miércoles, 25 de junio de 2014

Lift the embargo – but liberate Cuba first

Lift the embargo – but liberate Cuba first

By Jeff Jacoby | GLOBE COLUMNIST JUNE 25, 2014



AT A June 12 appearance in New York before the Council on Foreign

Relations, Hillary Clinton made the familiar argument for ending the US

trade embargo against Cuba, the same one critics of the policy have been

making for years.



"The embargo is Castro's best friend," the former secretary of state

said; it provides the Havana regime with "an excuse for everything."

Scrapping sanctions would "change the psychology of this issue" and

improve US relations with the rest of the hemisphere. So "we should

advocate for normalizing relations and see what [Cuba's rulers] do."



A few hours earlier, Cuba's rulers had been doing one of the things they

do best: persecuting peaceful dissidents. More than 40 pro-democracy

activists were rounded up on June 11, and several were allegedly beaten

by security agents. One of Cuba's most respected dissidents, Jorge Luís

García Pérez, widely known as Antúnez, said he was battered and choked

into unconsciousness in a police station in Santa Clara, according to

the Miami Herald. State security officials warned Antúnez to stop

collecting signatures on a petition condemning international efforts to

reduce US sanctions against Cuba.



In Cuba, as in the United States, it requires no bravery to publicly

oppose the embargo. Cubans who publicly support it, on the other hand,

risk being prosecuted for committing a crime punishable by up to 15

years imprisonment. Clinton's critique of the US embargo drew attention

because she is a potential candidate for president. But what really

merits the headlines is the courage shown by the hundreds of ordinary

Cuban citizens openly urging the free world not to do more business with

the dictatorship that for so long has kept Cuba on its knees.



Conventional wisdom holds that the US embargo has persisted only because

Cuban-Americans in Florida, a key voting bloc, strongly defend it.

Florida International University generated some media notice last week

with a new poll showing that by a narrow majority, Cubans living in

metropolitan Miami — the capital of the Cuban American community —

actually oppose the embargo. Critics quickly flagged some glaring

problems with the poll, such as the 90 percent of respondents who

claimed to be registered voters, while only 62 percent said they were US

citizens. And the reported results filtered out the "unsures," which on

the embargo question amounted to 12 percent of respondents. Including

those numbers in the overall tally would show 45 percent against the

embargo — a plurality, not a majority.



Yet the focus on polling data is a distraction. The US economic embargo

is not the cause of Cuba's misery. The Castro tyranny is. Unilaterally

repealing the embargo would not weaken that tyranny by flooding the

island with American tourists, consumer goods, and democratic notions,

as sanctions opponents romantically imagine. Nearly 3 million tourists

already visit Cuba annually, hundreds of thousands of Americans among

them. In recent years, more tourists have traveled to Cuba from the

United States than from any other country except Canada.



The trade embargo is far from hermetic. Since 2000, US exporters have

sold close to $5 billion in food, agricultural, and medical goods to

Cuba — for several years, in fact, the United States was Cuba's

fifth-largest trade partner. Meanwhile, Cuba has had the rest of the

world to do business with, unfettered by embargoes or Florida politics.



If tourism and trade were going to undermine Cuba's communist regime, it

would surely have toppled long ago. But engagement with totalitarians

doesn't turn them into free and democratic neighbors. Rather, it

empowers them to crack down on their subjects with even greater

impunity. According to Elizardo Sanchez, a well-known human rights

activist in Havana, detentions of dissidents have spiked, reaching more

than 3,800 in just the first four months of 2014, far above the previous

high of 2,795 two years ago.



The embargo, or what remains of it, is not chiseled in granite. It is,

however, codified in US law. The Helms-Burton Act, signed by Hillary

Clinton's husband in 1996, allows the embargo to be lifted once the

Cuban government legalizes political opposition, frees its political

prisoners, and schedules democratic elections. Cuban dissidents insist

on that point at the risk of going to prison. Shouldn't American

politicians, with nothing at risk but their credibility, insist on it as

well?



Jeff Jacoby can be reached at jacoby@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter

@jeff_jacoby.



Source: Lift the embargo – but liberate Cuba first - Opinion - The

Boston Globe -

http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/06/24/lift-embargo-but-liberate-cuba-first/7Msp22F4gTVhBajSG8lSaK/story.html

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