Frank Calzon. April 19, 200.
The Washington Times
The campaign to lift the U.S. embargo against Fidel Castro has resumed.
Central Europeans believe that radio broadcasts and solidarity with the
dissidents were important but that Western loans and tourism propped up their
communist regimes, which otherwise would have collapsed much earlier.
U.S. agro-business believes that there are huge profits to be made by
trading with Mr. Castro and that Cuban trade will open the way to profitable
trade with the likes of Libya and Iraq as well.
Last year, Congress lifted sanctions on sales of agricultural products
and medicine to Cuba. No sales have materialized. One reason why they haven´t
is Mr. Castro. He suspended payments on his foreign debt in 1986, but wants U.S.
taxpayers to subsidize trade with Cuba with credits and export insurance.
Though Mr. Castro expropriated U.S. and Cuban businesses in the 1960s,
the Cuban dictator keeps the trade pressure, telling U.S. businessmen that they´re
losing deals.
The U.S. International Trade Commission estimates that absent
sanctions, "U.S. exports to Cuba . . . based on average 1996-98 trade data,
would have been less than 0.5 percent of total U.S. exports.´´ Also,
that "U.S. imports from Cuba, excluding sugar [U.S. sugar imports are
government-regulated] would have been approximately $69 million to $146 million
annually, or less than 0.5 percent of total U.S. imports.´´
The report, requested by U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel, an opponent of
sanctions, says: "U.S. wheat exports to Cuba could total between $32
million and $52 million annually, representing about 1 percent of recent U.S
wheat exports.´´
More instructive are the experiences of other countries: "With
Mexico," according to the Wall Street Journal, "Cuba is in arrears on
about $400 million of commercial credits. France recently withheld a shipment of
wheat and canceled $160 million in credits because Mr. Castro hasn´t paid
for earlier shipments.
Chile is attempting to establish "a payment plan´´ for
$20 million worth of fish shipped to Cuba last year. South Africa, according to
the Johannesburg Sunday Times, is "frustrated´´ by Havana´s
failure to settle a $13 million debt and will not approve new credit guarantees
until the debt is settled.
Thailand, last June canceled a 100,000 ton sale of rice to Havana
because Mr. Castro´s imports agency refused to provide Bangkok with a
confirmed letter of credit.
Mr. Castro´s Western creditors (Canadians, French, Spanish, etc.)
currently are attempting to recover loans amounting to more than $10 billion.
Havana refuses to repay loans even to Moscow, insisting that Cuba´s
debt is owed to the Soviet Union, "a country that no longer exists.´´
And although tourism brought to Havana an estimated $1.8 billion last year,
Havana did little better than break even. Due to Mr. Castro´s disastrous
agricultural policies resulting in poor quality products, Havana has to import
many items wanted by the tourists, including some tropical fruits.
One of the best-kept secrets about the U.S. embargo is that it has
saved millions for U.S. taxpayers. Due to the embargo, there are no American
banks in the "Paris Club,´´ a consortium of Cuba creditors.
Otherwise, U.S. banks and their congressional allies now would be hitting U.S.
taxpayers to cover their losses in Cuba.
According to the trade-commission report, rice exports to Cuba would
be worth $40 million to $59 million, increasing the value of U.S. rice
competitive with current suppliers,´´ it says, but then it cautions
that Mr. Castro´s trade decisions are based on politics, not on economic
efficiency.
In plain words, Mr. Castro is unlikely to give U.S. farmers the market
share of his ideological allies China and Vietnam.
Louisiana rice and Illinois wheat producers should not assume that
selling to Havana is synonymous with getting paid. U.S taxpayers should be wary.
Mr. Castro desperately needs credits and subsidies, and Washington is being
pressured to provide them.
If the United States begins to subsidize trade with Cuba estimated at
$100 million a year five years from now, U.S. taxpayers could be holding, or
paying off, a $500 million tab. That´s real money.
Before extending Mr. Castro credit, grain growers should visit any
street corner in Manhattan and observe a game played there. Called three-card
monte, it consists of convincing the player that he knows exactly where the card
carrying his money is. Until it disappears. In this game, the gambler takes his
own chances. Where trade with Mr. Castro is concerned, the U.S. taxpayer will be
left holding the losing card.
Frank Calzon is executive director of the Center for a Free Cuba, a
nonpartisan organization dedicated to the promotion of human rights in Cuba.
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