You
may have noticed this in the aftermath of the Christmas Day airline
terrorist act.� The Obama administration advanced a discussion regarding
the upgrading of security.� In that context various US-alleged state
sponsors of terrorism were mentioned in the media.� Cuba was on
the list.� With the exception of one commentary that I have read
in the last two weeks, no one seems to have been left unsettled
by the reference to Cuba.
How
is it that Cuba is on the list of state sponsors of terrorism?�
A country that has been on the receiving end of terrorist attacks
by either the USA or by right-wing Cuban exiles based in the USA
has not carried out any terrorist attacks.� The Cuban government
has repeatedly taken steps to provide the USA with information regarding
terrorist groups training on US soil.� Yet the Cuban government
remains on THE list.
The
Obama administration has made noises about changing US policy towards
Cuba.� One step, on the road toward eliminating the hated blockade
of Cuba, would be the removal of Cuba from this list of state sponsors
of terrorism.
Whether
the Obama administration will do this is anyone�s guest because
facts do not seem to matter in a situation like this.� The fact
that Cuba has not launched any terrorist attacks against the USA,
or the fact that Cuba offered to provide assistance TO the USA at
the time of the Hurricane Katrina disaster, is irrelevant.�� The
question is a matter of politics and the appearance of such an action
to the Cuban exile community in the USA and their supporters.
Cuba
is an excellent example of the fundamental problem with the manner
in which the Obama administration goes about making decisions.�
The majority of the Cuban exile community will not support President
Obama short of his leading a naval armada to invade Cuba and restore
the corrupt rule that was terminated in 1959.�� The same is true
when it comes to most US Republicans.� They will not be won over.�
There is no middle ground with them.� They cannot be convinced by
suggestions of compromise.� They wish to see the Obama administration
collapse ignominiously.
One
does not need a degree in political science to recognize any of
these points.� Yet the Obama administration continues to move forward
at glacial speed.� Here is an arena where decisive and progressive
action would make President Obama truly worthy of the Nobel Peace
Prize.� The Administration could take a tremendous and history-making
step:� end Cuba�s status on the terrorism list and, yes, end the
blockade.� The people who will hate the Obama administration for
such a step ALREADY hate the Administration.
The
time has come for the Administration to actually do something significant
in the international arena.� As I said in my commentary last week,
we don�t need any more eloquent speeches:� we need shrewd and path-breaking
action.� Let�s begin by taking Cuba off the terrorism list and ending
the blockade.� As is said in a different context, fifty years is
enough.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |