10/31/09 - Havana Times (Spain) - Cuba a State Sponsor of Terrorism?
By Dawn Gable
HAVANA TIMES, Oct. 31 - âWisdom removes hate,â said U.S. Congressman Bobby
Rush, noting that U.S. citizens have been denied the truth about todayâs
Cuba. The representative spoke on Capitol Hill where he, along with the
Center for Democracy in the Americas, hosted a panel this Wednesday to
discuss the appropriateness of Cuba being included on the list of State
Sponsors of Terrorism (SST).
The panel included Larry Wilkerson, retired U.S. Army Colonel and former
Chief of Staff to Colin Powell; Randy Beardsworth, former Assistant
Secretary for Strategic Plans at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security;
Wynn Segall, an attorney specializing in economic sanctions and national
security based trade and investment controls; Ray Walser of the Heritage
Foundation, a conservative Washington think tank; and Mark Sullivan,
specialist in Latin American Affairs at the Congressional Research Service.
Sullivan began the dialogue by explaining that taking Cuba of the SST list
would not affect the embargo at all. But Congressman Rush recognized that
the removal would send a strong message to the international community that
the US is listening to the overwhelming and near unanimous global consensus
on this issue and is moving toward bringing some rationality to US policy
toward Cuba, which is consistent with the overall change of attitude in
foreign policy President Obama has set for his administration.
In his expert opinion, Wynn Segall, said the justification for Cubaâs
inclusion on the SST list âlacks clarityâ and rigor in comparison with
reports on other listed countries. He emphasized that Congress has the power
to require the administration to report on such decisions and set reporting
standards.
He recalled that North Korea and Libya came off the SST list in 2008 after a
policy review found that on balance, the countries did not fit the criteria
for inclusion and noted that the embargo against Libya was lifted in 2004,
four years before coming off the state sponsor of terrorist list,
demonstrating that the two issues need not be looked at jointly.
The Administrationâs Delayed Cuba Policy Review
Segall further noted that the Cuba policy review Obama promised early on is
long overdue. Wilkerson suggested that the promised review is on hold
because the new administration still does not have a Latin American expert
or an assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs.
Congressman Rush added that the only thing on the mind of anyone in
Washington right now is Health Care reform and no movement on the Cuba
travel bill (HR874) or anything similar should be expected until that has
been dealt with.
Even Ray Walser, the only panelist clearly aligned with the Bush paradigm,
conceded that taking Cuba off the SST âmay be merited,â adding that âif we
were to apply uniformity to policy, we would have relations with Cuba on a
par with those we have with China.â
Larry Wilkerson and Randy Beardsworth voiced that there is no justification
for Cubaâs inclusion on the list and the former stated that the SST roll and
the embargo have been used to garner electoral votes in Florida and to
punish the Cuban government- at the expense of the Cuban people.
Referring to the Cuban population Wilkerson exclaimed, âThere are 11 million
reasons to normalize relations!â
A self-proclaimed pragmatist, Beardsworth recalled his conversation with
Ricardo Alarcon, in which they both agreed that Cuba must not go back to the
days of Batista and Meyer Lansky. To this end, he stressed the need for
increasing bureaucrat to bureaucrat relations and warned that if a power
vacuum were to occur in Cuba for whatever reason, the U.S. will want to have
mechanisms of cooperation with Cuban institutions in place to aid the island
in warding off organized crime and drug-trafficking, etc.
US-Cuba Cooperation Potential
Wilkerson fully concurred and noted that joint exercises at the fence
dividing Guantanamo base from the rest of Cuba have been going on for years
and said that the U.S. Marines and the Cuban Army have an excellent
professional relationship. âAsk any Marine!â he exclaimed.
Similarly Beardsworth described cooperation between the Cuban Border Guard
and the U.S. Coast Guard over the past decade. However, Wilkerson clarified
that it has been mostly one sided as Cuban Boarder Guards are quick to alert
the Coast Guard of any threats heading toward the U.S., but the Coast Guard
does not reciprocate that courtesy when it knows of a threat headed toward
the island.
Beardsworth would like to see cooperation in environmental protection,
response to oil potential spills, and natural disasters relief, in addition
to law enforcement. Moreover, no one on the panel could identify any
legislative barriers to developing these kinds of relationships.
Walser countered that âCuba does not have our interests in mind,â nearly
verbatim what George Tenet said about Venezuela shortly before the 2001 coup
attempt against President Chavez. But overall, being outnumbered in terms of
the panel and the audience, Wasler was apologetic about his position.
Holding his hands up in defense, he repeated âthese are just the opinions of
one man.â
When he mentioned freedom and democratic principles, Chris Lee, staffer for
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, asked him why the U.S. has a cooperative
relationship with communist China. He responded that while China is
authoritarian and communist, it practices dynamic capitalism, thus exposing
that U.S. policy has less to do with civil rights than with capitalist
enterprise.
Lee quickly retorted that when President Nixon visited China, it was hardly
a dynamic capitalist state, implying that the U.S. should not put off
engagement with Cuba until desired changes are made.

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