President Criticized Over Past Pledges About Cuba
By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
President Bush met yesterday with a group of former Cuban political
prisoners and relatives of newly imprisoned dissidents to mark the anniversary
of Cuban
independence from Spain and renew his pledge to work toward the end
of Cuba's communist dictatorship.
The 11 Cubans, who spoke to reporters after the meeting, said they appreciated
Bush's gesture. "Our suffering is not important, compared to the suffering
of those
[Cubans] who have never emerged into the light of liberty," said Ana
Lazara Rodriguez, a doctor who spent 19 years in a Cuban prison.
Isabel Roque, whose economist sister Marta Beatriz Roque was among 75
human rights and political activists given long prison terms in Cuba last
month, wept as she
said they had "come to talk to our president to ask him to help."
But the hastily arranged meeting did little to assuage the ire of Cuban
Americans in Congress and activists in Florida who have accused Bush of
failing to act on
promises he made to crack down on Cuba during Independence Day speeches
last year, the year before and during his campaign.
A terse statement issued by Reps. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Mario Diaz-Balart
and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, all Florida Republicans, said they had recommended
that Bush meet
with the Cuban group after "we were informed that the White House had
not yet completed its ongoing review of U.S. policy toward the Cuban dictatorship."
None of
them attended.
Rep. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) was more direct, saying that Bush, after
"relentlessly" attacking Clinton policy as soft on Cuba, has done no better.
"Shame on you for
not living up to your promises; shame on you for your deceptions; and
shame on you for playing on the emotions of the Cuban American community,"
he said in a
statement.
Although the four Cuban Americans in Congress believe Bush has not been
tough enough, a bipartisan majority in Congress has asked Bush to ease
an economic
embargo and travel restrictions that have been imposed on Cuba through
nine U.S. administrations. They argue that the sanctions have not accomplished
their goal of
hastening the fall of Cuban President Fidel Castro, and that a U.S.
opening would stand a better chance.
Political dissidents in Cuba generally advocate lifting sanctions, and
not all the relatives appreciated Bush's efforts. The daughter of imprisoned
independent journalist
Raul Rivero said she thought the expulsion of 14 Cuban diplomats for
alleged spying was unhelpful. "I think it is playing a game," Cristina
Rivero told reporters.
Bush is widely seen as sincere in averring that the United States should
squeeze Castro until his government topples or he opens Cuba's totalitarian
political and
economic systems. But while a hard-line policy on Cuba could once ensure
a reliable majority of votes in Florida, and brought little argument from
Congress, the political
landscape on the issue has become much murkier in recent years.
Last year, Bush delivered his Cuban Independence Day speech on the White
House lawn, and then flew to Miami for a rally packed with cheering Cuban
Americans.
He announced an "Initiative for a New Cuba," saying normalized relations
would require free elections. In the meantime, he pledged measures to "directly
benefit the
Cuban people, including a scholarship program for Cuban students; modernization
of TV and Radio Marti, the U.S. broadcasting system into Cuba; and stepped-up
enforcement of sanctions.
Although restrictions on travel to Cuba have been toughened, the administration
has been unable to prevent the sale of more than $200 million in food and
agricultural
products to Cuba under a law passed before Bush took office. Neither
the scholarship program nor the broadcasting enhancements have gotten off
the ground.
Cuban Americans who oppose easing the sanctions differ on the precise
crackdown measures that should be taken. But they join in criticizing Bush
for not making good
on campaign promises to directly fund dissidents inside Cuba; to fully
implement sanctions against governments and companies that trade with Cuba;
and to end
President Bill Clinton's policy of sending migrants apprehended at
sea by the U.S. Coast Guard back to Cuba.
© 2003