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On eve of Carters trip to Cuba
Bush administration split over anti-Castro blockade
By Bill Vann
11 May 2002
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Jimmy Carters six-day trip to Cubathe first by
any US president, past or present, since the 1959 revolution toppled
the Washington-backed dictatorship of Fulgencio Batistahas
cast a spotlight on a bitter internecine dispute within the Bush
administration over the four-decades-old economic blockade against
the island nation.
Carters visit, which begins May 12, is to include meetings
with President Fidel Castro and political dissidents as well as
a live television broadcast over Cuban state television. It has
the backing of powerful corporate interests as well as politicians
in both the Democratic and Republican parties.
These layers see the ex-presidents trip as a step toward
lifting an embargo that has shut US corporations out of Cuba,
even as their European, Japanese and Canadian rivals are reaping
substantial profits off both trade and direct investment in the
Caribbean country.
The virulently anticommunist Cuban exile lobby, however, has
denounced the trip as virtual treason. The Miami Herald
recently released the text of a furious letter to President Bush
sent by two Cuban-American House members from MiamiReps.
Lincoln Diaz-Balart and Ileana Ros Lehtinenurging the White
House to block the visit.
We write to request that you deny permission for Mr.
Carter to visit the Cuban dictator, the letter declared.
While US law authorizes the granting of licenses by the
Treasury Department to US officials and members of Congress to
visit Cuba on official business for the US government, it does
not do so for former presidents seeking to appease anti-American
dictators.
Going on to describe Carter as directly responsible for
having brought to power the terrorist regime of the Ayatollah
Khomeini in Iran, the two congressmen pointedly informed
Bush that they had not sent the letter to Treasury Secretary Paul
ONeill, whose department is in charge of enforcing the embargo,
because of Mr. ONeills publicly professed opposition
to your policy in Cuba.
ONeill recently provoked the ire of the Miami-based anti-Castro
lobby by telling a congressional committee that he would rather
use Treasury Department resources to pursue terrorists than to
ferret out US citizens who have violated the embargo.
A Congressional coalition is preparing to pass legislation
that would knock a significant hole in the blockade, amending
a Treasury Department appropriations bill to prevent the department
from spending any money on prosecuting US citizens who violate
a ban on travel to Cuba. The anti-Castro exile groups are pressuring
for Bush to veto the entire appropriations bill until the amendment
is rescinded.
In an apparent bid to derail any move to ease the embargo policy,
John Bolton, the State Departments undersecretary for arms
control and international security affairs and one of the most
right-wing figures in the administration, earlier this week made
unsubstantiated accusations that the Castro government was using
Cubas advanced biotechnology industry to promote at
least a limited research and development program on biological
weapons. He declared Cuba part of the axis of evil,
and warned that it could become a target of the US
war on terrorism.
The Wall Street Journal called attention to this bitter
debate over the blockade in an editorial this week entitled Bushs
Cuban Pickle.
Now, back in the days when a younger Fidel was rapidly
turning his island into a Soviet client state, an embargo had
a certain logic, said the Journal, which generally
reflects the views of those sections of big business that brought
the Bush administration to power. But with the collapse
of the USSR ... its time to acknowledge that the primary
victim of our embargo is not Fidel but the Cuban people.
Had the Journal chosen to be more forthright, it would
have added, and US profits.
The editorial noted, however: When the Bush administration
looks at the embargo ... it sees a President whose bacon was saved
in Florida in 2000 by the Cuban-American vote. Not to mention
the ghost of Elian Gonzalez now hovering over Janet Renos
gubernatorial bid to unseat Mr. Bushs brother Jeb. Which
means that if youre White House politico Karl Rove, youd
rather see your boss declare war on Canada than risk upsetting
a key constituency in a key state by lifting the embargo with
Cuba.
The struggle over Cuba reflects an underlying contradiction
in the administration between the essential big business interests
it promotes and the policies demanded by the rabidly right-wing,
middle-class elementsfrom Cuban exiles and the gun lobby
to Christian fundamentalistswhich constitute the Republican
Partys active base. These conflicting social
and political agendas lend an air of crisis and instability to
its pursuit of both domestic and foreign policy.
Claims that the embargo is necessary to counter a security
threat from Cuba become ever more preposterous. The Castro regime
has long ago given up any pretense of backing social revolution
abroad. In recent months, it has not only accepted the use of
Guantanamo Bay Naval Base as a US detention camp for prisoners
of war captured in Afghanistan, but has guaranteed Washington
that should any of these POWs escape, the Cuban authorities will
hand them back.
Those defending the embargo, however, have substantial bases
of support within the administration. A significant number of
right-wing Cuban-Americans with intimate ties to the anti-Castro
groups operating out of Miami have gained key positions within
the Bush administration. Most prominent among them is Otto Reich,
the assistant secretary of state for the Western Hemisphere, a
former CIA operative who under the Reagan administration directed
an illegal propaganda campaign in support of the contra mercenary
war on Nicaragua.
In a speech before a meeting of the Council of the Americas
held at the State Department May 6, Reich insisted that the administration
was not about to budge from a hard-line defense of the economic
blockade.
Were not going to launch a lifeboat to rescue a
regime that is sinking under the weight of its historical failures,
he declared, asserting that Washington would maintain and strengthen
the economic embargo against Cuba. Many of those in the audience
represented US corporations that are chaffing at the restrictions,
anxious that the potential profits from Cuban markets are falling
to Canadian and Western European firms.
With so many opportunities for investment and business
in Latin America, why would anyone want to associate themselves
with a bankrupt, totalitarian regime, when you have to be partners
with the owner of all the countrys wealth, who decides laws
and judicial rulings on his own, who jails or expels those business
partners he doesnt agree with? he asked.
The warning that businessmen could be jailed must have sounded
somewhat ironic to the assembled corporate executives, given that
the Bush administration has attempted to do just that to enforce
its blockade against Cuba.
A federal jury in Philadelphia last month found a Canadian
businessman living in the US, James Sabzali, guilty of violating
the US embargo by selling water purification materials to Cuba
through a middleman. The Canadian government denounced as objectionable
and unacceptable the conviction of Sabzali for sales he
made in Canada that are entirely legal there.
Sabzali is the first foreign national indicted for trading
with the enemy. He and two American partners are appealing
the verdict. If the verdict is upheld, they will face prison terms
of four years or more.
Any Canadian or European businessmen who had previous dealings
in Cuba could be similarly prosecuted if they established residence
in the US. The prosecution was carried out under the terms of
the Cuban Democracy Act, a 1992 law signed by the
elder George Bush that prohibits overseas subsidiaries of US corporations
from trading with Cuba.
Four years later, the Helms-Burton act was signed into law
by Clinton, allowing American companies or citizens to sue foreign
corporations trafficking in property that they had
owned before the nationalizations carried out by the Castro government
beginning in 1960. The act was known on Capitol Hill as the Bacardi
law for the rum manufacturer who was one of its key backers.
When this bill was moving through Congress, Reich was serving
as the companys leading lobbyist.
The Helms-Burton act, with its threat of extra-territorial
enforcement of US laws against foreign business interests, provoked
bitter protests from European and Canadian business circles, as
well as fears within the US corporate elite that it could engender
retaliatory trade war measures.
Differences within Republican circles over the embargo issue
are also expressed in opposed views on a post-Castro transition
in Cuba. Those backing an easing of the economic sanctions argue
that Cuba can follow the path taken by the former USSR and Eastern
Europe, where triumph of the free market was embraced
by decisive layers of the old ruling bureaucracies, who turned
themselves into businessmen. The result has been a historically
unprecedented growth of poverty and social polarization.
Cuba has already seen fundamental changes in social relations
since Castros nationalist regime opened up the island to
widespread foreign investment in the mid-1990s. There is an ever-widening
gulf between those with access to the tourist industry, foreign
business and dollars, and the vast majority of workers who depend
upon diminishing real wages. Trade and investment, corporate opponents
of the embargo argue, will accelerate the emergence of a privileged,
propertied elite, while placing the levers of Cubas economy
in US hands.
The Cuban-American lobby, on the other hand, which counts among
its allies those now directing US Latin American policy, rules
out any rapprochement between Washington and the Castro regime,
no matter how sweeping the latters concessions. They are
determined to see a counterrevolution in Cuba that will erase,
root and branch, every trace of social progress brought about
since the fall of the Batista dictatorship in 1959, and place
in power the extreme right leaders of the Miami-based exile groups.
See Also:
Bush administration issues new threats
Is the US planning a war against Cuba?
[10 May 2002]
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