So How’s That Cuba Deal Going?
Raúl Castro’s demands include reparations and no more U.S. asylum for doctors who defect.
By
Mary Anastasia O’Grady
The Wall Street Journal
Feb. 8, 2015
Less than two months after his “historic” outreach to Havana with a
promise to “normalize relations,” the U.S. commander in chief is getting
the back of Raúl Castro ’s hand.
On
Dec. 17, President Obama floated his plan to revise a half-century-old
U.S.-Cuba policy by promising engagement. “We intend to create more
opportunities for the American and Cuban people,” he said. The trouble
is that as his statements in recent weeks have shown, Raúl Castro has no interest in doing things differently.
The
message from Havana is that if Mr. Obama wants a Cuba legacy it will
have to be on Cuba’s terms. That means he will have to go down in
history as the U.S. president who prolonged the longest-running military
dictatorship in the Western Hemisphere.
Cuban President, Raul Castro
Days
before Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemispheric Affairs
Roberta Jacobson arrived in Havana on Jan. 21 for talks, the Cuban state
newspaper Granma published the government’s list of “demands” for
normalizing relations.
· One
of them was that the U.S. recognize Cuban state-run community groups as
nongovernmental organizations. It did not name any, but the notorious
“committees to defend the revolution,” which exist to enforce repression
by spying on the neighbors, come to mind.
· Also
on the list published in Granma was a demand that the U.S. end its
asylum program for Cuban doctors who escape while serving in third-world
countries where they have been sent to work for slave wages.
A
few days later, at a summit of Latin American and Caribbean leaders in
Belén, Costa Rica, the 83-year-old little brother of Fidel reiterated
some of his other demands.
· He said that relations would not be normalized unless Washington unilaterally lifts the embargo,
· returns Guantanamo Bay to Cuba,
· ceases radio and television transmissions beamed into Cuba and
· makes reparations for the half-century-long embargo.
Mr.
Obama may want to give back Guantanamo as his critics claim. But it is
not clear that he could do so without congressional approval. He
definitely needs Congress to lift the embargo and there’s not a
snowball’s chance in Havana that Congress is going to accept any such
thing as embargo reparations, let alone pay them. Raúl Castro knows
this, so in other words he’s telling Mr. Obama to take a hike.
But
Mr. Obama wants to be friends with the military dictatorship. To prove
it, he has promised to use his executive pen to streamline the permit
process for so-called educational and cultural travel by Americans to
the island. The military owns the tourism industry and more American
tourists will mean more dollars going into its coffers.
No problem there for the Castros. But don’t expect any quid pro quo that requires a softening of the totalitarian machine. That much was made clear in the days following Mr. Obama’s speech.
Mr.
Obama said that Cuba had pledged to release 53 prisoners of conscience
in exchange for three Cubans serving lengthy sentences in the U.S. for
espionage. This was supposed to be proof that Havana would behave more
reasonably if only Washington would show more humility.
Snookered
again. The spies were released but Havana did not keep its side of the
bargain until pressure mounted weeks later, and not even then in any
true sense. When the names of the prisoners finally were made public,
the Havana-based Cuban Commission on Human Rights and National
Reconciliation found that about a dozen of them had been released before
the “swap” was even announced. Some had completed or were close to
completing their sentences and were already scheduled for release.
Marcelino
Abreu Bonora was on the list. He had been released in October. He was
rearrested on Dec. 26 and spent two weeks in a solitary punishment cell
before being released again in mid-January. His crime was holding a sign
that said “change.” There were some 200 political arrests in the four
weeks following Mr. Obama’s speech.
Cuba
has never granted freedom to prisoners of conscience, as the treatment
of the 75 dissidents rounded up during the “Black Spring” of 2003 shows.
Sixty-three of them were exiled. The 12 who refused to leave are
sporadically detained and denied the right to travel abroad.
Mr. Obama says Cuba can help the U.S. fight drug trafficking. Cuba certainly knows the business.
· It
runs Venezuelan intelligence these days—and Caracas is home to some of
the region’s most notorious drug capos. But who can believe that Havana
would interfere with the cash flow the trade generates for its closest
revolutionary ally?
Cuba’s
top demand is that it be taken off the U.S. list of state-sponsors of
terrorism. But in 2013 it was caught running weapons for North Korea. It
is an Iranian ally. Last week the Colombian military intercepted 16
Russian-made antiaircraft rocket launchers bound for the Cuba-supported
Colombia guerrilla group FARC.
No one doubts that Mr. Obama is hard up for friends these days, but courting Cuba makes him look desperate.