The slow thaw of US-Cuba relations
By Judy Robbins, Special to the BDN
Posted May 24, 2015, at 6:48 a.m.
One might perceive change is happening apace in this new era in
U.S.-Cuba relations. But in the five months since the declarations of
presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro that diplomatic relations
between the two nations would resume, nothing substantial has actually
happened. The two governments did agree that the process would indeed be
a long one and that caution was in order on both sides. The most hopeful
sign is that, so far, formal talks have been "respectful," according to
Cuban and U.S. diplomats.
There essentially are three levels of ongoing talks. Negotiations on
logistics between the U.S. State Department and the Cuban Foreign
Ministry began in January, alternating sites between Washington and
Havana. Agenda items include the nuts and bolts of how and when to open
embassies, ensuring the nature of agreements meet international
standards and deciding what "normalization" means for both parties.
A second level is political and includes the recent meetings between
high-level members of both governments, up to and including the two
presidents. These talks eventually will cover higher-stakes issues, such
as the 53-year-old trade embargo against Cuba, human rights and
Guantanamo. One of the big hurdles in this arena — and of great
importance to Cuba — was removal of Cuba from the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terror. Obama has put this in motion, and it is expected to
become official at the end of May.
A third level of dialogue deals with details of ongoing relations, such
as trade agreements, cooperation in drug-trafficking interdiction,
collaboration in disaster management and environmental protection, and
arranging for migration. Discussion on migration will center on the
controversial Cuban Adjustment Act, which stipulates Cubans arriving on
U.S. soil are granted assistance and eventually permanent residence.
That policy has encouraged illegal and unsafe migration from Cuba.
Key to every conversation at any level, according to Cuba, is
acknowledgement of Cuba's independence and sovereignty and
noninterference in the country's internal affairs, as defined by
accepted international norms. This is a sticky point. The U.S. is quite
accustomed to applying its political and economic weight to influence
governments throughout the world, especially in Central and South America.
Among the goals laid out in President Obama's Dec. 17 speech was " to
support the Cuban people and promote our values through engagement." One
wonders whether the distinction between Obama's "promoting our values"
and the Vienna convention's mandated "duty not to interfere in the
internal affairs of that State" is lost on U.S. diplomats.
The meeting in late March among high-level diplomats on the topic of
human rights seemed to end abruptly after one day, even though the State
Department had expected up to three days of talks. Perhaps the statement
of head Cuban negotiator Pedro Luis Pedroso about "concerns regarding
discrimination and racism patterns in U.S. society, the worsening of
police brutality, torture acts and extrajudicial executions in the fight
on terror and the legal limbo of prisoners at the U.S. prison camp in
Guantanamo" gave pause to U.S. negotiators.
Cuba also expressed a desire to include in the talks a "balance
regarding civil and political rights and economic, social and cultural
rights," such as rights to food security and health care. Both sides
have agreed to an extension of talks on human rights, but no new dates
have yet been announced.
What does the U.S. hope to gain? Its long-term goals for Cuba are
unchanged: an "open" free market economy, multiple-party political
system and support for so-called pro-democracy activists. But aren't
these matters for a sovereign state to determine on its own?
What does Cuba hope to gain? As officials repeatedly have said, Cuba's
goals are for an end to the U.S.-imposed trade embargo and its
extraterritorial provisions, for return of U.S.-controlled Guantanamo
territory, for an end to the Cuban Adjustment Act and for no more overt
and covert U.S. subversion against the Cuban government. These all are
areas over which only the U.S. has control.
As Castro stated at the Summit of the Americas in April, "I think that
everything can be on the table. … We could be persuaded of some things;
of others, we might not be persuaded."
For now the two leaders have "agreed to disagree."
A Bangor Daily News editorial titled "Neighborly Relations" suggested
"an opportunity [for the U.S. and its neighbor Cuba] to gain culturally
and economically from each other." This was in 1994. Cuba-watchers have
no choice but to remain patient.
Judy Robbins of Sedgwick is a member of Let Cuba Live Committee of Maine.
Source: The slow thaw of US-Cuba relations — Opinion — Bangor Daily News
— BDN Maine -
http://bangordailynews.com/2015/05/24/opinion/contributors/the-slow-thaw-of-us-cuba-relations/?ref=mostReadBoxOpinion
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