By Paul Lewis.
The New York Times. March 9, 2001
Felipe Pazos, a Cuban economist who initially supported Fidel Castro because
he said he believed that he would restore democracy but broke with him in 1959,
died on Feb. 26 in exile at Puerto Ordaz, Venezuela. He was 88.
In February 1957, Dr. Pazos and his son Xavier arranged for a correspondent
from The New York Times, Herbert L. Matthews, to interview and photograph Mr.
Castro and his guerrillas at their hideaway in the southern Sierra Maestra.
The interviews belied the contentions by the dictatorship of Fulgencio
Batista that Mr. Castro had been killed and propelled him and his
revolutionaries into the international limelight.
In July 1957, Dr. Pazos met Mr. Castro in the mountains. With Raúl
Chibas, another Batista opponent, they issued a manifesto intended to reassure
the middle classes about the revolutionaries' intentions.
The revolutionaries committed themselves to "the fine ideal of a Cuba
free, democratic and just," pledging to restore the democratic Constitution
of 1940 that had been abrogated after the Batista coup in 1952.
They promised a free press and free elections in all unions. Uncultivated
land was to be redistributed among landless peasants.
Immediately after the manifesto, Dr. Pazos and his family were forced to
flee the country.
When Mr. Castro seized power two years later, Dr. Pazos was reappointed
president of the Banco Nacional de Cuba, Cuba's central bank, which he had
headed in the early 50's, resigning after Batista took over.
But the two quickly fell out, with Dr. Pazos increasingly disillusioned by
Mr. Castro's confrontational attitude toward the United States, his failure to
make good on his pledge to restore democracy and the growing power of
Communists.
Accompanying Mr. Castro on a visit to the United States in April 1959, Dr.
Pazos was annoyed at being forbidden to discuss economic aid for Cuba.
In October, he was further disillusioned by the arrest and imprisonment for
treason of Maj. Hubert Matos, the former military governor of Camagüey and
a leading anti-Communist in the army.
Later that month, when the former air force commander, Díaz Lanz,
flew a B-25 bomber from Florida over Havana to drop anti- Castro leaflets, Mr.
Castro denounced the United States for complicity in the raid.
On Oct. 23, 1959, Dr. Pazos told President Osvaldo Dorticós that he
wanted to resign, saying Mr. Castro had overreacted to the raid and that if
Major Matos had been arrested for opposing Communism, he should be, too.
"He realized then that the revolution would be taken over by the
Communists and the 1940 Constitution would never be restored as Castro had
promised," said Ernesto Betancourt, another former Castro supporter who
also fell out with Mr. Castro and went into exile.
Mr. Castro's brother Raúl proposed executing Dr. Pazos and Major
Matos immediately.
But Dr. Pazos was eventually allowed to leave the country, and his Central
Bank position was taken by Che Guevara.
Dr. Pazos was born in 1912 in Havana. He earned a doctorate from the
University of Havana in 1938, joined the Cuban foreign service and in 1944
attended the Bretton Woods conference that created the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund.
He was on the I.M.F. staff from 1946 until 1949, when he returned to Havana
to work on the creation of the central bank there, working as president from
1950 until 1952.
After leaving Cuba, he worked on the Alliance for Progress and then for the
Inter-American Development Bank, until his retirement in 1975, when he moved to
Venezuela.
His best known publications were "Economic Development of Latin America"
(1961) and "Chronic Inflation in Latin America" (1972).
His wife, the former Fara Vea, died in 1982. His son Xavier, who played the
boy in the film of "The Old Man and the Sea," is an engineer in
Venezuela. Another son and a daughter also survive.
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