U.S. Economic sanctions against
Cuba:
objectives of an imperialist policy
by Salim Lamrani, La Sorbonne
University, Paris
The economic sanctions imposed on Cuba
by the United States are unique in view of their longevity and
of their complexity but they are consistent with the real objectives
of the first world power. In order to show this, it is necessary
to base this analysis on the following postulate: the blockade
is part of a scheme designed not to promote democratic values,
as the administration in Washington would have us believe, but
to control the natural resources of Third World nations through
subjugation. And the history of the United States characterized
mainly by violent and bloody conquest of new territories
proves this unequivocally.
As far back as the middle of the 19th
century, U.S. expansionist William Gilpin announced: "The
destiny of the American people is to subdue the continent."
The primary goal of the United States is to make sure that the
resources of the countries of the South remain at hand of the
capital of the masters of the universe. The case of Cuba is exceptional
because it is the only country that has dared to refuse to follow
the orders set by their northern neighbor, designing its political,
economic and social system, at once sovereign and independent,
despite the unilateral constraints imposed by Washington. The
enmity Cuba is a victim of reflects a historical continuity whose
broad lines must be retraced. And by the way, it would be widely-known
if something like a sense of respect for obvious historical truisms
existed. This topic would not be controversial if the society
we live in was intellectually free.
Cuba is no doubt the oldest preoccupation
of U.S. colonialists. As far back as October 20, 1805, Thomas
Jefferson evoked the extreme importance of the Caribbean archipelago
under Spanish rule at the time stating: "The
control which, with Florida Point, this island would give us over
the Gulf of Mexico, and the countries and isthmus bordering on
it, as well as all those whose waters flow into it, would fill
up the measure of our political well-being." However, Spain
could rule the island until "our people is sufficiently advanced
to take those territories from the Spanish, bit by bit" .
In 1809, in a letter to James Madison, he wrote: "I candidly
confess that I have ever looked on Cuba as the most interesting
addition which could ever be made to our system of States."
The theory of the "ripe fruit" evoked in 1823
by one of the most clear-sighted and intelligent political visionary
of the history of the United States, John Quincy Adams mentioned
"an object of transcendent importance to the commercial and
political interests of our Union" that was to fall in the
hands of the United States at all costs . This object was the
Cuban island, which was already the priority of the United States
government of the time.
After the collapse of Napoleon's empire,
the Monroe doctrine came into the world. It stipulated that the
United States would on no account accept European interventions
in the affairs of the American hemisphere. It would enable the
northern giant to establish its power on the whole continent without
hindrance, since Europe would not interfere. The theory was first
motivated by Russian designs on Oregon and by the will to prevent
any reconquest of the young Latin American republics by European
nations. The Monroe doctrine one of the founding principles
of U.S. foreign policy had imperialist and hegemonic aims.
With the Roosevelt Corollary, its scope was later extended to
encompass a diversity of situations. Economic factors had a primary
role in the search for new markets. The birth of an industrial
nation and the rapid increase in the production of goods entailed
the need to conquer new territories. Because of its strategic
position if the Gulf of Mexico and despite the failure of the
various attempts to buy the island to Spain, Cuba was in the U.S.
line of sight .
In 1890, U.S. investments in Cuba amounted
to $50 million and 7% of U.S. foreign trade was with the island.
Spain spent $7 million on Cuban imported goods whereas U.S. imports
from the archipelago amounted to $61 million. U.S. economic interests
entailed the need for the U.S. to closely control the Cuban market
in order to protect U.S. investments .
The main objective of U.S. intervention
in the Cuban war of independence against Spain in 1898 was to
prevent Cuban revolutionaries to gain their sovereignty. Indeed,
in January 1896, the captain-general of the island Martínez
Campos, who was in charge of military Spanish operations, resigned,
admitting that he was powerless to stop the rebels who had managed
to infiltrate into the distant province of Pinar Del Río,
at the extreme West of Cuba. In talks with Spain in June 1896,
the United States put forward the possibility of granting Cuba
home rule status. This idea aimed at ruining the independence
movement and infuriated Maceo second-in-command of the Cuban
army of independence who flatly turned down the idea . Although
the Spanish army outnumbered Cuban freedom fighters and despite
its overwhelming material superiority, Cuban rebels were winning
one victory after another and their prestige among the Cuban population
and the Latin-American public was growing day by day. The Russian
ambassador in La Havana wrote to his counterpart in Spain that
"the cause of Spain [was] lost" . In the same way, Colonel
Charles E. Akers, the London Times correspondent, wrote:
"With an army of 175,000 men, all kinds of equipment in unlimited
quantity, a beautiful weather, no or few diseases, with everything
working in his favor, General Weyler was unable to defeat the
rebels. " Máximo Gómez, commandant of the
Cuban revolutionaries, declared on March, 1, 1898: "the enemies
are crushed and retreating and when they had the opportunity to
do something, they didn't do anything."
This was exactly at that time that the United States decided
to intervene, when Spain was put to rout. The U.S. wanted to despoil
the Cuban people of its independence, an independence that had
been conquered with machetes. U.S. Democrat Senator from Virginia
John W. Daniel accused the U.S. government of intervening to prevent
a Spanish defeat: "When the most favorable time for a revolutionary
victory and the most unfavorable time for Spain came the United
States Congress is asked to put the U.S. army into the hands of
the President to forcibly impose an armistice between the two
parties, one of them having already surrendered."
The armistice was signed on December,
10, 1898 in Paris, by the United States and Spain. The Cubans
were excluded from the talks. The vile Platt amendment that
was later repealed in 1934 after the United States started to
rule over the whole political and economic life of Cuba
shattered the hopes of Cubans. The United States replaced Spain
in the role of the colonizer, a role decadent Spain could not
take on anymore. After they had suffered from Spanish colonialism,
Cubans were to endure U.S. neo-colonialism and their northern
neighbor was going to "build an empire at the expense of
Spain" . On January, 1st, 1899, after the Spanish troops
had left, the Stars and Stripes not the Cuban flag
was hoisted in the sky of La Havana. The ripe fruit had at last
fallen into the hands of the United States .
After it had taken hold of almost all
sectors of the Cuban economy, the United States intervened several
times to maintain the status quo, notably in 1912, 1917 and 1933
when protests were repressed in a bloodbath. Before the 1959 revolution,
U.S. companies owned 80% of services, mines, ranches and oil refineries,
40% of the sugar industry and 50% of railways . The Batista regime
enjoyed Washington benevolence because it wonderfully served U.S.
economic interests. Cuba had to wait until 1959 to taste the fruit
of independence that had been forbidden to its people for almost
half a millennium. But again Cuba would have to pay the highest
possible price for this slap in the face of its lifelong neighbor,
an affront that would not be forgiven. And what price!
The total blockade of the island imposed
on February, 7, 1962 violates international conventions and runs
counter to the most basic juridical principles. Its main objective
is to re-establish U.S. neo-colonial domination over Cuba, using
starvation as a political weapon against the Cuban people. The
arguments justifying this economic state of siege varied according
to time. During the Cold War, the "communist threat"
that Cuba represented was the paradigm in use although any serious
study would smash this theory to pieces. Indeed, in 1959, there
was no Soviet presence in Cuba. But Washington stuck to that interpretation:
Cuba represented a threat for U.S. national security and Kennedy
urged Mexico to back them up in their policy of hostility towards
Cuba. But the answer of a Mexican diplomat was not long in coming:
"If we publicly declare that Cuba is a threat to our security,
forty million Mexicans will die laughing" .
The Cold War context, used for thirty
years as a pretext legitimizing U.S. animosity towards Cuba, was
actually a fraud since there are no facts to support this theory.
If there had been any foundations to this thesis, the United States
would have normalized its relations with Cuba after the collapse
of the Soviet bloc. Instead of that, Washington launched a new
and more serious wave of economic sanctions with the Torricelli
Act in 1992 and the Helms-Burton Act in 1996. As the ancient paradigm
departed this life in 1991, a new one was created. Now it is no
more about containing communism but about "re-establishing
democracy" in Cuba, a "democracy" devoted to the
interests of Washington. No matter if it is ruled by a clone of
Gerardo Machado or Fulgencio Batista: what's important is that
it should make of its subordination to the United States its main
virtue.
The economic sanctions imposed on the Cuban people are condemned
by almost all countries in the international community and, for
twelve years running, by their overwhelming majority. Nonetheless,
not an ounce of change in U.S. foreign policy towards Cuba stands
out on the horizon, driving international opinion to despair.
Below is a table summing up the successive votes since 1992:
Number of countries opposing the blockade
Number of countries against the end of the blockade
Countries voting against the end of the blockade
1992 59 3 United States, Israel, Romania
1993 88 4 United States, Israel, Albania, Paraguay
1994 101 2 United States, Israel
1995 117 3 United States, Israel, Uzbekistan
1996 137 2 United States, Israel
1997 147 3 United States, Israel, Uzbekistan
1998 157 3 United States, Israel, Marshall Islands
1999 155 2 United States, Israel
2000 167 3 United States, Israel, Marshall Islands
2001 167 3 United States, Israel, Marshall Islands
2002 173 3 United States, Israel, Marshall Islands
2003 179 3 United States, Israel, Marshall Islands
The only objectives of the United States
are to send Cuba back to the pangs and torments afflicting Third
World nations and which it has dared to escape; to plunder its
resources; and to destroy its health care system considered "uniformly
as the pre-eminent model for the Third World", according
to the American Association for World Health . The aim
of the blockade is to fulfill the wishes of Thomas Jefferson and
John Quincy Adams to incorporate Cuba into the U.S. sphere of
influence and to enable foreign capital to devastate it. The logorrhea
putting forward the argument of human rights problems in Cuba
is only a rhetoric motivated by self-interest and designed to
conceal a very clear plan: to make the Cuban people toe the line
and to send it back to the destitute standards of living they
were used to fret over before the triumph of the Revolution.
Recently, President George W. Bush not
only added Cuba to the list of terrorist states a decision
that should cause some mirth among the international community
given that this accusation is groundless but he also declared
that the restrictions concerning the travels of U.S. citizens
to Cuba would be made tighter. He also called for the creation
of a Presidential "Commission for the Assistance to a Free
Cuba", in order to repay the debt he has contracted during
the 2000 election campaign with his extreme-right friends of the
Cuban-American National Foundation a powerful entity never
reluctant to use terrorism as a tool to express political ideas
. What is the truthfulness of those declarations? It is non-existent.
It is easy to guess what kind of "Free Cuba" the United
States wants to create: a regime that would be "more acceptable
to the U.S.", as the Washington administration underlined
it as soon as 1959, that is to say a nation completely obedient
to its orders .
Condoleeza Rice, National Security Advisor
to President Bush, evoked the "intolerable case of Cuba"
and this opinion is not groundless if one sees things from the
point of view of U.S. political strategists . Indeed, it is "intolerable"
that a Third World country which is moreover in the U.S.
backyard dares to brave the masters of the world, intending
its natural resources to be used by its people and not by Washington
financial and economic interests. It is intolerable that a nation
stifled by a legislative net of sanctions that would be hard to
bear even for a European power, is still able to resist after
44 years of economic stifling. And there is even worse: "Social
policy is unquestionably one area in which Cuba has excelled by
guaranteeing an equitable distribution of income and well-being
of the population, while investing in human capital", according
to the report published by the United Nations Economic Commission
for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) . The United States
cannot tolerate this heresy.
If Cuba submits to the orders of Washington,
if it accepts to give up its sovereignty and to abandon its resources
to the ravenous appetite of multinationals, forgetting the needs
of its people on the way, it will be considered to be part and
parcel of the "democratic world". But as long as it
has not fulfilled those conditions, it will continue to be the
target of Washington attacks. As the hero of the 1898 independence
war José Martí said: "Freedom is very expensive
and it is necessary either to resign ourselves to live without
it, or to decide to buy it for what it's worth." And the
Cubans have made their choice.
As long as Cuba continues to challenge
the dominant and dogmatic ideology of free market by providing
an example showing that it is possible to free one's country from
the distress of under-development not through the implementation
of the diktats of the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank, but by putting human beings at the center of its plans for
society it will be a victim of paramilitary attacks organized
fron The United States. As long as it refuses to implement market
and profit discipline U.S. economic terrorism will not ease off.
The roots of the blockade date back not
to 1959 but to the beginning of the 19th century since U.S. imperialists
have always wanted to take hold of Cuba. In 1902, a U.S. bookstore
distributed a map of Cuba under the title: "Our New Colony:
Cuba" . The United States will do whatever is in its power
to go back to that pre-revolutionary situation, to make Cuba become
another Puerto Rico, Haiti or Dominican Republic, places in which
the wealth of a minority stands out in sharp contrast with the
poverty of the majority and where U.S. multinationals make staggering
profits. It will also unflaggingly cling to the same voluble and
outdated arguments that its representatives keep on repeating.
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