WASHINGTON — The White House on Friday dismissed as ‘cosmetic’ changes in Cuba under new President Raul Castro on issues like access to cellphones and the potential easing of travel restrictions. ‘They’re cosmetic,’ Dan Fisk, the US National Security Council’s senior director for Western Hemisphere affairs, told reporters days before a three-way US, Mexico, and Canada summit in New Orleans. ‘We would hope that the international community, and I say that in the large terms, recognize that this isn’t real change, this isn’t fundamental change in the nature of the system,’ Fisk said. ‘And if you look at what the regime is doing in terms of the continued repression against dissidents and civil society activists, the iron fist is still very, very visible, especially to the average Cuban,’ he said. Fisk said US President George W. Bush, Mexican President Felipe Calderon, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper were expected to discuss changes in Cuba when they meet on Monday and Tuesday in New Orleans. But while ‘all three countries agree’ broadly on the need for ‘democratic evolution’ in Cuba, ‘there are a lot ot tactical disagreements and I’m not expecting that to change,’ said the […]
Sunday, April 20th, 2008
White House: Cuba Changes ‘Cosmetic’
Author:
Source: Agence France-Presse (France)
Publication Date: Saturday, April 19
Link: White House: Cuba Changes ‘Cosmetic’
Source: Agence France-Presse (France)
Publication Date: Saturday, April 19
Link: White House: Cuba Changes ‘Cosmetic’
Stephan: It is very obvious that the Cubans have studied and are going to follow the path trod originally by Russia, and its former republics, and the Eastern European nations in the USSR's orbit. This response from the Bush Administration shows that they have placed Republican votes in Florida above national interest. Happily they will not be able to do too much damage, or to miss the cues for too long. The new administration will hopefully learn from the lost opportunities of the past and see a way through to creating a mutually beneficial relationship with the Cubans.