Greed
VS. Embargo © 2002 ABIP
by
Agustin Blazquez with the collaboration of Jaums Sutton
The
recent corporate collapses and scandals in the U.S. business community
have exposed the evils of greed when it becomes the basis for decision
making. Greed is certainly a bad advisor as it tramples the moral and
ethical principles on which America was founded.
Greed
and illusory dreams of profits were the foundations of the July 23, 2002
vote, 262 to 167, in the Republican-led House of Representatives in
favor of easing the economic embargo against the Castro regime and
letting American tourists visit Cuba.
For
some time now, Castro has been able to buy goods from the U.S. on a
cash-only basis -- no credit. But the legislation passed by the House
will allow Castro to buy on credit.
In
1986 he began suspending all payments of his international debt. Debt to
governments and debt to businesses. Since he is the only businessman in
Cuba, he can do that. As a result, many countries have withdrawn their
permission for him to buy on credit. Absolutely nothing has happened to
suggest that he has changed his tune an will now begin to take his debts
seriously. So, for the U.S. to now begin to sell to his regime on credit
it is an abysmal mistake.
Cuba’s
Foreign Debt
"Cuba’s
Foreign Debt" released on August 19, 2002 by the Cuba Transition
Project (distributed by La Voz de Cuba Libre), offers an accounting as
of the end of 2001: owed to the European Union, $10.893 billion; to the
former Eastern Europe, $2.2 billion; to the former Soviet Union, $25
billion; to England, $196 million; to Japan, $1.7 billion; to China,
$400 million; to Argentina, $1.58 billion; to Mexico, $380 million; to
Venezuela, $142 million; to Canada, $73 million; to Chile, $20 million
and to South Africa, $85 million.
From
the same report, "Cuba's foreign debt owed to numerous countries
remains unpaid. The Castro regime lacks the resources to even pay
interest on these obligations. Several European governments are now
refusing to provide further export credit to Cuba. According to a
Reuters report on July 6, 2002, ‘the island is notorious for paying
its debts late . . . and public and private creditors report that the
situation has grown much worse in recent months.’ As The Economist
noted in May 2001, ‘France, Italy and South Africa have recently cut
off further credit to Cuba, in a bid to claw back some of what they are
owed.’"
I am
willing to say it out loud. If the U.S. government allows farmers to
extend credit to Cuba, and, true to form, Cuba doesn’t pay, the U.S.
government will be obligated to save the U.S. farmers who (seemingly)
put their trust in the U.S. government by extending the credit. I say
"seemingly" because, now that I’ve said it out loud, the
U.S. farmers know the dangers of selling to Cuba on credit.
Once
the U.S. government pays Castro’s debts for him, then our tax money
will be used to support a tyranny. Isn’t there a little moral issue
here?
But
greed is very powerful. And apparently our businessmen and farmers
don’t care about who would eventually be paying, as long as they make
their profits. Our politicians, supposedly, must protect the interests
of their constituency, who are taxpayers and who will eventually be
faced with the bill for the irresponsibility of this small but powerful
special interest group.
Soon
in Congress and with the help of the well-financed pro-Castro lobby on
Capitol Hill, politicians will try to pass, and probably will with
flying colors, another similar action in favor of easing the U.S.
embargo, giving another victory to the old and now
"untouchable" tyrant-for-life of Cuba. That victory will be
one more defeat for the Cuban people since it will prolong their
suffering.
But
there are no moral principles driving our businessmen’s greed. Just
look at China, where, thanks to American businessmen, it has become more
powerful and threatening to the U.S. than ever and the three decades of
"engagement" has not brought the oppressed Chinese people any
closer to democracy.
Castro’s
‘Engagement’ With the World
Usually
unmentioned during times of "I know, let’s lift the
embargo!" the U.S. embargo says nothing about Cuba’s trade with
the rest of the world. Has his "engagement" with the rest of
the world made him change his political posture, improve human rights or
the living conditions for the Cuban people? Obviously not. Any benefit
Cuba gains from the engagements are for Castro, not the people.
Has
international business engagement brought a change in Castro’s
intentions about the future of Cuba? Obviously not, as he continues with
his tired, old "Socialism or death!," which Cubans on the
island changed to "Socialism is death!"
So,
where is the logic in the argument that lifting the U.S. embargo, giving
his regime credit and flooding his bankrupt economy with U.S. tourist
dollars will encourage him to mend his ways?
The
fallacious engagement theory that Castro’s apologists, supporters and
lobbyists on Capitol Hill, accompanied by the greedy U.S. business
community, have been using to justify their despicable actions, is that
it will bring change and improve the living conditions in Cuba. Also the
naïve concept that exposing Cubans to American tourists will bring new
ideas and will foster a tilt toward democracy, is simply unrealistic.
Cuba’s
Apartheid
Cuba
is an apartheid society where ordinary Cubans are not allowed in the
tourist areas - except as servants and security agents to keep tourists
under control and separated from the rest of the population. Ordinary
Cubans are penalized for mingling with tourists.
Cubans
are painfully aware who has been helped by "engagement". The
ventures with foreign companies are all administered by the armed forces
and the secret police. The payoff is only for Castro – keeping him in
power and repressing the people. Ordinary Cuban citizens are not allowed
to enter into partnerships with foreigners.
The
Cubans who work in these international businesses are aware that these
foreign companies pay salaries in U.S. dollars to Castro and he in turn
pays them a very small fraction in worthless Cuban pesos. They are aware
that as workers for these foreign companies, they have no bargaining
rights. They are aware of the differences between the opportunities of
foreigners and those of the ordinary natives – thus their hatred for
the resulting apartheid.
This
whole process sets up a hatred for the foreign exploiters, because the
ordinary Cubans are not only taken advantage of by Castro but by the
international business community.
Canadians,
Mexicans, Spaniards and other Europeans are vacationing in Castroland
and having the audacity to buy vacation places there while Cubans are
risking their lives – 85,876 deaths so far - trying to escape from
that "foreigners-only paradise."
And
apparently the greed extends to U.S. businessmen, swamping the moral
issues of the welfare of the expendable little Cubans.
The
‘Politically Correct’ Mantra
Many
U.S. businessmen keep trying to join the herd of profiteers by
pressuring the Bush administration to change U.S. policy toward Cuba.
The efforts of the pro-Castro lobby in the U.S. have been to convince
politicians, and the American people - with the full collaboration of
the U.S. media and academia - that lifting the embargo against Castro
will foster change in Cuba toward democracy.
That
has become the "politically correct" mantra, while
"politically correctly" maligning, censoring and discrediting
the Cuban Americans that oppose the lifting of the U.S. embargo.
This
heavily orchestrated campaign has succeeded to thoroughly misinform the
American people to a point that they have become insensitive to the
Cuban tragedy. And Americans traveling illegally to Cuba through third
countries has become "chic." And to encourage this illegality,
Castro’s immigration officials do not stamp their U.S. passports.
I
often think how ironic it is for the Americans to want to visit a
country where 90% of the enslaved population wants to get the hell out
of there. The happy-go-lucky vacationers seem to have no problem with
being served by the slaves.
American
politicians have also fallen victim to the fad, as they have become an
staple in Castro’s anti-embargo propaganda ploy. The politician
currently garnering favorable publicity by participating in this parade
of fools is Minnesota Wrestler-Governor, Jesse Ventura, who plans to be
in Havana from September 26-30 and met with Castro, of course.
In his
elected position, Gov. Ventura, as well as other visiting U.S.
politicians, must know that Cuba is a virulent anti-America terrorist
country that for 43 years has been waging a covert war against the U.S.
Cuba remains a threat to our national security. Castro’s Cuba is a
training ground for terrorists and allied in international terrorism
directed against the U.S. Castro’s Cuba is not a friendly nation.
It
should be considered un-American and unpatriotic to visit there, much
less to lend an economic hand, a platform and an opportunity for the
tyrant to trash the U.S. once more. There are a lot of reasons not to
visit Cuba.
After
43 years of the most brutal tyranny in Cuba’s history as well as in
the Americas, it seems that the drive should be for the continuation of
a policy based on moral principles and scruples against a criminal and
illegitimate regime that has raped the Cuban people of their right to
live with freedom and dignity.
Sadly,
the Europeans and others have shown to be totally insensitive to the
Cuban tragedy and behave without principles and scruples in their
dealings with the Castro regime. But I believe that America is different
and we should not descend to those levels. We must not act like them.
‘Disinvestment’
"Disinvestment"
was the right moral principle for the international business community
in the case of South Africa. Why do the opposite for Cuba?
Demanding
a unilateral change of policy from the U.S. without demanding that
Castro and communism must go from Cuba is hypocritical and a crime
against the suffering Cuban people. Lifting the U.S. embargo is not the
answer; disinvestment is the moral thing to do.
By
exploiting the situation in Cuba because of greed, the U.S. business
community becomes a collaborator and partner in Castro’s crimes.
Cubans
are crying for an end to their misery and are not going to forget and
forgive those who collaborated with their oppressor.
The
people who love freedom and democracy in the U.S. should want the same
for Cuba. They should urge all those politicians responding to the
pressures of the pro-Castro lobby on Capitol Hill and greedy U.S.
businessmen yearning for the imaginary profits promised by the
propaganda machinery of a bankrupt regime, to stop their immoral drive
and instead help by disinvesting in Cuba to help get rid of the last
tyranny in the Americas.
©
2002 ABIP