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Cuba Embargo Turns 50

Cuba Embargo 50

PETER ORSI   02/ 7/12 07:32 PM ET  AP

HAVANA — When it started, American teenagers were doing "The Twist." The United States had yet to put a man into orbit around the Earth. And a first-class U.S. postage stamp cost 4 cents.

The world is much changed since the early days of 1962, but one thing has remained constant: The U.S. economic embargo on communist-run Cuba, a near-total trade ban that turned 50 on Tuesday.

Supporters say it is a justified measure against a repressive government that has never stopped being a thorn in Washington's side. Critics call it a failed policy that has hurt ordinary Cubans instead of the government.

All acknowledge that it has not accomplished its core mission of toppling Fidel and Raul Castro.

"All this time has gone by, and yet we keep it in place," said Wayne Smith, who was a young U.S. diplomat in Havana in 1961 when relations were severed and who returned as the chief American diplomat after they were partially re-established under President Jimmy Carter.

"We talk to the Russians, we talk to the Chinese, we have normal relations even with Vietnam. We trade with all of them," Smith said. "So why not with Cuba?"

In the White House, the first sign of the looming embargo came when President John F. Kennedy told his press secretary to go buy him as many H. Upmann Cuban cigars as he could find. The aide came back with 1,200 stogies.

Kennedy announced the embargo on Feb. 3, 1962, citing "the subversive offensive of Sino-Soviet communism with which the government of Cuba is publicly aligned."

It went into effect four days later at the height of the Cold War, a year removed from the failed CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion meant to oust communism from Cuba and eight months before Soviet attempts to put nuclear missiles on the island brought the two superpowers to the brink of war.

Washington already had some limited sanctions in place, but Kennedy's decision was the beginning of a comprehensive ban on U.S. trade with the island that has remained more or less intact ever since.

Little was planned to mark Tuesday's anniversary, but Cuban-American members of Congress issued a joint statement vowing to keep the heat on Cuba.

Supporters of the policy acknowledge that many U.S. strategic concerns from the 1960s have been consigned to the dustbin of history, such as halting the spread of Soviet influence and keeping Fidel Castro from exporting revolution throughout Latin America. But they say other justifications remain, such as the confiscation of U.S. property in Cuba and the need to press for greater political and personal freedoms on the island.

"We have a hemispheric commitment to freedom and democracy and respect for human rights," said Jose Cardenas, a former National Security Council staffer on Cuba under President George W. Bush. "I still think that those are worthy aspirations."

With just 90 miles (145 kilometers) of sea between Florida and Cuba, the United States would be a natural No. 1 trade partner and source of tourism. But the embargo chokes off most commerce, and the threat of stiff fines keeps most Americans from sunbathing in balmy resorts like Cayo Coco.

Cuba is free to trade with other nations, but the U.S. threatens sanctions against foreign companies that don't abide by its restrictions. A stark example arrived off the coast of Havana last month: A massive oil exploration rig built with less than 10 percent U.S. parts to qualify under the embargo was brought all the way from Singapore at great expense, while comparable platforms sat idle in U.S. waters just across the Gulf of Mexico.

The embargo is a constant talking point for island authorities, who blame it for shortages of everything from medical equipment to the concrete needed to complete an eight-lane highway spanning the length of the island. Cuba frequently fulminates against the "blockade" at the United Nations and demands the U.S. end its "genocidal" policy.

Every fall, like clockwork, the vast majority of nations agree, and overwhelmingly back a resolution condemning the embargo. In November, 186 countries supported the measure, with only Israel joining the U.S. in opposition.

Also each year, Cuba updates its estimate of how much the embargo has cost it, using a complicated – and some say flawed – calculus that takes into account years of interest, the end of the gold standard and other factors. Last year's estimate summing 49 years of sanctions was $975 billion.

Even some critics of the embargo call Havana's claims exaggerated, saying that while the sanctions had a tremendous impact when first put in place, Cuba was able to adapt and benefited from relationships with like-minded allies such as the former Soviet Union and Venezuela.

"There's no doubt that the embargo is detrimental to the Cuban economy. It complicates international financial transactions, but more importantly, it limits Cuban families' access to medicine," said Geoff Thale, a Cuba analyst at the Washington Office on Latin America, which supports ending the policy. "At the same time, Cuba's economic problems go beyond the embargo."

While 50 years of socialism have brought advancements in areas such as education and health care, even island authorities acknowledge their perennially struggling economic system must change. President Raul Castro is in the process of allowing more private-sector activity, decentralizing state-run businesses, implementing agricultural reform and slimming government payrolls.

The United States actually does have significant trade with Cuba under a clause allowing the sale of food products and some pharmaceuticals.

According to the most recent information available from Cuba's National Statistics Office, the U.S. was the island's seventh-largest trading partner in 2010, selling $410 million in mostly food products. However, that was down from nearly $1 billion in 2008, as the island increasingly turned to other countries that don't force it to pay cash up front.

Many U.S. businesses would love to be allowed into the Cuban market, but an end to the embargo seems a long way off.

The issue is seen as a political nonstarter in the United States, where every four years, presidential candidates take turns courting the Cuban-American vote in Florida, a key swing state.

President Barack Obama has said Raul Castro's economic openings are insufficient, and it's unlikely he would do anything in an election year to risk losing support in Florida, which he won in 2008. Even if he wanted to lift the embargo, the Helms-Burton Act of 1996 stipulates that it would have to be approved by Congress.

Raul Castro, for his part, says recent changes in the U.S. such as allowing Cuban-Americans to visit relatives more often and send them more money are merely cosmetic.

Backers of the sanctions say it's as important as ever to maintain what they call the moral high ground, saying islanders will be grateful whenever change does come.

Critics cite the annual U.N. votes to argue that times have changed and the embargo is a Cold War relic that ought to be thrown onto the scrap heap.

"It's no longer a matter of the United States leading a movement to isolate Cuba in the hemisphere," said Smith, a staunch opponent of the embargo. "Quite the contrary: If anyone's isolated, on this issue anyway, it's us."

___

Follow Peter Orsi on Twitter at . http://www.twitter.com/Peter(underscore)Orsi

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HAVANA — When it started, American teenagers were doing "The Twist." The United States had yet to put a man into orbit around the Earth. And a first-class U.S. postage stamp cost 4 cents. The w...
HAVANA — When it started, American teenagers were doing "The Twist." The United States had yet to put a man into orbit around the Earth. And a first-class U.S. postage stamp cost 4 cents. The w...
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This American
An end to all this nonsense
11:18 PM on 02/09/2012
does anyone out there know why I am no longer able to access my comments?
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piul05
Can I have a biscuit yet?
08:30 PM on 02/12/2012
Meltdown.

You won't be able to fan anybody either.

It's been going on for days now and is getting tiresome.

If the idea is to get people to have some time off the HP, they are beginning to succeed.
06:42 PM on 02/09/2012
"In the White House, the first sign of the looming embargo came when President John F. Kennedy told his press secretary to go buy him as many H. Upmann Cuban cigars as he could find. The aide came back with 1,200 stogies."

This should embarrass every single American.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Mensch99
04:54 PM on 02/09/2012
The expanding economies of South America are turning their backs on the US and turning towards China. One reason is this last legacy of the Monroe Doctrine- the fruitless and counter-productive embargo against Cuba.
10:30 PM on 02/08/2012
a visit to Cuba is great. People are healthy. No besity. The air is clean as is the water. One can see how little one really needs to live a pretty good life. Children play in the schoolyard and their prents know if they get the grdes they can go on to be doctors.

Cubans have learned how to live without American trade. They know America has tried endlessly to kill Castro and failed. Cuba is not going to return land to the rich who lived in luxury in Cuba while the poor slept under leaky rooves and walked barefoot. Castro defeated the mafia and America with just a few hundred men. The mafia flourishes in America to-day.

Cuba could teach the world a lot about how to live with a little. It could teach America how to teach children. And it could teach America how to avoid obesity. So much Amricans could learn but given the entrenched Cuba community America will never learn until it drops the embargo and learns trade will always undermine communism.

Castro and Cuba have managed to survive how many presidents -
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05:22 PM on 02/08/2012
Here are 2 links from DemocracyNow from yesterday's show re: Cuba & Che

http://www.democracynow.org/2012/2/7/us_maintains_embargo_of_cuba_after
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/2/7/who_killed_che_how_the_cia
03:36 PM on 02/08/2012
Another failed conservative effort like the war on drugs. Maybe you should think about growing up and getting over it! Why must such a large powerful nation as the USA act so small! What is to be gained from continuing this child like behavior? So we lost a small inconsequential war. Does that stop us from dealing with Vietnam? How about Iraq and Afghanistan? Both of those are about to be added to our loss tally! I was hoping Obama would put an end to it but there are bigger things to worry about at the moment and the republicans have no limits on their childish behavior.
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philhellene
Far Left and Proud of It!
12:56 PM on 02/08/2012
" But they (conservatives) say other justifications remain, such as the confiscation of U.S. property in Cuba and the need to press for greater political and personal freedoms on the island."

A perfect example of just how bankrupt the right-wing thought process is. Instead of using the easing of the embargo as a bargaining chip for "greater political and personal freedoms" and a resolution of the property issue, all right-wingers can think is ...
12:55 PM on 02/08/2012
The embargo is one of the stupidest us policies there are. If the us was smart (which, of course, it has amply proven not to be. Just look at what republicans consider presidential material), it would end the embargo, let the tourists flood into Cuba and turn it back into the us playground it once was. The embargo has done nothing except hurt the people in Cuba. The us government likes to point to Cuba's poverty as proof of Cuba's government's failure, but it is the us government that has failed the Cuban people as well as us citizens. If Obama really cared about people, he'd end this ridiculous, hate-filled embargo now. It was useless in the past, and it still is.
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Paul Replogle
09:40 PM on 02/08/2012
The US is a major human rights abuser! We are still Pi$$ed of that all those US Co's. had to give the land back to the Cubans. So END THIS NOW!
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Joe Moore
English Teacher in Japan
09:55 PM on 02/08/2012
You did read the part of the article that states ending the embargo must be approved by Congress....right? When has this Congress ever really followed the President's lead and helped him on Anything?!
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Chaotician101
12:29 PM on 02/08/2012
This is so ridiculously stupid in every way possible! Who knew that the Mafia Dons were still so powerful! I suppose we are just afraid of losing our torture chamber in Gitmo.
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Schmice
11:21 AM on 02/08/2012
Give it another 50 years and call me in the morning.
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gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
10:03 PM on 02/08/2012
As soon as Korea, Ireland, Palestine work it all out.
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arecibo48
We just need to reinvent ourselves
10:18 AM on 02/08/2012
Most republican politicians don't agree with the embargo; however, they support it as a way of owning most Cubans in Miami.
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philhellene
Far Left and Proud of It!
12:58 PM on 02/08/2012
Or, pressure from the right-leaning Cuban community compels republican politicians to remain inflexible.
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gerorem
Linus v. Lucy
09:55 PM on 02/08/2012
Cuba better replace Castro quickly. With someone just as bad, so Cuban-Americans can have someone to hate for 50 more years.
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DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
09:41 AM on 02/08/2012
If the embargo were lifted, it would be a great economic boost to South Florida.

Exile community think that they will one day go back to Cuba and walk into the land title office and get land back that they fled from decades ago. This will not happen. Exiles lost the civil war and they are fist wavers at best. Cuba has gone on to be a wonderfully un-commercialized island, think California in the Carib, with beautiful unspoiled waters around the island as well.

To the exiles: go burn another US flag while waiving Cuba's flag and see where that gets you...
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freedom1947
sarcasm, cynicism
10:29 AM on 02/08/2012
Does this mean that cubans will no longer get free access to our country? Will they become just another illegal?
12:39 PM on 02/08/2012
I hope so
if they really cared about cuba they would stay and fight
after all castro overthrew batista with only a few hundred
the embargo should have been lifted a long long time ago
america not riussia should have been standing next to castro when he took control
but instead american foriegn policy was with the old guard , the very rich landowners who had controlled cuba for generations
the post above is right those lands adn properties are all long gone and never should be retrieved
no more free ride for cubn immigrants
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DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
04:36 PM on 02/08/2012
Yup, sure does.
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09:31 AM on 02/08/2012
HYPOCRITES! China is our trading buddy and that is a communist-run government as well as a repressive one. Why do we not treat them with the same contempt and rejection?

COUNTER-PRODUCTIVE!: 50 years, eh? Wow, talk about efficiency in government. What has the policy succeeded in doing? Nothing, unless you count entrenching the Cuban government more, and punishing the Cuban people, who are not our enemies.

The US-Cuba relationship is a classic example of how our foreign policy in Latin America is more often misguided, when not down-right evil, than it is intelligent.
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HipsterCorgi
I speak whale.
10:02 AM on 02/08/2012
It really makes no sense. If we're concerned about the Cuban people, lift the embargo and move on with all our lives.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
10:22 AM on 02/08/2012
MUA!!
banderson2
82nd ABN Div Paratrooper Ret
08:51 AM on 02/08/2012
The Cuban Americans want to control that Island. They want all that prime pre Castro beachfront property which of course would be worth millions of dollars in todays market. Does anyone remember the guy that was caught passing out communication equipment and the Cubans threw him in jail. That is what has been going on in the other Middle Eastern countries. Incite an uprising and install your own government.
01:54 PM on 02/08/2012
His name is Alan Gross and he has since lost over 100 pounds in prison. the regime refuses to release him because he committed the "unthinkable" crime of wanting to provide internet access to Cuba's small Jewish community.
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
08:39 AM on 02/08/2012
We traded all these years with other communist nations. The reason for the embargo is a powerful anti-Castro lobby in Florida and the fact that Castro embarrassed the US when he took power.
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DARK STAR
One small step for Man...
09:37 AM on 02/08/2012
Precisely!