[NYTr] A change of heart for The Herald Date: Fri, 9 Nov 2007 16:45:41 -0600 (CST) Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit Progreso Weekly - Nov 8, 2007 http://progreso-weekly.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=227&Itemid=1 A change of heart for The Herald By Emilio Paz First, the good news. The Miami Herald has come out officially in favor of an end to the travel and remittance restrictions imposed by Washington on Cuba. In an editorial Wednesday (Nov. 7), titled "More remittances, travel for a free Cuba," the newspaper states: "The U.S. government should lift harsh restrictions on travel and remittances to the island to encourage more people-to-people contacts and support for Cubans pushing for democracy." Farther on, the editorial explains: "More family travel and cultural and academic exchanges would open a world of information and supportive contacts for Cubans on the island. More remittances would help sustain political prisoners as well as Cuban democrats stripped of jobs." Now, the bad news. The Herald makes this bid for all the wrong reasons. It talks of "fissures" in the government, exemplified by a statement ascribed to Foreign Minister Felipe PC)rez Roque, to the effect that Cuba is ready to resign its sovereignty and join "a grand bloc of Latin American and Caribbean nations." That's twisting the truth. PC)rez Roque simply said that Cuba is a proud member of the Latin American-Caribbean community. He did not say that Cuba was willing to abandon its national individuality and become just another victim of Washington's hegemonistic intentions. His statement does not -- as The Herald said -- "contradict years of nationalistic fervor." On the contrary; it reaffirms them. Then, the editorial comes up with a whopper. "President Bush was correct in his recent speech on Cuba to encourage Cubans in the military, police and government to strive for reconciliation and democratic change," it says. "Encourage" Cuba's army, police and government to "strive for reconciliation"? What Bush did was to incite those institutions to revolt and create such an unstable, violent situation that the United States could be excused for taking over the island as a protectorate. "When Cubans rise up [...] you've got to make a choice," he told them. If you choose to overthrow the government, he hinted, "there is a place for you in the free Cuba." A place for you as well-paid puppets of the Bush administration, no doubt. Another whopper comes next. Bush "should take the advice of experts like Vaclav Havel and Lech Walesa, [...] and most Cuban dissidents, including hard-liner Martha Beatriz Roque. All push for more openings, travel and contact with Cuba." While it is true that many dissidents have expressed a desire for an end to the restrictions, Ms. Roque is not one of them. In statements to the foreign press, she has repeatedly urged Bush to continue to squeeze the Cuban people until the government collapses. Of course, she can afford to say that, since she is bankrolled and managed by the Bush administration through the U.S. Interests Section in Havana. And I don't remember ever hearing Havel or Walesa say that they would like the blockade to end. Of course, a reopening of Cuba's trade with the Czech Republic and Poland would be to everyone's benefit. The Herald's editorial closes by saying that "after Fidel Castro dies, Cubans will have a chance to shape their destiny. Opening up to Cuba now will encourage a transition to freedom." Wrong again. Cubans are shaping their destiny at this very moment, as they go through the national election process. A transition has proceeded successfully, even as Fidel Castro has turned over his principal duties to his brother RaC:l and other national leaders. It is a transition within socialism, not to the "freedom" (read "Plattist neoliberalism") that Bush would like to impose on the island. The editorial's subtitle is revealing: "U.S. can break the isolation imposed on the Cuban people." But who imposed that isolation? Sorry, Herald. Your proposal is good, but your intentions and reasoning are not. Emilio Paz lives in Miami. * ================================================================= NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us Our main website: http://www.blythe.org List Archives: http://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ Subscribe: http://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================