[NYTr] Clinton and Obama in Tussle over Cuba Policy
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Mon Sep 3 23:32:52 EDT 2007
[Lots of links in the original column at the URL below. -NYTr]
The Daily Dish (Atlantic Monthly blogs) - Sep 2, 2007
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2007/09/hillary-and-bar.html
Hillary and Barack's Tussle Over the Cuba Question
by Steve Clemons
US-Cuba relations are not high on the roster of priorities for many
Americans, and yet small moves in the terms of that relationship could
have enormous political consequences.
Recently, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama did battle over what their
policies would be towards Cuba if elected President. That's right --
this was not a discussion of Israel/Palestine, or withdrawing from
Iraq, or bombing Iran, or whether to talk to dictators without
preconditions. This was about Cuba.
Chris Dodd started things off with an eloquent statement about US-Cuba
relations released through my blog, The Washington Note as well as my
perch at The Huffington Post. Dodd set the gold standard in my view in
articulating a policy that wasn't all warm and fuzzy about Castro but
that spoke to America's 21st century economic and national security
interests with Cuba in contrast to those who want to keep US-Cuba
relations cocooned in an anachronistic Cold War era framework that has
little relevancy today.
Dodd wants to end the many decades old embargo. He wants to remove all
travel restrictions -- and he wants to see commerce and trade begin to
flow. He wants American people to meet Cubans and wants to trigger an
arbitrage between the norms of our society and theirs. That is the
American way. That's what we did with China.
Now Hillary Clinton -- who has visited China and who supports relations
with Vietnam and who has praised Assistant Secretary of State Chris
Hill and Under Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns on what seems so
far to be fairly successful nuclear deal-making with North Korea -- has
spoken out against change in America's stance towards Cuba and in favor
of George W. Bush's position.
Clinton doesn't support changing course in US-Cuba relations despite
decades of failed results and seems to have no problem with something
that Jeff Flake (R-AZ-6), the charismatic Republican Congressman from
Arizona, does. Flake has said:
"If my travel which I think is my human right is going to be
restricted, then it seems to me that a Communist government ought to be
the one doing the restricting -- not my own government of the United
States of America."
Hillary Clinton has stated quite clearly that she is content to stick
with past policies -- those of President Bush -- when it comes to Cuba.
But Barack Obama has a completely different view. While not quite up
to the robustness of Chris Dodd's proposal, Obama wrote an oped for the
Miami Herald, "Our Main Goal: Freedom in Cuba," calling for
restrictions on family-related travel to end and increasing financial
amounts that families could remit to loved ones inside Cuba. After he
wrote the piece, Miami-Dade Democratic Party Chairman Joe Garcia -- who
is also the former Executive Director of the Jorge Mas Canosa-run
Cuban-American National Foundation, organized a large gathering of
Miami citizens, an overwhelming number of whom were Cuban Americans, to
meet with Obama. Most report that it was a super success. There were
some protests -- but trivial compared to what one might have expected
in Miami on this subject matter just a few years ago.
How could this be? Hillary Clinton and those who want to keep US-Cuba
relations in a cocooned, freeze-dried state have not looked at the
recent polling data that show clearly that the Cuban-American voters in
Florida are becoming divided over not only the family travel issue, but
about the efficacy of the embargo itself.
Again to quote Republican Congressman Jeff Flake:
"President Bush's tightened restrictions on Cuban-American family
travel is now forcing people to choose whether they are going to attend
their father's funeral or their mother's."
Cuban-Americans from Miami have told me that the powerful triumvirate
of Cuban-Americans from Miami -- Ileana-Ros-Lehtinen, Lincoln
Diaz-Balart, and Mario Diaz-Balart (the brothers are coincidentally the
nephews by a failed marriage of their aunt to Fidel Castro) -- are
facing their most serious electoral challenges yet, as younger
Cuban-Americans as well as older are shifting in their policy
preferences when it comes to the Cuba travel ban and embargo.
Recently, I went to Havana along with former State Department Chief of
Staff Lawrence Wilkerson. Wilkerson is a blunt guy -- a military guy --
and doesn't suffer fools. He was Colin Powell's aide for sixteen years
and served as his aide when Powell was Commander of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and also when Powell served as Secretary of the State.
Wilkerson has published two sets of "reflections" on Cuba and US-Cuba
relations at the newly hatched, The Havana Note. In the first, he
starts with the admission that while Powell's chief of staff, he gave
an "off the record" interview to GQ Magazine in which he said that our
"US-Cuba policy was the stupidest policy on earth."
Wilkerson writes:
"When I was Chief of Staff to the Secretary of State in 2004, I was
exposed to some criticism within the Bush administration when I was
quoted in GQ Magazine as saying that U.S. Cuba policy was the stupidest
policy on earth. I deserved the criticism because my immediate boss,
Colin Powell, had approved that policy. Not only that, he was
co-chairman of the Committee set up to monitor implementation of it.
Now I realize that I deserve far stronger criticism for not resigning
my position in disgust over such policy. Let me tell you one of the
most powerful reasons I feel that way.
"There is a film by Lisandro Perez-Rey called "Those I Left
Behind". The film documents the lives of several Cuban-American
families against the backdrop of the Bush administration's tightened
rules on travel to Cuba. It is devastating in its condemnation of those
rules. In the film, you see and hear from people whose lives are in
turmoil because of these inane rules. You don’t need to understand how
damaging the rules are to helping democracy come to Cuba. You don’t
need to understand how dangerous the rules are with respect to U.S.
national security. You don’t need to appreciate that Cuba is the only
country in the world which U.S. citizens are prohibited to visit—a
violation of their constitutional rights. And you don't need to
comprehend how much business America is losing because of the policies
behind those rules—policies that have failed abjectly now for some 46
years. All you need to do is witness the devastation in the lives of
these families to know that the rules must be changed and as swiftly as
possible.
"Central to the film is the testimony of an American citizen—an
American soldier who has served in Iraq—who now finds it difficult if
not impossible to visit his sons in Cuba. Sergeant Carlos Lazo, now
somewhat famous for his advocacy for change, is shown talking to his
two sons, Carlos Manuel and Carlos Raphael, who are in Cuba, via one of
his many television appearances as he works for change. A resident of
Seattle and a member of the Washington National Guard, Sergeant Lazo
served as a combat medic in Iraq. Watching the scenes in the film of
his sons in Cuba and the Sergeant in the United States, is wrenching.
Particularly when Lazo talks of wanting to visit his sons prior to his
departure for a year in Iraq—a year where he easily could have been
wounded or killed—and then not being able to do so, you get the message
he is trying to convey with a directness that is heartbreaking."
On another front, well before any of us had heard of Michael Moore's
Sicko, we became exposed to the new edge of Cuban power -- soft power
-- in Latin America and elsewhere: the training and export of
doctors. Say what you want about Castro, who has outlived an
incredible number of US presidents and may be around a bit longer, but
exporting doctors is wildly different than the export of guns and
revolution, which was what Cuba was doing for decades.
Here is an intro to Wilkerson's reflections of Cuba's national health
care and medicine infrastructure and the global public diplomacy that
they connect to it:
"With Steve Clemons and others, I recently visited Cuba (March
2007). One of the areas of Cuban activity on which we focused was what
has been described as one of the world's best systems for delivering
healthcare to impoverished people—in Cuba, in Venezuela and elsewhere
in South and Central America, and increasingly in sub-Saharan Africa.
We visited Cuba's medical "contingency brigade", for example, and
talked with doctors and other healthcare personnel about the brigade's
recent, highly successful tenure in Pakistan following the devastating
earthquakes there in 2006. The passion in the doctors' eyes as they
related their experiences in delivering basic healthcare in isolated,
freezing regions of Pakistan was truly heartwarming. Some of the human
interest stories the doctors related brought laughter to us all and
served to demonstrate conclusively how deeply these medical personnel
had been touched by their almost year-long experience in Pakistan. They
were proud to announce that as a result of the good relations thus
created, Cuba was asked to open its first-ever embassy in Islamabad.
Talk about effective public diplomacy!
"We also visited the Finlay Institute: Center for
Research-Development and Production of Human Vaccines—incidentally, one
of the places that the jacobin Undersecretary of State for
International Security Affairs, John Bolton, alleged in 2002 was
manufacturing biological weapons. We didn't find any such activity (and
we did discover that at best the Institute has a rudimentary Bio-Level
III capability and no Bio-Level IV capability—the latter needed if one
is to engage in sophisticated biological agent research and
development). After the visit, we assumed that Bolton's insights were
right up there with the CIA's in 2002-2003 with respect to Saddam
Hussein's mobile biological weapons labs. It's safe to say we
considered the assessment by the former commander of the U.S. Southern
Command, Marine General Charles Wilhelm, as more definitive: 'During my
three year tenure, from September 1997 until September 2000 at Southern
Command, I didn't receive a single report or a single piece of evidence
that would have led me to the conclusion that Cuba was in fact
developing, producing or weaponizing biological or chemical agents.'"
Those interested in the realities of Cuba's health care progress -- and
the many lessons we can learn -- can skip the Michael Moore film and
instead see Salud!
In foreign policy circles, most people consider me to be a "realist".
I consider myself a hybrid of a number of schools. I don't think that
there are perfectly neat schools of thought any longer but whether I'm
a 21st century evolved realist, an ethical realist, a progressive
realist, or as Michael Lind would call me, a new American
internationalist -- when I see US-Cuba realities as a manifestation of
our failure to move forward in ways consistent with global needs and
American interests, then my realist DNA perks up.
Cuba and the Cuban population remember the fall of the Soviet Union and
survived a devastating, tortuous shrinking of their economy (and their
personal body weight). After the Russians, Venezuela cuddled up to the
Cubans and now they essentially barter doctors and medical support for
oil between each other. China is the second biggest economic partner
of Cuba and has designs on developing the oil fields in Cuban waters
estimated to be about 9-12 billion barrels. Americans are not there --
not involved.
Benetton has a store in old Havana. British Petroleum -- which
controls the Alaskan pipeline -- had a party on the roof of my hotel in
Havana. Israeli firms are managing large citrus groves there. The
Germans, Chinese, Australians, Canadians, Dutch, and Japanese are all
visiting Havana and seeing the business opportunities.
But Hillary Clinton, Mitt Romney, Rudy Giuiliani, Fred Thompson, and
John McCain all want to keep the Bush administration's restrictions on
trade and travel in place.
Lifting the travel ban makes the United States a more whole nation --
as travel is a natural right of ours, not to be taken away by our
government. This right should be restored to all Americans in my view.
But stepping away from the lofty for a moment, Hugo Chavez is not my
favorite guy in Latin America.
In my view, Chavez is a serious troublemaker made increasingly wealthy
from high oil prices. He is an increasingly significant constraint on
America's global options -- and to knock him back a respectable bit
would be a good thing. Opening the travel pipe would steal from Chavez
both the dependency and the affections of many Cubans and might send a
very popular pro-American current through Cuba and much of Latin
America.
More on this later -- but Cuba does matter and is already a point of
differentiation between Obama, Clinton, and Dodd. Fidel will not be
around long in my estimation, and we need our political and policy
leaders to begin plotting a policy not riveted in the past and not
dominated by a shrinking cartel in Miami.
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