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Caribbean-Latin America
US Won't Lift Cuba Embargo
2008-02-20
WASHINGTON (AP) - Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said Tuesday the United States will not soon lift its embargo on Cuba despite Fidel Castro's resignation. Asked by reporters at the State Department if Washington planned to change its Cuba policy now that Castro has stepped down, Negroponte replied: "I can't imagine that happening anytime soon." He declined further comment.

The centerpiece of American policy toward Cuba has been the economic embargo, first instituted in limited form in 1960 and strengthened in Castro persistently called the trade embargo "criminal," and claimed that its economic impact on the island ran well into the tens of billions of dollars.

In Rwanda, President Bush expressed hope that the end of Fidel Castro's presidency will launch a transition to democracy in Cuba after nearly 50 years of ironclad, communist rule. "What does this mean for the people in Cuba?" Bush said at a news conference during his trip to Africa. "They're the ones who suffered under Fidel Castro. They're the ones who were put in prison because of their beliefs. They're the ones who have been denied their right to live in a free society. So I view this as a period of transition and it should be the beginning of the democratic transition in Cuba."

"I view this as a period of transition and it should be the beginning of the democratic transition in Cuba."
Tom Casey, deputy spokesman at the State Department, expressed hope for change in Cuba, but said the U.S. remains skeptical. "We would hope that the departure from the scene of Cuba's long-ruling dictator Fidel Castro would allow for a democratic transition. ... We would hope that his departure would begin this transition," Casey told reporters.

But he added that the United States is troubled by signs that Cuba's leadership envisions this as a "transfer of authority and power from dictator to dictator light—from Fidel to Raul." Still, he said the Bush administration remains willing to help support the Cuban people in a true transition to democracy.

"In the meantime, political prisoners will rot in prison and the human condition will remain pathetic in many cases"
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Miami-area Republican who was born in Havana, said Castro's resignation was irrelevant because his regime had already "done great harm to the suffering Cuban people." "It matters nothing at all whether Fidel, Raul or any other thug is named head of anything in Cuba," she said. "What the people want is freedom to vote in multiparty elections that are internationally supervised and freedom to express their dissent from the oppressive regime. The Communist machinery is enslaving them so it doesn't matter who the thug of the moment will be."

Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., who is of Cuban descent, said Castro's resignation "is not the cause for celebration that some would believe." "This does not represent the replacement of totalitarianism with democracy. Instead, it is the replacement of one dictator with another," he said in a statement.
From a Democrat no less. Bravo.
The Coast Guard, meanwhile, has not added any additional patrols in light of Castro's resignation, said Coast Guard spokesman Chris O'Neil. O'Neil, speaking from Florida, said there have been no indications or warnings of a mass migration. "The threat has not changed," O'Neil said.

Bush said he anticipates debate about Cuba's future, and that some people will say "Let's promote stability." "In the meantime, political prisoners will rot in prison and the human condition will remain pathetic in many cases," he said.

Bush noted that he had met with the families of some of prisoners, and that their release should be the first step of any transition to democracy. "It just breaks your heart to realize that people have been thrown in prisons because they dare speak out," he said.

"The international community should work with the Cuban people to begin to build institutions that are necessary for democracy," Bush said. "Eventually, this transition ought to lead to free and fair elections—and I mean free, and I mean fair—not these kind of staged elections that the Castro brothers try to foist off as true democracy," Bush said.

"The United States will help the people of Cuba realize the blessings of liberty," Bush said.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  Ethanol.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-02-20 17:08  

#4  I'd be surprised if Cuba stuck with sugar as the core of its economy - it's got much more promise being rebuilt for high-end tourism.
Posted by: lotp   2008-02-20 16:06  

#3  Let's be honest. If Cuba turned into the Czech Republic tomorrow the sugar lobby would make sure the embargo would still continue.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-02-20 15:03  

#2  See?

Castro to be Cuba's ideologue, elder statesman
Posted by: tu3031   2008-02-20 10:36  

#1  Castro resigning is like Don Corleone "retiring".
Posted by: tu3031   2008-02-20 09:04  

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