Voices: Trump Win Casts Shadow on U.S., Cuba Relations
by LUISITA LOPEZ TORREGROSA
Jet Blue and American flights loaded with tourists, businessmen,
academics and journalists fly in and out of Cuba every day, perhaps the
most dramatic and visible sign of the thaw in Washington-Havana
relations since the restoration of relations nearly two years ago.
Beautifully restored and renovated hotels in Havana, including three
hotels managed by the U.S. hotelier Starwood, cater to the throng of
fast-spending travelers who are happily overrunning the Cuban capital,
disgorging from spiffy tourist buses and packing restaurants and
nightclubs, and turning the government-run tourism industry into a major
source of revenue for the impoverished island.
"There's a huge difference every time I go," said Sarah Stephens, a top
Cuba expert who is the executive director of the Center for Democracy in
the Americas, a D.C.-based nonpartisan advocate of normalizing
relations, in a conversation with me last week. "You can feel it. I've
gone 14 times this year alone. I notice change every time I go."
But now all this change may come to a screeching halt.
Donald Trump's election casts doubt on the new Cuba-U.S. policy after
his promise during the campaign that he would reverse President Obama's
efforts to restore relations.
Cuba has answered mostly with public silence. President Raúl Castro
messaged congratulations to Trump on his victory, but the official
government newspaper Granma reported on Wednesday [Dec 9] that Cuba
would hold military preparedness exercises for the first time in three
years, suggesting that Havana may be gearing up for a hostile Trump
administration.
"Is he really going to tell American Airlines and Jet Blue they can't
fly to Cuba,'' Stephens asked, "and tell Cuban Americans they can no
longer visit their families on the island, and tell church groups and
students they can't go to Cuba or use their cellphones to call their
families at home if they go?"
"These are some of the people who are now invested, in economic and
emotional terms, in the new policy," said Stephens. "He can take it back
to square one, but that's a choice with pretty significant consequences."
Over the past 15 years, Stephens has led over 60 fact-finding
delegations to Cuba including members of Congress, economists,
educators, artists, academics and experts. Unlike most visitors to Cuba,
her delegations gain access to senior Cuban officials and ministries and
include leading American business executives and politicians like
Senator Jeff Flake, Republican of Arizona, and Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New
York, who have major impact on evolving Cuba policy.
That two-year-old policy, the product of Obama's executive orders, has
restored diplomatic relations between the two nations and relaxed U.S.
economic sanctions on the island. Americans are traveling to Cuba more
easily. Commercial flights are increasing and are set to total some 110
a day. American businesses and corporations are gauging their prospects
in a largely untapped Cuban market. Americans can now legally bring back
a haul of Cuban cigars and rum, the two most popular Cuban souvenirs.
And yet, there's a long road ahead. Cuba has made it repeatedly clear
that it will not consider normalization complete until the U.S. Congress
lifts the trade embargo that the U.S. imposed in 1962.
In this new Trump era, with the control of Congress in conservative
Republican hands, lifting the embargo seems a long way off.
"We will cancel Obama's one-sided Cuban deal, made by executive order,
if we do not get the deal that we want and the deal that people living
in Cuba and here deserve, including protecting religious and political
freedom," Trump told Floridians during the campaign, a preview of the
uncertain future of Cuba-U.S. relations in the next four years.
But, of course, setbacks and reversals the U.S. side are not the only
obstacles to normalizing relations.
"Things in Cuba are moving at a glacial pace,'' Stephens told me.
"Expectations are so different, perceptions are so different."
She calls Cuba one of the most bureaucratic countries in the world. "The
bureaucracy is ridiculous. It requires new ways of doing things.
Government offices and agencies are understaffed. There's a tangle of
regulations for new businesses."
Stephens was at the International Trade Fair in Havana earlier this
month, where deals with foreign investors could have been made, but the
Cuban government stalled and nothing moved forward.
"Psychologically, it's a big change for Cuba,'' she admitted. "It's
still the party who governs the country. The party isn't going away."
That's cold reality, but there's this new reality, too.
"I was not able to get a hotel room last week, the entire city was
booked!" she exclaimed. But she discovered a boutique hotel in El
Vedado, a onetime upper-class neighborhood near the Malecón, the
oceanside boulevard. Someone had restored a house and quietly turned
into a small hotel. "Nothing like this existed until now."
In a country that has had little internet access, the government is now
allowing internet hot zones in parks and some neighborhoods, and on
another level, there's a notable change in the way top government
officials on both sides interact socially.
"It used to be that Havana and U.S. officials didn't mix at cultural or
social events. Now I see top Havana government officials showing up
together with American officials."
It seems fitting that on Sunday night, Nov. 13th, the Center for
Democracy in the Americas, which she founded in 2006, celebrates its
tenth anniversary at a $250-$350-per-person festivity in Washington
headlined by the well-known Cuban singer-songwriter Carlos Varela and
the Grammy-winning American musician Dave Matthews.
"As we process the results of the presidential election, many of us are
looking for places and spaces to come together," Stephens said, quoting
Varela's song, "There are those who build walls, and those who open doors."
Source: Voices: Trump Win Casts Shadow on U.S., Cuba Relations - NBC
News -
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/voices-trump-win-casts-shadow-u-s-cuba-relations-n682776
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