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U.S. Has Blueprint For Post-Castro Cuba
[url=http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGBPU6PQAEE.html:7f08f]<<<Link>>>[/url:7f08f]
[quote:7f08f] WASHINGTON - Fidel Castro looks like the 79-year-old he is, and the Bush administration has big ideas for Cuba once he departs. When that day comes, U.S. officials want to leave little to chance about the island nation's political fate. They are prepared to go to some lengths to ensure that the communist system Castro created goes out with him. It is official U.S. policy to undermine Cuba's planned succession from Castro to his brother Raul, 74. Just how that policy would unfold is not clear. "We are looking to support a genuine transition to political freedom for the Cuban people," said Caleb McCarry, the State Department official recently put in charge of transition matters for Cuba. McCarry, a Republican who spent many years on Capitol Hill as an aide on Latin American issues, declined in an interview to address how the United States would carry out its Cuban policy. McCarry's appointment July 28, with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice presiding, was one of few at the department made in front of television cameras. It gave Rice a platform for denouncing communist rule in Cuba, a stance perceived as a political winner for years among constituencies in South Florida and elsewhere in the United States. The appointment of a "transition coordinator" for Cuba arose in a 2004 report to President Bush by the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, led by then-Secretary of State Colin Powell. The report spells out steps to bring pressure on Castro and to provide assistance if a democratically inclined leadership takes power. Bush said upon the report's release: "We believe the people of Cuba should be free from tyranny. We believe the future of Cuba is a future of freedom." The prospect of political transitions in other countries usually does not merit much attention. Cuba, however, is a special case. A friendly government in Havana would mean an end to a security headache for Washington that has lasted 46 years. According to the report, not long after Castro's death, 100,000 tons of food could be purchased quickly and shipped to Cuba. U.S. charities would be encouraged to create and contribute to a foundation to aid a "Free Cuba." American government officials would carry out a "hands-on needs assessment" as soon as possible. There are detailed plans for upgrading Cuba's health and education system. The more than 400-page report discusses ways to modernize Cuba's aviation, railroad and maritime infrastructure. It envisions U.S. assistance in holding free and fair elections, fighting corruption and establishing independent trade unions. Wayne Smith, a Cuba expert and former U.S. diplomat who long has advocated establishing normal U.S. relations with Cuba, said he is outraged by the administration's plan. It is "blatant intervention in the internal affairs of another state," Smith said. "They talk about how we are going to oversee and facilitate the transition. Who gives us that right?" Smith said. The president of Cuba's National Assembly, Ricardo Alarcon, likens the U.S. plan to an annexation or occupation of Cuba. He said the United States would regard Cuba "as a piece of land administered by the U.S." "The whole strategy," Alarcon said, "is getting in forever." McCarry rejects charges that Washington's assistance plan is a blueprint for U.S. control. "The offer is not an imposition," he said, asserting that none of the proposals would go into place without the consent of Cuba's transitional government. McCarry said some recommendations in Powell's report are in effect. Measures to reduce travel to Cuba by Americans as well as by Cuban-Americans are thought to have reduced the island's income by some $500 million, McCarry said. TV Marti, a U.S. government broadcasting service to the island, reaches more households in Cuba today because new technology has been able to partially overcome Cuban jamming, he said. "We need to give Cubans the opportunity for a different future and better future," McCarry said. "What people lack under the dictatorship is hope. They have to hope there will be a better future." [/quote:7f08f] |
Dont touch Cuba PLEASE! its the only good place for us Canadians to go on vacation happy: its cheap too. I think you guys are just jealous that we are not vacationing in the US happy:
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Meh
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jesus cant they just worry about there issues within their own country instead of planning the world to how they want it.
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canadians pls stay the fuk out of america, especially pyro.
florida is the best vacation spot ever. |
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I can backup what I just said but you know that place is crazy happy: |
Judas is a crook.
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Castro is a badass.
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im fine with the 21 yr old drinking age ... the last thing we need is a pack of babbling drunken idiots running around. imo legal drinking age should be 45, since 80% of people cant drink like adults even at or over the age of 21.
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[img]http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2005/POLITICS/10/03/scotus.miers/story.bush.miers.2.ap.jpg[/img]
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you concider that news? Im sure plan have been in place since Pres Kennedy
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nation building as in invade it like iraq and make another mess hake: |
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