Race to influence the president on Cuba policy heats up
BY MIMI WHITEFIELD
mwhitefield@miamiherald.com
With an announcement on Cuba policy by President Donald Trump apparently 
imminent, those for and against engagement are jockeying to get their 
positions before the president — even his daughter Ivanka.
There has been a flurry of letters to the president this week as Miami 
awaits Trump's possible arrival Friday in the capital city of Cuban 
exiles to announce his recalibration of Cuba policy. Stakeholders who 
haven't penned letters to the White House also are trying to make their 
positions known.
The letter writers range from Cuba dissidents to a group of professors 
concerned that a new Cuba policy could hamper scholarly research and 
educational exchanges with Cuba. A group of 55 Cuban female 
entrepreneurs also sent their letter to 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., but they 
addressed it to first daughter Ivanka Trump, appealing to her 
businesswomen to businesswoman to make sure the Obama-era opening to the 
island isn't closed.
The Cuban American National Foundation hasn't sent the administration a 
letter or position paper, partly because with so many unfilled positions 
in the Trump administration and uncertainty over who is really driving 
Cuban policy, "the question is who do you talk to?" said José "Pepe" 
Hernández, president and one of the founders of the exile organization. 
"It's very confusing, really."
But the foundation is clear about what it would like to see Trump do on 
Cuba: "The main thing we want is for him to reaffirm his commitment to 
protect civil society and opposition activists inside the island," he 
said. "We are very concerned that the Castro regime is resolved to 
destroy the opposition this year."
Through May of this year, the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and 
National Reconciliation has documented 2,240 arbitrary detentions in 
Cuba for political reasons. That's significantly less than the number of 
arrests for the first five months of 2016, but Hernández said repression 
is intensifying. "I presume they want to clear the way for a new leader 
who will take power in 2018," he said.
Still, Hernández said the foundation supports engagement with the Cuban 
people and maintaining diplomatic relations with Havana.
"We would certainly see it as a negative move if the administration 
decides to return to the isolation of the Cuban people from their 
friends and relatives in the United States," he said.
It's unclear what measures the U.S. administration may adopt, but more 
limitations on travel and trade — including limiting the ability of U.S. 
businesses to strike deals with any enterprises controlled by the Cuban 
military — have been discussed.
While Hernández said blacklisting Cuban military operations would send 
an important message to the Cuban government, he said the foundation 
doesn't want the Trump administration to cut back on Americans' ability 
to send remittances and travel to the island.
The Cuban Democratic Directorate, however, said it would like a reversal 
of the Obama administration policy "of unilateral granting of 
unconditional benefits and concessions toward the Castro regime, a 
regime that will never be a friend of the United States and which denies 
all basic rights and liberties for the Cuban people."
Republican Gov. Rick Scott also chimed in on the Cuba issue during a 
visit to Miami on Tuesday. "What President Obama did didn't work. They 
haven't opened up democracy; they don't have more freedom," he said. 
"I'm looking forward to seeing the president's policy. It's going to 
open a new chapter."
"The fact that Obama's approach hasn't led to political reform in Cuba 
after just a few years isn't reason to return to a policy that proved a 
costly failure over many decades," said Daniel Wilkinson, managing 
director for the Americas at Human Rights Watch. "The previous 
administration was right to reject a policy that hurt ordinary Cubans 
and did nothing to advance human rights."
Some recent letter-writers to the president would like to see the policy 
of engagement continue.
A group of nearly 150 American scholars and educators from institutions 
across the United States signed a letter urging the president not to 
reverse Obama-era policies. They said it is un-American to restrict 
travel, that it could have negative hemispheric consequences, and that 
further pressure on Cuban leader Raúl Castro could make it more 
difficult for him to turn over the presidency to a successor in 2018 as 
he has publicly promised.
Trump's policy on Cuba, the letter said, "is not just about the freedom 
of the Cuban people. It is about ours."
The Cuban entrepreneurs — who own restaurants, boutique hotels, bed and 
breakfasts, shops, and other businesses — told Ivanka Trump they feared 
that Cuba policy might be "headed backward, in turn threatening our 
economic livelihoods and the overall well-being of Cubans on and off the 
island."
A setback in U.S.-Cuba relations, they said, "would bring with it the 
fall of many of our businesses." They appealed to Ivanka Trump to 
understand the importance that "the exchange of trade, people and ideas 
represents for our businesses" and invited her to visit them in Cuba.
While there's still much speculation about the final direction the 
president's Cuba policy might take, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson may 
have provided a clue Tuesday during his congressional testimony on the 
State Department's Fiscal 2018 budget proposal.
"The general approach is to allow as much of this continued commercial 
engagement activity to go on as possible," he said.
Pedro Freyre, a Miami lawyer who has represented cruise lines and other 
U.S. businesses that have done deals with Cuba under the Obama opening, 
said they, too, are trying to get the president's attention.
"Business interests that have been active in Cuba in agriculture, 
airlines, cruise lines, travel companies and pharmaceutical companies 
have made their views known to the White House and are working hard to 
make sure the president keeps the interests of American business in mind."
Follow Mimi Whitefield on Twitter: @HeraldMimi.
Source: Race to influence Trump on Cuba policy heats up | Miami Herald - 
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/cuba/article156003664.html
 
 
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