10/28/09 - Center for Democracy in the Americas (Washington, DC) - After UN
Embargo Vote, Obama Should Push Further, Faster on Cuba Policy Reforms
For Immediate Release
contact:
Kendra Seymour
Washington, DC â Sarah Stephens, Executive Director of the Center for
Democracy in the Americas, released the following comments about the vote in
the UN General Assembly today against the United States embargo of Cuba:
âPresident Obama inherited a Cuba policy that doesn't fit him - it's
unilateral, it doesn't work, and it puts us at odds with the region and the
world. The message of the UN vote is that he should follow his instincts on
Cuba and push forward, faster and further, beyond the incremental reforms he
has already undertaken.
âMy hope is that this vote will force the administration to ask itself 'why
are we enforcing a failed, hand-me-down policy that hurts Cubans and injures
the image of the US, when we are trying to get international cooperation on
problems that actually threaten our interests?â
âWhenever I travel in Latin America, I meet people who are genuinely
surprised that President Obama, who represents such a sharp departure from
the past, would continue enforcing an embargo that he inherited from the
Cold War. They are the audience for a policy change that shows he sees the
world differently.
âPresident Obama should take this UN vote for what it is â a sign that our
country needs to act in the world like its 2009 and not 1959, drop the
embargo, and engage openly and directly with Cuba.â
A longer essay on the UN vote, published by the Huffington Post and The
Washington Note, can be read here.
The Center for Democracy in the Americas (CDA) is devoted to changing U.S.
policy toward the countries of the Americas by basing our relations on
mutual respect, fostering dialogue with those governments and movements with
which U.S. policy is at odds, and recognizing positive trends in democracy
and governance.

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