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Judi Lynn

(162,385 posts)
Tue Jun 18, 2024, 01:58 PM Jun 2024

Speaking of Cuba! Golden Oldie, from 2007, from The Nation. So worth reading, for anyone interested in reality!

APRIL 26, 2007
Changing Course on Cuba
The US government’s policy toward Cuba is imperial, irrational, arguably insane. It’s time to change it.
THE EDITORS

This article appears in the May 14, 2007 issue.

What do you call a US policy that allows a notorious international terrorist to walk free on bail? A policy that detains and fines a class of New York high school students for taking a study trip over spring break? A policy that has been repudiated at the United Nations by virtually every other country in the world? A policy that, after forty-eight years of abject failure, is still based on the false assumption that success–in the form of “regime change”–is just around the corner? Imperial. Illogical. Irrational. Insane.

As Wayne Smith, former chief of the US interest section in Havana, has observed, Cuba seems to have “the same effect on American administrations that the full moon has on werewolves.” For almost five decades this small Caribbean nation has inspired some of the most rabid US policies, from economic embargoes and diplomatic sanctions to covert ops, paramilitary invasions and assassination attempts. Fidel Castro has survived such aggression from nine US Presidents, and it now appears he may outlast a tenth.

The next occupant of the White House will have an unusual opportunity to bring US policy toward Cuba into the twenty-first century. Slowly but surely, the political actors are realigning. Castro’s illness opened up unprecedented possibilities for change on the island, and the stable transition of power to his brother Raul exposed as a fallacy Washington’s prediction that the regime would disintegrate without its founder. Recent opinion polls reflect more moderate attitudes among Cuban-Americans, a shift that could ease the vise-like grip hard-line exiles have held over the crucial swing state of Florida. The Democratic takeover of Congress has placed limits on the power of right-wing Cuban-American legislators. Finally, the Administration has drained the blood from its global crusade for regime change with the self-inflicted wound known as the Iraq War.

In Washington, there is a reinvigorated, and increasingly bipartisan, effort to pressure Bush, presidential contenders and the new Congress to lift parts of the embargo and move toward normal relations. On April 18, for example, the New America Foundation launched an initiative to shape a “new consensus” on Cuba at a press conference featuring Colin Powell’s former chief of staff, Col. Lawrence Wilkerson. Speakers at the event echoed a recent report from the Center for Democracy in the Americas, In Our National Interest: Top Ten Reasons for Changing US Policy Toward Cuba: “We need a new Cuba policy rooted in America’s national interest and our common sense.”

More:
https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/changing-course-cuba/

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Speaking of Cuba! Golden Oldie, from 2007, from The Nation. So worth reading, for anyone interested in reality! (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2024 OP
And then we get this in 2024. Marcus IM Jun 2024 #1
 

Marcus IM

(3,001 posts)
1. And then we get this in 2024.
Wed Jun 19, 2024, 11:38 AM
Jun 2024

Dems want a bill to throw open the doors to more RW "exiles" who are "fleeing" "communist dictatorships".



Great ideas.

1) Sanction and embargo into poverty said nations corporate doesn't like
2) Attract victims of US policy with fast track immigration, chain immigration, special socialist benefits, etc.
3) Saturate S Florida with as many RW "exiles" as possible
4) Fast track them to citizenship
5) Grow the pool of Republican voters
6) Make Florida permanently Red.
7) Complain about Florida turning Red




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