Miami Herald (Sunday)

Will Biden restore ties with Cuba? Debate swirls over next steps as Florida loss muddies plans

President-elect Joe Biden promised to reverse Trump’s policies that hurt Cuban families, but the restoratio­n of Obama’s policies faces new hurdles in Cuba and Florida.

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES AND JACQUELINE CHARLES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

On the campaign trail, President-elect Joe Biden promised to reverse Donald Trump’s restrictio­ns on travel and remittance­s to Cuba. But he stopped short of saying just how far he’ll go in restoring ties with the communist island.

To rewrite Cuba policy, Biden will have to navigate the perilous waters of Florida politics, where a large exile population has turned increasing­ly Republican. The landscape in Cuba has also changed since former President Barack Obama and Raúl Castro agreed to reestablis­h diplomatic relations in December 2014.

“It’s not the same Cuba as it was four years ago,” said Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Council of the Americas and a former U.S. State Department official. “I think there’s going to be a sober reassessme­nt about … did meaningful change happen?”

Obama’s policies promoted the exchange of people, ideas and goods between the U.S. and the island 90 miles away. The policies also bet on expanding the private sector to form a nascent middle class that would eventually advocate for more freedoms on the island. Obama said it didn’t cost the U.S. much to try a new approach because the island was a “tiny little country” posing no significan­t security risks to U.S. interests.

But the test lasted just over two years before Trump started reversing what he called a “terrible and misguided” deal and punishing the Cuban government with a flurry of sanctions for supporting Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.

The issue divides Congress as much as the Cuban-American community. The Biden transition team declined to answer questions sent by the Miami Herald about the incoming administra­tion’s policies regarding Cuba. Interviews with experts, policy advocates and former U.S. officials hint at what is likely to be a contentiou­s path forward.

“We can’t keep, in my estimation, the same policy that we had for the last 50-plus years,” said Rep. Gregory Meeks, a Democrat who will become the chairman of the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee. “That has not changed things.”

On the other side of the aisle, Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott said he plans to hold rallies and other events throughout Florida over the next four years to oppose Biden’s presumed easing of restrictio­ns on travel and trade with Cuba.

He told the Herald he would “do everything” in his power to make the world know that Biden “appeases dictators.”

CUBA’S SLOW REFORMS BRING ‘DISAPPOINT­MENT’

Many Cuban Americans first embraced the engagement but grew frustrated by the lack of improvemen­t on human rights and by progovernm­ent artists and officials taking advantage of the deal to travel to and profit in the U.S.

During both the Obama and Trump years, state repression against dissidents and critics continued, suggesting the government’s use of strong arm tactics has little to do with U.S. policy toward the island. But Trump’s tough talk was popular among Cuban Americans. Their votes helped him land a stunning victory in Florida.

A recent poll by Florida Internatio­nal University found that a majority of Miami-Dade Cuban Americans still want to travel to the island and send money, food and medicines to their families. But they also support the U.S. embargo, even though they admit it hasn’t worked.

The outcomes of the brief engagement experiment are highly contested.

Activists and academics who favor fully restoring Obama’s policies point to several developmen­ts to support their position. Among their arguments: The Cuban government started expanding internet service on the island in the past few years following negotiatio­ns with the Obama administra­tion to restore ties.

Cuban authoritie­s, however, rejected offers from Google and other U.S. companies to significan­tly expand internet access across the island, choosing instead to rely on Chinese technology. And it was not until 2018, well into the Trump administra­tion years, that authoritie­s agreed to provide internet access on cellphones.

The arrival of U.S. cruises and tourists helped grow a budding entreprene­urial class on the island. Still, the government also reversed or slowed promising private sector reforms. Burdened by a severe economic crisis this year, Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel said the country would make some market reforms, but a much expected private enterprise law has been pushed back to 2022.

Former Secretary of State John Kerry, who served during the Obama years, said he expects the new administra­tion to focus on human rights while shaping its policy.

“It’s fair to say that everybody shares a little bit of disappoint­ment about the direction that the government in Cuba chose to go,” he told the Herald. “Cuba seemed to harden down after the initial steps were taken.”

FLIGHTS, REMITTANCE­S AMONG LIKELY FIRST CHANGES

Recent repression against independen­t journalist­s, artists, and activists could further complicate engagement with Cuba for the Biden team.

Last month, hundreds of young artists and activists gathered in front of the Ministry of Culture demanding a dialogue with the government and more freedom of expression. The rare public demonstrat­ion was sparked by the arrest of members of the San Isidro Movement, a collective of dissident artists advocating for civil liberties on the island. Since then, the government has repeatedly detained and harassed many protesters, labeling them mercenarie­s and terrorists.

Anti-U.S. rhetoric is once again rampant on state television shows. The Cuban government accused the U.S. of plotting the protests.

During the campaign, Biden and Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris walked a fine line, promising to reverse sanctions and immigratio­n policies they said are hurting the Cuban people while vowing to be strong advocates for human rights on the island.

“We will backtrack on Trump’s failed policies,” Harris told Spanish wire agency EFE. “And as he did previously as vice president, Joe Biden will also demand the release of political prisoners and will make human rights a centerpiec­e in the diplomatic relationsh­ip.”

Some Cuba observers like John Kavulich, president of the U.S.-Cuba Trade and

Economic Council, say the Biden administra­tion is likely to encounter little or no pressure to quickly reverse Trump’s Cuba restrictio­ns.

Instead, his team will look for “quid pro quo opportunit­ies,” he said.

Lifting the cap on remittance­s, now set at $1,000 per person per quarter, and allowing flights to cities other than Havana, are likely to be among the first steps the Biden administra­tion will take on Cuba, several experts said.

There’s consensus that expanding consular services at the embassy, perhaps relying on remote technology, is urgently needed to reunite thousands of separated families.

A fully staffed embassy is not likely to be a reality soon. The unexplaine­d incidents that harmed U.S. diplomats and CIA agents in Havana between 2016 and 2017 “will remain a gargantuan weight at the base of any meaningful rapprochem­ent,” Kavulich said.

But there are smaller moves the administra­tion could take.

The new administra­tion could try “trust-building” steps such as suspending Title III’s right to sue companies accused of traffickin­g in property seized by the Fidel Castro government and engaging the Cuban government in a new round of negotiatio­ns of pending U.S. claims, said Ric Herrero, the executive director of the Cuban Study Group, an organizati­on that has promoted U.S. engagement with the island.

While reversing Trump’s executive orders would be fairly easy, he said making deeper progress on normalizat­ion will take time.

“So much depends on the Cubans,” Herrero said. “If they line up all the economic reforms they have announced, that opens up a lot of opportunit­ies.”

The Cuba observer said the island’s government should do more by allowing U.S. companies to invest on the island, including Cuban-American entreprene­urs. Progress on the Cuban side would help the Biden team show “this is not a one-sided giveaway, but the Cubans need to play their part,” Herrero added.

CUBA’S ROLE IN RESOLVING VENEZUELA CRISIS IN FOCUS

Not everyone, however, is advocating for a slow and measured approach.

A policy memo published by two think tanks, the Washington Office on Latin America and the Center for Democracy in the Americas (CDA), urges the incoming administra­tion to reverse all Trump-era sanctions, turning back the clock to January 2017 within the first nine months.

They also advise the new president to halt U.S. efforts aimed at persuading other nations to reject Cuban medical profession­als sent by the government to provide care, a key source of income for the island.

“A new policy of engagement entails relatively little political risk and the potential to mobilize a wide variety of constituen­cies in support,” the document states.

The memo’s authors cite the crisis in Venezuela, and Cuba’s potential role in finding a resolution, as a reason why Biden should make engagement with the island a priority. While experts have debated offering Cuba oil exchange or aid to get its security agents out of Venezuela, not everyone buys into that idea.

“As the [Maduro] regime becomes more nefarious, Cuba has doubled down on its continued support,” Jason Marczak, the director of the Atlantic Council’s Latin American Center, said during a video call with journalist­s. “I don’t see a role for Cuba unless Cuba’s discourse on Venezuela begins to change.”

The memo has been sent to members of the Biden transition team. CDA’s director, Emily Mendrala, a former Obama NSC legislativ­e advisor who had worked on Cuba policy, is a member of the transition team at the State Department.

Some analysts reject concerns about a political fallout from a new thaw in Cuba relations.

“Biden doesn’t owe anything to Cuban Americans,” said Richard Feinberg, a University of California professor and former diplomat. “Florida is now a red state.”

But Biden has repeatedly made overtures to the Cuban-American community, signaling during the campaign he sees them as an important part of any successful U.S. policy. While the Obama administra­tion framed the thaw of relations with Havana as a legacy issue, Biden may have less of an incentive to pursue a high-profile new opening.

Many firmly believe the new president won’t be able to sidestep domestic politics while reviving an Obama-era type of relationsh­ip with Havana.

“I think the election results were sobering to a lot of people and have seemingly reduced the space for dramatic policy shift, at least in the near term,” Farnsworth said. “Because of the election results, which everyone is now aware of, they are going to take a more incrementa­l approach.”

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? In March 2016, President Barack Obama shakes hands with Cuban leader Raúl Castro, who lifts Obama’s arm after delivering speeches at the Palacio de la Revolucion in Havana.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com In March 2016, President Barack Obama shakes hands with Cuban leader Raúl Castro, who lifts Obama’s arm after delivering speeches at the Palacio de la Revolucion in Havana.
 ?? YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images ?? Artists protest in front of the Ministry of Culture on Nov. 27, 2020, in Havana, Cuba.
YAMIL LAGE AFP via Getty Images Artists protest in front of the Ministry of Culture on Nov. 27, 2020, in Havana, Cuba.

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