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WikiLeaks 2009 Cuba Cable Predicts Broke State In '2-3 Years'

Cuba

PAUL HAVEN   12/10/10 09:27 PM ET   AP

HAVANA — A newly released confidential U.S. diplomatic cable predicted Cuba's economic situation could become "fatal" within two to three years, and detailed concerns from other countries' diplomats – including China – that the communist-run country has been slow to adopt reforms.

The cable was written last February, months before Cuban President Raul Castro announced a major revamp of the island's economy, laying out plans to fire a half-million state workers and open up the island to expanded forms of private enterprise.

The cable, sent by the U.S. Interests Section in Havana, which Washington maintains instead of an embassy, was released Friday by WikiLeaks. It was apparently written by America's chief diplomat on the island, Jonathan Farrar.

Cuban parliament chief Ricardo Alarcon, who often speaks on U.S. issues, told The Associated Press the cable did not contain anything new or interesting. "It seems to me Jonathan Farrar was a little depressed that day" that he wrote the dispatch, Alarcon said.

Relations between Washington and Havana are already strained by the long detention of an American contractor on suspicion of spying – not to mention 50 years of Cold War animus, and the release of the cable was not likely to help matters.

It details a breakfast meeting held by the Interests Section's chief economic officer with diplomats from some of Cuba's main trading partners, including China, Spain, Canada, Brazil and Italy, as well as France and Japan, both of which are among the island's top creditors.

"All diplomats agreed that Cuba could survive this year without substantial policy changes, but the financial situation could become fatal within 2-3 years," the cable said, adding that Italian diplomats cited sources within the Cuban government as predicting that the island "would become insolvent as early as 2011."

Even the Chinese diplomat expressed what the cable referred to as "visible exasperation." It said the Chinese were particularly annoyed by Cuba's insistence on retaining majority control of any joint venture.

"No matter whether a foreign business invests $10 million or $100 million, the GOC's (Government of Cuba's) investment will always add up to 51%," the cable quoted the unidentified Chinese commercial counselor as saying.

The Chinese also complained about problems getting loans repaid, and in particular a Cuban request to extend from one year to four years the amount of time it has to repay credit.

It is no secret that Cuba's financial situation is increasingly dire. Raul Castro has warned that the state can no longer afford to subsidize nearly all forms of Cuban life. The government provides free health care and education, and nearly free transportation, housing and utilities. All Cubans also receive a ration book that provides them with some basic food, though not enough to live on.

Most islanders work for just $20 a month in a state-dominated economic system riddled with inefficiency.

Yet the country has survived the collapse of the Soviet Union, which caused the near-failure of its economy, as well as a 48-year U.S. trade embargo, the retirement of revolutionary leader Fidel Castro in 2006 and countless other bumps along the way.

And the cable's confidence that the government would not enact economic reforms did not pan out. The reforms announced by Raul Castro in September are considered the most significant in a generation. Still, it is unclear if they will be enough to save the island's perennially weak economy.

The cable said Cuba's attempts at agricultural and other reform up to that point had been ineffective, and said more changes were unlikely. It said the country seemed determined to give the more control over state-run businesses to the military, and particularly Agriculture Minister Ulises Rosales del Toro, whom the cable described as Raul Castro's most trusted general.

The cable said the situation would worsen dramatically should there be economic or political problems involving Cuba's top ally, Venezuela, which the dispatch said was "increasingly unstable." It quoted the French diplomat at the meeting as saying Hugo Chavez's country "is in flames" and "a source of serious concern for Cuba."

Cuba receives billions of dollars worth of oil a year from Venezuela at greatly subsidized prices in exchange for the services of Cuban doctors and other help.

"There is little prospect of economic reform in 2010 despite an economic crisis that is expected to get even worse for Cuba in the next few years," the cable said, citing Cuba experts. It closed with a scathing criticism of the leadership of a government ruled by aging brothers Fidel and Raul Castro since they overthrew dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959.

The government's "direction and leadership remains muddled and unclear, in great measure because its leaders are paralyzed by fear that reforms will loosen the tight grip on power that they have held for over 50 years," it said.

___

Associated Press writer Andrea Rodriguez contributed to this report.

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HAVANA — A newly released confidential U.S. diplomatic cable predicted Cuba's economic situation could become "fatal" within two to three years, and detailed concerns from other countries' diplo...
HAVANA — A newly released confidential U.S. diplomatic cable predicted Cuba's economic situation could become "fatal" within two to three years, and detailed concerns from other countries' diplo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JL-Sosa
(Nothing offensive here...)
04:57 PM on 12/25/2010
TWO TO THREE YEARS?!?!?!

Cuba was insolvent when I last visited it in 1995! Good god, this is ridiculous, the country is not on the verge of insolvency, it has been drowning for decades!
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deepintheheartoftejas
Middle o/t Road = Yellow stripes & dead armadillos
12:10 PM on 12/15/2010
Secret diplomatic cable? You could probably get the exact same prediction by asking any federal government official, at any time in the past 50 years. The vast majority of these cables seems to reveal nothing interesting or new.
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Bankerrkt
He's making things worse.
10:22 PM on 12/13/2010
Hiw can WikiLeaks make such a prediction. Have they not talked with Michael Moore about Cuba's top drawer, world class medical system.
01:08 PM on 12/13/2010
Lets help these guys out and start importing cohibas
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
11:31 AM on 12/13/2010
The US has been predicting Cuba's demise for half a century. Cuba will still be going when the Chinese survey teams show up to claim land for the debts we default on
10:15 AM on 12/13/2010
America will be insolvent long before Cuba if We dont win the Afghan war and take over the lithium mines, In the mean while laundering Mexican drug cartel money should keep us afloat.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
josephking
10:01 AM on 12/13/2010
Predicting the past...geeeeeee
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GeoToronto
Nik Nak Paddy Wak, Still Ridin' Caddy-Laks
09:31 AM on 12/13/2010
If Cuba starts drilling deep offshore oil wells, they mights stand a chance, but who knows when that will happen.
I read somewhere that the Chinese were going to help them drill, but no word yet, but if they do, the Chinese will buy all the oil.
08:42 AM on 12/13/2010
When you have people jumping in rubber rafts and paddling 90 miles to South Florida, I think that is a sign you are already insolvent.

Only thing keeping Cuba from completely crashing is Venezuela is keeping it afloat with lots of money (just like the Soviets did up until the earl 1990s.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tasies
01:25 PM on 12/15/2010
Pure lousy conjecture. I suppose you came to such a conclusion after your latest visit to Cuba.
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
07:45 AM on 12/13/2010
Nonsense.  As long as Hugo Chavez is around, Cuba will never fail.  As for the dire predictions for Venezuela, that's just someone sticking pins in a Hugo Chavez voodoo doll.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
04:41 AM on 12/13/2010
DOD-MSM guidelines about Wikileaks:

1.0 minimize: the cables don't reveal anything we didn't already know, at cheney's
2.0 criminalize: leaks made iraq into a dangerous place now
3.0 focus: pay attention to the iran cables, ignore the man beihnd the curtain
4.0 believe: this ain't a point of view of spying diplomats, it's the truth honest to god
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
03:58 AM on 12/13/2010
Yellow Journalism again. "wikileaks" predicts nothing. The US diplo corps may or may not have predicted something - this is the story - wikileaks is just a publisher, not a creator of 'content' - like for instance, the New York times' Jayson Blair.
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freddychef
what the heck is this??????????
03:21 AM on 12/13/2010
"If I'd written all the truth I knew for the past ten years, about 600 people - including me - would be rotting in prison cells from Rio to Seattle today. Absolute truth is a very rare and dangerous commodity in the context of professional journalism. "

- Hunter S. Thompson



Read more: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/h/hunter_s_thompson.html#ixzz17ygftKXp
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
07:47 AM on 12/13/2010
I wish Thompson hadn't been such a trainwreck.  He certainly had some rare insight into the news.  And he certainly was right since there are certain things you don't do.  Closest thing we have to him today is Matt Taibbi.