Mexico Leaves Castro's Cuba Behind
By DENISE DRESSER
Denise Dresser is a senior fellow at the Pacific Council on International
Policy at USC.
Once upon a time, Mexico and Cuba were best buddies in the Western Hemisphere.
Brandishing the banners of nonintervention and self-determination, both
countries provided each other with unconditional support and kept quiet
about their mutual lack of democratic development. Those days are over,
and today
relations between Cuba and Mexico are at an all-time low, for all the
right reasons. Mexico's foreign policy toward Cuba is changing, and Fidel
Castro is furious
about it.
The comandante is lashing out against Jorge Castaneda, Mexico's minister
of foreign affairs--calling him a lackey of the United States--out of sheer
desperation and
growing isolation. Castro's anger is proportional to the size of Mexico's
foreign policy shift. Castro would like to keep Cuba-Mexico relations as
suspended in time
as the city of Havana. He would like nonintervention in other countries'
affairs to prevail so that he can hide what happens to his own people.
But Mexico no longer wants to revere the Cuban revolution or ignore
its shortcomings, and Castro resents the change of course. Mexico seeks
to promote human
rights; Castro doesn't even know what they are. Mexico will continue
to oppose the U.S. embargo while at the same time recognizing that it can't
justify the lack of
democracy on the island. Castro is trying to stop a substantive policy
shift by turning it into a personal attack that will prompt the removal
of Castaneda from his post.
As he has done for years with the Cuban people, Castro wants to distract
attention from the heart of the matter.
And, up until now, he has achieved his objective. The Mexican left-wing
intelligentsia and opposition members of Congress have spent the last two
weeks developing
a dictionary of synonyms wherein "Jorge Castaneda" means cynic, diabolical,
Machiavellian, peon of American foreign policy and so on.
Anyone who knows Mexico's foreign affairs minister would agree that
some of these epithets have a reason for being. Castaneda believes--like
Che Guevara, who
he wrote a book about--that to win in politics one must be willing
to spill blood.
But the issue is not Castaneda's personal flaws; it's his vision of
Mexico's new foreign policy. Castaneda is revising stances because they
no longer work. Human
rights have become a legitimate concern of an international community
that Mexico wants to be a part of. The world has changed and therefore
Mexico's position on
Cuba must too.
Therefore it makes sense for Mexico to assume a more active role on
the Human Rights Commission in Geneva. It makes sense for Mexico's President
Vicente Fox
to meet with Cuban dissidents and recognize that they exist.
It makes sense for Castaneda to argue that the relationship with the
Cuban revolution has ended, and the relationship with the Cuban republic
has begun. Mexico is
demonstrating that it understands the changes in the international
environment and wants to be part of them.
Cuba cannot be treated as an exception to the rule in Mexico's foreign
policy and remain immune to criticism because of an anachronistic friendship
based on a
complicit silence. Where human rights and democracy are concerned,
Castaneda and Mexico's new foreign policy are on the right side of history.
As the cases of Augusto Pinochet and Slobodan Milosevic prove, human
rights are no longer an exclusively domestic affair, and the Mexican left
needs to understand
that nonintervention is a principle whose time as passed.
This tempest in the Cuba-Mexico teapot will pass. Meanwhile, Mexico's
foreign policy will have changed and for the better. The principle of the
protection of human
rights will prevail in Mexico and elsewhere. As Castaneda's father,
Mexico's minister of foreign affairs 20 years ago, said: "Friend, when
you defend principles instead
of interests, you never lose."
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