Obama at least ended the outright stalemate. That has begun a dialogue. I think that the best policy is to simply let it go. Things will change and we do have a stable dictatorship able to transition into something better without another blood bath.
What will happen is that we will see some Cubans immigrate. We will see plenty of folks visit and even invest. This all facilitates natural change as the old boys all die off.
Applied communism was monstrous. Fidel was hardly unique. And yes, embargos are stupid in quite another manner. They are only useful for short time periods and if not working they must be abandoned. This again opens the door for private dialogue.
We could have been at this point in 1970 when we dropped our embargo of China. It is hard to imagine how the outcome would have been worse in terms of US policy...
Castro Was Monstrous, and So Is Our Embargo
Wednesday, November 30, 2016
https://fee.org/articles/castro-was-monstrous-and-so-is-our-embargo/
This week on Twitter, President-elect Donald Trump threatened to put an end to the "normalization"
of US and Cuban relations initiated by President Barack Obama. “If Cuba
is unwilling to make a better deal for the Cuban people, the
Cuban/American people, and the US as a whole,” Trump wrote as news sources flooded the internet with stories about the death of the Cuban dictator, “I will terminate [the] deal.”
The Obama administration has done little to lift the barriers to trade.The following day, Obama’s press secretary, Josh Earnest, commented
on the incoming president’s threats, adding that severing the
blossoming business and tourism ties between the two countries is “just
not as simple as one tweet might make it seem.”
“There are significant diplomatic, economic, [and] cultural costs
that will have to be accounted for if this policy is rolled back,” he
added.
But despite his remarks, the Obama administration has done little to
emphasize the importance of simply lifting barriers to trade between the
two countries altogether, a problem that has prompted several freedom
and free market advocates to say more must be done.
Cuban Fascism and Diplomatic Ties: Why America Must Trust Americans on Cuba Again
In a country where people who are born differently or who subscribe to different ideologies have been prosecuted, imprisoned, and murdered over the decades – much like US allies in the Middle East such as Saudi Arabia – hope for Cubans used to materialize in the shape of makeshift boats sailing through the waves toward Florida.
But in December 2014, Obama and Raúl Castro, the late Cuban dictator’s younger brother, announced both countries would re-establish diplomatic ties.
The move secured the reopening of the US embassy in Havana and brought
Obama to call the then-ongoing policy of isolation embraced by the
United States an “outdated approach that for decades has failed to
advance our interests.”
Despite his inspiring words, Obama’s approach to normalizing the
countries’ relationship fell short of what could have truly given the
Cuban and American people a glimpse of what freedom looks like.
Instead of spurring real change in light of Obama’s push to have Congress lift certain economic restrictions, disagreements among lawmakers
led to the change and regulation of travel policies. On November 28th,
commercial flights between Havana and the United States were reintroduced.
This was a move that brought hope to residents of the small island who have been radically isolated due to
Cuba’s hardline policies and because of the United States’ insistence
on turning its back to the individuals hurt the most by Castro’s
dictatorship.
As news sources focus
on Obama’s decision to bring both nations closer while they attack
Trump over his online comments, the remaining Castro brother continues
to hold on to power with the same dedication demonstrated by his older
(and now dead) brother. But as the governments of both countries become
closer, one must look at the current leader’s corporate ties before
praising him for the economic policy changes he has managed to implement
since the historic warming of ties in late 2014.
With Raúl Castro’s son-in-law, Luis Alberto Rodriguez, sitting as
“chairman of the largest business empire in Cuba,” a dossier by Bloomberg’s Michael Smith from 2015 explains,
any foreign investor looking into making deals in the newly “opened”
Cuba must first strike a deal with Rodriguez, who is also a general
within the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces.
Cuban officials pledge never to allow free markets to rule over the tiny Caribbean island. As
a chairman of “a conglomerate that comprises at least 57 companies
owned by the Revolutionary Armed Forces and operated under a rigid set
of financial benchmarks developed over decades,” Rodriguez ensures the
Cuban government has a monopoly over any business being created in the
new, post-normalization Cuba. To critics of the regime, the obvious
discrepancies between the late Castro’s rhetoric and the actual state of
Cuba’s government-run economy are hard to ignore. Nevertheless, Cuban
officials pledge to never allow free markets to rule over the tiny Caribbean island.
But even as the fascist links between the current economic policies
in Cuba come to light — some of which are eerily similar to policies being embraced in the United States — many are still unaware of the economic reality in Cuba.
While the island’s residents are now allowed
to own cell phones and purchase vehicles and homes, and while private
farming and cooperative businesses are also becoming more common and
hotels are now finally allowed to welcome locals, the current president continues
to keep a tight hold on big-money industries; his own son-in-law
manages the conglomerates which are only allowed to operate on the tiny
island if they are being run by the Cuban State.
By September 2015, companies run by Rodriguez’s Grupo de
Administración Empresarial accounted for “about half the business
revenue produced in Cuba,” according to Bloomberg. Other economists, however, believe that figure may be “closer to 80 percent.”
Instead of lifting, or at least pushing for a lift of all
restrictions imposed by America after 50 years of failed, isolationist
policies — finally allowing Americans to make their own decisions as to
whether they want to risk going to Cuba or attempting to trade with
locals on their own — Obama decided to make the US government an
intermediary player in a fascist economic scheme. Despite Republican
voices in Washington urging colleagues to put an end to the economic sanctions, the US government is now picking which companies get to take Americans to Cuba,
for instance, and keeping other airlines from brokering their own
deals, offering competitive prices, and bringing down the cost of travel
for the common tourist.
The idea of having the government broker deals between businesses and
foreign governments is not something Americans should be proud of.
Instead of looking at the details of Obama’s decisions and how Cuba runs
its own economy, the public prefers to panic over what the
President-elect has said.
How about taking a hard look at what the current president has
enabled, which will allow the incoming president to be even more of a
corporate hack than he is? Is Obama 100 percent right just because of
his “historic” first step? Why won’t he do more?
Instead of allowing freedom to prevail for the first time in 50
years, America has, once again, allowed people in power to choose
winners and losers while the people who need freedom the most continue
to suffer.
President, the Embargo, and What to Do Next
While opening up formal trade policies between America and Cuba would
require a unified Congress to lift these restrictions, it’s important
to remember that the Cuba embargo started
“as a creature of executive discretion in 1962 when [President John F.]
Kennedy imposed it.” While Congress acted in 1992 and 1996 to tie the
hands of the executive in this sense, making it nearly impossible for
the president to unilaterally lift restrictions imposed on Americans
doing business in Cuba, Obama showed no signs he understands why
economic sanctions are wrong.
It's more important than ever to highlight the immorality of economic sanctions.Now
that a dictator is dead and his brother, who’s younger and just as
power-hungry, is in power, it’s more important than ever to highlight
the immorality of economic sanctions – and to do so as often as we can.
After all, throughout history, the United States government has initiated countless unnecessary conflicts by imposing these types of policies.
Instead of keeping them in place, we must finally understand that such policies are seen as acts of war and that they do not hurt the ones they are intended to. Instead, only the poor and working classes in nations targeted by these embargoes suffer the consequences.
Obama may have helped to boost the hopes and dreams of countless
Americans and Cubans who have always dreamed of peaceful exchanges
between their countries, but his inability to put an end to the
corporate welfare culture that has plagued his administration
— even as he put an end to the cold war policies of decades past —
proves his commitment to open trade between the nations is skin-deep.
Unless we begin discussing the importance of lifting restrictions and
once again trusting the American and Cuban people to make their own
decisions, President-elect Trump can only make things worse.
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