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FOSTERING
DEMOCRACY IN CUBA:
LESSONS LEARNED
By James C. Cason, Miami *
September 12, 2005
Miami
Florida
E.U.
Archives
La Nueva Cuba
September
22, 2005
It is a pleasure
to be here at the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and
Cuban-American Studies. All of us here tonight know the Institute's
vital contributions in helping us comprehend today's Cuba. I've
been particularly impressed by the Institute's work -- especially
through its Cuba Transition Project -- in helping prepare those
committed to seeing a vibrant democracy and free market economy
established in Cuba understand the challenges that they will face.
I want to thank
Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart
for their staunch support of the U.S. Interests Section's pro-democracy
outreach to the Cuban people. We always knew that both of you were
in our corner, and that support meant a lot to us at the Interests
Section.
I also want
to recognize my former boss Otto Reich, who as Assistant Secretary
of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs gave me, before sending
me to Havana, the following instructions. "Jim," he told
me, "President Bush is sending you on a mission."
Help the Cuban
people understand that their nightmare is ending. Reassure them
that the United States will assist Cubans in building a society
that protects their personal liberties, promotes their prosperity,
and wins for Cuba the admiration of the democratic world.
Tonight, I would
like to share with you the U.S. Interests Section's initiatives
in Cuba to advance President Bush's pro-democracy agenda. As articulated
by former Secretary Powell in his "Commission for Assistance
to a Free Cuba" Report to the President, the U.S. Government
should undertake the following six inter-related tasks to hasten
change on the island:
-- Break the
Cuban Dictatorship's Information Blockade;
-- Illuminate the Reality of Castro's Cuba;
-- Empower Cuban Civil Society;
-- Encourage International Diplomatic Efforts to Support Cuban Civil
Society and
Challenge the Castro Regime; and
-- Deny Resources to the Cuban Dictatorship.
I want to focus on the first three objectives, as the U.S. Interests
Section in Havana, by virtue of its physical presence, is particularly
well positioned to advancing them in Castro's Cuba.
Castro often
portrays his wrath against the United States as a battle between
a Cuban David against the U.S. Goliath. In reality, however, it
is the U.S. Interests Section that is the David trying to overcome
Castro's looming security forces. We are confined to Havana. Cuban
intelligence agents monitor our every move and harass our officers.
Cubans who deal
with us are exposed to the regime's arbitrary and often harsh reprisals.
The regime bombards Cubans with all sorts of lies about us, and
blocks our efforts to communicate directly with Cubans.
How, then, have
we been able to surmount the regime's efforts to isolate the Interests
Section from the Cuban people? How have we helped advance President
Bush's pro-democracy agenda in this repressive environment?
Breaking the
Information Blockade
The Castro regime
reserves for itself the exclusive prerogative to determine what
Cubans should know.
As a result,
Cuban bookstores are stocked with propaganda tomes, but little else.
Internet access is restricted to a tiny group of vetted regime loyalists.
Whatever factual information Cuba's media rations out is larded
with irrelevancies or propaganda. Cuban news outlets trumpet far-fetched
claims for a dysfunctional economy, obsess over every imaginable
failing of the United States, and report ad nauseam Fidel's pronouncements.
The U.S. Interests
Section has enthusiastically thrown itself into the task of breaking
Castro's information blockade. Some examples.
The Castro regime
scares off most Cubans from entering the Interests Section through
its front door.
Ironically,
however, probably more Cubans enter U.S. government facilities in
Havana than enter all of the other diplomatic missions put together.
In their thirst to escape the strictures of Castro's Cuba, considerably
more than 100,000 Cubans entered our Consular Section and Refugee
Annex in the past three years seeking to emigrate to the United
States. Another 81,400 entered seeking non-immigrant visas. While
in our buildings, Cuban applicants can listen to Radio Marti or
watch TV Marti and CNN En Español. We treat them to humorous
spoofs on the regime, and they knowingly titter.
They can read
and take home press clips and other written materials. These applicants
have a huge multiplying effect, sharing their impressions of what
they have seen at the Interests Section with family members and
friends.
During the past
three years, we have also greatly augmented our distribution of
uncensored informational materials to Cubans -- giving away over
540,000 academic studies, literature, news magazines and opinion
pieces. We make available written and video material to all those
who attend our receptions. We distribute materials to the independent
libraries, often little more than a shelf in some brave person's
apartment. The regime periodically raids these libraries, alarmed
that average Cubans have access to the Gulag Archipelago, Martin
Luther King's works or Newsweek in Spanish.
Let me share
with you a little secret: some of the Cuban authors banned on the
island whose works we distribute have an avid, if surreptitious,
audience among regime loyalists. We've discovered that Huber Matos'
compelling memoir, "Como Llego La Noche," has a particular
fascination for members of the nomenclatura.
Recently, the
U.S. Interests Section has been able to negotiate an innovative
agreement with the El Nuevo Heraldo, the Spanish language cousin
of the Miami Herald, to print within our premises the paper and
to distribute. Our daily one hundred copies are snapped up, and
are reverently passed from reader to reader. Accustomed to the stultifying
distortions of Granma, Cuban readers of the El Nuevo Heraldo instantly
appreciate the value of a free press. We plan to significantly expand
our printing and distribution of this paper.
We also continued
my predecessor, Vickie Huddleston's, excellent initiative of distributing
shortwave radios, handing out thousands more. We have given these
radios to good contacts, individuals we've met by chance, and the
occasional disappointed visa applicant. These radios give their
listeners the freedom to choose world-wide offerings, whether BBC,
Radio Netherlands, Radio Prague or a host of Miami-based stations,
including of course Radio Marti's 10 hours a day of Cuba-specific
programming.
The U.S. Interests
Section now offers the largest free, uncensored Internet Center
in all of Cuba. I am pleased that during my tenure we were able
to double the number of Internet terminals, and now over fifty Cubans
each day use our Internet facilities. They can exchange e-mails,
access world developments, research topics and browse the world-wide-web.
Dissidents can discuss their political programs, human rights activists
can highlight regime abuses, and independent journalists can file
stories on the real Cuba.
Another initiative
is to keep our diplomatic colleagues in Havana and other Cuba watchers,
both on and off the island, informed about Cuban developments. Five
times a week, the Interests Section sends out through our U.S.-based
Internet server press clips on Cuba, written by international journalists
and their independent Cuban colleagues. For a surprising number
of diplomatic missions in Havana, our press package is their main
source of uncensored, up-to-date information about Cuban developments.
Illuminate the Reality of Castro's Cuba
All Cubans know
that the Castro regime punishes anyone who strays from its rigid
dictates. For understandable reasons, most Cubans try to keep their
heads down as they go about their daily lives. However, a brave,
principled minority -- Oscar Biscet, Marta Beatriz Roque, Oswaldo
Paya, Vladimiro Roca, Rene Gomez Manzano, Felix Bonne, just to name
a few -- are willing to suffer the consequences for exposing the
regime's lies and its mistreatment of fellow Cubans.
We want to help
Cuban pro-democracy activists get themselves heard on the island
and throughout the world, and to encourage citizens of democratic
countries to call for the release of the more than 300 political
prisoners in Castro's jails. But in a regime that monopolizes all
means of communication, how is that accomplished?
Like other diplomats,
I've met with academics, businessmen, journalists and politicians
visiting the island to brief them on the real Cuba behind Castro's
Potemkin village.
The Interests
Section has its own Internet website, where we post our materials
on Cuba.
However, I discovered that symbols were the most compelling means
of conveying the repressive nature of the Castro regime. In Cuba
certain symbols are readily understood. Symbols also catch the attention
of the international media, and they get filtered back into Cuba
through photos, illegal Internet access, contraband satellite dishes
and TV Marti.
Let me share
four examples.
Last year when
introducing my deputy to the diplomatic community and press corps,
we invited the guests to see first hand a replica of the solitary
confinement cell that held prisoner of conscience, Dr. Oscar Biscet.
Most were appalled by Dr. Biscet's inhumanely cramped cell. Subsequently,
we moved this replica of Dr. Biscet's cell to our Consular Section
so that all our Cuban applicants can see how ruthlessly their government
treats the peaceful opposition.
In late 2004,
we buried a Time Capsule in the garden of my Residence in Havana
at the foot of the only monument in Cuba to the democratic opposition.
In a solemn, emotionally moving ceremony, Cuban pro-democracy leaders
deposited messages to the Cuban people to be read on the eve of
Cuba's future democratic national elections. Coverage of the event
reminded the outside world, and through it Cubans on the island,
that Cuba's political transition is inexorably approaching, and
that Cubans need to think about how to ensure that democracy prevails.
You may recall
the lighted number "75" we added to our December 2004
festive holiday decorations at the Interests Section.
We posted that
sign as a reminder that in March 2003 Cuban agents imprisoned 75
pro-democracy activists, whose only crime was articulating their
ideals. The Castro regime reacted with its characteristic heavy
hand: it surrounded our building with swastika emblazoned billboards
and for weeks literally blasted us with revolutionary music. However,
the ensuing media coverage reminded the world that innocent Cubans
are thrown into jail for having a different point of view than Castro's.
And even the most uninformed Habanero grasped that the world outside
of Cuba was protesting the regime's arbitrary incarceration of political
prisoners.
Our 2005 July
4th celebration witnessed the unveiling of another symbol -- a three
story, lighted Statute of Liberty with the number "75"
where the lamp is held. She was something to see. All those present,
over six hundred Cuban activists, artists, intellectuals and journalists
as well as our international guests, immediately understood that
she represented freedom.
More than 120
media outlets reported this event, publicizing my criticism of the
regime's dictatorial nature.
Perhaps appreciating
that a heavy-handed propaganda approach demonizing me was counterproductive,
the Castro regime tried its own hand at symbolic warfare. The regime
sought to lampoon me in a series of ostensibly humorous "Transition
Man" cartoons that still run on primetime TV. The cartoons
portrayed me flying about, clad in a pink gown and waving a magic
wand, trying to rollback the Revolution's so called "accomplishments,"
whether in education, public health or racial equality. However,
dictatorships are not good at humor. Moreover, the cartoons inadvertently
reminded all Cubans that a transition is inevitable, exposed the
regime's scare tactics, and converted me into an icon of dissent.
We've heard stories of children on buses pretending they were me,
incanting "Cachan, Cachan" as they waved imaginary wands
to magically obtain some scarce object. I don't think this was the
regime's intent.
Empower Cuban
Civil Society
In Castro's
Cuba, there is literally no place to hide. All who anger Castro's
ossified regime are ostracized, harassed or imprisoned. Our main
contribution to the courageous pro-democratic activists who expose
themselves to the regime's wrath is to let them know that we will
never abandon them, and that we will support them until they no
longer need us.
Other diplomatic
missions may believe it preferable to have Castro regime officials
attend their events rather than the dissidents. However, you have
our word: we will never consider Castro's stooges to be the equal
of the pro-democratic dissidents.
We show our
admiration for the pro-democratic groups by inviting them to our
receptions, which give them access to other diplomatic colleagues,
foreign journalists and influential visitors. We always try to bring
together visiting U.S. politicians with the dissidents.
We host special
events -- on Easter, Fathers' Day or Christmas, for example -- for
the families of the political prisoners, where the games we organize
delight the children. For dissident children, many of whom suffer
from constant taunts, these events are blissfully fun-filled.
We accept invitations
by dissidents to visit them at their homes, even when we know that
there is a possibility that Castro goons may organize an "acto
de repudio" against our hosts at any time. I personally met
with hundreds of Cubans throughout the island before the regime
decided to confine official Americans within the municipality of
Havana.
We also provide
tools to the pro-democratic groups so they can communicate among
themselves and with the outside world. We give them pens, paper,
laptops and printers. We give them access to the Internet, fax machines,
copiers, and cameras. The dissidents do their best to keep these
valuable items hidden from the regime, but the regime routinely
raids their homes and confiscates whatever it wants. Recently, the
regime seized all of the baseball equipment owned by Cubans who
were going to play a friendly match against an Interests Section
team.
I'm particularly
proud of one innovation we have put in place during my tenure --
videoconferences that link up Cubans on the island with international
audiences. This new tool allowed three leading Cuban dissidents
to testify before the U.S. House of Representatives, and to answer
questions in real-time. We've also used them to bring together Cuban
youth groups with Czech and Venezuelan counterparts. The videoconferences
have enabled us to conduct training seminars between respected international
journalists and aspiring Cuban independent journalists.
We are also
hosting a popular series of videoconferences examining key transition
issues, in which distinguished U.S. based experts exchange views
with large groups of Cuban civil society members. Among the topics
these videoconferences have explored include analyzing different
constitutional options, restructuring the economy, revitalizing
the public health sector, and instituting property rights.
We will continue
these valuable, intellectually stimulating exchanges, and plan to
broaden them to include discussions with experts from other democratic
countries.
It's Relay Race
The Castro regime
is no doubt glad to see Roger Noriega, Kevin Whitaker and Jim Cason
leave the Cuba portfolio. The regime should contain its joy. Our
next man in Havana will be Michael Parmly, a former Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary in our Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and
Labor. Michael is totally committed to promoting President Bush's
pro-human rights and democracy agenda.
Promoting democracy
in Cuba is not a sprint, but an ongoing relay race. I've lost forty
pounds and I'm feeling a bit out of breath, but Michael is about
to pick up the baton and race right past me.
Michael and
I have talked extensively about his challenges in Cuba, and he intends
to continue many of our projects. I have no doubt that he will lend
his creativity towards developing new ones. Michael will also be
able to count on the able support of our new Transition Coordinator,
Caleb McCarry, the new Coordinator of the Office for Cuban Affairs,
Steve McFarland, Deputy Assistant Secretary Dan Fisk and the proposed
Assistant Secretary, Thomas Shannon. These outstanding individuals
will make a great Cuba team.
And We're On
The Final Stretch
Castro's rickety
system cannot last much longer -- everyone on the island knows it
does not work. Change is inevitable. I'm confident that the Cuban
people will not be satisfied with a partial economic opening, but
will demand that Cuba undergo a thorough democratic transition.
Achieving such
a total, durable transition to democracy and free market economy
remains the unwavering policy of the United States. We hope that
international community partners will join us in demanding nothing
less. Mere stability would not be an acceptable outcome;
nor would any other outcome that fails to provide immediate, genuine
freedom to the Cuban people.
We are prepared
to work closely with the international community, multilateral financial
agencies and Cubans in exile to help democratically minded Cubans
on the island build strong democratic institutions as well as a
thriving market economy so all Cubans can enjoy protection from
arbitrary rule, personal freedoms and prosperity.
And on the eve
of Cuba's next national democratic elections, I promise you that
I will be on the island celebrating with you all. See you there.
Viva Cuba Libre.
* James C. Cason,
a US career Foreign Service Officer with extensive experience in Latin
America, has been Principal Officer at the United States Interests
Section (USINT) Havana, Cuba, (September 2002 - September 2005). Prior
to assuming his duties in Havana, he worked in the Bureau of Western
Hemisphere Affairs as Director of Policy, Planning and Coordination |