Guantanamo.- The subversive scheme designed for Cuba by the U.S. Government, after reaping innumerable failures in its objective of putting an end to the Revolution and restoring capitalism on the Island, is now being extended as a model against other governments that are uncomfortable for Washington.

Bolivia, recent victim of an attempted coup d’état, in the worst style of the “barbarisms” of past decades, tops the list of nations where, according to the White House, the subversive pattern should be applied.

An Argentine NGO called Cultura Democrática (Democratic Culture) serves as a platform for its implementation. This is evidenced by a document of that organization entitled “Support to the Cuban Civil Society as a method of pressure to totalitarian governments. Its possible application to Bolivia,” which highlights its role in this scheme.

The document states that “based on the analysis of the U.S. political approach to strengthening democracy and the legitimate use of agents of change in Cuban society, where democratic culture plays a significant role in supporting the Cuban opposition, we propose a similar vision for its application in Bolivia.”

Rarely has such shamelessness been seen, in which the subversive spawn describes in detail the way in which, from the top U.S. political leadership, the system of financial and economic measures of the blockade, the formation of agents of change, the work against the youth, etc., is organized and promoted against Cuba, and how useful it would be to apply this experience against other countries in the region.

The pamphlet emphasizes in one of its paragraphs how, according to them, “practice has shown that it is possible to awaken feelings and actions against the regime from its vital nucleus, which is the youth.”

On the other hand, it mentions those directly involved, that is, some of the operators of “experience”, such as Micaela Hierro, founder and president of the Democratic Culture association, used by the NED as an intermediary to finance organizations such as the San Isidro Movement, and those who pull the strings of the puppets, among them the Usaid, the NED and Atlas Network.

This last organization, Atlas Network, is “praised” in the document for having succeeded in having a Cuban artist awarded the Latin Grammy, “positioning this figure at an international level”, a lowliness that needs no comment.

The relationship of this project with the recent attempt to overthrow by force the legitimate government of Luis Arce in Bolivia, and other similar actions in recent years, involving the same operators working against Cuba, may seem casual to some; however, we cannot overlook that the scheme developed by the U.S. power is the result of perfecting the hybrid war to destabilize the continent.

Preserving their hegemony over what they still consider their “backyard” is a high priority, and to achieve it they stop (and will stop) at nothing.

Edited by Liubis Balart

By Granma