If you live in Galveston,
Texas, Hurricane Ike will be
remembered for its destruction. But history may remember the ninth named storm
of the 2008 season for swinging the 2008 presidential campaign.
That's because Ike devastated a little island off Florida
named Cuba.
In fact, Cuba
sustained damage from four hurricanes: Fay, Gustav, Hanna and Ike. Gustav hit
the Western end of Cuba
as a Category 4 storm. Ike entered the east of Cuba as a strong Category 3 then
shredded the full length of the island for three days. There were reports of
walls of water 50 feet high hitting the north shore.
In a country of more than 11 million people, 2.7 million evacuated their
homes when Ike came through. Today, 444,000 homes in Cuba are damaged, meaning up to 2.2
million Cubans are living dangerously or wondering when it will be safe to go
home.
Food supplies on the island are nearly exhausted. The crops and livestock
for domestic consumption and cash crops like tobacco and sugar cane, necessary
for the hard currency to import food - are devastated. The island's electrical
grid is severely damaged and in some places non-existent. Communication towers
are down across the country. Roads are blocked with rubble from collapsed buildings,
trees, or just washed away. Schools, hospitals, and clinics have suffered
extensive damage or are non-functioning.
And it will only get worse. With at least $5 billion of damage done to a
nation where the average monthly salary is $17, the economy will not be able to
support the Cuban population for quite some time. Even the Cuban military is on
short-rations with perhaps a week left. With food shelves empty, hoarding and
black market price gouging will quickly squeeze all families, displaced or not,
with little to no income and no subsistence agriculture to fall back on. As the
vast majority of Cubans become malnourished and post-disaster diseases increase
in prevalence, the political situation is likely to become much more volatile
within Cuba.
All this could occur within the next six weeks. Faced with a displaced,
hungry and frustrated population, Havana
could do what it has done in the past: allow a mass migration to head north. In
1980, responding to unrest triggered by economic downturn, Havana launched the
Mariel boatlift that brought 125,000 Cuban immigrants over a five-month period
to South Florida. In 1994, facing another economic catastrophe, the Castro
government allowed at least 35,000 Cubans to leave the island - an episode that
cost the U.S. Treasury more than $500 million.
The U.S. government is now offering Cuba a $1.5 million package of temporary
shelter for 10,000 families and household items for 8,000 with an additional
$3.5 million conditional on the survey of a U.S. disaster assessment team.(1)
In contrast, Haiti, which was hit by three storms, has already received $19
million in aid from the U.S. government. Even Burma,
which has a military dictatorship more repressive than Cuba's and was
ravaged by Cyclone Fargis, received $50 million in aid.
Indeed, an increase in funding for traditional humanitarian items is not
what Cuba needs or wants
from the United States.
Their government believes that there would be no prospect of a crisis if the U.S. economic
embargo were not blocking them from purchasing the needed supplies on the open
market. It can get food from other countries in the region. Rather, Cuba's
infrastructure needs repair. They need electrical components like poles, cable,
and transformers. They need heavy-duty construction equipment and materials.
The only market that can respond fast enough is the United States.
Without those supplies, the boats could very well sail before November.
Americans with family in Cuba
will be furious with the Bush administration for placing politics over saving
lives. Cuban refugees who make it onto U.S. soil will benefit from the
wet-foot/dry-foot policy that other Latino immigrants - a key demographic this
cycle - view with considerable hostility. South Florida
is already reeling from the domestic economic recession and a new load of
low-skilled immigrants will put downward pressures on wages and exclusion will
risk increased levels of criminal activity. At a minimum, CNN will be showing
pictures of thousands of malnourished and water-logged Cubans being picked up
on the high seas and then sent to the notorious U.S. Naval Station at
Guantanamo, only to be repatriated to a growing catastrophe.
It is now time to lift the embargo, let Cuba buy what it needs and move on.
The U.S.
policy of isolation to bring about regime change has failed to achieve its
goals for fifty years. Fidel has grown old and retired. Cuba is no
longer sponsoring revolution overseas but exporting doctors and nurses instead.
And by giving Havana
a ready-made excuse for economic failure, the embargo has the perverse effect
of supporting the Castro regime rather than weakening it.
The Bush administration is between a rock and a hard place. If it continues
with business as usual, Havana may very well
decide the outcome of the U.S.
elections. If it moves to end the embargo and Cuba
purchases the supplies it needs to rebuild, it will have prevented the disaster
that it foresaw but Cuba
will cease to be an electoral goldmine for the GOP.
America
needs to put politics aside. It is time to do the right thing. Protect the lives
of innocent Cubans, protect our electoral process, end a 50-year-old failed
policy, and be good Samaritans after all.