EU Lifts Cuba Sanctions

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JAN SLIVA | June 19, 2008 11:33 PM EST | AP

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BRUSSELS, Belgium — The European Union on Thursday agreed to lift its diplomatic sanctions against Cuba, but imposed tough conditions on the communist island to maintain sanction-free relations, officials said.

The U.S., which has maintained a decades-long trade embargo against Cuba, criticized the move, saying there were no significant signs the communist island was easing a dictatorship. An independent analyst predicted it would have no affect on U.S. policy toward the Caribbean island.

EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said the bloc felt it had to encourage changes in Cuba after Raul Castro took over as the head of the country's government from his ailing brother Fidel.

"There will be very clear language also on what the Cubans still have to do ... releasing prisoners, really working on human rights questions," she told reporters at an EU summit. "There will be a sort of review to see whether indeed something will have happened."

The largely symbolic decision takes effect Monday. The diplomatic sanctions, which banned high-level visits to EU nations by Cuban officials, have not been in force since 2005. They were imposed in 2003 following the arrests of dozens of dissidents but suspended two years later.

In Havana, state television mentioned the EU's decision briefly but did not give any government reaction.

Leading Cuban dissident Oswaldo Paya said he hopes the move does not signify the EU' approval of Raul Castro's government.

"This regime has not announced any change that is significant for rights or liberty, and we know we have to conquer that ourselves," Paya said.

As part of its action, the EU approved a set of conditions on Cuba in return for sanction-free relations. They include the release of all political prisoners; access for Cubans to the Internet; and a double-track approach for all EU delegations arriving in Cuba, allowing them to meet both opposition figures and members of the Cuban government.

Officials said the bloc will evaluate Cuba's progress in a year's time and could take new measures if human rights do not improve.

The U.S. expressed its opposition.

"We're disappointed," White House deputy press secretary Gordon Johndroe said. "We think the Castros need to take a number of steps to improve the human rights conditions for ordinary Cubans before any sanctions are lifted."

State Department Deputy spokesman Tom Casey said the United States has recently seen "some very minor cosmetic changes" in Cuba. "We certainly don't see any kind of fundamental break with the Castro dictatorship that would give us reason to believe that now would be the time to lift sanctions or otherwise fundamentally alter our policies," he said.

Peter De Shazo, Americas Program director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said the "decision will not affect the U.S. position toward Cuba" because the policy is largely fixed by legislation with key changes conditioned on a transition to democracy.

Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg said it was well known that certain circles in the United States wanted the EU sanctions to be maintained, but he said "we felt the need to find our own solution."

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said the lifting of sanctions in no way means the EU was getting weak on Cuba.

"We haven't softened our approach," Bildt said. "It's a repressive regime. ...Now we are very explicit on what we want. We want democratic changes."

He said the EU would push strongly for Cuban authorities to open up their economy, liberate Internet access, and release political prisoners.

The EU sanctions were introduced after Cuba's government rounded up 75 dissidents in 2003. Sixteen of those arrested have been released on medical parole and another four were freed last month into forced exile in Spain. But more than 200 dissidents are still serving jail terms.

Cuba has insisted the EU sanctions be eliminated completely, and said the unilateral action violated its sovereignty.

Asked if lifting EU sanctions would weaken U.S. sanctions, Casey said simply, "We'll see," but offered no assessment.

___

Associated Press writer Constant Brand contributed to this report.

 
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The great island "democracies" of The Bahamas, Haiti, Jamaica and The Dominican Republic, have any of you been there(other than at the resorts)? Poverty everywhere. Americans think their sanctions are holding the Cubans back and once lifted, all Cubans will become rich capitalists. Talk about dillusional.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:56 PM on 06/20/2008
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Of course they did. It is time to barter for some of those off-shore drilling contracts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 06/20/2008

two words about USA opposing dictatorship in Cuba...

"Saudi Arabia"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 06/20/2008
- rroy I'm a Fan of rroy permalink

I don't know of any country in the world that has gone from Colonial exploitation to the American interpretation of a free or free enterprise society.Sure there are numerous former British Colonial entities that evolved into independant Parliamentary Democracies.Countries like Canada,Australia,New Zealand,India,etc,and of course the U.S.but they were countries who grew in wealth and influance despite Colonial rule,and eventualy could stop being exploited for their resourses and cheap labor,by outsiders.
This was not the case with so many South and Central America smaller countries,along with other Colonial entities like Viet Nam.The only type of government that could succeed in breaking the foreign hold on the populace was a collective or Socialistic one.Any other type of government would result in nothing more than a Colonial Status Quo for the populace!
For the United States to continiue it's John Foster Dulles policy of "You're eithr for us or agin us"that has brought hardship and severe anymocity against us by the Cuban people ,is a glaring example of hard headed arrogance and stupidity!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:42 AM on 06/20/2008

Our stance on Cuba is idiotic and should be changed immeditately, sans "conditions".

Why not apply the same trade embargo to Saudi Arabia, for example? After all, one man's king is another man's dictator....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 06/20/2008
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I am glad to see that at least part of the world community has come to its senses. America the country where I was born has been the biggest hypocrite when it comes to Cuba. We are perfectly willing to deal with communist China and the oppressive misogynistic dictatorship of Saudi Arabia but we refuse to have any relationship with our neighbor Cuba?

Obviously the Miami Cubans have been dictating policy for the last 50 years in a vainglorious attempt to punish Cuba for taking back the land that USA businessmen stole from them during the Batista days.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 AM on 06/20/2008
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I've always liked the idea of the European Union, it has turned out to be a great success story and I think it's good for us to have a more balanced and multi-polar world. The embargo against Cuba is one of the stupidest policies of the US Government and it has caused unwarranted suffering to millions. The EU made a wise decision and will undoubtedly reap the benefits from this. Also the standard of living of the Cuban people will be significantly increased. Thank God, sanity has made a comeback.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 AM on 06/20/2008
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The EU will attain in months what has eluded the US for decades.

Come January 2009, we will be joining the rest of the sane world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 PM on 06/19/2008
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God, I hope so. The idiot Old School Cuban political faction in Miami has successfully pushed this nonsense for decades, and it is long past time for it to stop.

And since I live in south florida, I hope I can someday make the trip and have a nice Cuban cigar as I sit on the beach and watch the sunset....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 AM on 06/20/2008
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I'm the U.S.-born son of Cubans and have been watching this tragic scenario unfold for most of my thirty-six years. I, for one, cannot wait for it to end.

One has to understand that not everyone who stayed in Cuba were Communists. Most were too old to start anew in a foreign land, others waited for changes that never occurred under Fidel's watch. Some folks simply don't know any better. Why?

Imagine having George W. Bush as "Presidente" for nearly five decades. No free elections, no freedom of speech, no HuffPo, nada. Zilch. The younger generations know of no other leader, and Bush's strong-arm stance during the past eight years has only worsened anti-American feelings towards Washington. But the younger Cubans are no fools: They know that there is an outside world with food, utilities, and technology that Cuba could have been enjoying for years now, just like the rest of us. However, their older counterparts in Miami are determined to keep the status quo intact, no matter what the cost. Already some are praising McCain for vowing to continue the embargo if elected, while trashing Obama for even hinting at possible deals with Raul Castro.

What truly matters is this: Whatever helps the Cuban people come out of their 50 year-old time warp and keeps them from risking their lives at sea any further can only be viewed as a positive advance for everyone involved in this sad chapter of western civilization.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 PM on 06/19/2008

Cuba has been trading with a bunch of countries to various degrees all these years. WE have been selling food to them for years now. India even has an embassy there prepping for oil exploration off their waters. This whole nonsense about pressuring countries to "honor the U.S. embargo on Cuba" is complete bull and propaganda selectively enforced.

http://www.ongcvidesh.com/

"Venezuelan oil is the leading import into Castro's island, while Netherlands, Canada & China are major buyers of Cuban exports including sugar, nickel, tobacco & fish."

http://regional-business-profiles.suite101.com/article.cfm/cuban_trade_deficit_improves

The travesty of how we've conducted Cuban policy in comparison to other communist countries we've worked with is their own misguided people in Florida support the very policy aimed at ridiculing and punishing the population and think this is a GOOD thing in achieving a Cuba Libre.

McCain doesn't care about people risking their lives to escape Cuba. He's looking forward to 100 more years of it. Texas just caught 18 Cuban refugees coming in from Mexico. This policy truly is a mess meant to humiliate Cubans more than liberate Cuba.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 AM on 06/20/2008

Yours is about the most sane analysis to come from a Cuban-American I've ever heard. It's logical and, if you're considering the people's plight, humanitarian. Reminds me of the Israeli/Palestinian crisis. There are many Israelis, some polls say the majority, who would like the embargos and apartheid imposed on the Palestinians by the warhawks of the Israeli cabinet to end, yet the conservative warhawks hold the financial/political edge and thus the Palestinians and Israelis who desire peace and commerce lose out. I am willing to bet the same is true of Cuban-Americans living in Florida. They are manipulated by the former wealthy landowners of Cuba into thinking that causing the suffering of the peoples of Cuba will somehow benefit...............the Cuban people themselves!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 06/20/2008

I love HuffPost, it is the only place that always seems to get it. Too many American's buy into the propaganda, I think because ignorance is bliss, if they ever woke up from their dream they would see all the crap they/we have wrought upon our land and our world. Every time I hear someone say something about the greatest generation, I have to stop from laughing, greatest what, destroyers, usurpers, consumers, yes all but they are the best at self-delusion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 06/19/2008

amen how few americans understand anything you have just stated.

nationalism and patroitism can overwhelm a rational mind.

iraq was about oil pure and simple

the mass corp media dances around that one every day

in a dumb downed society many thngs are possible

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 06/20/2008

Wait a minute-do you mean that Manifest Destiny is a BAD thing?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 PM on 06/20/2008

Thank God, someone is taking charge and making decisions without asking mother may I. Now all they have to do is get some balls and bring Pinky and the Brain up on war crime.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 06/19/2008

America has become the largest third-world nation on the planet. Maybe now Cube will impose an embargo against the U.S. for also being the world's biggest exporter of terror.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 PM on 06/19/2008

The USA is its own Banana Republic.

You see, children, you cannot subject yourselves to unlimited fairy tales and gangsterism practiced in your name, and now directly against you, without being paid back in full by the harsh bite of Reality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 AM on 06/20/2008

Good to see that the E.U. is no longer taking ALL of its orders from Washington anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 06/19/2008

They sure as shit aren't going to be taking orders from Obama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:39 AM on 06/20/2008

Negotiating with communists is un-american, unless they agree to make the richest among us richer by producing goods cheaper than we can make them here. In that case, the Pres would be visiting Havana and claiming a new era of detente.
Why does everything have to be about business? Why can't we have relationships with them simply because we are both citizens of this planet?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 06/19/2008

Cubans have a health maintenance system that is far cheaper and far better than that in the US. We can learn from them. Cuba has had to make do with its own agricultural practices and their system is far better than the oil-based-fertilizer one run by the mega farms in the US. We can learn from them now that the end of the era of cheap and abundant oil is upon us and we're all going to have to learn again to be farmers--all except the priests, the politicians, and the other cons out there, that is. We trade with China; why not Cuba? What possible rationale is there for an embargo? People from all other countries freely travel to Cuba, why is the US the only exception? The US is definitely not the sharpest knife in the drawer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 06/19/2008


Yes, many people from other countries freely travel to Cuba. Of Cuba's many appealing features, a major one is that it is not overrun by American tourists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 AM on 06/20/2008
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I agree. Was the best part of the trip! And why I never go to Mexico anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 06/20/2008

At least not openly American.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 AM on 06/20/2008
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