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CUBAN LIBRARIES
SOLIDARITY GROUP
World News Articles
5 August 2003
Cuba has been left out for too long : Britain and Europe must break with
40 years of failed US policy
by Colin Moynihan, The Guardian
The past few months have seen a sharp escalation of tension in relations
between Cuba and the US. But unlike in the past, this time the EU has
jumped firmly on to the anti-Havana bandwagon. While the situation has
yet to reach crisis point, it is certainly serious. In the House of Lords
debate on Cuba last week, the British government was uncompromising in
its attitude.
The question is how best to integrate Cuba, the only socialist state in
the Americas, into the western hemisphere. Should it be through isolation
and coercion, or through dialogue and mutually agreed incentives? In May,
I led a British trade delegation to Havana, as someone who believes that
constructive engagement and expanded trade are the best ways to encourage
change and to bolster civil society.
Earlier that month, Cuba arrested more than 70 opposition activists. This
brought long prison sentences for most and the execution of three ferry
hijackers. The severity of the government's crack-down, and the human
rights issues it raised, provoked widespread international condemnation,
risking repercussions from the outside world, not least from its mighty
neighbour.
That new low point in US-Cuba relations has been mirrored on this side
of the Atlantic, with the EU downgrading diplomatic contacts and postponing
Cuba's application to join the Cotonou convention, the treaty on trade
and aid between Europe and 77 developing nations.
Britain has been at the forefront of orchestrating this new EU approach.
The reaction of many in government has been predictable - a default to
the tendency to shadow America's unreasonable lead and to turn this country's
back on dialogue.
While the present situation is a serious setback, I believe there is an
alternative. Engagement and dialogue wherever possible has always been
the British approach to achieving foreign affairs goals and encouraging
improved standards, or else we would not have diplomatic missions in North
Korea, Sudan, Iran, Zimbabwe, Burma, even China, to name but a few.
Tough messages are easier to send and more likely to be heeded within
the context of a relationship based on mutual respect and cooperation
than one based on exclusion and distrust. For over four decades, the US
embargo against Cuba has failed to deliver any of its goals. It is proof,
if proof were needed, that isolation is not the road to reform.
It is time for a radical new approach. Britain should be in the vanguard
of encouraging dialogue with Cuba. Increased cooperation through business
activity offers us the opportunity to encourage Cuba to take its relationship
with Britain and the EU more seriously.
There is a sense in many countries that the present Cuban government is
in its twilight years and it is only a matter of biding time. Policymakers
on both sides of the Atlantic need to rid themselves of the misguided
notion that Cuba policy is locked in a holding pattern until Fidel Castro
is no more, at which time the Cuban people will rise up as one and embrace
American culture and influence. It is naive in the extreme to think that
in the post-Castro era, Cuba will effectively become the 51st state of
the US. Yet that is precisely what many in the US administration and indeed,
on this side of the Atlantic, appear to believe.
In fact, the very opposite is likely to happen. Cuban history is marked
by a strong and deep-rooted desire for independence, and in the post-Castro
era, resistance to US influence and the drug and money-laundering culture
which has infected so many Latin and Caribbean nations, is likely to strengthen.
Ultimately, it will be the Cuban people who determine its future and British,
European and US policy must be formulated in view of this reality.
It would be of great benefit to the British-Cuban relationship if policymakers
in London now spent time studying the Cuban psyche, rather than viewing
the situation through the unfocused binoculars of American wishful thinking
- as unquestionably some in the government, with their strong adherence
to the neo-conservative wing of the US administration, are inclined to
do. We must avoid the danger of borrowing the blunt instrument of America's
political sledgehammer to drive home our message, when the skilful use
of subtler means would cause far less damage and achieve far better results.
This is a critical time for Cuba. A knee-jerk tendency to shadow US policy
threatens to seal up the window of opportunity, just at the very time
when Cuba is beginning to recognise the need for further economic reform
and a stable political transition to a younger leadership.
· Lord Moynihan is shadow minister for sport, a former minister
in the Thatcher government and chairman of the UK Cuba Initiative.
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