Latin America
Related: About this forumUSAID’s Cuban Twitter: “Democracy Promotion” Does More Harm than Good
Washington Office on Latin America
http://www.wola.org/commentary/usaid_s_cuban_twitter_democracy_promotion_does_more_harm_than_good
Hours after Vice President Joe Biden welcomed famed Cuban blogger and social media political activist Yoani Sánchez for a high profile photo op and meeting, the Associated Press broke a story about a clandestine U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) program that reportedly stole thousands of phone numbers of Cuban cellphone users in an elaborate attempt to inspire social unrest in Cuba.
According to the AP, in 2010 the USAID Office of Transition Initiatives and contractor Creative Associates secretly created a Twitter-like cell phone platform that allowed U.S. information technology contractors to gather private data on its 40,000 Cuban users and blast out text messages to the subscribers. The platform, called ZunZuneo, also allowed Cubans to communicate via text message with people who subscribed to their feed.
While the platform was popular among its Cuban users, Creative Associates was unable to find a way to make it financially sustainable, and ZunZuneo abruptly disappeared when its government funding dried up in September 2012. In the end, similar to other USAID initiatives that are described as promoting democracy but seem aimed at making trouble for the Cuban government, ZunZuneo was a costly failure that wasted millions of dollars, and it will likely undermine genuine internal reform efforts in Cuba and further damage the U.S. governments reputation in the region. The program is another ugly reminder of how an insular group of well-positioned politicians from Florida and New Jersey have long protected wasteful USAID programs that damage broader U.S. national interests.
While the AP story has rightly captured a great deal of attention for exposing such a controversial approach to reaching Cubans, it did not even mention another lightning rod issue associated with USAIDs misguided Cuba programs: the existence of cozy contractor relationships with high-level government officials.
msongs
(67,420 posts)flamingdem
(39,313 posts)and their colleagues in congress and in Miami, etc. who are lining their pockets with the current scenario and plenty of other politicians who know it's not in their interest to make risk on the issue of Cuba. Add to that the easy pickings for Florida politicians who can fundraise on this issue and this issue never moves forward much. It's a sticky situation and people like Sen. Menendez, now in charge of the Foreign Relations committee in the Senate, are hardliners who will block all attempts to improve relations.
Mika
(17,751 posts)Why you continue to focus solely on Cuban Americans is beyond me.
No Castro = no anti Castro funding.
No embargo = no anti embargo campaign contributions.
Our politicians who espouse normalization rely on the contributions to defeat it. Defeating it = no more money.
The USA needs democracy. Maybe Cuba can help.
flamingdem
(39,313 posts)and I think I allude to them - but I think it's the Cuban Americans who set the direction so that the cookie jar can stay full. Thus, I blame them first. Once they're out of the way a more sensible policy can happen.
It's not so much money that Debbie Wasserman Schulz is going to make it a central issue without her buddies pushing it - and John Kerry was attempting to reduce USAID money and probably would want to loosen things up if he didn't have to deal with Menendez, etc.
>>plenty of other politicians who know it's not in their interest to make risk on the issue of Cuba. Add to that the easy pickings for Florida politicians who can fundraise on this issue and this issue never moves forward much.
Mika
(17,751 posts)Of course no Floriduh pol is going to take this on, but, considering the most egregious aspects of the US sanctions on Cuba and Americans are not from Floriduh pols nor are they Cuban American pols.
There are MAJOR business interests that do not want normalization. The Cuban exiles in Miami provide good, and loud, cover.
It works. It has worked on you.
I do respect that you and I have normalization as the goal.
flamingdem
(39,313 posts)by the Floriduh pols / Cuban Americans pols?
There must be some documentation in the form of donations to groups like the Cuba Democracy Pac.
http://www.opensecrets.org/pacs/lookup2.php?strID=C00387720&cycle=2012
It looks to me, at least from what is researchable, that the interests are mostly Cuban American. Apart from that there is equal pro and con from agriculture for instance.
I'd say the proof of the pudding is what money is being donated to pro-embargo groups or pro-embargo efforts. What other entities or groups are there and how to they funnel money?
Judi Lynn
(160,545 posts)regarding the fact they had to know Alan Gross would be caught, and used that event as a springboard to greater hostilities, when nothing was going on, beyond their illegitimate imprisonment of the Cuban 5.
Very interesting, by all means.
Reminds me of the time Hermanos al Rescate staged another invasion of Cuban airspace, just to rattle Cubans again, just has they had so many times before, and actually got their asses shot for their efforts, just as the Clinton administration was relaxing relations between the US and Cuba.
Very, very interesting. Also very disgusting. Also very familiar, as a pattern.
Thanks.
MinM
(2,650 posts)Actually it's probably more accurate to say that USAID and the CIA have had a good working relationship through the years.
JFK had similar concerns about the Peace Corps.