Courtland Milloy, meet Walter Duranty.

Duranty, a correspondent for The New York Times, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1932 for his series on the Soviet Five-Year Plan. He managed to deny the existence of a man-made famine that killed millions of Ukrainians that year. ?Any report of a famine in Russia is today an exaggeration or malignant propaganda,? Duranty boldly wrote in August of 1933.

But Duranty was a dupe, an apologist for Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, a man he once called ?the greatest living statesman.? And besides, that was before Churchill?s Iron Curtain speech.

So what does Milloy, a Metro section columnist for The Washington Post, have to do with Duranty? Well, these days, virtually everyone says the dangers and evils of communism were apparent. Virtually everyone claims to have opposed it. But, like Duranty in his day, there are still a few communist apologists around.

?I was still carrying a lot of that spooky old Cuban commie baggage when I arrived last week.
The Cold War shadow was tailing me,? Milloy wrote on April 18. ?I feared my room was bugged.
Would they try to brainwash me, or just ply me with rum and make me talk??

Well, they did get him to talk -- but not about American state secrets (and just what secrets would a journalist have to share, anyway?). Instead, they got him to say just what they wanted him to: Cuba?s not so bad. And in some ways, it?s better than the United States.

 ?You really can walk down dark, narrow streets in this city and discover there is nothing to fear but fear itself,? he wrote. Not only that, ?Cuba has a near 100 percent literacy rate and free health care, and no hospital in the country has ever closed its doors.? Plus, ?school is free -- as is all education in Cuba. Castro, it turns out, has been saying ?leave no child behind? since 1959.?

Well, of course the streets are safer in a dictatorship. The streets of Soviet Moscow were safe, as well. For foreigners, that is.

Low-level street crime is one of the prices we pay to live in an open society. The Cuban people don?t have that luxury. And if they are picked up by Fidel Castro?s police, whether the charges are legitimate or not, it?s possible they?ll simply disappear.

And while it may be true that all Cubans can read, what they can read is severely limited.
Cuban law bans the ?donation, receipt, request, distribution or facilitation of material, financial or other resources for the purpose of undermining state security.? In other words, if the Cuban government doesn?t like what you?re reading or writing, it can and will arrest you.