End the U.S. Embargo on Cuba
By THE EDITORIAL BOARDOCT. 11, 2014
Scanning a map of the world must give President Obama a sinking feeling
as he contemplates the dismal state of troubled bilateral relationships
his administration has sought to turn around. He would be smart to take
a hard look at Cuba, where a major policy shift could yield a
significant foreign policy success.
For the first time in more than 50 years, shifting politics in the
United States and changing policies in Cuba make it politically feasible
to re-establish formal diplomatic relations and dismantle the senseless
embargo. The Castro regime has long blamed the embargo for its
shortcomings, and has kept ordinary Cubans largely cut off from the
world. Mr. Obama should seize this opportunity to end a long era of
enmity and help a population that has suffered enormously since
Washington ended diplomatic relations in 1961, two years after Fidel
Castro assumed power.
In recent years, a devastated economy has forced Cuba to make reforms —
a process that has gained urgency with the economic crisis in Venezuela,
which gives Cuba heavily subsidized oil. Officials in Havana, fearing
that Venezuela could cut its aid, have taken significant steps to
liberalize and diversify the island's tightly controlled economy.
They have begun allowing citizens to take private-sector jobs and own
property. This spring, Cuba's National Assembly passed a law to
encourage foreign investment in the country. With Brazilian capital,
Cuba is building a seaport, a major project that will be economically
viable only if American sanctions are lifted. And in April, Cuban
diplomats began negotiating a cooperation agreement with the European
Union. They have shown up at the initial meetings prepared, eager and
mindful that the Europeans will insist on greater reforms and freedoms.
The authoritarian government still harasses and detains dissidents. It
has yet to explain the suspicious circumstances surrounding the death of
the political activist Oswaldo Payá. But in recent years officials have
released political prisoners who had been held for years. Travel
restrictions were relaxed last year, enabling prominent dissidents to
travel abroad. There is slightly more tolerance for criticism of the
leadership, though many fear speaking openly and demanding greater rights.
The pace of reforms has been slow and there has been backsliding. Still,
these changes show Cuba is positioning itself for a post-embargo era.
The government has said it would welcome renewed diplomatic relations
with the United States and would not set preconditions.
As a first step, the Obama administration should remove Cuba from the
State Department's list of nations that sponsor terrorist organizations,
which includes Iran, Sudan and Syria. Cuba was put on the list in 1982
for backing terrorist groups in Latin America, which it no longer does.
American officials recognize that Havana is playing a constructive role
in the conflict in Colombia by hosting peace talks between the
government and guerrilla leaders.
Starting in 1961, Washington has imposed sanctions in an effort to oust
the Castro regime. Over the decades, it became clear to many American
policy makers that the embargo was an utter failure. But any proposal to
end the embargo angered Cuban-American voters, a constituency that has
had an outsize role in national elections.
The generation that adamantly supports the embargo is dying off. Younger
Cuban-Americans hold starkly different views, having come to see the
sanctions as more damaging than helpful. A recent poll found that a
slight majority of Cuban-Americans in Miami now oppose the embargo. A
significant majority of them favor restoring diplomatic ties, mirroring
the views of other Americans.
The Obama administration in 2009 took important steps to ease the
embargo, a patchwork of laws and policies, making it easier for Cubans
in the United States to send remittances to relatives in Cuba and
authorizing more Cuban-Americans to travel there. And it has paved the
way for initiatives to expand Internet access and cellphone coverage on
the island.
Share your thoughts. We're especially interested in hearing thoughts and
personal experiences from the Cuban community.
Share your thoughts »
Fully ending the embargo will require Congress's approval. But there is
much more the White House could do on its own. For instance, it could
lift caps on remittances, allow Americans to finance private Cuban
businesses and expand opportunities for travel to the island.
It could also help American companies that are interested in developing
the island's telecommunications network but remain wary of the legal and
political risks. Failing to engage with Cuba now will likely cede this
market to competitors. The presidents of China and Russia traveled to
Cuba in separate visits in July, and both leaders pledged to expand ties.
Cuba and the United States already have diplomatic missions, called
interests sections, that operate much like embassies. However, under the
current arrangement, American diplomats have few opportunities to travel
outside the capital to engage with ordinary Cubans, and their access to
the Cuban government is very limited.
Restoring diplomatic ties, which the White House can do without
congressional approval, would allow the United States to expand and
deepen cooperation in areas where the two nations already manage to work
collaboratively — like managing migration flows, maritime patrolling and
oil rig safety. It would better position Washington to press the Cubans
on democratic reforms, and could stem a new wave of migration to the
United States driven by hopelessness.
Closer ties could also bring a breakthrough on the case of an American
development contractor, Alan Gross, who has been unjustly imprisoned by
Cuba for nearly five years. More broadly, it would create opportunities
to empower ordinary Cubans, gradually eroding the government's ability
to control their lives.
In April, Western Hemisphere heads of state will meet in Panama City for
the seventh Summit of the Americas. Latin American governments insisted
that Cuba, the Caribbean's most populous island and one of the most
educated societies in the hemisphere, be invited, breaking with its
traditional exclusion at the insistence of Washington.
Given the many crises around the world, the White House may want to
avoid a major shift in Cuba policy. Yet engaging with Cuba and starting
to unlock the potential of its citizens could end up being among the
administration's most consequential foreign-policy legacies.
Normalizing relations with Havana would improve Washington's
relationships with governments in Latin America, and resolve an irritant
that has stymied initiatives in the hemisphere. The Obama administration
is leery of Cuba's presence at the meeting and Mr. Obama has not
committed to attending. He must — and he should see it as an opportunity
to make history.
Source: End the U.S. Embargo on Cuba - NYTimes.com -
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/12/opinion/sunday/end-the-us-embargo-on-cuba.html
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment