By Charles Krauthammer
Thursday, January 01, 2015
There’s an old Cold War joke — pre-pantyhose — that to
defeat communism we should empty our B-52 bombers of nuclear weapons and
instead drop nylons over the Soviet Union. Flood the Russians with the soft
consumer culture of capitalism, seduce them with Western contact and commerce,
love bomb them into freedom.
We did win the Cold War, but differently. We contained,
constrained, squeezed, and eventually exhausted the Soviets into giving up. The
dissidents inside subsequently told us how much they were sustained by our
support for them and our implacable pressure on their oppressors.
The logic behind President Obama’s Cuba normalization,
assuming there is one, is the nylon strategy. We tried 50 years of containment
and that didn’t bring democracy. So let’s try inundating them with American
goods, visitors, culture, contact, commerce.
It’s not a crazy argument. But it does have its
weaknesses. Normalization has not advanced democracy in China or Vietnam.
Indeed, it hasn’t done so in Cuba. Except for the U.S., Cuba has had normal
relations with the rest of the world for decades. Tourists, trade, investment
from Canada, France, Britain, Spain, everywhere. An avalanche of nylons — and
not an inch of movement in Cuba toward freedom.
In fact, one could argue that this influx of Western
money has helped preserve the dictatorship, as just about all the financial
transactions go through the government, which takes for itself before any
trickle-down crumbs are allowed to reach the regime-indentured masses.
My view is that police-state control of every aspect of
Cuban life is so thoroughly perfected that outside influences, whether
confrontational or cooperative, only minimally affect the country’s domestic
trajectory.
So why not just lift the embargo? After all, the
unassailable strategic rationale for isolating Cuba — in the Soviets’ mortal
global struggle with us, Cuba enlisted as a highly committed enemy beachhead 90
miles from American shores — evaporated with the collapse of the Soviet empire.
A small island with no significant independent military capacities, Cuba became
geopolitically irrelevant.
That’s been partially reversed in the last few years as
Vladimir Putin has repositioned Russia as America’s leading geopolitical
adversary and the Castros signed up for that coalition too. Cuba has reportedly
agreed to reopen the Soviet-era Lourdes espionage facility, a massive listening
post for intercepting communications. Havana and Moscow have also discussed the
use of Cuban airfields for Russia’s nuclear-capable long-range bombers.
This in addition to Cuba’s usual hemispheric mischief,
such as training and equipping the security and repression apparatus in
Venezuela.
No mortal threat, I grant you. And not enough to justify
forever cutting off Cuba. But it does raise the question: With the U.S. embargo
already in place and the Castros hungry to have it lifted, why give them trade,
investment, hard currency, prestige, and worldwide legitimacy — for nothing in
return?
Obama brought back nothing on democratization, a
staggering betrayal of Cuba’s human-rights crusaders. No free speech. No free
assembly. No independent political parties. No hint of free elections. Not even
the kind of 1975 Helsinki Final Act that we got from the Soviets as part of
detente, granting structure and review to human-rights promises. These provided
us with significant leverage in supporting the dissident movements in Eastern
Europe that eventually brought down communist rule.
If Obama insisted on giving away the store, why not at
least do it item by item? We relax part of the embargo in return for, say,
Internet access. And tie further normalization to serial relaxations of
police-state repression.
Oh, what hypocrisy, say the Obama acolytes. Did we not
normalize relations with China and get no human rights quid pro quo?
True. But that was never a prospect. The entire purpose
was geopolitical and the payoff was monumental: We walked away with the most
significant anti-Soviet strategic realignment of the entire Cold War, formally
breaking up the communist bloc and gaining China’s neutrality, and occasional
support, in our half-century struggle to dismantle the Soviet empire.
From Cuba, Obama didn’t even get a token gesture. Not
even a fig leaf such as, say, withdrawal of secret police support in Venezuela.
Or extradition of American criminals now fugitive in Cuba, including a
notorious cop killer. Did we even ask?
Obama seems to believe that the one-way deal was win-win.
A famous victory — the Cuba issue is now behind us. A breakthrough.
Indeed it is. You know how to achieve a breakthrough in
tough negotiations? Give everything away. Try it. You’ll have a deal by noon.
Every time.
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