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- <text id=94TT1262>
- <title>
- Sep. 19, 1994: Cuba:The Line Starts Now
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CUBA, Page 36
- The Line Starts Now
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The U.S. agrees to accept more legal refugees as long as Castro
- keeps the rafters home
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. NELAN--Reported by Cathy Booth/Havana and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Fidel Castro's envoys did their best to slide his main complaint
- across the bargaining table, but the U.S. negotiators slid it
- right back. After seven days of talks in New York City, the
- Cubans had to settle for what the Americans offered in the first
- place: a narrow agreement on immigration. They got nowhere on
- the issue that Castro blames most for his economic problems:
- the 32-year-old U.S. trade embargo. The deal sealed in New York
- last Friday amounted to a simple swap: the U.S. will take in
- at least 20,000 legal Cuban immigrants each year, and Havana
- will halt the wave of boats and rafts that have carried 35,000
- would-be refugees north from its beaches this year.
- </p>
- <p> The arrangement will please Cubans who have close relatives
- among the exiles in Florida and who are willing to drop by the
- U.S. Interests Section office in Havana to apply for emigration.
- The big losers are the 25,000 Cubans who risked their lives
- at sea only to wind up in tents at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station
- or in Panama. They cannot apply unless they return to Havana.
- </p>
- <p> Under the new agreement, Castro says he will take back "those
- Cubans who have recently left and wish to return," and he promises
- not to punish them. Some of the rafters in the "safe havens"
- will try to get to the U.S. by that route, but others will not.
- Attorney General Janet Reno says those who choose not to go
- back to Cuba will be held at Guantanamo "indefinitely." That
- is a harsh ruling but an unavoidable one. If the naval station
- were to become a processing point for entry to the U.S., another
- wave of emigres would head straight for it.
- </p>
- <p> As the number of rafters began to slow last week, the Cubans
- apparently decided they now had more to gain by coming to terms
- with Washington. But in accepting this narrowly focused solution,
- Castro seems to have settled for very little. Why would he agree
- to something that does not even mention the hated embargo? Did
- he get some unspoken understanding on that score? Apparently
- not, but he did win some points. He took a step toward better
- relations with the U.S. He received an immigration package that
- gives him some say about who can leave his island and, at the
- same time, removes much of the incentive for Cubans to hijack
- ships and planes to head for the U.S. Whether or not Washington
- says so, Castro must believe other agreements will be possible.
- </p>
- <p> Details of this one reached Havana just as a swirling rainstorm
- sent pedestrians scurrying for shelter in doorways along the
- seaside Malecon. They thought the 20,000 figure was far too
- low. "One million, maybe 5 million people want to go to the
- U.S.," said a young woman, "but they keep changing the rules
- on us."
- </p>
- <p> Castro agreed to use "mainly persuasive methods" to stop his
- citizens from fleeing. The U.S. will now accept at least 20,000
- yearly, plus about 6,000 more from a backlog of Cubans who are
- waiting to receive visas that have been approved. To get these
- visas, everyone must appear at the U.S. Interests Section in
- Havana.
- </p>
- <p> Castro can identify several promising elements in the way the
- talks turned out. To begin with, he achieves a long-term safety
- valve for shipping off malcontents. While he did not succeed
- in getting his call to lift the embargo on the table in New
- York, his request has landed on the American national agenda
- in a far more prominent place than before. Important congressional
- leaders such as Democrats Claiborne Pell and Lee Hamilton, chairmen
- respectively of the Senate and House Foreign Relations committees,
- were calling last week for "lifting the embargo in stages."
- Sanctions have failed to bring democracy to Cuba, they said,
- and urged "an invasion of people, ideas and information" instead.
- </p>
- <p> Pell and Hamilton are borrowing the theory that detente rather
- than confrontation proved more destructive of dictatorships
- in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. The despairing
- Cuban rafters talk about freedom, but mostly they are giving
- up on a system that cannot provide for their basic needs and
- shows no signs of ever being able to do so. After a difficult
- summer--the sugar crop was a disaster, hotels are averaging
- 30% to 40% occupancy--the government appears to be in disarray.
- Castro made three television appearances in rapid succession
- last month but has not been seen on television since Aug. 24.
- He seems to be trying to buy himself time rather than making
- hard decisions.
- </p>
- <p> Cuba's biggest problem right now is cash: for consumer goods,
- fuel, farming equipment, factories. Castro is looking abroad
- for rapid investment, especially to the U.S. and the prosperous
- Cuban community in Florida. To get his hands on some of that
- money, he must persuade Washington to drop the trade embargo
- and other economic sanctions. The rush of investment, trade,
- cultural exchanges and tourism into Cuba would provide a powerful
- boost, obviating at least for a while the need to undertake
- political and free-market reforms.
- </p>
- <p> Cubans may assume that the embargo question can be revisited
- after the November congressional elections if the refugees are
- controlled as promised. U.S. officials say that is not true.
- They say their only promise, direct or implied, is Secretary
- of State Warren Christopher's public pledge to make a "calibrated"
- response to any Cuban moves toward democracy, free-market economics
- and human-rights improvements. Privately, U.S. officials explain
- they "don't want to get into a `do this for us now, we'll do
- that for you later' arrangement." But, says one official, "if
- they start implementing reforms, that's something we can respond
- to."
- </p>
- <p> The central question is whether Castro has any such intentions.
- He seems ever more isolated, surrounded by cronies, unable or
- unwilling to change the Marxist ideology at the core of his
- beliefs. "He understands the need to change," says Wayne Smith,
- a former head of the U.S. Interests Section, "but his heart
- is with the hard-liners." Those reforms he has introduced have
- been small and grudging or, as in the case of permitting U.S.
- dollars to circulate, disruptive to Cuban society by creating
- new groups of haves and have-nots. "He has a visceral feeling
- against markets and political freedom," says a U.S. official.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Castro may have to proceed with some limited reforms to
- keep the dialogue with Washington open. American officials are
- hearing reports that Castro will soon announce a plan to create
- markets linking agricultural cooperatives and customers in the
- cities. He may also choose to dress up the decision he has already
- made to invite the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights to
- visit Cuba. "These types of things might lead to some response
- from us," says an Administration official.
- </p>
- <p> Ending the embargo is still Castro's Plan A. The rafters were
- a way of forcing Clinton to look again at the sanctions. Another
- was last week's carefully orchestrated conferences in Madrid
- between Cuban Foreign Minister Roberto Robaina and three leaders
- of the Cuban opposition based in Miami. The three--Ramon Cernuda,
- Alfredo Duran and Eloy Gutierrez Menoyo--are all considered
- moderates in the world of Cuban exile politics, and all strongly
- favor lifting the U.S. embargo.
- </p>
- <p> "The admission that there is a legal opposition and they are
- interested in talking to us," said Cernuda, "is a first step
- in the right direction." Nevertheless, the three exiles reported
- that nothing had been agreed upon, except that there would be
- more talks. That is not surprising. If Castro is a reluctant
- economic reformer, he is almost totally opposed to allowing
- any political opposition inside Cuba. In the past month, 30
- human-rights activists have been imprisoned, according to Elizardo
- Sanchez, a Cuban dissident who heads a coalition of rights groups.
- Since Aug. 5, when Cubans shouted "Down with Castro!" on the
- Havana waterfront, Sanchez says, 300 people have been detained
- and sent to labor camps.
- </p>
- <p> American experts, unable to discern Castro's plan, wonder whether
- his fate will turn out to be like that of China's Deng Xiaoping
- or East Germany's Erich Honecker. Deng produced prosperity by
- pushing through liberal economic reforms while holding tight
- to hard-line communist political control. Honecker denied the
- need for reform and was swept away by a vast national upheaval.
- Castro probably identifies more closely with Deng, who succeeded
- while remaining a communist. But Castro is striving to avoid
- basic reforms, making it more likely that he could end up like
- Honecker, a diehard and a failure.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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