Monday, July 20, 2015

Deshielo Cubano

After 54 years, the end of an exercise in futility:  The U.S. and Cuba have restored full diplomatic ties.

And what was accomplished by the half-century rift?  Families split apart, the isolation of a people trying only to build a better society, and a near brush with nuclear holocaust.  Yet soon an American ambassador will present his credentials to Raúl Castro.  Quite ironic when you think about it; Fidel used to half-jokingly warn his enemies that if anything ever happened to him they would only wind up having to deal with his even more radical brother. 

But Castro the Younger has proven not to be immune from the global neoliberal tide, permitting a limited growth of private enterprise in recent years.  It’s not as if Cuba’s leadership has much choice.  Having survived on its own for nearly 25 years since the demise of the Soviet Union, Cuba’s economy is in straitened circumstances to say the least.  Once Cuba becomes more fully integrated into the global economy, it will likely become still another haven for offshoring with its finances firmly under the whip hand of the World Bank and the IMF.

All the same, the current thaw is a win-win for both sides.  The U.S. will have entrée to Cuban markets.  Cuba still has the Castros.  I only wonder if the Cuban people will be better off in the end for it.



© 2015 The Unassuming Scholar



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