider that there were only 35 cases detected on November 25, 2020, and 9,907 on just one day in late August 2021.[xix] Hospitals were incapable of handling the influx of patients, and basic medical supplies were widely unavailable. On February 1, 2021 there were still only 6,337 total active cases in the country, though the weekly increase was 25 percent. Six days before the July 11th protests, the weekly accounting was up by 45 percent, with 30,840 active cases in the country. Deaths were also rising dramatically. In the week prior to July 5, there had been 122 deaths attributed to the virus. The next week there were 384.[xx] Cuba was quickly becoming the country with the worst COVID-19 rate in the Western Hemisphere.

These circumstances coincided with President Donald Trump鈥檚 decision to roll back most of President Barack Obama鈥檚 executive orders relaxing U.S. sanctions. New regulations reduced the amount of remittances Cuban-Americans could send to their families 鈥 these had accounted for one-third of Cuba鈥檚 hard currency earnings 鈥 and later forced the closure of Western Union鈥檚 operations in Cuba, which had been the principal conduit for remittances. Trump restrictions also reduced by more than half the number of U.S. visitors to Cuba prior to the onset of the pandemic. In a final blow in early 2021, the Trump State Department returned Cuba to its list of state sponsors of terrorism, which further hampered Cuba鈥檚 ability to engage in international financial transactions.

U.S. sanctions not only deprive Cuba of hard currency. They significantly increase the cost of buying basic medicines and even simple devices such as syringes to administer the COVID-19 vaccine the country developed. Consider that after President Gerald Ford modified the embargo in 1975 to allow US corporations in third countries to sell goods to Cuba, food and medicine made up 91 percent of Cuba's purchases from these companies.[xxi] But a 1992 US law ended that relaxation in the embargo. It also restricted ships that visited Cuban ports from docking in the United States for a period of six months. Cuba rarely can purchase a full shipload of goods. As a consequence, the cost of importing food and chemicals is high because these ships travel only partially full.

Meanwhile, the United States stepped up its efforts to instigate protests and disruptions. Under circumstances where Cuba was not struggling with multiple challenges, U.S. support for internal opponents might have had little impact. Indeed, in 2010 the U.S. Agency for International Development failed in an attempt to create a Twitter-like network in Cuba called ZunZuneo. It was intended to stimulate flash mobs of the sort that led to the 2011 Arab Spring. But in the context of a perfect storm, the annual $20 million 鈥渄emocracy promotion鈥 program undoubtedly contributed to the level of protests.[xxii] These projects continue today, well into the Biden administration.[xxiii] In addition, so-called 鈥渋nfluencers鈥 in Florida had an impact. Funded in part by conservative exiles, these commentators and hip-hop artists were empowered by Cubans鈥 newfound access to the internet. For example, the professional quality music video, 鈥淧atria y Vida,鈥 which became the anthem of the July 11 protestors, was produced in Miami in February 2021.[xxiv] Reuters journalist Sarah Marsh reports that the initial protest in the town of San Antonio 鈥渨as convened online by鈥he Facebook group 鈥楥ity of Humor,鈥欌 which is administered in Miami.[xxv]

The Cuban government鈥檚 immediate response to the protests only fueled the demonstrators鈥 anger. Focusing on the few who were violent, ignoring police violence against peaceful protestors, and dismissing legitimate grievances, D铆az-Canel described demonstrators as 鈥渕ercenaries, lackeys of the Yankee empire.鈥 He blamed most of Cuba鈥檚 problems on the United States, and called 鈥渙n all revolutionaries in our country, all communists, to take to the streets in any of the places where these provocations may take place today, from now on, throughout these days.鈥[xxvi] On July 14, D铆az-Canel did soften his remarks, recognizing that a lack of attention and sensitivity 鈥渂y our institutions鈥 to the population鈥檚 鈥減roblems鈥 contributed to widespread dissatisfaction.[xxvii] Still, as former Cuban ambassador Carlos Alzugaray observed, the government鈥檚 reaction lacked credibility and Cubans viewed it as 鈥渁n effort to cover up its own errors. What the regime has underestimated is the dissatisfaction that this mantra [blaming the United States for Cuba鈥檚 problems and belittling the sincerity of most demonstrators] now provokes.鈥[xxviii]

An Inflection Point?

In the immediate aftermath of the July 11 protests, the editors of this Symposium were flooded with blogs, articles, and email commentary from the world over, and especially from Cuba. We were surprised by both the openness of criticisms and the anguish and anger some expressed. Consider this private correspondence from a colleague who had believed deeply in and had devoted a lifetime working tirelessly for the goals of the Cuban Revolution:

My main problem and concern is the stupid and terrible behavior of the Cuban Government itself鈥.Since the approval of the new Constitution in 2019, the need to create norms, which translate the rights into real practice, has been delayed. With no strategic vision, and maybe some disdain, all the new measures have negatively affected ordinary Cubans鈥. Another long-delayed measure, the Tarea Ordenamiento, was supposed to eliminate the dual monetary system. Instead, they created special stores in which you can buy goods only with a hard currency bank card, not with Cuban pesos, not the result of honest work. For years, and particularly since the crisis of the 90鈥檚, class differences, inequalities and niches of real poverty have been a constant, but nobody listens. Now the Pandemic has revealed even more inequalities and distress.

Since July 11, there have been only a few isolated and peaceful demonstrations. The question thus arises, whether July 11 was an inflection point, an important moment in the development of the Cuban Revolution that will signify for Cubans a meaningful point of departure. One indication that it is an inflection point has been the Cuban government鈥檚 response. In the harshness of their crackdown against so many protestors, Cuban officials acted as if they viewed July 11 as a pre-revolutionary situation. At the end of September, according to some nongovernmental organizations, more than five hundred demonstrators remain in prison, and some have been forced to leave the country. As of this writing, the government has formally sentenced 67 protestors to prison, all for crimes of violence or the destruction of property.[xxix]

The government also reacted positively by announcing that state salaries would be increased. In addition it suspended tariffs for goods that visitors bring into the country, and announced it was developing a plan to increase energy production in order to reduce or eliminate blackouts. But such nods to the legitimacy of the protests may be too little and too late. Already some protestors have formed themselves into a nationwide organization called Grupo Archipi茅lago. In September 2021 it requested permits for peaceful rallies to be held on November 20, 2021 in several cities.[xxx] After the government announced that it would engage in a series of annual defense activities, culminating on November 19, opposition groups changed the date for the protests to November 15. On October 12, municipal authorities from the cities where the demonstrations are scheduled denied permission for the march permits, stating that 鈥渢he announced march鈥onstitutes a provocation as part of the strategy of 鈥榬egime change鈥 for Cuba, which has been tried out in other countries.鈥[xxxi]

Even though circumstances continue to change rapidly in Cuba, knowledgeable observers have had the benefit of four months to reflect on the meaning and importance of the July 11 protests. We have assembled a set of articles written expressly for this Symposium analyzing factors that engendered the demonstrations and which can also provide a basis for assessing the future course of the Cuban Revolution. In addition, we offer readers links to a set of materials that complement the essays in this symposium from more than three hundred items we reviewed. These include especially thoughtful pieces assessing the causes and meaning of the protests, most written by authors living on the island, as well as documents and official statements from Cuba, the United States, China and countries in Europe.

Notes

[i] Marc Frank and Sarah Marsh, 鈥淐uba sees biggest protests for decades as pandemic adds to woes,鈥 Reuters, July 12, 2021. Found at: https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/street-protests-break-out-cuba-2021-07-11/; William M. LeoGrande, 鈥淐uba鈥檚 Protests Are Different This Time,鈥 The Nation, July 13, 2021. Found at: https://www.thenation.com/article/world/cuba-protests-2021/.

[ii] J茅sus Arboleya, 鈥淭he Perfect Storm,鈥 Progreso Weekly, July 28, 2021. Found at: https://progresoweekly.us/the-perfect-storm/.

[iii] Katherine Tucker and Thomas R. Hedges, 鈥淔ood Shortages and an Epidemic of Optic and Peripheral Neuropathy in Cuba,鈥 Nutrition Reviews, vol. 51, No. 12 (1993), pp. 349鈥357; Jorge I. Dom铆nguez, 鈥淐uba鈥檚 Economic Transition: Successes, Deficiencies, and Challenges,鈥 in The Cuban Economy at the Start of the Twenty-First Century, ed. Jorge I. Dom铆nguez, Omar Everleny P茅rez Villanueva, and Lorena Barberia (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004), 19.

[iv] Mar铆a del Carmen Zabala Arg眉elles, 鈥淧overty and Vulnerability in Cuba Today,鈥 in A Contemporary Cuba Reader: The Revolution Under Ra煤l Castro, eds., Philip Brenner, Marguerite Rose Jim茅nez, John M. Kirk, and William M. LeoGrande (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2014), 192.

[v] Hope Bastian, Everyday Adjustments in Havana: Economic Reforms, Mobility, and Emerging Inequalities (Lanham, MD: Lexington, 2018), Chapters 2-3.

[vi] Katrin Hansing, 鈥淩ace and Inequality in the New Cuba: Reasons, Dynamics, and Manifestations,鈥 Social Research: An International Quarterly, 84:2 (Summer 2017), 331.

[vii] Mauricio de Miranda Parrondo, 鈥淭he Cuban Economy: Amid Economic Stagnation and Reversal of Reforms,鈥 in A Contemporary Cuba Reader: Reinventing the Revolution, eds., Philip Brenner, Marguerite Rose Jim茅nez, John M. Kirk, and William M. LeoGrande (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2007), 134.

[viii] Margot Olavarria, 鈥淩ap and Revolution: Hip-Hop Comes to Cuba,鈥 in Brenner, et al, A Contemporary Cuba Reader (2007), 367.

[ix] Ra煤l Castro Ruz, 鈥淪peech at the Celebration of the Attack on Moncada.鈥 Camaguey, July 26, 2007; accessed September 21, 2021 at www.granma.cu/granmad/secciones/raul26/02.html.

[x] Ra煤l Castro Ruz, 鈥淪peech during the closing ceremony of the Sixth Session of the Seventh Legislature of the National People鈥檚 Power Assembly,鈥 December 18, 2010; accessed September 22, 2021 at http://www.cuba.cu/gobierno/rauldiscursos/2010/ing/r181210i.html.

[xi] Sixth Congress of the Communist Party of Cuba, 鈥淩esolution on the Guidelines of the Economic and Social Policy of the Party and the Revolution,鈥 April 18, 2011, accessed September 23, 2021 at: www.cuba.cu/gobierno/documentos/2011/ing/l160711i.html.

[xii] Richard E. Feinberg, Open for Business: Building the New Cuban Economy (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2016), 140.

[xiii] Juan Triana Cordov铆, 鈥淢oving from Reacting to an External Shock toward Shaping a New Conception of Cuban Socialism,鈥 in No More Free Lunch: Reflections on the Cuban Economic Reform Process and Challenges for Transformation, eds, Claus Brundenius and Ricardo Torres P茅rez (Heidelberg: Springer, 2014), 234.

[xiv] Constituci贸n de la Rep煤blica de Cuba, Articles 22 and 28; accessed September 23, 2021 at: https://www.presidencia.gob.cu/media/filer/public/2019/04/11/constitucioncuba.pdf.

[xv] Jorge Mario S谩nchez Egozcue, 鈥淐hallenges of Economic Restructuring in Cuba,鈥 in Brenner, et al, A Contemporary Cuba Reader (2014), 129.

[xvi] Ricardo Torres P茅rez, 鈥淐oncluding Reflections of the Current Reform Process in Cuba,鈥 in Brundenius and Torres P茅rez, No More Free Lunch, 225.

[xvii] Ricardo Torres, 鈥淐uba鈥檚 Economy: Reforms and Delays, 2014-2018,鈥 in Cuba at the Crossroads, eds., Philip Brenner, John M. Kirk and William M. LeoGrande (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2020), 56.

[xviii] Torres, 鈥淐uba鈥檚 Economy,鈥 47.

[xix] Data found at COVID-19 Data Repository by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University. Accessed September 30, 2021 at: https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19.

[xx] World Health Organization, 鈥淐oronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic: Countries: Cuba.鈥 Accessed September 26, 2021 at: https://covid19.who.int/region/amro/country/cu.听听

[xxi] Donna Rich Kaplowitz, 鈥淯S Foreign Subsidiary Trade with Cuba: Before and After the Cuban Democracy Act,鈥 in Cuba in the International System: Normalization and Integration, eds., Archibald R.M. Ritter and John M. Kirk (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 1995).

[xxii] Knight Lab, 鈥淕uerra Digital en Cuba,鈥 Knight Lab, Northwestern University, August 21, 2021; accessed September 26, 2021 at: https://cdn.knightlab.com/libs/timeline3/latest/embed/index.html?source=141Ta_yyepHTcmxZRZGZrqE_kJV_oXX2RZsZwu845DUo. Also see: Ronald Su谩rez Rivas, 鈥淒os meses de feroz ataque digital de EE. UU. contra Cuba,鈥 Granma, August 30, 2021; accessed September 26, 2021 at: http://www.granma.cu/cuba/2021-08-30/denuncia-canciller-cubano-politica-de-guerra-no-convencional-promovida-por-estados-unidos.

[xxiii] U.S. Agency for International Development, 鈥淣otice of Funding Opportunity Number: 7200AA21RFA00024 鈥 Supporting Local Civil Society and Human Rights in Cuba,鈥 June 30, 2021; accessed September 20, 2021 at: https://govshop.com/opportunities/supporting-local-civil-society-and-human/. Also see: Tracey Eaton, 鈥淣ED failed to disclose 21% of Cuba grants,鈥 Cuba Money Project, March 9, 2021; accessed September 26, 2021 at: https://cubamoneyproject.com/2021/03/09/ned-3/.

[xxiv] Max Blumenthal, 鈥淐uba鈥檚 cultural counter-revolution: U.S. gov鈥檛 backed rappers, artists gain fame as 鈥榗atalyst for current unrest,鈥欌 MR Online, August 3, 2021; accessed September 19, 2021 at: https://mronline.org/2021/08/03/cubas-cultural-counter-revolution-u-s-govt-backed-rappers-artists-gain-fame-as-catalyst-for-current-unrest/. Notably the June 30 USAID Notice of Funding Opportunity (p. 4) lauded 鈥淧atria y Vida鈥 as 鈥渁s a rallying cry for change on the island.鈥

[xxv] Sarah Marsh, 鈥淭he Facebook Group That Staged First in Cuba's Wave of Protests,鈥 Reuters, August 9, 2021; accessed September 20, 2021 at: https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2021-08-09/the-facebook-group-that-staged-first-in-cubas-wave-of-protests.

[xxvi] As quoted in Gladys Leydis Ramos L贸pez and Juan Diego Nusa Pe帽alver, 鈥淲e defend the Revolution, above all else,鈥 Granma (English edition), July 12, 2021; accessed on September 26, 2021 at: http://en.granma.cu/cuba/2021-07-12/we-defend-the-revolution-above-all-else.

[xxvii] Yaditza del Sol Gonz谩lez y Gladys Leidys Ramos L贸pez, 鈥淒铆az-Canel: Hacemos un llamado a que el odio no se apropie del alma cubana, que es de bondad,鈥 Granma, July 14, 2021. https://www.granma.cu/cuba/2021-07-14/en-vivo-presidente-de-cuba-comparece-en-la-mesa-redonda-videos.

[xxviii] Carlos Alzugaray, 鈥淚t's not just the US embargo,鈥 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND SOCIETY, August 23, 2021; accessed on September 26, 2021 at: https://www.ips-journal.eu/topics/democracy-and-society/its-not-just-the-us-embargo-5373.

[xxix] Nora G谩mez Torres, 鈥淐uban artist freed from jail, forced into exile. Other protesters face harsh sentences,鈥 Miami Herald, September 27, 2021; accessed September 28, 2021 at: www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article254556737.html.

[xxx] 鈥淐uban activists ask government for authorization to carry out 鈥榩eaceful and civic鈥 march,鈥 OnCubaNews English, September 27, 2021; accessed September 27, 2021 at: https://oncubanews.com/en/cuba/cuban-activists-ask-government-for-authorization-to-carry-out-peaceful-and-civic-march/.

[xxxi] 鈥淓s il铆cita la marcha con fines desestabilizadores convocada en Cuba,鈥 Granma, October 12, 2021; accessed October 12, 2021 at: https://www.granma.cu/cuba/2021-10-12/es-ilicita-la-marcha-con-fines-desestabilizadores-convocada-en-cuba-12-10-2021-14-10-04. [Translation by Philip Brenner.]