Biden: No plans to scrap Cuba embargo

While attending the Progressive Governance Summit of leaders from Latin America, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said the White House does not plan to lift its embargo on Cuba.
He added that a “transition” fase in Cuba-U.S. relations was called for. However, Biden said, he and the president believe Cubans should be allowed to “live in freedom” not oppression, and that the “Cuban people should determine their own fate.”
Biden and Obama break with Latin America’s most important leaders. Five of them visited Cuba in the last few years. They respect Fidel and his brother Raul tremendously. Especially Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez considers the Castros “Latin American heroes.”
Chavez doesn’t stand alone, however. Leftist or left-leaning governments have been elected to power in Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Honduras and Uruguay in recent years. Most if not all of them have called on the U.S. to scrap its embargo and to include Cuba in international trade.
Cuban Americans, however, passionately oppose lifting the embargo. These Americans fled Cuba after Fidel Castro took over and won’t appreciate a soft policy towards the communist regime. In other words, if Biden, Clinton and Obama plan to integrate Cuba in the ‘international community,’ they’ll have to take it slowly.
This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.
Comments are closed.
PoliGazette Comments Policy
PoliGazette encourages comments from all viewpoints, especially those that disagree.
Comments submitted must, however, adhere to the following standards. Comments that violate
these standards may be edited or deleted without notice at the sole discretion of the editors.
Commenters who repeatedly or egregiously violate these standards or who attempt to argue
publicly with editors regarding the comments policy may be banned from commenting further.
(1) Comments should address the substantive content of the post. Comments that repeatedly
or blatantly misrepresent the content of the post or of others' comments are not welcome. Comments that
respond to something other than which the contributor or commenter may have said are irrelevant and should
not be posted.
(2) Comments should avoid vulgarity as well as racial, ethnic, religious, or sexual bigotry.
(3) Comments should not personally attack the character, personal integrity, or professional
reputation of any PoliGazette contributor or of other commenters.
(4) Comments should reflect the contributions of the commenters themselves and should not
include extensive cut-and-paste reproductions of others' words except insofar as necessary to supplement
the commenter's own arguments. Link spam, trackback spam, and propaganda spam will be instantly deleted.
(5) Public figures are considered open to all substantive criticism of their policies and statements.
Comments that present objectively false factual information about public figures (i.e. "Obama is a Muslim") or
that attack public figures by attacking their families are not welcome. Comments that merely repeat
slogans for or against a candidate without engaging in substantive comment are not welcome.
Questions or challenges to these policies or their application should be directed to the editors
by email only.