Rethinking Solidarity with Cuba
January 01, 2015
The Road Ahead
Rethinking Solidarity with Cuba
by W.T. WHITNEY Jr.
President Obama recently announced changed U.S. policies toward Cuba. He gets high marks for defying an entrenched, hardline political opposition. Euphoria, however, is brief. Cuban suffering is recalled that could have been avoided, if only he or his predecessors had taken steps earlier.
Obama announced the release of the last three anti-terrorist Cuban Five prisoners. He indicated diplomatic relations with Cuba would be restored and travel restrictions eased. Obama invited Congress to begin dismantling the U.S. economic blockade. He spoke of preparations to drop Cuba from the U.S. list of terrorist-sponsoring nations. U.S. banking, credit card, and communications services would be available in Cuba.
Cubas victory was clear. All Cuban Five prisoners are home now. The Cuban people outlasted strong-arm policies that caused immense grief. The Cuban Five triumphed; their dignity, revolutionary fervor, and optimism never wavered.
Now the New York Times celebrates dissident bloggers in Cuba, Cubas supposedly grim economic prognosis, and the prospect of market forces prevailing in Cuba. The U.S. media remains silent on history that matters: anti-Cuban terror attacks, injustices visited upon the Cuban Five, half a century of suffering at U.S. hands, and Cubas socialist achievements.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/01/01/rethinking-solidarity-with-cuba/