Bill Clinton: Gross detention imperils U.S.-Cuba relations
BY JIM WYSS JWYSS@MIAMIHERALD.COM
12/11/2014 2:09 PM  12/11/2014 7:12 PM
Former President Bill Clinton said the United States might be "well on 
its way" to ending the Cuban embargo, and that there were multiple areas 
where the two foes could cooperate, if the island would release USAID 
subcontractor Alan Gross.
In an interview with the Miami Herald on Thursday, Clinton said that his 
wife, Hillary Clinton, had come out in favor of ending the half-century 
embargo in her recent book about her time as Secretary of State.
"I think we would be well on our way to doing it [ending the blockade] 
if they released Alan Gross," he said of the contractor who has served 
five years of a 15-year sentence. "It is really foolish to allow what is 
clearly a questionable incarceration to imperil the whole future of 
U.S.-Cuban relations, but that's not my call to make."
But Clinton also welcomed the more "nuanced" view of Cuba that was 
emerging — one where the communist island could be recognized for its 
role in Haiti's earthquake response or responding to the Ebola outbreak 
in Africa.
"We can't turn a blind eye when we think you're wrongly oppressing…we 
can't pretend what happened hasn't happened," he said of Cuba's human 
rights violations. "But there may be a way for us to work together going 
forward."
Clinton made the comments on the sidelines of the "Future of the 
Americas" summit that his foundation hosted Thursday at the University 
of Miami.
The meeting brought together business and political leaders from around 
the region to plot the coming decades and pass recommendations along to 
the 2015 Summit of the Americas in Panama.
On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry indicated that 
Washington will not stand in the way if Cuba attends the event for the 
first time. That same day, however, Congress potentially added another 
obstacle to regional integration when it approved a bill that would 
freeze assets and deny visas to Venezuelan authorities who cracked down 
on anti-government rallies earlier this year.
On Thursday, the White House said President Barack Obama will sign the 
bill into law.
Clinton said the sanctions were merited, but he also questioned their 
effectiveness. He noted that the Nicolás Maduro administration is adept 
at blaming its problems on the United States and the sanctions may give 
Caracas ammunition.
"The main thing we ought to be working on is getting Venezuela back into 
the community of nations with a normal relationship and a normal 
political system with reasonable elections where sometimes your crowd 
wins and sometimes it doesn't," he said.
Thursday's event, however, was focused on tackling regional problems by 
engaging some of the region's most influential thinkers. Among the 
attendees were Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, the world's 
second-richest man Carlos Slim, Inter American Development Bank 
President Luis Alberto Moreno, and Susan Fonseca, the founder and CEO of 
Woman@TheFrontier.
During the day-long meeting, delegates addressed issues such as energy, 
employment and chronic disease that could hold sway in the decades to come.
The meeting fell on the 20th anniversary of the first Summit of the 
Americas that then-President Clinton organized in Miami. It was the 
first time that all the regions' leaders — except Cuba's Fidel Castro — 
had met in almost three decades.
At that time, there was a consensus that free trade could pull the 
region out of poverty. The flagship initiative of the conference was the 
creation of the Free Trade Area of the Americas. That agreement never 
materialized, but commerce boomed nonetheless and the region prospered.
If commercial power helped define the last few decades, the 
democratization of power may be the theme of years to come, Clinton said.
"There is a much greater understanding now that power is more dispersed 
for good and ill," he said, speculating that governments may play a more 
limited, goal-setting role, in the future as business and 
non-governmental organizations fill in the gaps.
But the last 20 years have also brought surprises, Clinton said.
"The climate change problem is much more severe than we thought 20 years 
ago," he said, "and it's bearing down on us."
The problem also may also hold the seeds of the next economic surge: 
overhauling the $6 trillion energy sector could create jobs as it saves 
the environment.
"This whole energy thing may play out in a very interesting and dramatic 
way in the Americas over the next 20 years," he said.
These challenges come amid shifts in regional politics. Just a few 
decades ago, the United States was the undisputed power in the 
hemisphere and what happened in Washington rippled through Patagonia.
But the field is increasingly crowded, as the likes of Brazil, China, 
India and Europe play a larger role in the area. China, for one, has 
become a major trading partner in Latin America and is slated to break 
ground on a $50 billion trans-oceanic canal through Nicaragua later this 
month.
"I used to say all the time when I was in office…that I was trying to 
build a world that I would like for our children and grandchildren to 
live in when we are no longer the only big dog on the block," Clinton said.
The rise of these nations in no way "means the decline of America. 
Whether we go into decline or not is up to us," he said.
"We should welcome other people's prosperity," he added. "I just think 
it's a terrible mistake to be rooting against somebody. We should be 
rooting for them and get them to become part of a cooperative rather 
than a competitive world."
Source: Bill Clinton: Gross detention imperils U.S.-Cuba relations | The 
Miami Herald - 
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/article4427163.html
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