Obama to lift travel restrictions to Cuba

posted at 5:05 pm on April 13, 2009 by Allahpundit

Sweet. Now we can have the Green Room launch party in Havana, like I wanted. Dates are required, except for me.

Under the new policy, Cuban Americans will now be allowed to travel freely to the island and send as much money as they want to their family members — so long as the money is not going to senior officials of the Cuban government or the Communist Party.

Second, the administration will take steps to open up communications to the island by allowing telecommunications companies to engage in licensing agreements that will support cell phones, satellite televisions and computers there.

Third, the president will reverse restrictions on gift packages imposed by his predecessor, former President George W. Bush, in 2004. The new rules will permit Cuban Americans to send clothing, personal hygiene items and fishing equipment to family members on the island — again, so long as the recipients are not government or Communist Party officials.

CNN’s story on this also implies that the new policies are limited to Cuban-Americans, which can’t be right, I think. Federal law that discriminates on the basis of ethnicity almost always violates equal protection; the policy must be broader than the media’s suggesting. Meanwhile, the GOP — minus RINO Mel Martinez, natch — is hammering The One for having played into the Castro boys’ hands here, with the Diaz-Balart brothers in the House calling him out for a “serious mistake”:

“Unilateral concessions to the dictatorship embolden it to further isolate, imprison and brutalize pro-democracy activists, to continue to dictate which Cubans and Cuban-Americans are able to enter the island, and this unilateral concession provides the dictatorship with critical financial support,” the two said in their statement.

Fair points all, but also equally fair (if not more so) with respect to, say, China, and there’s no travel ban in place there. (Indeed, compare the dramatic difference in tone in the descriptions of China and Cuba on the State Department’s visa page.) CNN cites a poll taken last month showing that 71 percent of Americans want to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba, which doesn’t surprise me: We can debate whether it’s smart policy to punish totalitarian states with travel bans as a rule, but I’m not sure what the argument is for distinguishing between them. As near as I can tell, the Cuba ban is driven mainly by good ol’ fashioned tradition and not wanting to let Fidel, the last vestige of the Cold War, claim a moral victory by outlasting America’s antipathy to him. Or am I overanalyzing it and this is really a simple case of Cuba being small and powerless enough to shun and China being very much not so?

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Comment pages: 1 2

This is a good move. Flood the country with Americans, and end the isolation. Bans/sanctions have always been an example of foreign policy hypocrisy, similar to naming Saudi Arabia and Pakistan as partners against terrorism, when we all know those are two of the biggest terrorist-enabling-and-producing nations on the planet.

What did sanctions ever do to Iraq except cause the suffering and deaths of hundreds of thousands of people.

What have US policy and isolation done to Cuba, except to help keep the country regressed back to the 1950s.

Mister Ghost on April 13, 2009 at 8:16 PM

Or am I overanalyzing it and this is really a simple case of Cuba being small and powerless enough to shun and China being very much not so?

That’s it.

IMO, they should probably let Castro die (Fidel, that is), and then do this. That is, deny him the victory, but in the end the ban is probably worthless.

PersonalLiberty on April 13, 2009 at 8:20 PM

I’m actually surprised that people think this is a bad deal. Has it accomplished anything to keep the ban? Does anyone but the people of the country suffer from our ‘embargoes’? The officials we’re trying to target sure don’t suffer, they just take more from their people.

It was a stupid idea to begin with. Embargoes and bans have become the scapegoat strategy when it comes to dealing with other nations. We want to be seen as strong and do something…. in reality it comes across as a weak answer that make us look even weaker.

First the pirate thing and now this… at least Obama’s showing he’s not a complete coward.

Luckedout on April 13, 2009 at 8:23 PM

” Or am I overanalyzing it and this is really a simple case of Cuba being small and powerless enough to shun and China being very much not so?”

Yeah, that. Nothing wrong with dealing with reality.

Golden Boy on April 13, 2009 at 8:26 PM

Embargoes and bans have become the scapegoat strategy when it comes to dealing with other nations. We want to be seen as strong and do something…. in reality it comes across as a weak answer that make us look even weaker.

First the pirate thing and now this… at least Obama’s showing he’s not a complete coward.

Luckedout on April 13, 2009 at 8:23 PM

Funny thing-O’bama in essence said that we should have kept the embargoes and bans in place against Iraq, instead of liberating them as Bush did.

Del Dolemonte on April 13, 2009 at 8:34 PM

I’m fine ending the whole embargo. It hasn’t worked, the Soviet Union fell in part due to increased trade/contacts with the US, and China’s become more capitalistic with increased trade/contacts.

rbj on April 13, 2009 at 8:47 PM

Something tells me these policies will be just enough to help prop up the Castro brothers government.

Dr. ZhivBlago on April 13, 2009 at 9:29 PM

The O’s will have an easy holiday commute to Cuba rather than Hawaii.

We are giftwrapping millions probably billions of dollars to the Cuban government to use on whatever it wants because the money WILL flow from the individual to the state through taxation etc and the telcoms will be dropping millions if not billions in the governments hands for cell towers etc.

Russian navy just visited last fall. Venezuela’s is a BF. And the UN and the US have a perfect record of keeping nukes etc out of unfriendly countries hands.

But nothing to worry about. It’s all 5-10 years down the road. Let’s go and enjoy those cigars, margaritas now and the leaders 10 years from now will deal with our follies.

journeyintothewhirlwind on April 13, 2009 at 9:47 PM

For an excellent treatment on this subject, I would recomment the Babalu Blog. Val has been writing about the embargo issue for ages.

Net takeaway from Babalu on the embargo: remember that the US is the only country which embargoes Cuba. It does business with virtually every other country on the planet, with China, Brazil, and Spain as its largest patrons. Yet Castro still rails against the US embargo as the reason for all of Cuba’s economic woes.

Val calls bullsh*t on that argument.

Having put the embargo in place, we should not unilaterally relax it for any reason. There should be concessions made by Cuba. The main concession the US could win in return for curbing or dropping the embargo would be to get the Cuban government to end the apartied practices it engages upon its citizenry: denying them access to healthcare, goods, services, and hard currency that it hoards from the tourist trade. I will never visit Cuba as a tourist so long as the average citizen is denied access to facilities that cater only to tourists.

*Anything* done to “ease” the embargo only props up Fidel and Raul. This idiotic declaration that money cannot be paid to the government there is a joke: it completely ignores the fact that if families send their relatives money, the Government is free to spend money that it might otherwise need to spend on citizens to continue propping up its own sorry existence. By giving in to the bleeding heart argument, we only serve to further support for the regime.

If Obambi seriously wanted to help Cuba, he could attach the carrot of dropping sanctions to a provision that free elections be held there, monitored by true, impartial observers who are free to move about without government interference – and not let Jimmah within 100 miles of it.

But Obambi never quite denied that little dalliance with the philosophy of Che, now did he?

/spit

Wanderlust on April 13, 2009 at 10:10 PM

I look forward to visiting Cuba and trying to spread a little capitalist spirit myself. Latin/Cuban jazz and Cuban sandwiches FTW!

DaveS on April 13, 2009 at 10:20 PM

We can debate whether it’s smart policy to punish totalitarian states with travel bans as a rule, but I’m not sure what the argument is for distinguishing between them.

I think the difference here is one simple thing, location. Cuba is right off our shores. An air attack launched from Cuba upon the United States provides a very small window of time for the United States to react where as China is an ocean away. I think the strategic location of Cuba provides a built in uniqueness that requires special consideration for determining policy just as China or any other country has unique qualities and circumstances that require Tailor-made policy for each. I’m not saying that our Cuban policy shouldn’t be changed but if it does the change should be made based on what is best for American interests and those of the Cuban people and not based on policy with other nations.

Dollayo on April 13, 2009 at 11:50 PM

How is it that the communist administration of Obama doesn’t understand how communism works? Anything they send to their family IS the property of the Government.

leetpriest on April 13, 2009 at 11:55 PM

I truly, truly, truly wish this was some sort of great deception plan to do a “Bay of Pigs without the Bay” situation.

A. It would mean Obama is at least half as smart as his worshipers think he is.

B. It would mean the Cuban people ACTUALLY WOULD BE FREE!

We have slipped far.

Turtler on April 14, 2009 at 12:32 AM

this will flood america with cubans, who will now be able to row across to Florida, then keep in touch with friends and family by plane.

Phoenician on April 14, 2009 at 12:48 AM

I wonder what the hell Uncle Obammie’s gonna after the Russians set up their air bases, naval facilities, and missile silo’s in Cuba, not tomention Venezuela, now that the Patron Saint of Simpering Defeat is POTUS.

SilverStar830 on April 14, 2009 at 1:21 AM

“…so long as the money is not going to senior officials of the Cuban government or the Communist Party.”

Seriously? This sentence just seems completely ridiculous…

I’m torn on this. There’s a point to be made about the hypocrisy.

As to economics, how much longer did the Soviets last beyond where they should have due to an opening of economic markets? The same could be said for China I suppose. Now more money will go directly to a repressive regime.

I guess this is something which we’ll just have to see play out.

catmman on April 14, 2009 at 8:13 AM

We wouldn’t want to pass up a chance to help out a guy like Castro. How many more billions can we have in remittances leaving the USA to support failed governments. Oh, and he’s such a likable old cuss.

Ernest on April 14, 2009 at 8:51 AM

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