We are told we need
to feel sympathy for the Cuban people who have suffered from a U.S. embargo and
lack of diplomatic recognition. That ignores a long history of oppression in
Cuba no matter who was in charge.
Prior to Fidel Castro, Cubans were in the grip of Flugencio Batista who overthrew the existing government in September 1933 and then dominated Cuban politics for the next 25 years until Castro’s revolutionary movement took control of the capitol in January 1959.
Prior to Fidel Castro, Cubans were in the grip of Flugencio Batista who overthrew the existing government in September 1933 and then dominated Cuban politics for the next 25 years until Castro’s revolutionary movement took control of the capitol in January 1959.
Fifty-six years ago
in 1959, I was about to graduate from the University of Miami and among my
friends were young Cubans sent there to get a degree. I have often wondered
which among them returned to Cuba and which, like those who could afford it,
were joined by their family who fled Cuba.
The U.S. had been
involved with Cuba from the end of the Spanish-American War in 1898 when Spain
ceded Puerto Rico, the Philippines, and Guam for $20 million. We stayed in Cuba
until it was granted independence in 1902 as the Republic of Cuba. Its first
president faced an armed revolt in 1906 so we returned to briefly occupy Cuba
to restore some stability, but they never really got the hand of being a
democratic self-governing nation.
How much better it
would have been for the Cubans if the U.S. had decided to make the island a
territory like Puerto Rico. Then we could have let the island prosper without
having to end up with becoming a Communist nation closely allied, first with
the Soviet Union and after its collapse in 1991, with others like China and
Venezuela.
The lesson we might
be expected to draw from this is that Communism does not work. It is an utterly
failed economic and social system that can only stay in power by jailing or
executing anyone who resists. That is exactly what the brothers, Fidel and Raul
Castro, have done since seizing power. One consistency of the past five decades
has been the anti-America policies they have pursued.
The reason given by
Obama was that U.S. policies toward Cuba “have not worked” and that it is time
for a change. There is some truth in this and it should be noted that Canada
has long had good relations with Cuba as have European and, of course, Latin
and South American nations.
Even so, what are
we to conclude from the report that Russia plans to join military drills with
Cuba and North Korea that may also include Vietnam and Brazil? Russia’s
aggression in Ukraine has left it sanctioned and isolated, so the military
drills send a message that it still has nations friendly to it, but what
nations!
Cuba was caught not
long ago when it attempted to ship weapons to North Korea, so we are talking
about two dedicated Communist nations. Over the years, it has more than
demonstrated its anti-American hostility.
Generally, there is
little to be gained by exchanging embassies or relieving Cuba. Lifting our
embargo and other sanctions leaves the U.S. with even less leverage, if any.
What has been
largely overlooked since Obama’s announcement is the fact that Cuba is still
ruled by a Castro and is likely to remain so because Raul’s son, Alejandro
Castro Espin, a colonel in Cuba’s intelligence apparatus is likely being
groomed to take over after becoming a general and a member of the Communist
Party Politburo, Cuba’s ruling body. As noted in an article in The Atlantic,
it is the Cuban military not only that plays a major role in the Politburo, it
also controls at least sixty percent of the island nation’s economy.
I have no doubt
that reaching out to Cuba ranks just below reaching out to Iran as Obama
contemplates his “legacy.” Both are notorious enemies of the U.S. Nor would it
surprise me if Obama would try to unilaterally shut down Guantanamo. Failing
that, he will do everything he can to empty it by the time he leaves office.
Since the collapse
of the Soviet Union in 1991, Cuba has had to struggle to survive economically.
Its earlier behavior got it banned from the Organization of American States
that was not lifted until 2009, but which did not confer full membership until
it was deemed to be “in conformity with the practices, purposes, and principles
of the OAS.” At the time, Fidel said he was not interested in joining.
Not much has
changed in terms of the enmity the Castro brothers have expressed toward the
U.S. but practical considerations to keep unrest among elements of Cuba’s
population under control require them to ease some of the earlier control over
being able to travel and likely who Cubans can do business with would improve
whatever commerce will be permitted.
At this point, the
only “winner” is Cuba.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
Editor’s Note: To really see just how vile Castro and his murderous
myrmidons were and still are – Zone of Reality – Castro Notes.
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