Miami Herald

Biden administra­tion just propped up Cuba’s failing dictatorsh­ip. And for what, exactly?

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In a single move, President Biden just gave Cuba’s aging, creaky regime new oxygen to continue to exist, living on to oppress those who oppose it on the island.

It knocked the wind out of the Patria y Vida movement, which staged huge protests against the regime across the country last July.

And, apparently, none of this will necessaril­y lead to a free and democratic Cuba.

Nice work.

LITTLE INPUT

Monday, without counsel from South Florida’s Cubanexile community or its congressio­nal delegation, the Biden administra­tion announced that it was gifting Cuba with a return to the Obama-era concession­s, ended by President Trump.

Cuba’s repressive regime can party like its 2015 when President Obama announced he was reestablis­hing diplomatic ties with Cuba for the first time in decades. It was a historic move that we supported, with cautious optimism. However, that free and democratic Cuba we all hoped for never got any traction.

CUBA WINS

Now, with a return to those days, Cuba is regaining expanded travel to the island; remittance­s that families in the United States can send to their bereft relatives; and more family reunificat­ion. And Biden is offering an added perk: He’s paving the way for American companies to invest in Cuba, a workaround to the U.S. embargo on the island.

Did the president even bother to come to South Florida for the big announceme­nt? Nope.

He’s got to know that not all Cuban Americans feel the same about relations with Cuba. For those unfamiliar with the intricacie­s of exile politics, here’s a primer:

Older exiles, mainly those who left Cuba starting in the early 1960s because of Fidel Castro’s Communist takeover — commonly known as the “historic exiles” — have long believed that the United States should not deal with Cuba’s regime or offer any aid or assistance at all. Their fervent hope is to outlast the regime using the embargo, force it from power and free the 11 million Cubans on the island who exist in a world of deprivatio­n in every aspect of their lives.

On the other hand, there are Cuban refugees who arrived in 1980 and later, and who want to visit and support their relatives on the island. They often travel back and forth, something a “historic exile” promises never to do until the regime is gone.

Biden’s actions will be welcomed by those more recent Cuban exiles.

Cuba is a conundrum for the United States.

We can’t argue with the humanitari­an elements of this policy change to help Cubans who have struggled with harsh economic times following the pandemic and U.S. tourism plunged after Trump tightened a travel ban.

But why would Biden do this at this juncture? Could the Rus

sia-Ukraine war play a role? Does Biden think that being friendly to Cuba will mean the island will end its decades-long ideologica­l love affair with Russia? That would be naive.

Obama went down the same rosy path and, ultimately, found the Cuban government as unyielding as ever. Many historic Cuban exiles rejected Obama’s olive branch to Raul Castro. They warned it would be a oneway street.

They were right.

RUBIO PUSHES BACK

Florida’s U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio and other local Republican congressio­nal lawmakers united in a statement blasting the Biden administra­tion for

ignoring the anti-government demonstrat­ion on the island on July 2021.

“Today, while hundreds of activists remain unlawfully imprisoned, the White House is resurrecti­ng President Obama’s failed policy of unilateral concession­s to the Castro/DíazCanel criminal dictatorsh­ip,” the lawmakers said.

“The Biden administra­tion’s repeated appeasemen­t to the Cuban dictatorsh­ip is a betrayal of America’s commitment to human rights and freedom and to the long-suffering Cuban people who are struggling for a genuine democratic transition,” the lawmakers added.

Unfortunat­ely, we can’t argue with that, either.

 ?? AP ?? In 2018, Cuban lawmakers approved the Cabinet named by President Miguel Diaz-Canel, front left.
AP In 2018, Cuban lawmakers approved the Cabinet named by President Miguel Diaz-Canel, front left.

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