Thursday, May 9, 2013

The Cuba Embargo: A Fork on the Road

The Cuba Embargo: A Fork on the Road
May 9, 2013
Fernando Ravsberg*

HAVANA TIMES — The periodical of Cuba's Catholic Church, Espacio Laical
("Secular Space"), has criticized a group of Cuban dissidents who,
during a tour abroad, called on the United States to maintain the
economic embargo it has imposed on the island for over fifty years.

Many Cuban dissidents support Washington's policy of economic pressure
but avoid publicly expressing this within Cuba, where the majority
condemns the so-called "U.S. blockade".

During a recent international tour, however, a number of them have
spoken in favor of the embargo. These dissidents include around 20 of
the island's most renowned bloggers, the Ladies in White and the Human
Rights Commission.

The editorial published in Cuba's catholic journal, titled "A Fork on
the Road" ("Senderos que se bifurcan"), criticizes these dissidents
because they "insist on asking major centers of power around the world
to destabilize the Cuban government, and to take measures that can do
profound harm to the people of Cuba."

The aim of the embargo, which is to "deprive Cuba of money and supplies,
to reduce its financial resources and real wages, cause hunger,
desperation and the overthrow of the government." (1), had been
established in official U.S. government documents as early as the 1960s.

In view of this, it is understandable that the Cuban Catholic Church and
Vatican should oppose these measures, whose severe social costs are
evident. It is a posture the Church has maintained, in fact, since the
times before it established closer relations with the Cuban government.

Espacio Laical acknowledges that "Cuba has to change in many ways" and
expresses its gratitude towards individuals and institutions committed
to such change, but adds that "the key figures behind these changes
cannot be the centers of power of certain powerful and influential
countries."

The periodical affirms that "the majority of Cuban patriots" appeal to
those who wish to help Cuba not to become "conspirators who are willing
to lead us down uncertain roads, which have not been traced by the
express will of the people."

In addition to expressing support for the US embargo, Cuban dissidents
have requested additional material aid. Relations between the United
States and the island's dissidents, bloggers and human rights
organizations would appear tainted by the US $20 million which
Washington destines to financing their activities every year.

In a confidential cable published by Wikileaks (cable # 202438, sent on
April 15, 2009), the U.S. diplomatic chief in Cuba, Jonathan Farrar,
acknowledged that Cuban dissidents "were more concerned about getting
money than about taking their proposals to broader sectors of Cuban
society."

The Church also appears to have lost faith in the opposition. In recent
years, it has built tighter links with the Cuban government, gained
spaces for its evangelization work and promoted measures of immense
social impact, such as securing the release of all political prisoners
and 3,000 common inmates.

In a way, Cardinal Jaime Ortega has become a kind of privileged
interlocutor of President Raul Castro, and the two are building
relations of trust which are putting behind decades of mutual
misunderstanding and aggression.

It is within the context of these relations that Espacio Laical calls
for greater understanding "between Cubans with different conceptions of
patriotism", so that others do not "manage to impose a new model which
responds to partial interests or, worse, to hijack the country's destiny."

The Church periodical thinks it possible that "together, and with the
people's active participation, we can fashion a new social model for
Cuba, with the aim of adjusting it to the nation's pressing demands, a
model that is the true expression of the general will."

The proposal advanced by the Catholics is complicated, because it calls
for a space where Cubans with different conceptions of patriotism can
debate their positions. Reaching an agreement regarding who fits into
this category, and who are to be excluded from it, will not be an easy task.

Deciding what criteria define a "patriot" will be a difficult process
indeed, but it seems likely that the Cuban Catholic Church and
government already agree on one thing: that public condemnation of the
US economic embargo on Cuba is one of these criteria.
—–

(1) Foreign Relations of the United States, 1958 – 1960, Volume VI,
Cuba, United States Government Printing Office, Washington 1991, p. 885

(*) An authorized Havana Times translation of the original posted in
Spanish by BBC Mundo.

http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=92817

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