Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Answers needed on Cuba's missile shipment to North Korea

Answers needed on Cuba's missile shipment to North Korea
July 23
The Kansas City Star

The following editorial appeared in the Kansas City Star on Monday, July 22:

Given Cuba's long-running economic crisis, you could imagine that some
entrepreneurial lieutenant of the revolutionary government got a gold
star for inventing a possible new revenue stream.

It certainly sounds like a clever move to clean out the Cold War closet
and dump some outmoded radar systems, Russian jets and missile parts on
a willing taker. After all, Cuba's Museum of the Revolution can hold
only so many military souvenirs. Were the parts going to North Korea for
repair, as Cuba has confessed in the days since a North Korean ship was
halted at the Panama Canal? Or is Kim Jong Un in the midst of refreshing
his toy chest?

And burying the cargo under bags of sugar - that's the kind of low-tech
comedy we've come to expect from the Cubans.

So, was Cuba paying North Korea in advance with sugar for the fix-it
work or was it selling a fellow underfed nation one of the only exports
of substance it has to offer, along with the military hardware?

Weapons analysts have said that even if the restored equipment made its
way back to Cuba, it would be ineffective to useless. The Russians made
these things a half century ago. The Cubans can hardly keep Russia's
leftover Lada cars running.

Seriously folks, this episode, which reportedly follows a similar
Cuba-to-North Korea shipping event in 2012, comes right at a time when
the U.S. and Cuba seemed ready for constructive engagement.

Is this another Cuban Missile Crisis, the edge-of-war standoff of 1962
that should've remained a distant memory?

That's doubtful. But what is certain is that Cuba owes the U.S. and the
world a full explanation. The United Nations will take up the matter,
and the U.S. government, thankfully, is not reacting in haste.

We've been led to expect better from Cuban President Raul Castro, who
has seemed more open to repairing relations with the U.S. than was his
older brother and predecessor, Fidel. But making nice with big boy Kim
puts Castro on a par with - say it ain't so - Dennis Rodman.

That's a comedy and a tragedy all rolled up into one.

Source: "Answers needed on Cuba's missile shipment to North Korea -
KansasCity.com" -
http://www.kansascity.com/2013/07/23/4361378/answers-needed-on-cubas-missile.html

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