The Cuba-USA Conflict on the Threshold of the 21st Century Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit CubaNow - Aug 27, 2007 http://www.cubanow.net/global/loader.php?&secc=12&item=3184&c=2 By Esteban Morales Domínguez English translation by Frank Martìnez Hraste Cubanow.- The second half of the 1980s is the context we use as a starting point in order to study the conflict between Cuba and the United States. We consider the decade 19861996 in particular became a decisive momment in the formation of the current context in which the clash between Cuba and the United States is unfolding. During the aforementioned period, those events we usually call “a change of focus” of U.S policy towards Cuba, principally took place. While the Cuban Revolution perceived itself as an internally consolidated process with a lot of international activism, the North American policy focused on, paying primordial attention to it, Cuba’s international presence. But within the aforementioned period, serious difficulties, mainly economic, appeared and developed for Cuba. They were basically a direct consequence of having lost the markets from Eastern Europe’s former socialist countries, particularly the late U.S.S.R. This situation put to the test and continues to put to the test, the Cuban Revolution’s capacity, above all internal, to continue onward with its socialist project. Because of this, the development of internal Cuban reality, and particularly the dynamics of its process of recovery and economic reform especially since 1995 - becomes a vvariable that, as never before, is informing and heavily influencing the characteristics of U.S. policy towards Cuba and the peculiarities of the confrontation between both countries. Within the 19921996 period other variablees appeared, defined by the signing of the Torricelli Law, during the 1992 Clinton-Bush presidential campaign and the passing of the HelmsBurton Law, signed by Presidentt George Bush (son), in March, 1996. As a starting point, for us, there are three general basic centers of attention of the conflict between Cuba and the United States. In our opinion they are the following: * Cuban internal reality * North American internal reality * Reality of the international situation Variables have been formed within these three centres of attention where the phenomena of the CubaUnited States conflict takes place. To conttinue, we characterize them: * Within Cuban internal reality, the variable Dynamic of the internal situation (Is) becomes the synthesis of the advance of the economic recovery, together with the challenges coming from the process of economic reforms in Cuba, and the international environment, within which the Island must develop its process of economic re-insertion. Within this dynamic the country’s Political Direction aims to overcome the difficulties, mainly economic, without making concessions in the stability of the political system. * We’re going to synthesize the North American internal reality in four basic variables which are: the Congressional Correlation on Policy towards Cuba (Ki); the Economic Lobby (El); the support the North American policy towards Cuba receives from the Cuban-American Extreme Right (Ca); and Bush’s attitude as president on policy towards Cuba (B) (Conjunctural Variable, or the so-called: Administration Effect). * We concretize the international reality in three fundamental variables that synthetically express the Cuba-United States conflict as seen internationally. That’s to say, in its current tendency towards internationalization. These variables are: The Transnationalization of the blockade (or “Embargo”, according to the U.S. government) (Tb), the Resistance to the Transnacionalization of the Blockade (Rtb), and the Negotiation, in the search for on the part of the U.S., a political consensus to subvert Cuba (N) A GENERAL CHARACTERIZATION OF THE MODEL’S VARIABLES. The dynamic of the internal situation of Cuba (Is). This refers in particular to the current dynamic of the process of economic recovery. Within it are the tensions provoked by a cluster of economic changes, under the prism of a reform policy, determined to definitively take the country out of the crisis, and achieve a model of economic growth, making no concessions in the basic pillars supporting the socialist system. In our opinion, this variable synthesizes the challenges internally facing Cuba as a result of its gradual process of approaching foreign capital in particular, and the market economy in general, as well as the challenges coming from the impact of these rapprochements within Cuban society. The congressional correlation on policy towards Cuba (Ki). Since the signature of the Helms-Burton Law, the Congress has gradually become the nucleus of the debate where not only the liberal and extreme right positions can be found, but also that of the Administration, now headed by Bush, and the Cuban-American extreme right, which undoubtedly try to maximally sharpen the aggressiveness towards Cuba. Logically, when Clinton signed HelmsBurton, he moved the center of thee debate to Congress, today the main scene of the clashes between the extreme right positions concerning Cuba and the different attempts to erode the blockade policy. In reality, President Bush has paid almost no attention at all to the Congress, considering it more as an obstacle in his intentions to keep Cuba under more and more pressure. Support of the Cuban American Extreme Right. (Ac) We mean the extreme right groups that internally, from the so-called Cuban-American community, support the aggressiveness of current United States’ government policy towards Cuba. These groups, although recently affected by internal struggles and political erosion, continue to play an important role, mainly in the Congress, to halt any attempt to change U.S. policy towards Cuba. Its leading representatives, congresspersons Ileana Ross Lehtinen, Lincoln Díaz Balart and Bob Menéndez, followed by other allied North American congresspersons, do everything possible inside the legislative body to halt any initiative against the blockade, and try to advance all those aimed at increasing pressure on Cuba even more. Transnationalization of the blockade (Ts) The pressures of the blockade against Cuba have been increased, broadening its previous framework (tipified by the Torricelli Law) moving, with the passing of the HelmsBurton Law, to more direct attacks againnst the process linking the Cuban economy to foreign capital and the world economy in general. This intensification of the transnational character of the blockade essentially explains the tendency to the internationalisation of the conflict between Cuba and the United States. Bush now, for his part, is pressuring, as never before, to isolate Cuba, trying to articulate a unique political framework in order to deal with the Island at international level and to “speed up” the so-called Cuban transition to the market economy and liberal democracy, supported in the so-called “Transition Report.” International resistance to the blockade’s transnationalization (Rts). This is the daughter of Helms-Burton because it has contributed to an extent the extreme right never imagined - to internationalizing the conflict and making evident the insanity of the blockade policy, thus creating difficulties for the United States in its relations with its allies. Without doubt, the conflicts of interest brought about by this law in the international sphere explain the emerging of “antidote laws”, and the panel against the U.S. before the World Trade Organization (WTO), as well as the United States’ attempts to reach an agreement with the European Union, which turn the concept of “Traffic” contained in the third chapter of the aforementioned law into part of the Multilateral Accords on Investment (MAI) negotiated not long ago. More recently, Bush has closed ranks more with Josè Marìa Aznar (architect of the European Union’s so-called Common Position) in Spain, looking for increased pressures against Cuba from the European Union. But he lost this member of the Transnational Oligarchy, who committed a ridiculous criminal act against the Spanish people, which lost his party (PP) the presidential election. It doesn’t seem that Bush can keep his alliance to bring the Island along the so-called “peaceful transition to democracy” based upon his aggressive policy against Cuba; despite the fact that this would also be his allies’ strategy, because it’s very clear, including to the actual president of the United States, that the Cuban transition would not be peaceful at all. Starting from this situation, there’s a growing resistance on the part of enterprises and businesspersons in Europe and the world in general to following the North American policy guidelines dealing with Cuba at an international level. Negotiation in the search for an international political consensus to subvert Cuba (N), as a variable expressing the desire to use HelmsBurton, for its main purpoose: to pressure Cuba, as well as U.S. allies, with the aim of forcing them to follow Bush in a consensus to bring the Island towards the so-called “democratic transition”. Undoubtedly in his search, Bush has been able to make use of the law as an instrument to re-float his most aggressive political aims towards Cuba. But a difference is now appearing between the way proposed by Bush for Cuba, and that accepted by his allies before, for Cuba’s “peaceful transition” to democracy. Contrary to Clinton, Bush doesn’t seem to be concerned about negotiating the strategy of policy towards Cuba with his allies, rather carrying it on alone, by his own methods, and by pressuring the others. All this is reflected very well in the Report of the “Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba”, issued in May, 2004, and supplemented in 2006. The latter is the program seeking to speed up the Cuban transition. For its part, the European Union seems to base itself, in the very aggressive context that the Bush policy offers to Cuba, so that the aggressiveness that the United States wants to apply seems to be Cuba’s responsibility for not accepting the more “gentle” and supposedly “less aggressive” variant of the European Union, contained in the so-called “Common Position”. So, everything seems to indicate that, amidst the current aggressiveness, the strategic coincidence between the E.U. and the U.S. in their policy against Cuba, puts the Island in the dilemma of waiting for the Marines, or accepting the European Union’s Trojan Horse. More recently, with the visit of the Spanish Minister of Foreign Relations, Moratino, Spain seems to be distancing itself from the U.S. position against Cuba. Bush’s attitude on the policy towards Cuba (B). The so-called Administration Effect. This is a conjunctural variable, due to the fact that each administration tends to stamp its specific seal on policy towards Cuba. Now, with George Bush’s (son) administration, U.S. policy towards the Island has retaken increasingly more aggressive channels. Pressures of all kinds: abrogation of trips and of academic exchanges, elimination of People to People diplomacy, accusations of all kinds against the Island plus a return to an aggressiveness coordinated with all the mechanisms of the administration. Accusing Cuba of terrorism, of having biological weapons or the capacity with the intention to produce them, broadcasting TV-Martì from a military plane, threats of speeding up the transition, measures against recently approved commerce, etc. That’s to say, the perspective of conflict (PC) between the two countries seems determined by an equation, in which the internal Cuban situation, the congressional correlation on policy towards Cuba (congress’s internal debate), the support of the Cuban-American Extreme Right, the perspective of the Economic Lobby, the transnationalization of the blockade, the resistance to the transnationalization of the blockade, negotiation, and Bush’s conjunctural variable as the administration, work as independent variables, determining the perspective of the conflict, according to its impact and mutual interrelations with the main centers of attention in which it develops. Just as we’ve already outlined, the variable Dynamic of the Internal Cuban Situation (Is), has acquired a fundamental role for understanding what’s happening now or might happen regarding the conflict between both countries. Above all, amidst the current political aggressiveness. In this aspect the internal dynamic of the Island informs and impacts, as never before, the debate on Cuba within the reality of North American policy in all spheres. The complexity of the process described above has had as its most general scene the reality that Cuba has managed to survive the severely negative impacts of the 198919994 economic crisis, which has as a consequence a growing debate within the framework of United States’ policy towards the Island. Because of this, some pretty hard questions, none easy to answer, have come to light. Let’s look at them: 1. Firstly, we have that the attitude toward the policy’s object (Cuba) in the current situation -- a period in which internal Cuban reality informs and conditions the internal and international debate, as never before -- is determined by the spectrum of positions coming from the answers to the following questions. * What is the cost for the United States of keeping its current policy towards Cuba? * Although Cuba is recovering, taking into account the challenges it still faces, should a negative outcome for Cuba be expected, or is it already necessary to change U.S. policy? * Should businesspersons keep on waiting for the “Cuban transition”, despite that, faced with other capital, they’re losing opportunities in Cuba? 2. The aforementioned doesn’t contradict the problem remaining a question of internal policy, although to the extent that the forces opposing Cuba within the United States loose their power, a change of direction favoring policy change occurs. 3. Undoubtedly, internationalization of the conflict is increasing and weakens the internal factors, as has been happening since the passing of HelmsBurton in March, 1996, and particularly afteer the rescue of the child, Elián González. 4. Notwithstanding the pressures, Cuba continues the process of reconstructing its international economic relations, to the extent that its international ties are still continually increasing. 5. This is a struggle in which Cuba, (as object), confronts those formulating and executing factors, which from a North American internal sphere, debate a policy whose failure becomes gradually more and more obvious. So, to the extent that the debate sharpens, the different actors’ positions depend more on how Cuba’s capacity, above all internal, is interpreted, in order to respond to the necessities of a difficult conjuncture whose duration is still undetermined. 6. Another level of analysis refers to the fact that the ruling forces within the debate, which in no case are extreme in the sense of their viability (within the prevailing political atmosphere of a shift to the right), are not those opposed to Cuba being a market economy with a liberal democracy multi-party political system. Since really what a faction of these political forces oppose is the methods by which current North American policy aspires to reach such objectives, and above all, that such methods would prevail as an imposition over other domestic and international interests. So, then, although U.S. allies side with Cuba in its struggle to get rid of the weight of the blockade, they neither support it nor side with it in its intention of maintaining its socialist project. This scene of such complex confrontation, within which the Island develops, brings us again to reflect on the role that Cuba’s internal situation is playing. Can Cuba, at the same time that it frees itself from the blockade, prevent the fulfilment of North American strategic policy intentions, supported by U.S. allies? Has Cuba space to maneuver, within a situation in which Bush’s policy becomes obvious as having nothing to do with a “peaceful transition”? We think so; Cuba has proved its ability to survive the pressures of the blockade, having advanced its project while at the same time not letting itself be tricked by the North American policy strategy. Although doesn’t not mean that Cuba shouldn’t pay attention to the way that it’s being victimized by such policy. Then, the truth is that for Cuba, going forward with its economic recovery and its international reinsertion, never losing its capacity to lead both processes, especially concerning their impacts within civil society, becomes a condition that can not be ignored, so that neither the United States nor its allies can achieve their strategic goals of destablizing Cuba. All these reasons reconfirm the Cuban internal variable (Is) in its status as decisive factor of what might happen in the future in the confrontation with the United States. Therefore, the real synthesis of the processes which take place today within the CubaU.S. conflict, are concretizzed more than ever in the current struggle carried on in the Island to escape the pressures of the blockade, impart more dynamism to the internal economy, and to avert North American strategic policy aims. Both the current debate which takes place within the North American political system, as well as the one existing at international level, aimed at reinforcing pressures against Cuba, or succeeding in changing the United States’ blockade policy, exist because Cuba was able to survive such a policy and is still going forward, increasing its vulnerability. Reason for which, although Cuba is not the place where North American policy can change, nevertheless, neither is what can be done from the Island to change such a policy inconsiderable. These circumstances allow us to state that the variable that determined the beginning of an opposing dynamic in behavior regarding policy towards Cuba was the change which began to take place in the Cuban internal situation, particularly in its economy. To which is added, in those same years 1994 and 1995, the W. Clinton administration’s acceptance of Cuba’s capacity to struggle to reach an agreement in the so-called “raft-people crisis”. The rapprochement with the United States, essentially produced by the situations described, were what determined the Cuban-American extreme right’s reaction, preparing the legislative package to try to impose the so-called Helms-Burton Law in the same year, 1995. Because of all this, appears then one of the constants which have characterized the history of the conflict and which tells us: Every time the extreme right notices a rapprochement taking place between Cuba and the United States, they work to throw a roadblock in the way of a potential understanding. Undoubtedly, when estimating the current perspectives of the CubaUnited States conflict, all the variablle must be taken into account, but, within them, the dynamics of the Cuban Internal Reality (Is) play a kind of either dynamizing or slowing role of the objective processes pointing to a potential change or not, of policy. Because, undoubtedly, whatever happens in Cuba, is always linked with what might happen with the policy aimed at it. This also means that, while Cuba is always available for something that will stimulate the United States’ interest in negotiating; it always works at strengthening the Island’s capacity to face the profound asymmetries that have always characterized the bilateral relation. If Cuba had not proved its capacity to survive and go forward during all these years, it wouldn’t have been necessary for some political actors to explore other ways to destroy the Island’s stability or try to reach an understanding with it. Nor would it have been necessary for the different North American administrations to constantly design new measures and instruments aimed at subverting Cuba. Some final considerations According to what we’ve analysed we can consider that, although the essence of the conflict remains, and the aim of United States’ policy towards Cuba remains unchanged, nonetheless, the model of analysis reveals very important aspects to take into account about the future, among them: * Within the setting of the 1992-2007 period, changes in the dynamic and the context of the policy towards Cuba have taken place. * The mere fact of the existence of a debate on U.S. policy towards Cuba in the United States signals criteria different from those that have characterized the conflict for more than three decades. Within this circumstance Cuba seems to have more opportunities. * Although the objective of North American policy remains the same, it’s now characterized by “trying to grab the direction and orientation of the changes and adjustments that Cuba’s making from the hands of the Cuban Revolution’s political leadership”, in order to, according to the current administration, “speed up” the so-called transition to “regime change”. * In a substantial way, Cuba has come to have a more active role concerning a possible change in North American policy towards the Island. Among other factors, it’s due to this that the Congress is more sensitive to this dynamic of a Cuba policy debate. * The international factors have come to play a more important role. This is expressed by a lack of respect and support for the blockade. * Within North American internal reality tendencies in favor of a potential policy change towards Cuba are still accumulating as never before. * It’s also obvious that the United StatesCuba conflict is going througgh a conjuncture of unpredictable duration, delimited by several events: * The so-called “special period” in Cuba, of still unpredictable duration, although little by little being surpassed. * The gradual changes of attitude towards Cuba recently accelerated within the United States, despite the recent backsliding within the current Congress. * The international changes that are bringing about a growing scene of confrontation with the United States’ blockade policy. * Those processes which have to do with the reconstruction of United States’ hegemony, pointing to uni-polarity (we mean: a single political system) of North American power at international level. Although it’s a process it has its limits because North American foreign policy is now facing a level of unpopularity and questioning that hasn’t happened since the Viet Nam War period. These are events that prejudice or favor Cuba’s capacity to maintain its position in the clash, that allow it to resist, while actively waiting for a change in North American policy. Notwithstanding, within the conjuncture produced by the George Bush (son) administration’s aggressiveness, the policy towards Cuba is more organically inserted in the so-called Bush Doctrine, directed to the so-called “regime change”. The fact of locating its current policy of so-called regime change within the context of the so-called “war on terror”, has limited this latest focus. Now Bush is making this orientation independent. Because of this, the perception of the course of internal events in Cuba, that’s to say, the dynamic of the internal situation (Is), becomes a more decisive variable than ever, amidst great danger, in the remaining years of that administration whose intentions are so characterized by escalating its interventionist choices against Cuba. At the same time, everything indicates that the current administration in its policy towards Cuba is clashing with reality, to be a transition administration, which confronts those ongoing tendencies towards changing Cuba policy with a policy totally contradicting such tendencies, and which seems to have no future at all in the domestic and international reality which could open, once the Bush era is surpassed. Then within this complex, convulsed and dangerous, although also full of opportunities world, there are spaces for Cuba. But Cuba must respond to them always on the basis of an ever-recovering economy, with a growing process of international reinsertion, together with leadership of the internal changes, able to assimilate the negative impacts on Cuban civil society, and to preserve the stability of its socialist political system. * ================================================================= .NY Transfer News Collective * A Service of Blythe Systems . Since 1985 - Information for the Rest of Us . .339 Lafayette St., New York, NY 10012 http://www.blythe.org . List Archives: https://blythe-systems.com/pipermail/nytr/ . Subscribe: https://blythe-systems.com/mailman/listinfo/nytr =================================================================