Cuba

Nukes and Cuba On Day One

March 13, 2008 - 3:59pm

One of the very coolest and most informative blogs I check in on a daily basis is ArmsControlWonk.com published by my New America Foundation colleague Jeffrey Lewis.

Both of us were asked by the Better World Campaign to offer comments for its "On Day One" initiative. He talked nukes, and I talked Cuba. . .though I'd also like to talk about Israel/Palestine, Syria, China, Iran, climate change, oil/energy, and nukes. I may fool them and wear different hats and perhaps a moustache to make myself appear differently.



Obama, Clinton Debate How to Change Cuba Policy

February 21, 2008 - 7:00pm

With Fidel Castro stepping down this weekend (see earlier TAS posts here and here), and after a bit of behind-the-scenes nudging from some of our colleagues, last night CNN and Univision asked Senators Clinton and Obama about how they would handle Cuba if they were president. And it was no brief exchange, Cuba took 9 of the debate's 90 minutes. Check it out:


 

Castro Retires: A New America Media Compilation

February 19, 2008 - 7:00pm

What should the United States do now that Fidel Castro is about to depart from the scene? The New America Foundation's U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative held a major conference call analyzing the significance of the news and was called on by domestic and international media to comment on this historic opportunity.

Here's a selection of our appearances:

Historic Opportunity, by Steven Clemons, The Guardian
Castro's Exit is a Giant Opportunity, by Steven Clemons, The Philadelphia Inquirer
For Cuba Experts, Castro Presents Opportunity for Change, by Mike Nizza, New York Times' 'The Lede'
U.S. Cuba Polcy Could Get New Look, by Richard Wolf, USAToday
Our Failed, Punitive Policy, Anya Landau French, The Washington Post
Fidel Castro's Resignation Gives American Inventors New Hope For Havana, Nightly Business Report
Castro Hints at Younger Face for Cuba, by Carol Williams, L.A. Times
Anti-Embargo Groups Call for Lifting Sanctions, by Pablo Bachelet, Kansas City Star
As Cuba's Power Shifts, So Should U.S. Policy, Editorial, Palm Beach Post
White House Rejects Calls for an End to Embargo, by Suzanne Goldenberg, The Guardian
US Awaits Its Own Transition to Review Cuba Policy, by Jim Lobe, AntiWar.com
The Cuba Embargo Stays: Bush, by Richard Sisk, New York Daily News
A Broker's Role for Canada, by Tim Harper, Toronto Star

From the Havana Note:
The Cuba Embargo Does Not Give US Leverage -- It Harms American Interests, by Steve Clemons
Some Key Statements on US-Cuba Relations and the News from Fidel Castro,
by Steve Clemons
Time to Retire America's Failed Cuba Policy,
by Sarah Stephens
Fidel Castro's Advice for Politicians,
by Gail Reed
Fidel Castro Not Returning to the Presidency,
by Steve Clemons

Planning for a Post-Fidel Cuba

February 18, 2008 - 7:00pm

Today, New America's U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative gathered leading Cuba watchers and scholars to discuss the implications of Fidel Castro's announcement that he will not seek nor will he accept the role of Cuban President and Commander-in-Chief. (On Sunday, Feb. 24, the Cuban Council of State is expected to hand power to Fidel's brother, Raul Castro, ending Fidel's 49-year rule with a constitutional succession.)

An MP3 audio recording of this conference call is available here.

Planning for a Post-Fidel Cuba

February 18, 2008 - 7:00pm

Today, the New America Foundation's U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative gathered leading Cuba watchers and scholars to discuss the implications of Fidel Castro's announcement that he will not seek nor will he accept the role of Cuban President and Commander-in-Chief. (On Sunday, Feb. 24, the Cuban Council of State is expected to hand power to Fidel's brother, Raul Castro, ending Fidel's 49-year rule with a constitutional succession.)

An MP3 audio recording of this conference call is available below. Participants in the call, which I moderated, included:

  • Rep. Jim McGovern
    U.S. Congressman (D-Mass.)
  • Col. Lawrence Wilkerson (ret.)
    Co-Chair, U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative, New America Foundation
    Former chief of staff to secretary of state Colin Powell
  • Julia Sweig
    Rockefeller Senior Fellow for Latin America Studies, Council on Foreign Relations
  • Peter Kornbluh
    Director, Cuba Documentation Project, National Security Archive
  • Sarah Stephens
    Executive Director, Center for Democracy in the Americas
  • Jake Colvin
    Director, USA*Engage, National Foreign Trade Council

TWN: Transitions in Havana and Transitions in Miami

January 30, 2008 - 7:00pm

Steve Clemons, writing at The Washington Note, has this to say about the linkage between Cuba policy and the politics of South Florida:

THE Cold War continues to rage in one last place in the world -- and that is between the United States and Cuba. It makes no sense for a democratic American government to unconstitutionally inhibit the travel of its own citizens to Cuba -- when it has embraced China and Vietnam and is on the way to normalizing relations with North Korea.

One of the protectors of the status quo and a failed American embargo of Cuba is Lincoln Diaz-Balart, one of two Diaz-Balart brothers currently serving as members of the Florida Congressional delegation.

Lincoln and his brother are nephews by former marriage of Fidel Castro -- and any scant investigation of the battle lines in the US-Cuba standoff will show the situation to be something of a nasty, Kentucky-style family spat.

Lawrence Wilkerson: Cuba Diversified

January 29, 2008 - 7:00pm

Col. Lawrence Wilkerson (ret.), Co-Chair of New America's U.S.-Cuba Policy Initiative comments on the ease with which Cuba's leaders can ignore America's unilateral trade embargo. From the Havana Note:

LET'S look at what Cuba is doing with regard to diversification. It’s darned smart.

Having experienced the Soviet withdrawal from their island—a move that impacted nearly every Cuban in some way—and the concomitant epiphany of the tragic downside of sole-source support, the Cuban leadership vowed never to repeat. As a result, today that leadership is diversifying its support by state and function. Spain, China, Germany Canada, Israel, Venezuela, Brazil, and others fill the former role and nickel, tobacco, oil, rum, tourism, and other trade the latter. Cuba will never be trapped again into reliance on one state or on one or two commodities or trade functions.

Syndicate content