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Cuba's seige mentality

By Graham Cooke - posted Thursday, 11 February 2010


“We had a scientific mission visit Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne in October so I believe the opportunities for further contact in this field as well as in cultural and business areas are very positive.

“As regards trade, our main export is sugar and we are certainly interested in automating the industry. Australia could help there.”

He listed the possibilities for co-operation between the two countries: “In mining, energy, renewable energy technology, chemical technology and oil - this last item taking into account our important offshore reserves.

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“And of course, if there is anyone in Australia interested in tourism development, we are open to joint ventures.”

It is almost half a century since Cuba was the playing field for the Cold War contest between the US and the Soviet Union. In October, 1962 the rest of the world were horrified spectators to the confrontation over Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s attempt to station nuclear missiles on the island, less that 150 kilometres from the American mainland.

The crisis was the closest the world has come to nuclear war. American armed forces were at their highest state of readiness ever and Soviet field commanders of forces already in Cuba were preparing to defend the island from invasion. Soviet Army Chief of Operations, Anatoly Gribkov gave a graphic description of the mounting tension when he said afterwards: "Nuclear catastrophe was hanging by a thread ... and we weren't counting days or hours, but minutes."

As history records, the crisis was resolved and in the decades since Cuba has slipped off the radar. Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran and North Korea dominate the media now; Cuba hardly rates a mention. And yet the embargo, imposed by the US several months before the missile crisis in the wake of the botched Bay of Pigs invasion by US-backed Cuban opponents of the Castro regime, remains in place.

Some chinks in the wall have appeared since the election of the Obama Administration with the relaxing of personal travel restrictions, allowing Cuban Americans to visit family on the island and to stay for as long as they want. Padron believes this is partly due to changes in attitudes within the Cuban-American community as its older members who actually fled the Castro regime, begin to die off.

However, the fact remains that in most of its aspects the embargo, a relic of an era that has faded into history, remains in place. It is an irritant to other nations who wish to trade with Cuba and helps to promote the siege mentality within the country that provides a raison d’être for human rights violations, including the jailing of dissenters and restrictions on a free press.

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The Obama Administration, with its preoccupations in the Middle East and Afghanistan, appears to lack the will to overcome what domestic opposition remains to a move towards normalising relations with Cuba, but for a president who was elected on a platform of change, this left-over from the time of superpower confrontation is an anomaly indeed.

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About the Author

Graham Cooke has been a journalist for more than four decades, having lived in England, Northern Ireland, New Zealand and Australia, for a lengthy period covering the diplomatic round for The Canberra Times.


He has travelled to and reported on events in more than 20 countries, including an extended stay in the Middle East. Based in Canberra, where he obtains casual employment as a speech writer in the Australian Public Service, he continues to find occasional assignments overseas, supporting the coverage of international news organisations.

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