The embargo is going to be hollowed out from within, with American tourist and investment dollars permitted to flow.
No one in the mainstream media will acknowledge it, but the normalization of American relations with Havana, symbolized by release of prisoners today, is a huge success for the Cuban Revolution.
The hostile U.S. policy, euphemistically known as “regime change,” has been thwarted. The Cuban Communist Party is confidently in power. The Castros have navigated through all the challenges of the years. In Latin America and the United Nations, Cuba is accepted, and the United States is isolated.
It is quite legitimate for American progressives to criticize various flaws and failures of the Cuban Revolution. But the media and the right are overflowing with such commentary. Only the left can recall, narrate, and applaud the long resistance of tiny Cuba to the northern Goliath.
For those actually supportive of participatory democracy in Cuba, as opposed to those who support regime change by secret programs, the way to greater openness on the island lies in a relaxation of the external threat.
Despite the U.S. embargo, Cuba remains in the upper tier of the United Nations Human Development Index.
Despite the U.S. embargo and relentless U.S. subversion, Cuba remains in the upper tier of the United Nations Human Development Index because of its educational and health care achievements. Cuba even leads the international community in the dispatch of medical workers to fight Ebola.
Cuba is celebrated globally because of its military contribution to the defeat of colonialism and apartheid in Angola and Southern Africa. Now a new generation of Cuban leaders who fought in Angola is coming to power in Havana and its diplomatic corps. For example, Rodolfo Reyes Rodríguez, Cuba’s representative to the United Nations, today walks on an artificial limb as a result of his combat in Angola.
When few thought it possible, Cuba has achieved the return of all five prisoners held for spying on right-wing Cubans who trained at Florida bases and flew harassment missions through Cuban air space. The last three to be released served hard time in American prisons, and are being welcomed as triumphant heroes on the streets of Havana. Three of the Cuban Five served in Angola as well.
Tens of thousands of Americans, from the veterans of the cane-cutting Venceremos Brigades to the steady flow of tourists insisting on their right to travel, deserve credit for steady years of educational and solidarity work and for pushing a hardy Congressional bloc towards normalization.
President Obama has kept his word, despite relentless skepticism from both the left and the mainstream media.
President Obama has kept his word, despite relentless skepticism from both the left and the mainstream media. He is confounding the mainstream assumption that the Cuban Right has a permanent lock on American foreign policy, especially after the Republican sweep in the November elections.
In this case, Obama’s extreme emphasis on diplomatic secrecy worked to his advantage. For over a year, leaders in both countries have conducted regular private debates and consultations which resulted in the detailed normalization plan released in both capitals today. No one was more important on the American congressional team than Senator Patrick Leahy. Their tight discipline held until the final moment.
It is known that the private U.S.-Cuba conversations about Alan Gross and the Cuban Five were the most difficult. The U.S. has never acknowledged that Gross was a de facto spy of a certain type, having traveled five times to Havana to secretly distribute advanced communications technology to persons in Havana’s small Jewish community before he was arrested in 2009. Also problematic for American officials immersed in decades of Cold War thinking was the task of wrapping their minds around the idea that the Cuban Five were political prisoners and not terrorist threats.
Finally, when both sides had achieved an internal consensus, the project was derailed by the furious Republican-led blowback against Obama’s trade of five Taliban captives for captured American soldier Bowe Bergdahl in May 2014. Then the November elections interfered with, and threatened to indefinitely delay, the normalization announcement further. Chanukah was the last date for an announcement before the installation of the new U.S. Congress.
Because of the anti-Cuban slant of mainstream thinking, the media will make much of the anger of the Cuban Right.
Because of the anti-Cuban slant of mainstream thinking, the media will make much of the anger of the Cuban Right exemplified by Senator Marco Rubio. But while it’s too early to know, it’s hard to imagine his presidential ambitions being enhanced by arguing in 2016 that Obama should have tried to overthrow the Castros. Senator Bob Menendez has been a leading Democrat trying to block the Obama initiative from his chairing position on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Most Democrats will be delighted to see Menendez, who represents Cuban exiles in Union City, diminished in the Senate.
Going forward, the U.S. will remove Cuba from the “state terrorism” listing, which will ease the possibility of funding from the international financial system. For American citizens, permission to travel to Cuba will be significantly widened. Business and trade possibilities will increase. Starting with the 2015 Summit of the Americas in Panama, the American and Cuban delegations will sit at the same table. The so-called interest sections will be upgraded to formal embassies.
The embargo is going to be hollowed out from within, with American tourist and investment dollars permitted to flow. With or without Congressional action to lift the 1996 Helms-Burton act, the embargo is being dissolved. Over 400,000 Cuban-Americans traveled to Cuba last year alone.
And here’s a prediction: if the president has his wish, the Obama family will be seen on the streets of Havana before his term is up.
Editor’s Note: “Two Old Guys Talking” is the introduction to Tom Hayden’s forthcoming book, Listen, Yankee!, Why Cuba Matters, to be published next year by Seven Stories Press. The piece was finalized last month. The “two old guys” are the author, now 75, who first visited Cuba in 1968, and Ricardo Alarcon, now 77, former president of the Cuban National Assembly, foreign minister, and UN representative.
This article was originally published at The Nation and was cross-posted to The Rag Blog by the author.
Read more of Tom Hayden’s writing on The Rag Blog.
[Tom Hayden, a regular contributor to The Rag Blog, was an early and outspoken critic of the War in Vietnam. Tom, who served in the California Legislature for nearly two decades, was a leader of Sixties peace, justice, and environmental movements. An enduring progressive voice, Hayden is the author of 20 books, is director of the Peace and Justice Resource center, and is editor of The Democracy Journal.]
Well, within the general euphoria, I’m hoping it’s not the Revolution that is “hollowed out from within” by all those US investment dollars, Tom!
BTW, will there be an extradition treaty? What does the thaw in relations mean for Assata Shakur?
Yes, I’m thrilled by this change on most levels; not least of which the opportunity for the US to learn from Cuba’s exemplary medical system and unequalled herbal medicines. But let us not be entirely naive about the possible results; let us hope that another Revolution isn’t necessary in 50 years, if Havana is once again a US gambling den and brothel. Maybe we’d better go ahead and have ours, just to be on the safe side!
P.S. — This article would benefit if the difference between Angola, the African nation where Cuban troops supported independence from Portugal, and Angola, the notorious Louisiana prison, were made clear. Not all readers may have this embedded in their DNA. 😉
I have seen my email erupt with my conservative friends talking about the how we have capitulated to a communist dictator in Cuba that tortures and kills dissenters and opponents in his own country. How can we now normalize relations with that I am asked?
Its a simple answer. Saudi Arabia, Egypt. What is the difference between normalizing relations with a communist dictator and an Islamic monarchy? In one case we vilify and punish the government and its people, and in the other we sell them billions of dollars of weapons.
What about the pseudo democratic countries of Iraq and Iran I ask, where Iran crushed the opposition winners in its 2009 elections and with whom we are now negotiating the . end of sanctions. What about the communist State of China I ask?
Haven’t all of these countries done the same things that we accuse Cuba of? Have we not directly created a failed state in Libya where people are killed daily for their religious views, sexual orientation, or political affiliations? Is their blood not on our own hands?
Dont be hypocrites I tell them. If you want to support a global empire, then please remove the log from your own eye before you protest the splinter in your neighbors eye.
– Proud to be an Extremist2TheDHS
As perhaps the last bastion of socialism Cuba is an inspiration to us all.