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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Carlos Alberto Montaner

Interviewed January 3, 2011

International support for the democrats who are struggling on behalf of freedom is a moral obligation on the part of democracies. In Cuba’s case, there’s even an ideological justification; the Cuban government for 52 years now has proclaimed the right to revolutionary internationalism. This means that they claim that the Cuban dictatorship has the right to help communist revolutionaries anywhere in the world by sending their armies, training them, giving them money and turning them into instruments for the fight. Now, if they believe in the legitimacy of revolutionary internationalism, they have to accept the legitimacy of democratic internationalism, that democratic nations help democratic movements in places where they suffer the hardships of dictatorships.

But there’s a difference. Democracies don’t provide violent assistance. Rather, what they want is to assist in broadcasting information, so that people are familiar with things, so that they can have clear ideas. And what they do is to assist on the intellectual and moral level, on the level of international legitimacy. But this right to democratic internationalism must of course be constantly exercised, and the U.S. does well in helping democratic opposition forces wherever they’re able to help. In the same way as when the U.S. received the help of those who wanted to fight against British Imperialism within the U.S., basically France and Spain.