Ex-President Carter Plans Cuba Trip
From Associated Press
ATLANTA -- Former President Carter will visit Cuba this year, provided
the Bush administration doesn't stand in his way, a Carter spokeswoman
confirmed
Saturday.
The move would make Carter the first former American president to visit the island since Fidel Castro took power in 1959.
"He was issued a formal invitation by Fidel Castro, but he doesn't know
yet when he's going," Kay Torrance, of the Carter Center in Atlanta, said
Saturday. "He
doesn't have an agenda planned at this time. He's just looking forward
to the visit." Carter told CNN on Friday that the Bush administration probably
wouldn't
prevent the trip.
"I expect to get their tacit approval, not their blessing," Carter said.
"We can't go, obviously, without the permission of the government. My understanding
is that they
will give that approval."
Carter spokeswoman Deanna Congileo said Castro's invitation stemmed
from the Carter Center's Americas Program, an effort to bring together
leaders of the
Cuban American exile community and the Castro government.
Joe Garcia, executive director of the Cuban American National Foundation,
told the Miami Herald his organization welcomes the trip--provided Carter
tells Castro
to step down. During a 1994 visit to Haiti, Carter negotiated an agreement
to remove military ruler Gen. Raoul Cedras from power.
"If he is going the way he went to Haiti, then we welcome his trip to
Cuba if he is going to tell Fidel Castro to leave," Garcia said. "However,
if he's going to give
legitimacy to a 43-year-old dictatorship, then I think it would be
unfortunate."
While not divulging his agenda, Carter said his intentions are to improve relations between Cuba and the United States, not to deliver an ultimatum.
Carter said increasing trade and Americans' visits to Cuba would spread understanding of the advantages of freedom.
"That's the best way to bring about change," he said.