Facts Prove Obama's Cuba Policy Counter-Productive
02/05/2016 04:33 pm ET | Updated 18 hours ago
Mauricio Claver-Carone
Director, Cuba Democracy Advocates in Washington, D.C.
President Obama announced a new Cuba policy on Dec. 17, 2014. It gave
diplomatic recognition to the sole remaining dictatorship in the Western
Hemisphere, unilaterally eased U.S. trade and travel restrictions, and
commuted the prison sentences of three convicted Cuban spies, including
one imprisoned for plotting the murder of three Americans shot-down by
Cuban MIGs while flying over the Florida Straits.
When Obama announced his new policy, describing it as "what change looks
like," few believed that the "change" would be for the worse. Yet the
policy has clearly proven to be counter-productive. Set aside the policy
theories and debates. Instead, look simply at the irrefutable facts
since the announcement:
•Political arrests have intensified. Throughout 2015, there were more
than 8,616 documented political arrests in Cuba. In November alone there
were more than 1,447 documented political arrests, the highest monthly
tally in decades. Those numbers compare to 2,074 arrests in 2010 and
4,123 in 2011.
•A new Cuban migration is unfolding. The United States is faced with the
largest migration of Cuban immigrants since the rafters of 1994. The
number of Cubans entering the United States in 2015 was nearly twice
that of 2014. Some 51,000 Cubans last year entered the United States;
tens of thousands more are desperately trying to make the journey, via
Ecuador and other South and Central American countries. When President
Obama took office, the numbers were less than 7,000 annually.
•The number of "self-employed" workers in Cuba has decreased. The Cuban
government today is licensing 10,000 fewer "self-employed" workers than
it did in 2014. In contrast, Castro's military monopolies are expanding
at record pace. The Cuban military-owned tourism company, Gaviota S.A.,
announced 12 percent growth in 2015 and expects to double its hotel
business this year. Even the limited spaces in which cuentapropistas
previously operated are being squeezed as the Cuban military expands its
control of the island's travel, retail and financial sectors of the economy.
•Internet "connectivity ranking" has dropped. The International
Telecommunication Union's (ITU) Measuring the Information Society Report
for 2015, the world's most reliable source of data and analysis on
global access to information and communication. ITU has dropped Cuba's
ranking to 129 from 119. The island fares much worse than some of the
world's most infamous suppressors of the Internet suppressors, including
Zimbabwe (127), Syria (117), Iran (91), China (82) and Venezuela (72).
•U.S. agricultural sales to Cuba have plummeted. Despite the Obama
Administration's easing of sanctions, U.S. agricultural exports to Cuba
declined by nearly 40 percent in 2015. In August alone, the value of
U.S. agricultural exports dropped 84 percent to $2.25 million from
$14.30 million in 2014. That's one of the lowest numbers since the
United States authorized agricultural exports to Cuba in 2001.
•Religious freedom violations have increased tenfold. According to the
London-based NGO, Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW), last year 2,000
churches were declared illegal and 100 were designated for demolition by
the Castro regime. Altogether, CSW documented 2,300 separate violations
of religious freedom in 2015 compared to 220 in 2014.
•Castro reneged on the release of political prisoners and visits by
international monitors. Most of the 53 political prisoners released in
the months prior and after Obama's December 2014 announcement have since
been re-arrested on multiple occasions. Five have been handed new
long-term prison sentences. Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch noted in its
new 2016 report, "Cuba has yet to allow visits to the island by the
International Committee of the Red Cross or by U.N. human rights
monitors, as stipulated in the December 2014 agreement with the United
States."
•International political and economic pressure on Cuba has eroded.
Despite the Obama Administration's prediction that the new U.S. policy
would allow other countries to hold the Castro regime accountable for
its repressive practices, the opposite is occurring. Presidents, foreign
ministers and other dignitaries have flocked to Cuba to discuss business
opportunities with Castro's state monopolies. None has made even a
minimal gesture of solidarity with Cuba's civil society. International
creditors have forgiven tens of billions in the Castro dictatorship's debts.
Supporters of Obama's policy point to the re-establishment of diplomatic
relations as a sign of "success" in itself. Yet no progress has been
made on pressing diplomatic issues like the extradition of one of the
FBI's Top Ten Most Wanted Terrorists, who continues to be harbored by
Cuba's regime, or compensation or return of billions in Americans
property confiscated by the regime. To the contrary, we've learned that
throughout this process of negotiations and "changes" sought by the
Obama Administration, that Cuba has had a stolen U.S. Hellfire missile
in its possession and refused to return it. To make matters worse,
defense experts fear Cuba may have shared information about this
missile's technology with nations like North Korea.
Unfortunately, the Obama Administration's "talking for the sake of
talking" is proving only to be a useful distraction in this country and
the world that is allowing the Castro regime to strengthen its political
and economic grip over the Cuban people and their future.
Follow Mauricio Claver-Carone on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@capitolcubans
Source: Facts Prove Obama's Cuba Policy Counter-Productive -
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mauricio-clavercarone/facts-prove-obamas-cuba-p_b_9158572.html
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