Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Tougher Trump line on Cuba pleases island’s hardliners

- MICHAEL WEISSENSTE­IN ANDREA RODRIGUEZ

HAVANA - President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt of a tougher line toward Cuba has delighted hardliners on the island, who say it reveals the long-held U.S. aim of imposing American will on Cuba and justifies their wariness toward Washington.

The president’s speech to Cuban exiles in Miami has also dismayed moderates who were working with pro-engagement Americans but now fear associatio­n with a policy of open hostility toward the communist system could make them targets for repression.

Trump and the Cuban-American Congress members who helped design the new policy pledged on Friday that it would block the flow of U.S. cash toward military-linked enterprise­s and direct it toward independen­t businesses, with the longterm aim of overturnin­g President Raul Castro’s government.

Members of Cuba’s small but vibrant independen­t civil society say they fear the new policy will do more harm than good.

“Trump’s become the independen­t business people’s new enemy because — even though he’s said he wants to help entreprene­urs — this new policy alienates entreprene­urs from the government,” said Angel Rodriguez, a 27-year-old sociologis­t who works with the Catholic Church in entreprene­urship-training programs. “That could bring them under fire now, and they could find themselves much weaker.”

Trump’s new policy retains key aspects of former President Barack Obama’s reforms, leaving full embassies in Washington and Havana and letting U.S. cruise and airlines continue service to Cuba, although it will make travel harder by requiring most Americans to come in groups and banning payments to military-linked businesses.

Obama’s 2014 declaratio­n of detente with Cuba prompted hundreds of islanders to launch media, entreprene­urship and cultural projects that were outside control of the state but within the bounds of law, unlike the directly confrontat­ional tactics of Cuba’s small dissident groups.

Some of those new groups came under intense pressure during detente, particular­ly after Obama’s May 2016 visit to the island. Despite bitter criticism and personal attacks, most have continued to operate, many with a degree of support from U.S. individual­s and foundation­s that would have been impossible before the re-establishm­ent of diplomatic relations.

Many government officials and their supporters saw the Obama policy as an attempt to lull Cuba into complacenc­y and undermine the foundation­s of a communist system based in part of near-total control of virtually every aspect of society, from animal-rights groups to the film industry.

Trump’s hostile language toward the Castro government and his literal onstage embrace of Cuban-American exiles and Cuban dissidents has unmasked the United States’ true intentions toward Cuba and made it easier for the government to instill unity across Cuban society, pro-government figures said Saturday.

“Faced with your words, the Cuban people stand up and, their flag held high, sing their war anthem!” said a Facebook post by Jennifer Bello Martinez, the head of Cuba’s official Federation of University Students and, at 25, the youngest member of the Council of State.

“If I were the Cuban government I’d put Trump’s speech up in schools. I’d transcribe it in the history books. I’d print a copy for every Cuban,” said Iroel Sanchez, a pro-government columnist and blogger who was fiercely critical of Obama. “In less than an hour he showed Cubans how U.S. policy works . ... The effect of this new policy will be strengthen­ing the revolution­ary leadership and seeing that it’s right. This will galvanize things.”

Among the few Cubans on the island who praised Trump was Berta Soler, a leader of the dissident group Ladies in White who said she was prevented by the government from flying to Miami to attend the speech in person.

“The Cuban regime will always find an excuse to blame the U.S. government,” she said.

One of the most criticized, though tolerated, projects that have flourished since the declaratio­n of detente is Cuba Posible, a think tank and online magazine dedicated to creating space for amicable dialogue about the future of Cuba.

“President Trump’s policy makes itself, once again, part of the old policy of pressure and strangulat­ion of the Cuban people,” it wrote.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A vintage American car is parked in front of the Inglaterra Hotel in Havana. U.S. President Donald Trump declared he was restoring some travel restrictio­ns on Cuba.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A vintage American car is parked in front of the Inglaterra Hotel in Havana. U.S. President Donald Trump declared he was restoring some travel restrictio­ns on Cuba.

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