Sarah Stephens
On the Anniversary of
Cuba's Revolution, the Case for Evolutionary
Thinking Here at Home
On New Year's Day, as Cubans celebrate
the 50th anniversary of their Revolution, we
in the United States should remember another
milestone.
January 3rd will be the 48th anniversary
of President Eisenhower's Cold War-era
decision to break diplomatic relations with
Cuba. Ike might be surprised that a
veritable conga line of his successors stood
by the policy of trying to overthrow,
isolate, or starve Cuba for five decades --
even after the Soviet Union ceased to exist
and the policy had long since demonstrated
its uselessness.
This is a moment for President-elect
Obama to decide whether he wants to be the
11th president of the Cold War to champion a
failed policy or the first president of a
new era to be an advocate for a far more
sensible course.
This is Obama's Cuba opportunity, and
this is the direction he should follow.
On day one, he should take executive
action to restore the rights of
Cuban-Americans to visit their families on
the island and to support them financially
and without limitations.
He should get the Treasury Department out
of the travel business, so that the faith
community, the business community, artists
and academics, among others, no longer have
to apply to a government bureaucracy on
bended knee for permission to travel to Cuba
- permission that under the Bush
administration was routinely denied.
The President has much of that authority
already, but he should promise Congress that
he will sign legislation to authorize travel
by all Americans to Cuba as soon as they put
it on his desk.
He should then remove restrictions on
trade so that the American economy and the
Cuban economy can enjoy the benefits that
freer commerce can bestow - an increase in
jobs and living standards, and the
opportunity to learn and share ideas about
innovation, management, environmental
standards, working conditions, and the like.
Most of all, he should engage the
government of Cuba in a manner that respects
its sovereignty, just as our allies across
the world do every day, especially if he
believes - as he stressed in the campaign -
in the kind of diplomacy that emphasizes
negotiation as means for settling disputes
and differences.
It is time to talk to Cuba - about
problems in the neighborhood, security, law
enforcement, environmental protection, and
migration, to name just a few - and to talk
about these issues without preconditions.
President Raśl Castro has signaled he's
ready to do this, and we should not let this
moment pass.
There is ample historical precedent for
conducting such talks, as Peter Kornbluh and
Bill LeoGrande, in particular, brilliantly
establish in their new article for Cigar
Aficionado "Talking with Castro," and there
is no shortage of subjects to discuss, as my
organization demonstrates in our new report,
"9 Ways to Talk to Cuba and for Cuba to Talk
to US."
Were Mr. Obama to reunite families, he
would lift an emotional burden from the
Cuban-American community and give
long-needed support to those who have worked
so hard and in such difficult circumstances
to reconcile the Cuban families on both
sides of the Florida Straits.
Were he to fully open travel, commerce,
and diplomacy, the impact on Cuba would
extraordinary, and he would give all Latin
Americans a new reason to engage with the
United States.
Most of all, in doing these things, Obama
would send an unmistakable signal to Latin
America and nations everywhere that our
country is ready to embrace this world not
as we found it 50 years ago, but as it
exists today.
Few actions could make these two January
anniversaries, more memorable or momentous,
or give the Obama presidency such a
promising start.
Sarah Stephens, director of
the Center for Democracy in the Americas, is
co-editor of the forthcoming report: "9 Ways