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Judi Lynn

(160,601 posts)
Thu Aug 20, 2015, 06:14 AM Aug 2015

John Kerry and the Exportation of US “Democracy” to Cuba

August 19, 2015
John Kerry and the Exportation of US “Democracy” to Cuba

by Binoy Kampmark

While the rapprochement between Cuba and the US will rank highly in the achievements of the Obama administration, it is a deal with sharp blades and rough edges. Such an issue provides a host of reactions. The doors may be opening, but what will Cuba be letting in?

The flag fetish on CNN was suggestive of omens to come. The aged marines who took the US embassy flag down from the embassy as Cuba fell to Fidel Castro were interviewed, while the new set were also given an airing about what it would be like to raise the holy item over the compound again.

The term “normalising” should perhaps be scrapped from the official US-Cuban handbook of engagement. There has been something fundamentally abnormal in the relations between Havana and Washington. Generations have witnessed empires with their ambitions and cruelties imposed upon Cuba. Spanish departure laid the way for US intrusions. Talk about emancipation was rapidly replaced by actions of the brute. When the Cuban mistress refused to comply with Uncle Sam’s lustful wishes, the anger exploded.

That tendency, in rather unedifying fashion, has continued in the form of Secretary of State John Kerry, who drew on that great tradition of US hectoring in telling the Cubans what they really wanted. That old, sadly ill-kept mummy called democracy was taken out of the tomb and displayed in speech. This was the mummy of distinct US pedigree.

More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/08/19/john-kerry-and-the-exportation-of-us-democracy-to-cuba/

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John Kerry and the Exportation of US “Democracy” to Cuba (Original Post) Judi Lynn Aug 2015 OP
Incredibly jaundiced view of anything that Kerry said, but typical of counterpunch karynnj Aug 2015 #1

karynnj

(59,504 posts)
1. Incredibly jaundiced view of anything that Kerry said, but typical of counterpunch
Sat Aug 22, 2015, 09:26 AM
Aug 2015

The NYT actually got things right in their title when they spoke of the delicate balance that Kerry had to strike. The fact is that he and Obama are trying to move US foreign policy in the correct direct here. However, for many things - like confirming an ambassador to lifting the embargo, they will need Congressional support.

Here is the actual speech given in its entirety - I'll avoid cherry picking. http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2015/08/246121.htm
Here is an oped that he wrote explaining what happened. http://www.state.gov/secretary/remarks/2015/08/246124.htm

The cynical, sarcastic mindset of counterpunch is no more accurate than the other extreme - the Cuba right wing expats demanding that dissidents be included in the inter governmental ceremony, which obviously would have been a provocation.

I agree that the US history in Latin America has been pretty dark, but it is wrong to attack people trying to change things in the right direction. I don't know if ANY step by a US administration would have met Counterpunch's standards. Thus the reference to the NYT's title. To achieve any movement here, a delicate balance needs to be struck -- or Congress will shut down any real change. It also means that just as Kerry is attacked here, he is attacked on the right and by people like Senator Menendez. All while doing something that the majority of Americans (and it seems Cubans) want to happen.

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