Home > Business > International Business & Trade
Results so far:
| Yes | 33% | 180 votes | Total: 552 votes | |
| No | 67% | 372 votes |
Created on: June 20, 2007
Neither United States, nor Cuba, are really ready to change the current economic and political deadlock which exists between them. Normally one would look at a question like this and return with a typical liberal knee-jerk reaction, which in this case would have been a resounding 'NO'. But at closer viewing, this issue is far from black and white. Its complex nature has been spun, and re-spun constantly on both sides since Cuba's famous revolution 50 years ago. Unfortunately today, the answer to the embargo would be 'YES', because neither the United States or Cuba are yet ready for full, liberal trade and foreign relations with each other.
If the US boycott were to end today, it would surely spell disaster for Cuba. The embargo which the United States has imposed on its Caribbean neighbor is as much a genuine aspect of that island country as is the Revolutionary Spirit itself- in short, its arch-enemy(U.S. foreign policy) has not just fueled, but maintained the Castro regime we see today. This deadlock has been allowed to continue simply because it suits both sides and you can bet that 50 long years of status quo is evidence to that point.
With the 'War On Terror' in full swing, the communist "evil empire" and the Cold War are mere distant nightmares for the American public. But for the US power structure, Cuba is still an absolute essential set-piece in its back garden war shed, an idealogical 'rabid dog' whose very existence within the US foreign policy matrix feeds a compartment the US industrial military complex- still running on full alert(at least during 35 years of cold war action). And there are large political ramifications too: if relations were to be relaxed today with Cuba, then certainly the world would be involved in a much tighter discussion with the Washington regarding its 'mini-pogrom', the remote torture project site in Guantanamo Bay. Expect that the Cuban government would most certainly use this embarrassment as a bargaining chip in the global game of 'truth and reconciliation'. Guantanamo Bay is a key piece in Washington chessboard of oppression, and one it will not give up now, but may have to, should Cuban relations become normalized.
For Cuba, the US trade blockade provides it with the essential adversary which a revolution needs to maintain its own shape, and let's face it- this has been one of the most successful and long-running revolutions ever. A country as large and as powerful as the US flexing its muscles at a humble and economically
Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:
Should the US continue the Cuban trade boycott?
Yes
No
View all articles on: Should the US continue the Cuban trade boycott?
Featured Partner
Americans for Prosperity (AFP) is committed to educating citizens about economic policy and mobilizing those citizens as advocates in the public policy process. AFP is an organization of grassroots leaders who engage citizens in the name...more