Fidel Castro said Cuba's economic model no longer works, a US-based journalist reported Wednesday following interviews with the former president last week. Jeffrey Goldberg, a writer for Atlantic Monthly magazine, wrote in a blog that he asked Castro, 84, if Cuba's model - Soviet-style communism - was still worth exporting to other countries, and he replied, "The Cuban model doesn't even work for us anymore." The comment appeared to reflect Castro's agreement, which he also expressed in a column for Cuban media in April, with his younger brother, President Raul Castro, who has initiated modest reforms to stimulate Cuba's troubled economy. Goldberg said Julia Sweig, a Cuba expert at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank in Washington who accompanied him to Havana, believed Castro's words reflected an acknowledgment that "the state has too big a role in the economic life of the country." Such sentiment would help President Castro against those members of the ruling Communist Party who oppose his attempts to loosen the state's hand, Sweig told Goldberg. Goldberg wrote in a blog Tuesday that Castro summoned him to Havana to discuss his recent article about the likelihood of conflict between Israel and Iran. He said Castro criticized Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for anti-Semitism and denying that the Holocaust occurred. Castro also criticized his own actions during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, when he urged the Soviet Union to launch nuclear weapons against the United States, telling Goldberg "it wasn't worth it at all." Reuters |