« Why Can't Congress Telecommute? | Blog Index | Blair's Cabinet in Open Revolt »
Our "Cuba" Policy Has Failed... Even in Syria
Now that Fidel Castro's wavering health has brought the issue of America's Cuba policy to the public stage once again, the parallels with other areas of U.S. foreign policy are more obvious than ever. Consider this analysis published today in The Miami Herald, under the heading, "U.S. Isolation Policy Leaves Few Options:"
[Some] Cuba analysts say the U.S. policy of aggressively isolating Castro through economic sanctions means Washington will be forced to play a secondary role in a post-Castro period…. Under the 1996 Helms-Burton Act, the U.S. government cannot lift many of the sanctions against Cuba without congressional approval until Havana declares its intention to hold free elections and release political prisoners, among other conditions.
'"Our strategy is to enter the game in the ninth inning and to tell the Cubans they are on their own until then,'' said Phil Peters, a Cuba expert with the conservative Lexington Institute, an Arlington, Va., think tank.
Now consider what Thomas Friedman said earlier that morning on NPR. "If you're not going to go to war but you really need [a given country's cooperation], and you're just going to adopt this aggressive verbal stance and some economic sanctions, then you have the worst of all worlds." Sound familiar? But Friedman wasn't talking about Cuba—he was talking about Syria. The result of such a policy, he continued, is that now "you have a hostile Syria but it's not afraid of you and therefore you have no real leverage, and that seems to me to be the penumbra that we're in right now vis-à-vis Syria. And I don't see it serving anyone right now."
Cuba is no Syria, obviously, but it is also no closer to democracy than it was when we first imposed sanctions back in 1960. And there are other important similarities: the U.S. government has castigated and disengaged with both countries largely at the behest of a single, well-organized lobby in Washington, despite no evidence that either policy has produced the desired results.
As Flynt Leverett, a former CIA official and author of Inheriting Syria, told a Brookings Institute audience last year, "I think there is a better way to achieve American policy objectives… It's not rocket science. It's sticks and carrots. In a previous era, we used to call it diplomacy." Of course, he didn't mean "Cuban diplomacy."
Posted by Paige Austin on 08/02/06 at 3:30 PM | E-mail | Print
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://161.58.185.225/mb/mb-backtracks.cgi/1173
Comments
whats next for cuba ?>
Posted by: Dr.Q on 08/05/06 at 2:16 AM
The question isn't whether Cuba is any closer to becoming a democracy than it was when we imposed sanctions in 1960, but rather, is the U.S. closer?
Posted by: Granpa Mike on 08/06/06 at 1:51 AM
ARCHIVE
October 1, 2006 - October 7, 2006
September 24, 2006 - September 30, 2006
September 17, 2006 - September 23, 2006
September 10, 2006 - September 16, 2006
September 3, 2006 - September 9, 2006
August 27, 2006 - September 2, 2006
August 20, 2006 - August 26, 2006
August 13, 2006 - August 19, 2006
August 6, 2006 - August 12, 2006
July 30, 2006 - August 5, 2006
April 23, 2006 - April 29, 2006
April 16, 2006 - April 22, 2006
April 9, 2006 - April 15, 2006
March 26, 2006 - April 1, 2006
March 19, 2006 - March 25, 2006
March 12, 2006 - March 18, 2006
March 5, 2006 - March 11, 2006
February 26, 2006 - March 4, 2006
February 19, 2006 - February 25, 2006
February 12, 2006 - February 18, 2006
February 5, 2006 - February 11, 2006
RECENT COMMENTS
Texas to DC: Don't Fence Me In (2)
Clarence Smart wrote:
Thank you, Eleanor! My thoughts exactly!
...
[more]
Supreme Court Declines to Take Up Sex Toys (1)
Clarence Smart wrote:
Do they grow cucumbers in Texas? ...
[more]
Woodward, Kissinger, Vietnam--Let's Do The Time Warp Again (2)
john wrote:
1938 was over 50 years ago. Like the “world’s greatest g...
[more]
Foley Now In Deeper Trouble (3)
john wrote:
Kathleen, you are forgetting that 50% of the population ar...
[more]
And the Next Secretary General Is... (2)
airtravel wrote:
airtravel...
[more]
Predatory Payday Lenders Ground Thousands of Troops (2)
car loan wrote:
car loan...
[more]
Turn Up the Propaganda, Please (1)
Joe DeLibertas wrote:
Here WE Go Again:
We're not fooling anyone particularly s...
[more]
They've known about Foley for almost a YEAR? (3)
M Baley wrote:
It looks like the Congress will now have to get together ...
[more]
Foley Resigns Over Sexually Explicit Emails (Or, "...sick sick sick sick sick.") (4)
seattledem wrote:
Typical Republican ...
[more]
Remember the Anthrax Investigation? (9)
Dr.Q wrote:
by having antrax identified of an specific strain tells me...
[more]
Movable Type 3.33
Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org
U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records
www.PublicRecordsInfo.com
Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com
Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as
Well as County Property Records Search.
www.PublicRecordsIndex.com














Decades after the U.S. government declared itself winner of the Cold War, and years after it declared that 9/11 changed the world, we're still conducting foreign affairs as if they're a simple conflict of two opposing empires or ideologies. It's just silly.
Posted by: Tim J. on 08/03/06 at 11:43 AM