Candidate takes a hard line on Castro
In bid for presidency, Bush links ending embargo to Cuba reforms
By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS
Herald Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- Heeding anti-Castro voices in Florida, presidential
contender
George W. Bush is supporting existing sanctions against Cuba
until Havana
holds free elections, allows free speech and liberates political
prisoners, aides
said this week.
``In a George W. Bush administration, you're going to have a president
who's
going to take steps to help the internal opposition and insist
on those three
points,'' said Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, a Miami Republican.
That hard-line stance, written into U.S. law in 1996, has been
undercut in recent
months by Clinton administration efforts to expand cultural,
academic and
anti-narcotic contacts with the Cubans, and by a lopsided Senate
vote in favor of
allowing the regulated sale of food and medicines to Cuba.
Diaz-Balart, a fierce critic of Cuban President Fidel Castro,
said a George W.
Bush administration would freeze such overtures and halt further
erosion of the
decades-old trade embargo.
``We have a track record with this Democratic administration,''
he said. ``They are
people who are appeasing Castro, and now they are trying to circumvent
the three
conditions and lift the embargo unilaterally.''
The White House denied this week that it is seeking to lift the embargo.
``I don't see that Castro has done anything to deserve lifting
of an embargo today,''
said National Security Council spokesman David Leavy.
Diaz-Balart, the Havana-born son and grandson of Cuban lawmakers,
has
emerged as an early advisor on Cuba policy for Bush, whose campaign
aides
praise his input.
``He's an expert on U.S.-Cuban relations,'' said Bush spokesman
Dan Bartlett.
``Gov. Bush is fortunate to have his advice and support and will
continue to seek it
throughout the campaign.''
Diaz-Balart sent the Texas governor a memo in December outlining
his three
criteria for improving ties with Cuba. Bush responded a month
later; Diaz-Balart's
aides said they were gratified to see the candidate incorporate
that position
outright.
Diaz-Balart is quick to admit that the candidate's brother, Florida
Gov. Jeb Bush,
is his top consultant on Latin America policy. Moreover, Diaz-Balart
said, he
works ``as one'' with Miami's other Cuban American lawmaker,
Rep. Ileana
Ros-Lehtinen.
Ros-Lehtinen, however, does not consider herself an advisor to
Bush, though she
has endorsed his candidacy, said spokesman Rudy Fernandez.
Generally, Bush is relying on two former Republican officials
for foreign policy
guidance: George Shultz, secretary of state under President Reagan,
and
Condoleeza Rice, a national security aide under President Bush.
Shultz was one of several prominent Republicans who last year
advocated a
serious reexamination of U.S.-Cuba policy by a bipartisan commission
headed by
Virginia Sen. John Warner. In a letter to President Clinton,
Shultz said such a
commission ``would provide your administration and the Congress
critically
important insights needed to improve the policy's effectiveness.''
But Clinton nixed the proposal, at the strong urging of Vice President
Al Gore,
who, as the leading Democratic candidate for president, appears
eager to burnish
his own anti-Castro credentials.
Gore's foreign policy advisor, Leon Fuerth, was not available
for comment Friday.
But Cuba-watchers say the vice president, eager to woo South
Floridians, might
embrace a policy similar to Bush's.