Obama Renounces an Insane Policy, But What’s Next? Cuba Détente
I do not expect the changes I am announcing today to bring about a transformation of Cuban society overnight.
Barack Obama, Dec. 17, 2014
President Obamas Dec. 17 statement announcing changes in U.S. Cuba policy was a mixture of historical truths and catch phrases drawn from the catalog of myths about Cuba and U.S. policy goals.
The first round of rule changes, announced by Jan. 16 by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), was significant in the areas of trade and banking. At the same time, much of the language is drawn from the old justifications for regime change. (Let us put aside the hypocrisies in Obamas speech such as the instruction coming from a country where labor unions have been systematically destroyed that Cuban workers should be free to form unions.)
In his speech, Obama reworked Einsteins famous definition of insanity to support his partial abandonment of the half-century attempts to destroy the Cuban revolution. I do not believe we can keep doing the same thing for over five decades and expect a different result, said Obama. (If he means that the policy he has supported for six years is insane, what does that say about him?)
Nowhere in the speech did Obama renounce the longstanding U.S. commitment to regime change in Cuba or even acknowledge that it ever existed. While implicitly recognizing that the use of sanctions to achieve political results had failed, he continues to pursue them in Korea, Russia and elsewhere. One day after making the Cuba speech, he signed a bill imposing sanctions on Venezuela alleging that the government of President Nicolas Maduro had violated the human rights of protestors during violent anti-government demonstrations last February. The demonstrations were led by right-wing representatives of the Venezuelan elite who have long been backed by the United States.
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/01/28/cuba-detente/