Time to rethink the Cuban embargo?

posted at 10:18 am on February 23, 2009 by Ed Morrissey

Many expected the election of Barack Obama to bring changes to our foreign policy on Cuba, but the first volley for new thinking comes from a Republican.  Richard Lugar, ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, has issued a report calling for a change in the decades-long embargo on Cuba and the Fidel/Raul Castro regime.  Lugar says the embargo has “failed”:

The US economic embargo on Cuba “has failed” and should be re-evaluated, senior Republican Senator Richard Lugar argues in a report.

“We must recognise the ineffectiveness of our current policy and deal with the Cuba regime in a way that enhances US interests,” Senator Lugar says.

President Barack Obama has promised a new look at US policy towards Cuba, including easing travel restrictions.

But he has said he believes the embargo is an “inducement” for change in Cuba.

Well, if it is, it’s certainly taking a long time to show it.  The US started the embargo shortly after Fidel Castro took power in 1959, and last time I looked, the Castros still run the show.  For almost 30 years, the Soviet Union floated them as a rebuke to the US in Latin America, but even after the collapse of the USSR, the Castros have managed to remain in power — for an additional 20 years.  Under any rational measurement, the embargo has failed to produce change in Cuba.

Would engagement have been a better policy?  Consider China as an example.  When Richard Nixon went to China, they were at least as oppressive internally and a bigger risk for metastizing communism around the world.  They’re still oppressive, but have gradually begun to adopt the free-market economics that will eventually free their people.  Without a doubt, the Chinese are more free now than in the early 1970s when Nixon met Mao, and engagement can get at least some of the credit for that.

I’m in favor of keeping pressure on the Castros, and in any event, they won’t be around much longer.  Fidel stepped down a year ago today, and now lives in an undisclosed location, if he’s alive at all.  His brother Raul is in his late 70s and won’t live forever, or even another ten years.  What will replace them?  The refusal to engage may allow a pristine democracy movement to come to power in Havana, but more likely it will be the army and people already in power, groups with no contacts to speak of with the US.

Lugar is correct.  The embargo has failed and left us in a poor position for the eventual transition to a post-Castro Cuba.  We need to find other ways to keep pressure on for change, but start looking towards the future.

Blowback

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Comment pages: 1 2

OOOOhhhhh… Cigars

TinMan13 on February 23, 2009 at 7:26 PM

Looks like Sen. Lugar want to turn loose his repressed sexuality with Juanita and her RINO. And mayby cigars, too.

Dilbertnomore on February 23, 2009 at 7:44 PM

As long as they pay cash, I am not opposed to selling non-military, or security goods. I would oppose extending credits or dual use technology.

KW64 on February 23, 2009 at 8:04 PM

This is certainly not the time to change policy! In fact, I would argue quite the opposite. As the world has entered an economic recession, Cuba will probably feel the full brunt of years of their own failed policy. Russia still is in no position to support Cuba, and Venezuela is also unable to assist them . I say wait the Casto family out, and let the economic chips fall as they may.

jerseyjoe99982002 on February 23, 2009 at 8:06 PM

What I am hearing is that Lugar wants the embargo lifted to drive a wedge between Cuba and Venezuela. It’s means of isolating The Thug. But I don’t think it will work. At a time when Cuba is reconstructing Russian military bases to menace us and plotting to control valuable sea lanes, from which 64% of our imported energy must transverse, I don’t think this is the time to be rewarding Castro.

Nobody wants the embargo lifted more than Castro. Lifting it will put a great big smile on his mangy bearded face. Why do you suppose that is? It’s not that he can’t get all the US stuff he wants from Europe, or Latam or Asia. He already can. He can buy any American-made product in Mexico or any country on earth if he wants. What he so far doesn’t have access to is trade credits, the financing guarantees that Uncle Sam extends on all international trade. Go read any of the Cuban statements demanding an end to the embargo and there in the fine print you will see that this is all about extending trade credits, and Castro says he won’t accept any embargo-lifting without them. So Castro not only wants our stuff, he wants US TO PAY FOR IT. After that, he will default. How do I know this? Because 1. He has urged other countries to default and has praised those who did. 2. Because he himself has defaulted, multiple times, and on even his best friends – Russia, Japan, Mexico, Europe. Anybody who has extended him credit has rapidly learned that he’s been had. Now with Chavez running out of money, Castro looks forward to draining our till, getting his Porkulus stimulus bailout, and making us pay for it.

No thank you.

Writer gal on February 23, 2009 at 10:17 PM

What I am hearing is that Lugar wants the embargo lifted to drive a wedge between Cuba and Venezuela. It’s means of isolating The Thug. But I don’t think it will work. At a time when Cuba is reconstructing Russian military bases to menace us and plotting to control valuable sea lanes, from which 64% of our imported energy must transverse, I don’t think this is the time to be rewarding Castro.

Nobody wants the embargo lifted more than Castro. Lifting it will put a great big smile on his mangy bearded face. Why do you suppose that is? It’s not that he can’t get all the US stuff he wants from Europe, or Latam or Asia. He already can. He can buy any American-made product in Mexico or any country on earth if he wants. What he so far doesn’t have access to is US trade credits, the financing guarantees that Uncle Sam extends on all international trade. Go read any of the Cuban statements demanding an end to the embargo and there in the fine print you will see that this is all about extending trade credits, and Castro says he won’t accept any embargo-lifting without them. So Castro not only wants our stuff, he wants US TO PAY FOR IT. After that, he will default. How do I know this? Because 1. He has urged other countries to default and has praised those who did. 2. Because he himself has defaulted, multiple times, and on even his best friends – Russia, Japan, Mexico, Europe. Anybody who has extended him credit has rapidly learned that he’s been had. Now with Chavez running out of money, Castro looks forward to draining our till, getting his Porkulus stimulus bailout, and making us pay for it.

No thank you.

Writer gal on February 23, 2009 at 10:18 PM

You are now free to travel to Cuba, wonder if you can bring back some real swell cigars that are rolled by children in their basements. Maybe they should expand Gitmo to include the rest of that island. Good start in my opinion.

workingforpigs on February 24, 2009 at 1:50 AM

Lugar is a misleading fool. And you Ed. should know better.

The only thing the embargo does now is deny the Cubans US Government credit. The Cubans have, for some time, been able to purchase humanitarian supplies from the USA. However, they have to pay cash.

Greater access to the US market has not improved the Cubans way of life. British Socialist “Neil Clark says that he went to Havana in search of a left-wing Utopia and discovered instead an island fortress of poverty, corruption and currency apartheid” – Cuba was no place for a socialist like me

I am not aware that improved access to US products has changed the Cuban Govrnment’s approach to the USA. Cuba’s opinion of the Embargo

davod on February 24, 2009 at 3:00 AM

At least Lugar didnt vote for the Porkulus stimulus package.

I would say now is a good time for a blockade to stop all but humanitarian supplies from reaching Cuba. how long until the Cuban elite depose the Castros? 6 hours.

darktood on February 24, 2009 at 7:31 AM

Maybe we should increase our exporting to Cuba as a start to see how it goes. We could start by sending them 1 million illegal aliens which seems to be our only current product.

workingforpigs on February 24, 2009 at 8:30 AM

Pardon me if I intrude on the Cuba love fest ;)

To be honest with you guys, its American policy that has kept Fidel and his family in power all these years.

When the iron curtain came down, along with the Soviet Empire, America should have removed the embargo at that point. With an influx of “legal” American investment in to the country Fidel would have been over thrown…after all, people love money more than they love dictators.

Also, with a star bucks, McDonalds, KFC and Pizza hut on every corner, along with fat kids…Cuba would have fallen completely under America’s control.

Instead what has happened is America gave Fidel a bogey man to focus his countries dissolution away from him and on to the great satan.

And its in that respect, why I say its american policy that has kept Fidel in power.

One of the posters above was going on about Russian bases being rebuilt. Well the truth is nothing like this happens without financial pay back BUT if American investment was already in the country there would be no need for Russian rubles.

Regards

Mailman

mailman on February 24, 2009 at 9:18 AM

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