Tomado de Babalú Blog:
The inside scoop on the ICCAS scandal at the University of Miami
By Carlos Eire
For many years,
José Azel was a senior scholar at UM’s Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American
Studies.
His role at that institution ended abruptly this summer when UM’s
president Julio Frenk fired everyone at
the Institute.
Yes, Frenk fired everybody. It was an academic massacre. And it’s
clear he wanted to shut down the Institute.
When news of
Frenk’s autocratic execution orders caused a stink in the Cuban exile
community, a UM vice-president denied that Frenk had tried to shut down ICCAS,
and that the “retirement” announced by director Jaime Suchlicki had been
“misunderstood.”
As the uproar increased, Frenk named an interim director who has close
ties to a cruise ship company that takes American tourists to Cuba, and who
actually leads such tours himself, on a
luxury vessel.
This information
comes straight from someone on the inside, who was summarily fired, along with
everyone else.
See for yourself how Dr. Frenk, aided by Harvard’s Castrophilic
professor Jorge Dominguez, a Cuban exile,
tried to to get away with murder — metaphorically speaking, of course…
Below
is José Azel’s full exposé.
ICCAS-gate
at the University of Miami: It’s the Cover-up that Gets You
By José Azel
The Watergate
scandal of the Nixon administration and President Clinton’s forcefully claiming
“I did not have sexual relations with that woman…” are two of the most infamous
examples of the “it’s the cover-up that gets you” dictum.
The suffix
“-gate” has become synonymous with presidential scandal and cover-up. I
introduce it here to expose the ICCAS-gate cover-up by University of Miami
President Dr. Julio Frenk. The buck stops with the President, and I seek to
show, responsibly and factually, that Dr. Frenk intended to dismantle ICCAS,
and is now engaged in a cover-up of those intentions.
My association
with the University of Miami dates back to the late 1960s when I was a business
student. Over the years, I earned bachelors, masters, and doctorate degrees,
becoming a three-time UM alumni. I am also a former adjunct business professor,
and a member of the ICCAS team. This is to say, I wish only the best for my
beloved Alma Mater and my community.
But, whether Dr.
Frenk intended to dismantle ICCAS is, as Alexander Hamilton noted in Federalist
No. 23, “one of those truths which, to a correct and unprejudiced mind, carries
its own evidence along with it.”
The controversy surfaced with a July 10 Miami Herald article
citing Dr. Jaime Suchlicki as having been instructed to effect the cessation of
ICCAS operations. In June, Dr. Suchlicki wrote to his
staff:
“This
is to inform you that as of August 15, 2017, I will be leaving the University
of Miami. I have been instructed by the Office of the Provost to effect
the cessation of operations for the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American
Studies, consequently your position has been eliminated and you will be placed
on layoff status as of August 15, 2017.”
I respectfully
complied by vacating my office, returning my keys, and retiring in sad silence.
Now, compelled by the cover-up, I speak publicly for the first time on
ICCAS-gate.
As
instructed by Dr. Frenk the entire ICCAS staff was fired in June. Yet, the
July Miami Herald article quotes Jacqueline R. Menendez,
UM’s Vice President for Communications, caustically refuting Dr. Suchlicki:
“the only thing that has happened is that Jaime retires on Aug. 15 there are no
plans to close ICCAS.”
I will generously
assume that Ms. Menendez was misled by her boss, President Frenk. Her statement
that “there are no plans to close ICCAS,” when, in fact, ICCAS had already been
effectively closed by the firing of all its personnel is patently false.
I hope Ms. Menendez would not be as callous as to consider the firing
of the entire ICCAS staff a non-event as implied by her statement that “the
only thing that has happened is that Jaime retires on Aug. 15.” Is the firing of all ICCAS personnel not a “thing”?
I have verified
that Dr. Suchlicki’s termination agreement explicitly requires him to “…effect
the cessation of operations for the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American
Studies.” Similarly, Ms. Menendez should have sought the truth from her boss to
avoid misleading our community. She has now been made complicit in the
cover-up.
Those are the
facts as I know them. Now we can ask: If Dr. Frenk’ did not intend to dismantle
ICCAS, why did he find it necessary to fire, without the courtesy of an
explanation, the entire ICCAS staff? Were they incompetent, or were they an
impediment to the implementation of his plans? What were those plans?
Dr. Frenk had
been formulating his Cuban studies ideas for many months, and he had
commissioned a comprehensive study of options to his friend, Harvard Professor
Jorge Dominguez. Given this careful advanced planning, if there was no
intention to dismantle ICCAS, the announcement of Dr. Suchlicki’s departure
would have been accompanied with the announcement of the new interim director,
or perhaps even the new director.
That was not the
case, and the untimely appointment of an interim director appears to be an
improvised, disingenuous cover-up to placate the community’s outrage. Dr. Frenk
has been untruthful with our community, and now, under pressure, he will meet
with community representatives on 18 August. I pray he uses that opportunity to
come clean about his designs. Our community deserves honesty, not an
ICCAS-gate cover-up.
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