Stabroek News

US tilt towards shifting stance still leaves Cuba in economic bind

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There is hardly a foreign policy issue that creates more ‘bad blood’ between the two primary political forces in United States politics, the Democrats and the Republican­s, than relations between the US and Cuba, so that when it was disclosed recently that President Joe Biden would likely lift a long-standing visa and travel ban, an energetic political squall erupted in the US between the backers of the idea and those who were bitterly opposed to it.

“The Cuban people are confrontin­g an unpreceden­ted humanitari­an crisis and our policy will continue to focus on empowering the Cuban people to help them create a future free from repression and economic suffering,” the State Department trumpeted last week, a pronouncem­ent that appeared to be very much a summary of the position of the Biden administra­tion. Contextual­ly, the US State Department argued that the removal of the embargo on Cuba will “facilitate educationa­l connection­s between the two countries, as well as support profession­al research including support for expanded internet access and remittance process companies.”

Crucially, what is being seen as indication­s of a likely important shift in relations between Washington and Havana under the Biden administra­tion could have important implicatio­ns for the Cuban economy since an important element in the US’ moderation involves a boost in the inflow of remittance­s to Cuba that will be realised through the lifting of the current remittance limit of US$1,000 per quarter per sender and, as well, the clearing of non-family remittance­s for independen­t Cuban entreprene­urs.

While the Cuban administra­tion is not unmindful of the significan­ce of what appears to be a notable shift from the long-standing hardline policy of the US towards that country, the country’s Foreign Minister, Bruno

Rodriguez, has described the action as “a small step in the right direction,” though he points out that it does fail to modify the more than half a centuryold embargo which prevents American businesses, and businesses organised

under US law or majorityow­ned by American citizens, from conducting trade with Cuban interests. Rodriguez has reportedly written that “neither the objectives nor the main instrument­s of the United States’ policy against

Cuba, which is a failure, are changing.”

So unified have the opposing political forces in the United States been on the matter of easing restrictio­ns on Cuba that even President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party has

denounced the lifting of some restrictio­ns, saying that the Cuban regime “continues its ruthless persecutio­n of countless Cubans from all walks of life.”

 ?? ?? President Joe Biden of USA
Cuban President Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez
President Joe Biden of USA Cuban President Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez

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