From: "Walter Lippmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 14:16:10 -0700
To: "CubaNews" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [CubaNews] Bush plots a course for Cuba

Bush plots a course for Cuba
Guest column by Holger Jensen

Faced with a dilemma on what to do about Cuba,
President Bush did both.

First he pleased hard-line Cuban exiles in Miami --
whose votes are needed to help re-elect his brother as
Florida's governor next year -- by ordering stricter
enforcement of the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba and
more support for dissidents opposed to Fidel Castro's
regime.

Then he pleased the European Union by waiving Title
III of the Helms-Burton Act, which would have allowed
those selfsame exiles to sue foreign firms using
property they had lost in the 1959 Communist takeover.
European investors in Cuba view the law as
extra-territorial and unenforceable.

The double-barreled approach seemed to work. Even Sen.
Jesse Helms, R-N.C., who had criticized President
Clinton for waiving Title III 10 times in a row,
praised Bush for being ''much tougher overall'' than
his ''wishy-washy'' predecessor.

However, the practical effects of that toughness are
debatable, since many other lawmakers do not feel the
same way. A growing bipartisan consensus in Congress
views the embargo as counterproductive, having failed
for 40 years to dislodge Castro from power while
causing hardship to 11 million Cubans.

Sanctions force Cuba to pay higher interest rates on
its $30 billion foreign debt and increase shipping
costs by forcing the impoverished island to trade with
more distant nations instead of its closest neighbor,
the United States. They also hurt American farmers and
businessmen by denying them a market only 90 miles off
Florida's shore.

Last year, under pressure from agribusiness, Congress
passed a law permitting ''humanitarian'' food sales to
Cuba, but without financing by U.S. banks to appease
the Cuban-American lobby. This year, Sen. Chris Dodd,
D-Conn., introduced a ''Bridges to the Cuban People''
bill that would lift not only the credit ban but also
travel restrictions that bar Americans from visiting
Cuba unless they are on cultural exchanges or have
relatives there.

In truth, Americans find it relatively easy to get
around the travel ban. Cuba can be reached through
Canada, Mexico, Jamaica or other Caribbean islands, is
openly advertised by travel agents and attracted
200,000 U.S. visitors last year. This makes the United
States the third largest source of tourism in Cuba,
now the country's biggest foreign exchange earner at
$2 billion a year. Remittances from Cuban-Americans to
family members bring in another $1 billion or so.

Bush has ordered the Treasury Department's Office of
Foreign Assets Control to hire additional personnel to
monitor travel to Cuba and limit the amount of money
Cuban exiles send home. He also has promised more
funding to Cuba's pro-democracy dissidents.

But these moves are opposed by the very people he is
trying to help.

Cuban dissident leader Elizardo Sanchez opposes the
travel ban, saying the more Americans visit the better
Cuba's chances of liberalizing. The same goes for the
embargo. ''Isolation is not the way to get rid of
Castro,'' Sanchez contends. ''Isolation is oxygen for
totalitarianism.''

As for foreign aid, it's the last thing dissidents
want since it would prove Castro's oft-repeated charge
that they are subversives in the pay of the U.S.
government. Receiving money from a foreign power to
undermine Castro's regime is a crime in Cuba, turning
his relatively harmless opponents into ''foreign
agents.''

Thus they were appalled when Helms and Sen. Joseph
Lieberman, D-Conn, unveiled the ''Cuban Solidarity
Act'' in May. Modeled on U.S. aid to Poland's
Solidarity movement in the 1980s, it would provide
$100 million over four years to finance fax machines,
telephones and outright cash payments to ''voices of
liberty'' on the island.

Castro, of course, was delighted. ''An excellent,
brilliant idea,'' he said on a visit to Portugal.
''The money will help us out with the embargo and show
who these few malcontents are really working for. The
more mistakes they make, the weaker the U.S. position
will be.''

A dismayed Sanchez responded: ''We will never accept
this type of aid. You cannot bring freedom to people
with money.''

But Bush seems determined to give it anyway.

Holger Jensen is the international editor of the Rocky
Mountain News.


Publication date: 07-24-01

Copyright 2001 The Cincinnati Post, an E.W. Scripps
newspaper. 



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