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Published in The
Orlando Sentinel on April 23, 2000
Is
little Elian just a pawn in an international business scheme?
By Charley
Reese
Columnist
Mash
almost any of America's foreign-policy postules and what will ooze out
is big business in pursuit of money. It now seems that even little
Elian Gonzalez has become a pawn in an international business scheme.
By
the time you read this, some outcome may have occurred. Nevertheless
what follows is important background. All of the information comes
from the Archer Daniels Midland Shareholders Watch Committee.
In
the fall of 1995, ADM's chairman, Dwayne Andreas, met with Fidel
Castro for dinner in New York. In July 1996, Andreas announced that he
was going to Cuba to see Castro. He said he contemplated building a
refinery in Cuba but would do it through a Spanish subsidiary because
of the trade embargo.
In
1997, a Spanish company invested $65 million in Cuba for a refinery
for the production of alcohol from molasses. In October 1999, Martin
Andreas, senior vice president, said ADM would consider constructing a
vegetable-oil plant in Cuba if the market were open.
Last
January the Cuban government announced that it is moving toward
consideration of a joint-venture type of relationship with ADM. In
February, ADM announced plans for another trade exhibition in Havana
in December.
What
has this got to do with Elian Gonzalez?
Well,
there are a lot of interesting coincidences. Remember the meeting with
the grandmothers at the home of the president of Barry University?
Dwayne
Andreas is a large contributor to Barry University, and his wife is a
graduate and is past chairman of the board of trustees. The president
of the university was initially in favor of returning Elian to his
father -- until the meeting with the grandmothers convinced her that
the Cuban government was calling the shots.
Last
October, Andrew Young, an ADM board member and member of the
public-policy committee, was installed as president of the National
Council of Churches, an old left front group, which has taken the lead
in urging that Elian be returned to his father.
Gregory
Craig, the high-priced lawyer who suddenly materialized to represent
Juan Gonzalez, who couldn't afford two seconds of Craig's time, is
part of a law firm that also represents ADM. Craig is ostensibly being
paid by the National Council of Churches.
That
seems like an awful lot of coincidences linking Elian Gonzalez with
ADM, which calls itself the supermarket to the world. Castro is like
any other communist dictator. If you want to cut deals with him, you
have to kiss his backside. If you want to open a news bureau in
Havana, you have to kiss his backside. Castro wants the kid back, and
what do you know?
A
leftist church group and a high-priced lawyer, both with ADM
connections, pop up to lead the campaign. And, no surprise, the big
American news media jump on the same bandwagon.
Castro,
by the way, has already said Elian will be sent to a boarding school
in Havana, where Cuban psychologists will straighten out his mind.
Castro's daughter, who lives in Spain, had already warned that would
be Elian's fate if he's handed over to the dictator.
The
Cuban exile community has always known that the question is not one of
familial custody but one of freedom or a kid being sacrificed to a
ruthless communist dictator.
One
day I may find an American foreign policy that does not cause me to
become nauseated. By and large, it is safe to say that the American
government generally disgusts me, as do much of American big business
and much of the American news media. Liberty gets a cold reception
from all three.
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