· Just
in: an academic paper
that speculates on the possible cause of the sounds heard by U.S. diplomats in
Havana, but not on the cause of the harms.
· Cuba
turns to SES Networks of Belgium to expand its connection to the global
Internet and to improve connectivity internally. The contract is described in
the company’s press
release and in Granma.
· Dissident
Eliecer Avila, on extended stay in the United States, praises the
U.S. health care system after his first child was born in a Virginia hospital.
Medicaid covered all the costs.
· From Max
Boot’s new biography of the CIA’s Edward Lansdale, an excerpt on Operation
Mongoose and the “remote, romantic myth” of creating a Cuban opposition
movement from the outside. It turns out that Lansdale hated the Cuba assignment
and wanted out the whole time.
· A
sharply written first-person article in Granma on a
section of Cuba’s central highway in Villa Clara that is in disrepair and
causing fatal accidents.
· A new
anglicism, “buldoceada,” in a Granma story about
the war against marabu. The Real Academia doesn’t recognize it, but it means
“bulldozed.”
· As we
debate Russian interference in the 2016 election, Granma scoffs that
we’re getting a taste of our own medicine.
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