Americas

Cuba

  • Cuba
    Tightening the Screws on Cuba
    Several weeks ago I wrote an "Expert Brief" for the Council on Foreign Relations titled "Time to Tighten the Screws on Cuba?" There I argued that the one-sided and unfortunate concessions the Obama administration made to Cuba had helped the regime but not the Cuban people, and urged the Trump administration to go even further than it has already gone in reversing those concessions. Americans' travel to Cuba was one of the topics I covered: The Trump administration has left most of Obama’s major changes intact, despite the new president’s tough rhetoric. “The previous administration’s easing of restrictions on travel and trade does not help the Cuban people—they only enrich the Cuban regime,” President Trump said in June 2017. Under Trump’s leadership, the United States has restricted commerce with Cuban entities owned by the military and security services, such as hotels owned by the Cuban army, and it has ended individual travel. The State Department also warned Americans not to visit Cuba following attacks first reported in 2017 on U.S. diplomatic personnel there that left two dozen with serious and unexplained health problems. However, Trump has not altered regulations covering commercial flights and cruises to Cuba or travel by tour groups. It is too early to judge whether Trump’s policies will have a significant commercial impact. Cruise ship passenger arrivals appear to be rising, but multiple airlines have canceled flights from the United States due to low demand. The net effect on U.S. citizen travel to Cuba will have to be calculated after another year or two. Now we have some preliminary information about U.S. citizen travel to Cuba, and it suggests a substantial reduction. Reuters has just published a story titled "U.S. visits to Cuba plunge following Trump measures." The story quotes the Cuban Ministry of Tourism’s commercial director, Michel Bernal, saying that "The total of U.S. clients is only 56.6 percent of what it was in 2017." This is a larger drop than I anticipated and suggests that the Trump administration's steps are having a substantial impact.  Last week Raul Castro stepped down as president of Cuba, leading some journalists and analysts to believe that real change had come to the island. It has not. Raul Castro remains head of the Cuban Communist Party and the Cuban armed forces, and other members of the Castro family hold critically important and powerful posts. For example, Raul’s only son, Col. Alejandro Castro Espín, heads intelligence and domestic security for the army and interior ministry. The new president, Miguel Diaz-Canel, is surrounded--but that may not matter very much because Diaz-Canel is himself an apparatchik with a long history of service to the Castros and to the Communist party. As an article in The Atlantic noted, immediately after being sworn in Diaz-Canel said “I affirm to this assembly that comrade Raul will head the decisions for the present and the future of the nation. Raul remains at the front of the political vanguard.” In this at least Diaz-Canel spoke truthfully. That's why the Trump administration was right to judge the Obama opening to Cuba as a gift to the Castros: “The previous administration’s easing of restrictions on travel and trade does not help the Cuban people—they only enrich the Cuban regime,” President Trump said last year. And it is why reversing those concessions was right and should go further. The regime is vulnerable, especially now that Venezuelan help is no longer available to it. Pressure (something the Obama administration never really tried) might elicit some human rights concessions. At the very least, the United States should demonstrate that we realize Cuba remains a communist tyranny, and that we remain entirely on the side of the Cuban people in their long struggle for freedom. 
  • Cuba
    What Is Cuba’s Post-Castro Future?
    Miguel Diaz-Canel, set to replace Raul Castro as president of Cuba after sixty years of Castro rule, will be faced with the challenges of implementing economic reform and sidestepping regional isolation.
  • Cuba
    The Latin American Summit Must Deal With Dictatorship in Cuba
    The Latin American summit meeting in Lima, Peru this coming weekend occurs just a week before Raul Castro "steps aside" and Cuba has a new president. But consider this anomaly: Venezuelan president Maduro has been excluded from the Summit because he is trying to turn Venezuela into a new Cuba--while the head of the actual Cuba is allowed to attend. It makes no sense. Now, 34 Latin American heads of state and heads of government have joined together to protest Castro's presence and to urge that his "successor" not be recognized as the legitimate leader of Cuba. After all, there has never been a free election in Castro's Cuba, and the Cuban people had no say whatsoever in selecting Raul's "successor." I keep using quotation marks because Castro himself will remain head of the Cuban Communist Party, so how much power he is actually giving up remains to be seen.  The 34 Latin leaders should get U.S. support. The Miami Herald story says this: Former Latin American presidents on Wednesday urged participants in the upcoming VIII Summit of the Americas to reject the new Cuban government scheduled to take power next week. The former leaders of Costa Rica, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, and of Bolivia, Jorge Quiroga, issued the statement on behalf of the 37 former heads of state and government that are part of the Democratic Initiative in Spain and the Americas. They urged summit participants to “reject the presidential elections called by the dictatorship” and “refuse to recognize as legitimate the newly elected members of the National Assembly, the Council of State and its president because they do not represent the will of the people.” The declaration, read from the halls of the Peruvian congress, also demands an end to the Cuban government's repression of opponents and the release of political prisoners. Vice President Pence will represent the United States at the Summit. His remarks should note this appeal from the 34 Latin American democratic leaders, and back it. Raul Castro should never have been allowed to attend, and there should be no recognition of what former Bolivian president Jorge Quiroga correctly called “dynastic succession … a change of tyrants in a dictatorial system” in Cuba. The Herald reports that "the former government leaders also endorsed a proposal for a binding plebiscite on whether Cubans want 'free, just and pluralistic elections' pushed by the Cubadecide coalition headed by Cuban opposition activist Rosa María Payá." So should Mr. Pence, who should equally back the call to release all political prisoners in Cuba. If hemispheric solidarity for freedom is the central theme of his remarks, this could be a historic speech.  
  • Iran
    Ideology and Foreign Policy
    Barack Obama undertook two supremely ideological foreign policy moves. In both cases he seemed largely motivated by myths about American "crimes" in the past, and for that reason failed or refused to bargain hard for American advantage. Instead, he appeared to see the new negotiations as including a bit of restitution for previous American wrongs. The more significant case was Iran, where he spoke of the crime of overthrowing the leftist Iranian prime minister, Mohammed Mossadeq, in 1953. There is good reason to wonder, in fact, whether the United States bears the responsibility for Mossadeq's fate--or indeed whether Mossadeq and the Iranian people get the credit. (After the State Department released a large group of cables about those events in 1953, Reuel Gerecht wrote that “It is hard to read these cables and come to the conclusion that America overthrew Mossadeq.”) That was not Obama's view, but in fact Obama was never much concerned about the Iranian people, and his human rights efforts in Iran were weak to the point of disappearance-- even, or especially, when the Iranian people rose up against the regime in June 2009. The other case was Cuba. There, Obama handed valuable gifts of money and legitimacy to the brutal Castro regime. As with Iran there was a peremptory claim that the deal being done would somehow lead to a vast relaxation of the regime's oppression, but as with Iran it was quickly proved false. The new tourist flights, the cruise ship arrivals, the additional commerce, and all the money they brought was swept into the maw of the Castro regime, while the people benefitted not at all by experiencing an ounce of freedom. Of course Obama might have negotiated for better. He might have agreed to do all he did for Castro providing only that all political prisoners were freed, internet freedom allowed, and so on--but he didn't. He didn't because he was too anxious to move forward, or what he mistakenly saw as forward, in Cuban-American relations. What he meant of course was Castro-American relations, ridding us of the Cold War relic of our Cuba policy. As for demanding freedom for the Cuban people, well, how old-fashioned. Today we see the results, in both cases. Iran has received many commercial, political, and diplomatic benefits from the Obama deal, but there is no reform, no change. Internally, repression is at least as bad as ever. In the region, Iran’s aggression and subversion have increased. And its nuclear ambitions have not been abandoned, or it would not be trying to perfect advanced centrifuges and longer- and longer-range ballistic missiles. In Cuba, there has similarly been no change in foreign or domestic policy. Cuba continues to be the mainstay of the Maduro dictatorship in Venezuela, and continues to oppress, abuse, and imprison Cubans who seek freedom. And now, Obama’s gifts are being taken back: the United States is withdrawing most of its embassy staff and has issued a travel warning against visiting Cuba, because of the vicious attacks on American diplomats there. The New York Times reported that the Trump administration, which has already expelled two Cuban diplomats over the illnesses, is considering further retaliatory steps, according to Congressional staff briefed by administration officials. And the State Department issued an advisory that Americans should not travel to Cuba. Because some of the attacks occurred in hotels where State Department employees were temporarily staying, officials said they worried that tourists and others could be affected. The Washington Post said that “Senior State Department officials said U.S. diplomats have been ‘targeted’ for ‘specific attacks,’” not the victims of strange untargeted phenomena. Rumors in Washington suggest that the health problems of the American diplomats attacked in Cuba are even worse than has yet been reported. Of course the Cuban regime says it knows nothing, but its probity is non-existent and it has a long history of attacking American diplomats. As Jose Cardenas wrote recently in Foreign Policy,   A 2003 cable from the U.S. Interests Section in Havana reported that “Cuban agents routinely enter U.S. employee residences to search belongings and papers, enter computers and gather other information thought to be useful from an intelligence point of view. Vehicles are also targeted. In many instances, no effort is made to hide the intrusions.” Not only are vehicles vandalized — tires slashed, parts removed, windshields smashed — but in some instances human excrement is left behind in the diplomats’ homes. The cable continues, “Electronic surveillance is pervasive, including monitoring of home phone and computer lines. U.S. personnel have had living-room conversations repeated or played back to them by strangers and unknown callers.” In one case, after one family privately discussed their daughter’s susceptibility to mosquito bites, “they returned home to find all of their windows open and the house full of mosquitoes.” In 2007, the Department’s Inspector General issued a 64-page report asserting that the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana suffered from poor morale as a result of the Cuban government’s deliberate efforts to create hardship and discontent in the lives of the diplomats. “Retaliations have ranged from the petty to the poisoning of family pets." Obama foreign policy had a gigantic ideological element, and was all too often an effort to right imagined wrongs from the American past. The result of such of policy is victories for enemies like the Islamic Republic and Cuba, and danger for the United States, our allies, and even now our diplomats. In Cuba and Iran both, it’s a sorry record.  
  • Cuba
    What Expanding Internet Access in Cuba Could Mean for Women
    Broadening access to the internet and other information and communication technology, such as mobile phones and social media, could be an important tool for women’s rights (and other human rights) in Cuba. 
  • Gender
    Postcard from Havana: A Lack of Childcare Leaves Cuban Women in Quandary
    As my own spring break approached this past March, I decided to take a couple of my students to this Caribbean destination to explore the impact of Obama-era policies on Cubans. We were surprised by what we learned about the opportunities and challenges facing Cuban women.
  • Cuba
    The Sad Story of American Flag Officers in Cuba
    The American Security Project, a somewhat obscure Washington think tank, is one of the very many groups leading trips to Cuba. What makes theirs different is that it is a "Delegation of Retired Admirals and Generals to Cuba." The group departed on March 14 for Havana. It isn’t a very big or distinguished delegation, to be sure. One member is a retired brigadier general who is actually the CEO of the American Security Project (ASP). There are five others (also retired) with flag rank joining him. They should be ashamed of themselves. ASP’s own web page tells us why, stating that "ASP looks forward to helping build a closer relationship between the governments of the United States and Cuba." The governments-- that is, a relationship between our government and the vicious, brutal, repressive Castro regime. The delegation schedule is true to this approach: "The itinerary includes meetings with senior officials from across the Cuban government, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Trade and Investment, the Ministry of Agriculture, and the Ministry of Energy." What’s missing in this list? Cubans--ordinary Cubans who are not on the regime payroll and who might tell the delegation the truth about life in Cuba. Notably, the delegation meets no dissident and apparently has not the slightest interest in freedom and human rights in Cuba. Another ASP web page tells us that "The American public understands the complexities of today’s global challenges, but has too often been misled by empty rhetoric and cherry-picked facts. ASP is organized around the belief that honest public discussion of national security requires a better-informed citizenry–one that understands the dangers and opportunities of the 21st century, the spectrum of available responses, and the benefits and drawbacks of each course of action." But the Cuba trip makes a mockery of that standard. This delegation will hear one side, the official side--and then help the Castro regime by shoveling it back to the U.S. press. "The delegation is scheduled to return to Washington, D.C by way of Miami late Friday, March 17th and is eager to engage with media regarding the trip," says ASP. Eager--no doubt, as there is no doubt what they will have to say after this voyage to visit the Castro regime. They will see nothing of the real Cuba, and this trip is reminiscent of the visits Westerners made to Potemkin villages in Stalin’s Russia. No doubt the regime is eager to welcome them, as it welcomes all visits by Americans whom it is confident it can fool. That there are a half dozen retired American flag officers on this visit is sad. Will not one single one of them demand to speak to a dissident, or to say a word in defense of the freedom of the Cuban people?
  • Cuba
    The Man Who Will Not Be A Tourist in Cuba
    Touring Cuba is all the rage these days, with new scheduled flights, cruise ships, and largely phony "educational" visits. But one man who will not be visiting Cuba is the Secretary-General of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro. He was refused a visa today. Anyone who thinks Cuba is reforming under Raul Castro or since Fidel’s death last November ought to wake up. Almagro was trying to visit Cuba to receive an award: the first Oswaldo Paya Liberty and Life Award, which was to be given to him by Paya’s daughter Rosa Maria. Paya was a human rights activist killed five years ago in Cuba, under circumstances that clearly suggest that the regime murdered him. According to the Miami Herald, the regime refused the Secretary General a visa because his visit to accept this award at the Paya family home constituted "an unacceptable provocation." It is worth recalling, once again, exactly who Oswaldo Paya was, as The Washington Post did in editorial two years after his death on July 22, 2012: Two years ago Tuesday, a blue rental car was wrecked off a deserted road in eastern Cuba. In the back seat was Oswaldo Payá, one of Cuba’s best-known dissidents, who had championed the idea of a democratic referendum on the nation’s future. Mr. Payá’s voice was not the loudest against the Castro dictatorship, but it was one of the most committed and determined. On the day of the car crash, he had been trying for more than a decade to bring about a peaceful revolution, one that would empower Cubans to decide their own fate and end the half-century of misrule by Fidel and Raúl Castro. Mr. Payá endured harassment and intimidation for his efforts. Many of his friends and allies were jailed. He received threats by phone and other warnings, some violent. But he did not give up. On the day of the crash, Mr. Payá was traveling with a young associate, Harold Cepero, across the island to meet with supporters of the Christian Liberation Movement. In the front of the rental car was a visitor from Spain, Ángel Carromero, a leader of the youth wing of that country’s ruling party, and one from Sweden. The car spun out of control after being rammed from behind by a vehicle bearing state license plates, according to Mr. Carromero. While he and the associate from Sweden survived, Mr. Payá and Mr. Cepero were killed. Mr. Carromero says he was then coerced to confess and subjected to a rigged trial in order to cover up what really happened. Mr. Carromero’s videotaped “confession,” broadcast on television, was forced upon him; he was told to read from cards written by the state security officers. He was sentenced to four years in prison for vehicular homicide and later released to return to Spain to serve out his term. Since then, there has been no serious, credible investigation of the deaths. Nor will there be, as long as the communist regime rules Cuba. The regime knows that its decision to exclude Almagro will evoke criticism, but believes the risk is more than it can bear. People might get ideas about Paya, voting, and even freedom. Already there is a chorus of condemnation from several former presidents of Latin American countries. Perhaps now that Fidel is dead, his myth will begin to die and the regime will increasingly be seen for the dull, deadly, bureaucratic communist dictatorship it actually is. A regime that is afraid to let Luis Almagro, a Uruguayan Leftist politician and former foreign minister, visit the Paya home is a regime afraid of the slightest symbolic gesture toward freedom, respect for human life, and justice. I wish the tourists frolicking on Cuba’s beaches had the slightest clue about what their dollars are supporting.
  • China
    Open Questions about Latin American Relations During the Trump Administration
    We know very little about who will run Western Hemisphere affairs under the Trump administration. So far, the only named appointees are Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly and National Security Council (NSC) Senior Director Craig Deare. There are as yet no nominees for key Western Hemisphere positions at State, Defense, or Commerce, which is not unexpected for an administration this young. Although the Latin America team is not fully formed, the pressing Latin America agenda – which will get underway in earnest with today’s visit by a Mexican delegation – suggests that it is well worth reflecting on the central questions likely to determine the trajectory of the region during Trump’s presidency: Mexico: The wall, immigration, and NAFTA may all be on the table when Mexican Foreign Minister Luis Videgaray and Economy Minister Ildefonso Guajardo come to Washington this week, followed by President Peña Nieto at the end of the month. Even after today’s executive order paving the way for a wall, the central question looming over the talks – led on the U.S. side by Reince Priebus, Stephen Bannon, Jared Kushner, Peter Navarro, Gary Cohn, and Michael Flynn – is just how far Trump is willing to go. Is the incendiary campaign rhetoric about NAFTA simply the opening gambit of a negotiating strategy, as some suggest, or is Team Trump really sincere in its desire to sink the most successful hemispheric trade deal of all time? In the meantime, what does this uncertainty do to the Mexican economy, given that 85 percent of Mexican exports are to the United States and the country has already seen a decline in U.S. investment? What are the implications for integrated supply chains throughout NAFTA? What effect does a worsening labor market in Mexico have on migration flows? The Mexican response to Trump: Peña Nieto’s response so far has been measured, displaying perhaps a disbelief that Washington will allow the bilateral relationship to be scuttled, a recognition that there are elements of NAFTA that deserve renegotiation, and a desire to quickly resolve the uncertainty that is wreaking havoc on business decisions. But Penã Nieto is under considerable pressure to respond forcefully to U.S. pressure. Many Mexican thought leaders – such as Enrique Krauze and Jorge Castañeda – have called for the country to retaliate against any U.S. bullying by easing controls on both Mexican and Central American migration, backing down from the drug war, or building international alliances with China and Russia. The Peña Nieto administration has noted that the “whole relationship” is up for discussion – a subtle hint that the United States has much to lose if Mexico ceases to cooperate on security and migration. Mexican policymakers have also expressed their willingness to perhaps even contemplate dropping NAFTA if the United States pushes too hard. The frontrunner in the July 2018 elections, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO), seems unlikely to be more conciliatory than Peña Nieto’s Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and, if anything, his electoral prospects seem enhanced by the bullying tone out of Washington. How far will the Mexican response go? Elections: As the AMLO phenomenon demonstrates, there is likely to be a Trump effect on the electoral landscape of Latin America. The mobilizing effect of Trump’s rhetoric is already being exploited by Corona beer, which has hit back hard against Trump’s vituperative statements with a well-received public relations campaign mocking Trump’s wall-building and America first jingoism. Silly though that may be, it points to the enormous public repercussion of Trump’s words south of the border. The next two years will bring elections in half of Central and South America, and although much has been made of the supposed rightward turn in the region, is it possible that nationalistic appeals responding to perceived American jingoism might provide succor to the left and/or to nationalist forces? Cuba: How far will Trump turn back the thaw in relations that took place during the second Obama administration? And what will be the practical effect on Cuba’s planned 2018 leadership transition? While some lawmakers are pushing for more pressure on Cuba for human rights, it seems unlikely that the administration would be able to completely unwind U.S. investment on the island, given growing U.S. business interests. Even as he has promised to review Cuba regulations, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson seems to have put some space between himself and the most dramatic Trump campaign oratory. But a harder rhetorical line and the possibility of renewed sanctions from Washington may strengthen hardliners within the Cuban regime and diminish the impetus toward reform; already it has led to nationwide military exercises that belie the Cuban regime’s concern about a return to a more confrontational relation. Venezuela: Does the country implode slowly or explode catastrophically? And how does Washington respond? The Trump administration has so far adopted a fairly measured tone regarding Venezuela, but recent statements by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle calling for further targeted sanctions against President Nicolás Maduro’s officials may contribute to a ratcheting up of rhetoric against the autocratic chavista It seems unlikely that the Trump administration would continue talks with the regime that had taken place during the late Obama administration. But there are not many good multilateral options for addressing Venezuela’s crisis, nor is it clear that there are many effective unilateral options beyond targeted sanctions. Nevertheless, the deepening economic crisis and the increasing power of hardliners within the regime suggests that Venezuela will soon become a hemispheric hotspot, worsening the already devastating humanitarian crisis in ways that could test the new administration’s capacity to galvanize a regional response. Colombia: Although the peace deal has now been approved by the Colombian Congress, will the Trump administration commit to funding the peace? Even before Trump’s victory, there was uncertainty about the U.S. Congress’ willingness to fund the peace over the long haul, although it was heralded on both sides of the aisle as a rare bipartisan foreign policy success and a vindication of the huge investment in Plan Colombia. Homeland Secretary Kelly noted before his confirmation that it was “imperative” that the United States remain involved in Colombia, but Secretary of State Tillerson cast doubt on that commitment in his written responses to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Given continued lobbying by former president Álvaro Uribe and the isolationist tendencies of some Trump administration officials, it is by no means a certain proposition that the administration will invest in the Colombian peace, especially if Congress’ attention turns elsewhere. China, investment and trade: The Trump administration’s withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), its promised renegotiation of NAFTA, and its inward-looking rhetoric have begun what looks like a paradigmatic shift of the trade and investment panorama in Latin America toward the east and the south. In the absence of a better deal up north, the Pacific Alliance is the new hot thing in the region. One Brazilian diplomat snidely remarked that Trump’s victory means that “Mexico will have to remember that it is Latin American.” Mexico has already suggested that the Pacific Alliance turn southward to Mercosur, which appears more open than ever to a deal that allows its Atlantic membership to reach Pacific markets. The savings-depleted nations of South America are also happy to turn eastward for increased foreign investment that might enable them to recover from the economic downturn. China is well aware of the opportunity this presents: President Xi Jinping arrived for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit in Peru only ten days after the U.S. election. Latin American countries are already moving “to put their eggs in a [Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP)] basket,” led eastward by Chilean and Peruvian expressions of interest. Will the end of TPP presage greater hemispheric trade integration, centered around a Mercosur-Pacific Alliance deal? What would be the implications of an even greater Chinese economic role in the region? Would the Chinese be willing to incorporate Latin America into RCEP? Would RCEP complement or weaken the BRICS, and what are the implications for the relative roles of Mexico and Brazil as regional leaders (and sometimes rivals)? Central America: These countries will likely be squeezed by the United States’ cooling trade relationship with Latin America, the stronger anti-migration rhetoric of the new administration, and the possibility that the US will double down even further on hardline measures in the drug war. The big questions for Central America will be: does the United States maintain the CAFTA-DR trade agreement (which was not mentioned by the Trump team during the campaign)? Where does the Trump administration find the balance between its stated desire to cut foreign assistance budgets and the need to maintain aid programs designed to slow migration and quell security problems? And how will migration and remittances be affected by the Trump administration’s emphasis on illegal workers and the border, amidst already desperate conditions that led to increasing apprehensions of Central Americans in Mexico and the United States in recent years, and a record-breaking 2.7 million deportations under the Obama administration? Anticorruption: In recent years, the U.S. government has played a largely unheralded role in anticorruption efforts in Latin America, ranging from support for Guatemala’s CICIG (International Commission Against Corruption and Impunity) to indictments and actions against firms and executives accused of corrupting regional officeholders. While it does not seem likely that the U.S. Department of Justice will shut down Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement (given the pipeline of pending cases, the competitiveness arguments that can be made for FCPA, and the investments that have been made by business to ensure compliance), in all likelihood the anticorruption agenda at both State and DOJ will become far less of a priority under a regulation-averse Trump administration. Will the Trump administration actively work to water down anticorruption efforts and cross-border enforcement? If so, what will be the repercussions for countries that have undergone significant anticorruption reforms in recent years, and are seeking to consolidate anticorruption gains, often against powerful domestic opposition? The Monroe Doctrine: Given the proximity of Latin America to the U.S. homeland, Washington policymakers have long been concerned by the efforts of countries like Iran, Russia, and China to penetrate into the hemisphere. Trump’s Latin America advisor on the NSC, Craig Deare, has written critically of Secretary John Kerry’s 2013 declaration that the “era of the Monroe Doctrine was over,” noting that it served “as a clear invitation to those extra-regional actors looking for opportunities to increase their influence.”[1] He further argued, with reference to China’s growing role in Latin America, that the United States has the right to protect its geopolitical interests in the region, and “if it does not do so, [it] cedes to China its strategic goal of ‘reshaping the current world system in a fashion more to its liking.’” Will the Monroe Doctrine be resurrected? What are the practical implications of this renewed emphasis on U.S. primacy in the region? As the United States turns inward, what tools will policymakers have to prevent perceived meddling by extra-regional forces? How will the Trump administration balance its rapprochement to Putin with concerns about, for example, Russia’s growing role in Venezuela? How will the administration react if Latin America does indeed turn more forcefully to Asia, and particularly China, on trade? In sum, although Latin America has long been one of the most neglected regions of U.S. foreign policy, the next four years are likely to significantly shift the trajectory of regional relations, regardless of whether the Trump administration adopts an active or passive role. The coming appointments of key Latin America personnel will provide us with a better sense of where the administration hopes to come down on some of the questions raised above. [1] Deare, Craig A. “Latin America,” in Charting a Course: Strategic Choices for a New Administration, edited by R.D. Hooker, Jr. Washington: National Defense University Press, 2016.
  • China
    Shannon O’Neil On Bloomberg Surveillance
    This morning, I had the pleasure of joining Tom Keene on Bloomberg Surveillance to discuss Venezuela, Brazil, Cuba, and China’s increasing opportunities in Latin America. You can watch the two clips of our conversation here and here.
  • Cuba
    Thinking About Fidel
    What are we to make of the death of Fidel Castro, and the eulogies that flowed from all too many places? I’ve explored that subject in a podcast--an interview of me by Bill Kristol--and in an article in The Weekly Standard entitled "History Will Not Absolve Him." Here is a short extract:   What in fact did Castro do for Cuba? The great social and economic gains are delusions. The grand international adventures resulted in many deaths—of Cubans, to be sure, but as well of Latins and Africans in wars he fed. He created a system of neighborhood spies, political tribunals and political prisons, viciously harsh sentences and chronic maltreatment of prisoners, that was a miniature version of the nastiest Communist regimes anywhere. It is impossible to believe that Cuba—whose Leninist system was always unique in the Caribbean and indeed in the hemisphere—will not some day be free of all this, just as Germany is free of the Stasi system.   What will then remain? Two things. The first is, again, Miami—and more broadly a Cuban diaspora in the United States, Spain, and elsewhere that enriches every country to which Cubans fled to escape the clutches of Fidel Castro. And the second is heroes.... In Cuba, the truth about Fidel Castro is lived each day as it has been since January 1, 1959, and the truth will emerge when the regime falls—however long that takes. Then the statues will all be brought down and the murals will be painted over, and the story of Fidel Castro will be told by those who suffered most from his brutality, his hatreds, and his megalomania: the people of Cuba. Today’s obituaries cannot reflect their views, but in due time they will have their say. And they, like history, will not absolve him.  
  • Global
    The World Next Week: December 1, 2016
    Podcast
    Syria's humanitarian crisis escalates, Italy holds a constitutional referendum, and Cuba mourns Fidel Castro.