Col. CĂ©sar RodrĂguez of Cubaâs Ministry of the Interior announced Sept. 7 the arrest of 17 people who were part of a secret network recruiting young men on the island to join Moscowâs forces in their war on Ukraine.
Cubaâs Foreign Ministry said it had uncovered the operation Sept. 4.
âThe Ministry of the Interior ⊠is working on the neutralization and dismantling of a human trafficking network that operates from Russia to incorporate Cuban citizens living there, and even some from Cuba, into the military forces participating in war operations in Ukraine,â the Foreign Ministry said. âCuba is not part of the war in Ukraine.â
The Cuban Revolution has a long record of support for national self-determination worldwide.
The Foreign Ministry pointed out that âCubaâs enemies are promoting distorted information that seeks to tarnish the countryâs image and present it as an accomplice to these actions that we firmly reject.â
Mouthpieces for the U.S. rulers and their decadeslong economic war against the Cuban Revolution lost no time slandering the countryâs government. The Sept. 12 New York Sun claimed âCuba, Faced With Economic Crisis, âRentsâ Soldiers to Russia for Ukraine War.â
âCuba has a firm and clear historical position against mercenarism,â the countryâs Foreign Ministry said, pointing out âit plays an active role in the United Nations in rejection of the aforementioned practice, being the author of several of the initiatives approved in that forum.â
RodrĂguez said that recruiters were targeting Cubans interested in military activity, focusing on those âwith antisocial behavior and criminal records.â
The Moscow Times reported that a Facebook group, Cubans in Moscow, advertised a one-year contract with the Russian army, offering Russian citizenship to recruits and their families.
News outlets from the Ryazan region in central Russia reported that âseveral Cubansâ have signed contracts to fight, after they were promised a one-time payment of $2,433 from the Russian federal budget, $2,500 from Ryazanâs regional budget and a monthly salary of $2,545.
Two 19-year-old Cubans, Andorf Antonio VelĂĄzquez GarcĂa from Havana, and Alex Rolando Vega DĂaz from Santa Clara, told the Miami Herald they signed up for construction work in Russia and ended up in a military training unit in Ryazan. They were dispatched to a trench in Ukraine, but sent back to Ryazan when they got sick.
âWhat is happening in Ukraine is ugly. It is hard to see people with their heads open before you, to see how people get killed,â Vega DĂaz said.
âFrom my heart, I tell all Cubans who plan to come here not to come. It is crazy here,â he said.
Source: Themilitant.com