The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Will a Biden presidency reverse Trump’s Cuba policy?

- PETER MCKENNA GUEST OPINION Peter McKenna is professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

Interestin­gly, not every country in the world was quick to recognize officially Joe Biden as the incoming U.S. president. Others, though, were anxious to be first in line, including Canada’s Justin Trudeau, to acknowledg­e the president-elect barely 40 minutes after the U.S. TV networks declared Biden the presidenti­al election winner.

Countries like China, Turkey and Russia, however, were less than thrilled with the prospect of a Biden presidency. Indeed, the best that Moscow could muster was a statement from Russian President Vladimir Putin’s top spokespers­on: “We believe it is correct to wait for the official results of the election that have taken place. I’d like to remind you that President Putin has repeatedly said that he will respect the choice of the American people whatever it may be.”

Yet, even Venezuela’s embattled leader, President Nicolás Maduro, managed to offer up some compliment­ary words for Biden’s electoral victory (and VP-elect Kamala Harris). He then went on to add: “Venezuela, the Homeland of the Liberator Simón Bolivar, will always be open to dialogue and understand­ing with the people and government of the United States.”

Perhaps the least surprising congratula­tory acknowledg­ement came from Cuba’s President Miguel Díaz-Canel. He said that “we recognize that, in their presidenti­al elections, the American people have chosen a new course.”

His short tweet then stated: “We believe in the possibilit­y of a constructi­ve bilateral relationsh­ip that is respectful of difference­s.”

The Cuban government has obviously not fared well during the shambolic Trump years. From the very beginning, President Trump was adamant about transporti­ng U.S.-Cuba relations back to the 1960s Cold War era. He was all-in on embracing the failed U.S. strategy of the past of mostly isolating, punishing, haranguing and threatenin­g Cuba.

His administra­tion moved to gradually dismantle many of the central elements of the Obama-Biden U.S.-Cuba accord (2014-16). In fact, he invoked damaging parts of the anti-Cuba Helms-Burton Law (all designed to discourage foreign investment in Cuba), slashed much-needed remittance­s from CubanAmeri­cans and restricted U.S. citizens from actually travelling to Cuba. He also impeded the ability of Cubans to visit family members in Florida by closing down the consular section of the U.S. embassy in Havana after American diplomats (2018-2020) pointed to unexplaine­d brain injuries— or what some refer to as the “immaculate concussion.”

Although there wasn’t anything specific about the so-called “Havana Syndrome” or the Cuban government in the foreign policy plank of Biden’s election platform, he certainly backed Barack Obama’s 2014 diplomatic entente with Havana. During the election campaign itself, the Biden-Harris ticket did say that it would swiftly reverse Trump’s hard-line approach to Cuba.

As far as they were concerned, Trump’s Cuba policy has only “inflicted harm on the Cuban people and done nothing to advance democracy and human rights.” According to one senior

foreign policy adviser to the campaign, president-elected Biden wants to “empower” the Cuban people and “reverse the decisions that are separating families, limitation­s on family travel and remittance­s.”

Of course, it remains to be seen whether a Biden White House will be able to follow through on these pledges. Admittedly, a rapprochem­ent with Cuba makes sense from an American economic, security, diplomatic and regional standpoint. But there will be plenty of roadblocks in Biden’s plan to “build back better” a new U.S.-Cuba relationsh­ip.

For one thing, the BidenHarri­s team will be preoccupie­d with a trifecta of crises: runaway COVID-19 cases, a slumping economy and a simmering racial injustice challenge. It will also have to contend with a bitterly divided country and a Twitterhap­py Donald Trump now fully unleashed. President Biden, then, will necessaril­y have to expend significan­t political capital to salve the U.S. domestic scene before he can turn his attention to various foreign policy initiative­s.

It also bears repeating that the issue of U.S.-Cuban relations is not exactly topof-mind for most Americans these days — or any other day. Accordingl­y, there is no robust political constituen­cy in the U.S. that is aggressive­ly pushing for Biden to significan­tly revamp relations with a struggling Cuba.

Most importantl­y, the Democrats were hugely disappoint­ed that the Hispanic vote in Florida (especially Cubans and Venezuelan­s) did not come out strongly for Biden. Trump was able to hold onto Florida’s 29 electoral college votes, in part, by corralling the support of the Cuban-American community. So the last thing that Biden wants is for Republican­s to incessantl­y point to a pro-Cuba White House that only confirms Trump’s highly effective campaign rhetoric about Democrats being “radical socialists.”

I’m sure that Biden and Harris can heal a polarized American polity and, simultaneo­usly, mend fences abroad. But it won’t be easy. And I’m not convinced that the requisite political will needed to reconstitu­te the 2014 entente with Cuba will eventually materializ­e.

I do hope that I’m wrong, though.

 ?? 123RF STOCK ?? During its U.S. election campaign, the Biden-Harris ticket said that it would swiftly reverse Donald Trump’s hard-line approach to Cuba.
123RF STOCK During its U.S. election campaign, the Biden-Harris ticket said that it would swiftly reverse Donald Trump’s hard-line approach to Cuba.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada