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Are We Ready for a New Policy on Cuba?

Posted by Steve Benen, The Carpetbagger Report at 11:19 AM on May 20, 2008.


In a speech in Miami, John McCain is preparing to attack Sen. Obama for suggesting a new approach toward Cuba.
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For a couple of generations, every major presidential candidate, from both parties, has taken the same position on U.S. policy towards Cuba: keep the status quo. The embargo needs to stay in place in order to “keep the pressure” on Castro. Any thawing in relations would be a victory for a brutal thug, and would enrage a powerful voting bloc (Cuban Americans) in a key electoral state (Florida).

With that in mind, no candidate has been willing to talk openly about a change. I distinctly remember in 2004 when Wesley Clark said in a debate he wanted a dramatic shake-up in the existing policy. “When you isolate a country, you strengthen the dictators in it,” Clark said. The next day, Clark’s campaign backpedaled, after aides heard from supporters in Miami.

This year, Chris Dodd and Barack Obama went out on a limb and said the status quo isn’t good enough, and had the audacity to point that the current policy doesn’t actually work. They no doubt expected Republicans to try to exploit this, but made the case anyway.

Dodd stepped aside in January, but Obama is poised to be the first Democratic candidate in a half-century to offer a real change when it comes to Cuba. Today, John McCain intends to smack him on it pretty hard in a speech in Miami.

In an indication that John McCain sees foreign policy as the best route to take on Barack Obama — and that he will take it frequently — McCain is set to roll out another tough attack, with a speech today to the Cuban community in Miami. At the rate things are going, the McCain camp will be hitting Obama on some new foreign policy point every day.

“Just a few years ago, Senator Obama had a very clear view on Cuba,” McCain will say, according to prepared excerpts, then quoting Obama saying that normalization of relations would improve conditions for the Cuban people.

“Now Senator Obama has shifted positions and says he only favors easing the embargo, not lifting it. He also wants to sit down unconditionally for a presidential meeting with Raul Castro. These steps would send the worst possible signal to Cuba’s dictators — there is no need to undertake fundamental reforms, they can simply wait for a unilateral change in US policy.”

It’s obviously an off-shoot of the debate over Iran — McCain believes the silent treatment is an effective foreign policy in relation to rivals and enemies; Obama believes the opposite.

Indeed, McCain is apparently prepared to argue that Bush’s policy towards Cuba hasn’t been far enough to the right.


Bloomberg reported today:

Commemorating Cuban Independence Day, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee seeks to distance himself from President George W. Bush’s Cuba policy by taking a tougher stance while also criticizing Barack Obama’s approach as too accommodating.

The Arizona senator said the U.S. trade embargo against Cuba must remain in place until basic elements of democratic society are established.

As for Obama’s willingness to change U.S. policy and consider diplomacy with Cuba, McCain will say open discussions “would send the worst possible signal to Cuba’s dictators.”

The conventional wisdom suggests McCain’s criticism will be well received in South Florida, and Obama will face a serious push-back on this. But I’m not at all sure the conventional wisdom is right on this. Michael Tomasky noted yesterday:

[Obama] has signalled that he’d dramatically alter the US’s hard-line Cuba policy. He’s not alone in thinking it’s outdated. Brent Scowcroft, a Republican foreign-policy high priest who worked for George Bush Sr, said last week that the American embargo “makes no sense” any more.

This freaks some people out. And in electoral terms, it makes them think that Obama has thrown away Florida, home of a large, conservative Cuban-American community. But Florida’s Latino population is no longer majority-Cuban. And just this month, the news broke that more Latinos in Florida are Democrats than Republicans — a major historical shift. Could it be that Obama is on to something?

Maybe so. In fact, Obama’s willingness to break with a failed status quo may turn out to be a political winner after all.

It doesn’t get a lot of attention, but there’s a big distinction between Cuban exiles who fled to the United States and their children’s generation. The younger Cuban-Americans are far less conservative, and far more open to a policy change. Obama assumes, probably correctly, that the older generation isn’t going to vote for a Democrat anyway, so why not shake up the dynamic by reaching out with a common-sense policy that has the added benefit of appealing to younger Cuban-American voters?

Miami Democrats like Elena Freyre, a Cuban-American art gallery owner in Little Havana, say they’ve been trying to tell Democratic candidates to stop parroting the hard-line position. “Obama’s people were the first who ever said to me on the phone, ‘Wait, let me get a pen and write that down,’” says Freyre. “He’s the first to have the cojones to say Bush’s policy is wrong, and I think it’s going to wake up a lot of moderate Cuban-American voters.”

McCain assumes the rules haven’t changed in decades. We’ll see soon enough if he’s right.


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FYI
Posted by: QQOblivion on May 20, 2008 12:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
FYI, it has been just over a year since the US freed an anti-Castro terrorist (and former CIA operative), Luis Posada Carriles . (He was not jailed for terrorism. He had been in jail for only 2 years because of immigration violations.)

Posada Carriles is accused of masterminding the bombing in 1976 of a Cuban passenger jet. 73 people died. He also is accused of being behind hotel bombings in Havana that killed an Italian tourist.

The Bush administration has been protecting this terrorist.
(Also, on a related note, the Bush administration has been giving aid to an anti-Iranian terrorist group.)
When do we start bombing ourselves, like we did with Afghanistan??...

Posada Carriles was recently honored by 500 Cuban-Americans at a sold out gala.
These people are honoring a man who killed 74 innocent people!

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» RE: FYI Posted by: QQOblivion
Yes
Posted by: Kimmy on May 20, 2008 3:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but would they want to ? considering We have one of the sh*ttest Gov't & Inc's in the global neighbor hood-WHO Would be so foolish as to invite US in!
I was born & raised in this country -6th generation- And I would not wish the Crap the neo CONS (red & Blue) have been doing over the last 40 yrs on My worst enemy!

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Demo Congresswoman Wasserman
Posted by: reinaldok on May 21, 2008 4:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why is there so little mentioned about the Demos congresswoman from South Florida Ms.
Debbie Wasserman-Schultz? This woman was elected unapposed and is a hundred percent backer of the ridiculous Bush backed Cuban fiasco. She has refused to criticize the three Republican Cuban-American congressmen from that area. Why don't we hear more from the demos about Sgt Lazo, war hero in Iraq, prohibited by the neo-cons from visiting his sick son in Cuba? Interestingly the famous Little Havana area in Miami is no longer predominately Cuban. Many, if not most are from other countries in South and Central America. Just take a quick walk through the area, find a Cuban and you will be amazed that hardly anyone backs the Bush-Cheney (or previous government's) embargoes or travel restrictions.
For how long will the USA continue to be the laughing stock of just about all of the rest of the world's countries, with regards to the idiotic never ending North American Cuban policy. How can we let a tiny and it really is s tiny minority dominate the USA absurd policy for so many years?
After thought: A lady named Pelosi was recently in Miami. She took a walking tour of Miami. Who was her guide and companion? The turncoat Ms. Wasserman, of course.

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Here in southern Florida
Posted by: bettyn on May 21, 2008 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
people have treated the Cuban issue like the "third rail" in the area's politics. If Obama tries to push any change in U. S. policy toward Cuba, expect JEB and company to stir up the Cuban American community in Miami to the point that no rational discourse is possible.

Remember the "re-count riot" in 2000 in Miami that the pig Tom Delay stirred up? You ain't seen nothing yet!

The U.S. policy toward Cuba is ridiculous and outdated, but these people continue to hold our government hostage to it. It will take another generation, or more likely with the current adminstration, an unprovoked attack on the island by Bush/Cheney before there's any change.

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It's Good business to lift the Embargo on Cuba
Posted by: peacekeepertwo on May 21, 2008 10:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just think of how much money Tourist from the States, could save if you Had a direct flight to Havana, from New York city, or L.A, with Fuel prices going up every Day, I think this would be A win, win for all.

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leequinn
Posted by: leequinnn on May 21, 2008 11:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
McCain is right about Obama's position on the Cuban embargo. According to 2008 Election ProCon, Obama said:

"When I'm President, I will grant Cuban-Americans unrestricted rights to visit families and send remitances to the island. Because that's the way to bring about real change in Cuba. Through strong and smart diplomacy, not just tough love...

As President I am not going to take off the embargo, it's an important inducement for change because we know that Castro's death will not automatically guarantee freedom."

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YES... end this ridiculas political charade!
Posted by: Bearzerker on May 21, 2008 5:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... or is the past 50 years of blatant assassination attempts not enough?

US policy on Cuba makes little to no sense and lacks cohesive sense...
The US not only recognizes China, but is treating it and Vietnam as a preferred client state... whats up with that?

the US is a 2 faced monster internationally

nuff said!

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