News (Media Awareness Project) - US: A New Cuba Debate |
Title: | US: A New Cuba Debate |
Published On: | 1999-08-12 |
Source: | Washington Post (DC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-28 18:12:36 |
A NEW CUBA DEBATE
THE AMERICAN debate about economic connections to embargoed Cuba has
produced some modest tentative gains for free trade, thanks mainly to the
desire of American farmers to sell crops that are otherwise a drag on the
market. But Cuba's poverty and the small size of its economy put their own
tight limits on the economic possibilities of an expanding relationship,
even as the continuing internal American concern for Cuba's Communist
dictatorship limits the political possibilities. Fortunately, there is a
better, more promising and more urgent arena of American debate about Cuba:
cooperation in drug interdiction.
It should be a natural: Americans know well and detest the scourge of drugs,
while Fidel Castro fears the infection of his people by America-bound drugs
that, by criminal design or authentic accident, find their way to Cuba.
President Castro reported on the recent national day that just in the first
half of 1999, 4,539 kilograms of drugs washed up on Cuba's northern coast --
cargo dropped off by airplanes in the Old Bahama Channel and meant to be
picked up by speedboats.
The Cuban authorities are promoting a vigorous campaign for cooperation with
Americans against drug trafficking. This has alarmed some Americans in
Congress and in Miami. They fear that the Cubans will turn the struggle
against illegal drugs away from real law enforcement and toward their own
political advantage.
In this flank of American opinion, there is a deep suspicion that the Castro
regime itself participates in and profits from the vile trade.
There is anecdotal evidence to the contrary.
In one conspicuous case in which a tanker had been grounded in Cuban waters,
the Cubans cooperated amply in discovery, investigation and a subsequent
Miami trial.
To the continuing dismay of some Americans, Cuban conduct in that episode
whetted the appetite of American drug enforcement officials for making
cooperation with Havana systematic and routine, not just a matter of
occasional opportunity.
The issue of Cuban complicity in the drug trade has yet to be addressed in
Washington with the fullness, vigor and publicity that would allow the
United States to take Fidel Castro's demonstratively extended anti-drug
hand. But the Clinton administration has undertaken an intelligence review;
this was reported by Juan Tamayo of the Miami Herald and relayed by
President Castro. If Cuba passes a rigorous test of its fitness for
pragmatic partnership on this issue, then the United States should explore
what can plausibly be done.
Such a development would grant a degree of legitimacy and favor to the Cuban
regime; this troubles Miami. But even those Americans for whom this would be
not a boon but a bitter pill could presumably share in the satisfactions of
limiting some greater part of the flow of drugs across the Caribbean and
into the United States. The critics of Clinton administration policy are
sensitive to any suggestion that they are putting anti-Castroism over the
protection of American citizens, and they should be.
THE AMERICAN debate about economic connections to embargoed Cuba has
produced some modest tentative gains for free trade, thanks mainly to the
desire of American farmers to sell crops that are otherwise a drag on the
market. But Cuba's poverty and the small size of its economy put their own
tight limits on the economic possibilities of an expanding relationship,
even as the continuing internal American concern for Cuba's Communist
dictatorship limits the political possibilities. Fortunately, there is a
better, more promising and more urgent arena of American debate about Cuba:
cooperation in drug interdiction.
It should be a natural: Americans know well and detest the scourge of drugs,
while Fidel Castro fears the infection of his people by America-bound drugs
that, by criminal design or authentic accident, find their way to Cuba.
President Castro reported on the recent national day that just in the first
half of 1999, 4,539 kilograms of drugs washed up on Cuba's northern coast --
cargo dropped off by airplanes in the Old Bahama Channel and meant to be
picked up by speedboats.
The Cuban authorities are promoting a vigorous campaign for cooperation with
Americans against drug trafficking. This has alarmed some Americans in
Congress and in Miami. They fear that the Cubans will turn the struggle
against illegal drugs away from real law enforcement and toward their own
political advantage.
In this flank of American opinion, there is a deep suspicion that the Castro
regime itself participates in and profits from the vile trade.
There is anecdotal evidence to the contrary.
In one conspicuous case in which a tanker had been grounded in Cuban waters,
the Cubans cooperated amply in discovery, investigation and a subsequent
Miami trial.
To the continuing dismay of some Americans, Cuban conduct in that episode
whetted the appetite of American drug enforcement officials for making
cooperation with Havana systematic and routine, not just a matter of
occasional opportunity.
The issue of Cuban complicity in the drug trade has yet to be addressed in
Washington with the fullness, vigor and publicity that would allow the
United States to take Fidel Castro's demonstratively extended anti-drug
hand. But the Clinton administration has undertaken an intelligence review;
this was reported by Juan Tamayo of the Miami Herald and relayed by
President Castro. If Cuba passes a rigorous test of its fitness for
pragmatic partnership on this issue, then the United States should explore
what can plausibly be done.
Such a development would grant a degree of legitimacy and favor to the Cuban
regime; this troubles Miami. But even those Americans for whom this would be
not a boon but a bitter pill could presumably share in the satisfactions of
limiting some greater part of the flow of drugs across the Caribbean and
into the United States. The critics of Clinton administration policy are
sensitive to any suggestion that they are putting anti-Castroism over the
protection of American citizens, and they should be.
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