Bush: Cuban embargo stays until Castro meets tough conditions
By SCOTT LINDLAW
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI - (AP) -- President Bush said Monday he won't heed calls to lift the Cuban trade embargo unless Fidel Castro releases political prisoners, conducts independently monitored elections and accepts a list of tough U.S. conditions for a ``new government that is fully democratic.''
''Freedom sometimes grows step by step, and we will encourage
those steps,'' the president said at the White House, outlining his new
U.S. policy on Cuban
Independence Day. He then flew to Miami, where he delivered
a similar message and was raising $2 million for the Florida Republican
Party, which will use it to boost the re-election campaign of his brother
Gov. Jeb Bush.
Bush declared to a boisterous crowd of Cuban Americans in Miami: ``We are here today to proclaim loudly and clearly to the entire world ... that the Cuban people's love of liberty cannot and will not be denied.''
Seeking to balance his hard-line policy with a sensitivity to
Cuba's grinding poverty, the president outlined administration actions
designed to make life better for the
Cuban people. One initiative would resume direct mail service
to and from Cuba.
Bush's speech, which aides said has been in the works since January, came a week after former President Carter traveled to Cuba and urged the people to embrace democracy while calling on the United States to lift the 40-year-old trade embargo.
Carter and other critics argue that the restrictions have failed
to end Castro's regime while making life tough on ordinary Cubans. Critics
also note the United States
maintains trade and diplomatic relations with other nations
that hold political prisoners and prevent free speech and elections, such
as China, Malaysia and Saudi Arabia.
Bush also has been accused of shaping his policy to win support of Cuban-Americans, a force in Florida politics and thus a key to his re-election hopes. Indeed, Bush was traveling to Miami later in the day to address Cuban-Americans eager to hear his anti-Castro rhetoric.
The Cuban government did not respond immediately to the Washington speech. But some leading Cuban dissidents did not approve of Bush's hard-line stand.
''Changes have to be made but changes have to be made on both
sides,'' said Vladimiro Roca, who was released from prison earlier this
month. ``The prickly
relationship between the two countries ... can hurt our hopes
for advancing a transition to democracy.''
Another human rights activist, Elizardo Sanchez, praised Bush
for his support of the Varela Project to get a national referendum on civil
rights. ''The rest of (Bush's)
speech was more of the same, the same prickly rhetoric from
the time of the Cold War that has characterized the relationship between
the countries for 40 years,''
Sanchez said.
''U.S.-Cuban relations are held hostage to a small minority in
each country,'' said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., one of several congressmen
who criticized Bush's
new policy. Dodd called for ``a fundamental change in the way
we look at Cuba.''
Speaking in Spanish at times, Bush said Cuba's legacy of freedom
``has been insulted by a tyrant who uses brutal methods to enforce a bankrupt
vision. That legacy
has been debased by a relic from another era who has turned
a beautiful island into a prison.''
If all his conditions are met, Bush will support lifting the congressionally mandated trade ban -- even if Castro is still in charge -- said two senior White House officials, speaking on condition of anonymity. But they said Bush does not envision Castro's making the necessary changes, prompting the new policy designed to foment change from within the country.
''If Mr. Castro refuses our offer he will be protecting his cronies at the expense of his people and eventually, despite all his tools of oppression, Fidel Castro will need to answer to his people,'' Bush said.
Last year, Bush proposed aiding Cuban dissidents, strengthening the impact of Radio Marti and TV Marti broadcasts and enforcing travel restrictions.
''Well-intentioned ideas about trade will merely prop up this dictator, enrich his cronies and enhance the totalitarian regime,'' he said Monday. ``It will not help the Cuban people.''
To win his approval of easing restrictions, Bush said Cuba must:
--Allow opposition parties to speak freely and organize.
--Allow independent trade unions.
--Free all political prisoners.
--Allow human rights organizations to visit Cuba to ensure that the conditions for free elections are being created.
--Allow outside observers to monitor 2003 elections.
--End discriminatory practices against Cuban workers.
''Full normalization of relations with Cuba, diplomatic recognition, open trade and a robust aid program will only be possible when Cuba has a new government that is fully democratic, when the rule of law is respected and when the human rights of all Cubans are fully protected,'' Bush said.
Citing the spread of democracy throughout Latin America, Bush said: ``With real political and economic reform, trade can benefit the Cuban people and allow them to share in the progress of our times.''
He voiced support for a referendum in Cuba asking voters whether
they favor civil liberties, including freedom of speech and assembly, and
amnesty for political
prisoners.
Bush called for the resumption of mail service and promised assistance to nongovernmental organizations that aid Cubans. He also pledged to create scholarships in the United States for Cuban students, family members of political prisoners and professionals trying to build civil institutions in the communist regime.
Money still needs to be found for the scholarship program, White House officials said. They said the initiatives can be carried out without congressional approval
Last week, a 40-member, bipartisan group in Congress announced support for easing the embargo. The private Human Rights Watch called for the same, saying the embargo ``imposes indiscriminate hardship on the Cuban people and impedes democratic change.''
The public is evenly divided on ending the trade embargo, according to a recent CBS News poll that shows no change on that issue from four years ago. Sentiment for continuing the embargo has dropped from the mid-1990s. Republicans were more inclined to want to continue the embargo.