Agence France-Presse, Cuba has been upgrading its military arsenal since President Fidel Castro fell ill 13 months ago, to defend itself against a possible U.S. invasion, senior officers told Trabajadores weekly on August 27.
“In the irregular combat we would face in Cuba in case of an invasion, the engineering, infantry and artillery systems we produce and repair here are of vital importance, because they’re designed for the aggressor’s direct assault,” said Lt. Col. Pascual Machado, chief coordinator of Cuba’s Military Industrial Firm (EMI).
EMI director Col. Arturo Torres, told the weekly that the facilities he runs “have increased their production level since 1998 more than four-fold.”
Weapon systems that have been upgraded in precision targeting and destructive capabilities include munitions, grenades, land mines and anti-tank rockets, Trabajadores said.
As an example, the weekly said a laser-guided targeting system called VLMA has boosted the AK-M automatic rifle’s precision by 80 percent to 90 percent, regardless of the shooter’s skill level.
Interim Cuban President Raul Castro, on Cuba’s July 26 national day, urged the successor of U.S. President George W. Bush to seek an end to more than a half-century of U.S.-Cuban enmity through dialogue.
Washington said talks would be possible only if Cuba turned to democracy.
Raul Castro, 76, who was appointed to Cuba’s top post after Fidel Castro, 81, underwent delicate surgery on July 31, 2006, also warned that Cuba was ready to defend itself if needed.
Raul Castro said special military operation Caguairan, put in place following Fidel Castro’s illness, would finish at the end of 2008 — U.S. presidential elections take place in November of next year.
Fidel Castro, who has been writing regularly in Cuba’s leading newspapers since March, in a June article said Cuba should continue producing and buying weapons to defend itself from the “growing aggression” of the Bush administration.