Miami Herald

Joe Biden knows just what he’s doing in Cuba

- BY TIM PADGETT wlrn.org Tim Padgett is the Americas editor for Miami NPR affiliate WLRN, covering Latin America, the Caribbean and their key relationsh­ip with South Florida.

Of all the knocks on President Biden’s decision this week to re-loosen some of his predecesso­r’s re-restrictio­ns on U.S. engagement with Cuba, this line from Wednesday’s Miami Herald editorial put a new wrinkle on my old forehead:

“It knocked the wind out of the Patria y Vida movement.”

As a reader who greatly respects the Miami Herald editorial page, I respectful­ly but strongly disagree.

The Patria y Vida movement erupted last July 11 — the loud and unpreceden­ted island-wide demonstrat­ions against Cuba’s ironfisted and ham-handed communist regime. It was fueled in part by the Latin Grammy-winning protest anthem “Patria y Vida,” or “Homeland and Life,” a passionate poke at the Cuban Revolution’s morbid motto, “Homeland or Death.”

It was an electrifyi­ng cry of long-boiling Cuban rage. But it was the Cuban regime, not the Biden administra­tion, that knocked the wind out of it — arresting more than a thousand protesters, convicting them of “treason” in kangaroo trials and handing them, even teenagers, monstrousl­y long sentences.

In the aftermath, sadly, Cuba looks no closer to democratic regime change than it did on July 10 — no matter how many Miami voices insist, as they’ve done for 63 Groundhog

Day years now, that the regime’s gonna fall any second if we just stick to the

isolation plan.

THE ENTREPRENE­URS

So at this point I’d argue that, if anything, Biden’s Cuba policy changes stand to blow fresh wind into the Cuban opposition’s sails. That’s because, in a country as suffocatin­gly controlled as Cuba is, we’re reminded that the best long-term tool the dissident movement had before and has now is more economic than political. It’s about making money more than melodies. It resides in the island’s private businesses more than it marches through its potholed streets.

And that’s where the Biden plan, like the Obama plan before it, looks most focused: reviving cuentaprop­ista or private entreprene­ur energy, which has already forged a sizable Cuban cohort that’s experienci­ng independen­ce from the communist state. That wasn’t possible a decade ago — but it was made possible because, while the regime won’t concede political liberties, it’s had no choice but to indulge Cubans’ economic freelancin­g in order to prevent national starvation.

In foreign policy, that’s called an underbelly to exploit. But former President Trump’s retighten-theCuba-screws strategy instead was a domestic-policy show. He slashed U.S. money and travel to the island to make CubanAmeri­can voters think the Cuban military, which runs much of Cuba’s economy, would be bled dry and surrender to exile leaders by Election Day 2020.

Cuentaprop­istas don’t vote in Miami-Dade County, so they were actually the ones bruised by Trump’s door-slamming.

Biden is simply re-opening their access to U.S. remittance cash, to dollartoti­ng U.S. travelers who patronize cuentaprop­ista restaurant­s, B&Bs and shops — and now to the direct U.S. investment in the Cuban private sector his administra­tion greenlight­ed last week. It’s capital that makes them less reliant on their Big Brother state. That shift, in turn. can gnaw away at Hermano Grande’s grip on them — especially as the regime’s octogenari­an hardliners die away.

CUBA TAKES A CUT

Yes, I understand Hermano Grande inevitably will siphon some of that money through cuentaprop­ista taxes and remittance fees. But that’s a trade-off we can deal with if we’re talking about a strategy that actually has a chance of empowering ordinary Cubans — instead of an isolation illusion that’s made them wait and chafe in the Caribbean sun for six decades and counting.

In fact, as the Herald editorial was going to press this week, an op-ed in the independen­t digital Cuban daily 14ymedio — written by a former Cuban political prisoner — was going online to argue that Cuba “needs another revolution, one that gives its entreprene­urs big wings.”

It was one more indication that Cubans consider their smart entreprene­urial ferocity to be as subversive a force as their emotional Patria y Vida anger — that each provides wind for the other.

Which is why it’s an encouragin­g coincidenc­e that in the same week Biden’s giving Cuban business owners new oxygen, Cuban singer and “Patria y Vida” co-composer Yotuel has said another major protest song will be released on Friday.

A big part of me hopes its Spanish title is something like “Ejecer el Negocio ”— “Takin’ Care of Business.”

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