
Fidel taked to the Cuban Ambassadors
The Commander in Chief Fidel Castro talked to the Cuban ambassadors gathered at the Ministry Foreign Affairs for over an hour and a half on the serious dangers to hang over the humanity if it unleashes an attack against Iran or North Korea and handed them a letter personally addressed to each of them, Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla and its Board of Directors.
The leader of the Cuban Revolution was answering questions or comments from the national diplomats and reviewed news and political analysis of the most diverse sources to conclude that the pressures facing Iran at this time are "a coal copy of what they did to Mohammed Mossadegh, Prime Minister of that nation, who was overthrown by a coup encouraged by the United States and other Western powers when it launched a policy of nationalization of resources in the 50’s of last century.
The Commander in Chief said in his meeting with the ambassadors some of the questions raised to the economists of the Center for Research on the World Economy Research Center during his recent visit to the center, including one 20 or 15 years ago would hardly have been raised anyone: Can the empire keep the rule if the money market disappears and the dollar would have some value if there was no the money market?
Fidel again insisted on the arsenal of more than 20 000 non-strategic and strategic weapons in the great powers and wondered what the difference is the so-called conventional weapons that the U.S. now seeks to promote as an alternative, if the technological development of armaments recent years given to all the similar destruction power.
He warned that it is ridiculous to think of the nuclear suitcase with a button that was the panic of the early Cold War. "All the answers are already programmed. It's just a matter of seconds, "he said and did not forget to point out that although several sources exclude the data, we know that Israel is the world's sixth nuclear power.
MINREX workers and residents of EL Vedado, who gathered spontaneously to know his presence there, said good bye to Fidel with a long ovation. From the crowd gathered on the sidewalk, a university graduated girl raised her diploma, devoted to him with gratitude.




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