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NY Times, December 31, 2009
In Cuba, Hopeful Tenor Toward Obama Is Ebbing
By MARC LACEY

HAVANA — The Obama honeymoon here is over.

When President Obama came to office, the unflattering billboards of 
George W. Bush, including one outside the United States Interests 
Section of him scowling alongside Hitler, came down and the 
anti-American vitriol softened. Raúl Castro, who took over from his 
ailing brother Fidel in 2006, even raised the possibility of a 
face-to-face meeting with Mr. Obama, which would have been the first 
time one of the Castros met with a sitting American president.

But the tenor here has changed considerably, and Mr. Obama, whose 
election was broadly celebrated by Cuba’s racially diverse population, 
is now being portrayed by this nation’s leaders as an imperialistic, 
warmongering Cuba hater.

“As things appear now, there will be no big change in the relationship 
in the near future,” said Ricardo Alarcón, the president of Cuba’s 
National Assembly. He dismissed the Obama administration’s recent steps, 
like loosening restrictions on Cuban Americans’ traveling or sending 
money to the island and allowing American telecommunications companies 
to do business there, as “minor changes.”

The two countries have postponed the talks they restarted at the 
beginning of the Obama administration to discuss migration, postal 
delivery and other issues, blaming each other for the delays. In the 
absence of talks, Mr. Obama’s carrot-and-stick approach of relaxing some 
Bush-era policies while continuing to denounce the Castro government on 
human rights has failed to engage — and perhaps has enraged — the Cuban 
leadership.

While Raúl Castro repeated the offer to meet with Mr. Obama in a fiery 
speech recently, he also blasted the Obama administration for 
“undercover subversion” against Cuba and warned that his nation was 
ready for any American invasion. In one of his recent written 
commentaries in the state press, Fidel Castro, who has not appeared in 
public in nearly three years, wrote that Mr. Obama’s “friendly smile and 
African-American face” masked his sinister intentions to control Latin 
America.

Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla also recently accused Mr. 
Obama of behaving like an “imperial chief” at the climate change talks 
in Copenhagen, displaying “arrogant” behavior aimed at quashing 
developing countries.

“It’s unfortunate,” Wayne S. Smith, a former American diplomat in 
Havana, said of the rising tensions. “There was and still is potential 
for the Obama administration to change relations with Cuba. These 
comments coming out of Havana don’t help.”

Mr. Obama is the 11th president from what the Cubans call “El Imperio,” 
or “The Empire,” that the Castros have jousted with since the revolution 
a half century ago. And given that the Cubans have used Washington as a 
foil for so long, some of the high-voltage criticism of Mr. Obama is 
chalked up by some Cuba analysts as merely Havana’s normal stance when 
it comes to the United States. It is only a matter of time before the 
first anti-Obama billboard goes up, some experts speculate.

Mr. Alarcón, the National Assembly president, did give Mr. Obama credit 
for using language that is “more peaceful, and civilized and open” than 
his predecessor. But he said that it was clear to him that the White 
House was too distracted with other issues to make Cuba a priority.

Others in the Cuban government take matters further, maintaining that 
Mr. Obama, despite some initial steps toward rapprochement, has 
continued to follow the Bush administration’s goal of toppling the 
Communist leadership. “In the last few weeks we have witnessed the 
stepping up of the new administration’s efforts in this area,” Raúl 
Castro told Cuba’s National Assembly during its annual session on Dec. 
19. “They are giving new breath to open and undercover subversion 
against Cuba.”

He was referring to the detention this month of an American contractor 
distributing cellphones, laptops and satellite equipment in Cuba on 
behalf of the Obama administration. The Cubans have accused the 
contractor, whose identity has not been made public, of giving the 
equipment to civil society groups in Cuba without permission. For its 
part, the Obama administration complains that Raúl Castro is running the 
island exactly like his brother did, without fundamental freedoms and 
with continued abuses against political opponents. But Cuban officials 
say Washington’s insistence on more democracy in Cuba continues an old 
pattern of meddling in their country’s sovereign affairs.

“If the American government really wants to advance relations with Cuba, 
I recommend they leave behind the conditions of internal governance that 
they are trying to impose on us and that only Cubans can decide,” Raúl 
Castro said in his assembly speech.

Cuba continues to press its own issues with the United States, arguing, 
for instance, that Mr. Obama ought to immediately pardon five Cuban 
agents, known on the island as the Cuban Five, who are serving long 
prison terms in the United States for gathering information about Cuban 
exile groups in south Florida.

Mr. Alarcón reiterated a proposal that Raúl Castro has made on more than 
one occasion: the exchange of political prisoners in Cuba for the five 
Cubans held in the United States

The Cubans also insist that the Obama administration extradite to 
Venezuela Luis Posada Carriles, an anti-Castro militant accused of 
helping to blow up a Cuban airliner in 1976, killing 73 people. Mr. 
Posada, who is living in Miami on bail, faces charges in federal court 
in Texas for making what the government says were false statements to 
immigration officials. An immigration judge has ruled that he cannot be 
sent to Venezuela, a close ally of Cuba, because he faces a high 
likelihood of torture there.

“With the previous administration, it didn’t make sense to talk about 
anything,” said Mr. Alarcón. “This administration came to office 
pledging to change and to improve relations. Obama has nothing to do 
with the past but he’s finished his first year and so far nothing has 
happened with these issues.”

Mr. Smith, now a Cuba analyst at the Center for International Policy who 
advocates a lifting of the American trade and travel bans on Cuba, was 
supposed to accompany Barry McCaffrey, a retired American Army general, 
on a trip to Havana from Jan. 3 to 6 to discuss how the two countries 
could cooperate on fighting drug trafficking. But General McCaffrey 
pulled out, incensed by recent criticisms of Mr. Obama by Cuban officials.

“This type of shallow and vitriolic 1960s public diplomacy also makes 
Cuban leadership appear to be nonserious, polemical amateurs,” he said 
in a letter to Mr. Smith. “President Obama is the most thoughtful and 
nonideological U.S. chief executive that the Cubans have seen in 50 years.”

At the same time, still hopeful that the two countries can put their 
grudges aside, Mr. Smith said the United States should continue efforts 
to improve relations by removing Cuba from the list of state sponsors of 
terrorism, for instance, and by closing Radio Martí and TV Martí, the 
anti-Castro broadcasts financed by the United States government and sent 
from American soil to Cuba.

Some Cuban exiles, however, argue that Mr. Obama has gone far enough and 
that it is Cuba’s turn to make a meaningful gesture.

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