Remarks by the President on Cuba Policy Review The
East Room. Office of the Press Secretary, May 20, 2002.
The White House.
THE PRESIDENT: Bienvenidos. Welcome to the White House for the 100th
anniversary of Cuban independence. Today we honor the ties of friendship, and
family, and faith, that unite the Cuban people and the people of the United
States.
We honor the contributions that Cuban-Americans have made to all aspects of
our national life. And today, I am issuing a proposal and a challenge that can
put Cuba on the path to liberty.
I appreciate our Secretary of State being here. He and I take this issue
very seriously. He loves freedom as much as I love freedom. I want to thank Mel
Martinez, a graduate of Pedro Pan, for being here; Mr. Secretary, you're doing a
great job. Welcome.
I appreciate members of the diplomatic corps who are here. Thank you all for
coming; I'm honored to have you here. I want to thank Senator George Allen from
the Commonwealth of Virginia. I want to thank Congressman Dan Burton; Mr.
Chairman. And, of course, two great members of the United States Congress,
people who have got a lot to offer, a lot of sound advice: Ileana Ros-Lehtinen
and Lincoln Diaz-Balart. Thank you all for coming. (Applause.)
Cuba's independence one century ago today was the inspiration of great
figures such as Felix Varela. It was the result of determination and talent on
the part of great statesmen such as Jose Marti, and great soldiers such as
Antonio Maceo and Maximo Gomez. Most of all, Cuba's independence was the product
of the great courage and sacrifice of the Cuban people.
Today, and every day for the past 43 years, that legacy of courage has been
insulted by a tyrant who uses brutal methods to enforce a bankrupt vision. That
legacy has been debased by a relic from another era, who has turned a beautiful
island into a prison. In a career of oppression, Mr. Castro has imported
nuclear-armed ballistic missiles, and he has exported his military forces to
encourage civil war abroad.
He is a dictator who jails and tortures and exiles his political opponents.
We know this. The Cuban people know this. And the world knows this. After all,
just a month ago the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, in a resolution
proposed by the nations of Latin America, called upon Cuba's government to
finally -- to finally -- begin respecting the human rights of its people.
Through all their pains and deprivation, the Cuban people's aspirations for
freedom are undiminished. We see this today in Havana, where more than 11,000
brave citizens have petitioned their government for a referendum on basic
freedoms. If that referendum is allowed, it can be a prelude, a beginning for
real change in Cuba.
The United States has no designs on Cuban sovereignty. It's not a part of
our strategy, or a part of our vision. In fact, the United States has been a
strong and consistent supporter of freedom for the Cuban people. (Applause.) And
it is important for those who love freedom on that beautiful island to know that
our support for them will never waver. (Applause.)
Today, I'm announcing an Initiative for a New Cuba that offers Cuba's
government a way forward towards democracy and hope, and better relations with
the United States.
Cuba's scheduled to hold elections to its National Assembly in 2003. Let me
read Article 71 of the Cuban Constitution. It says, "The National Assembly
is composed of deputies elected by free, direct, and secret vote." That's
what the constitution says. Yet, since 1959, no election in Cuba has come close
to meeting these standards. In most elections, there has been one candidate,
Castro's candidate.
All elections in Castro's Cuba have been a fraud. The voices of the Cuban
people have been suppressed, and their votes have been meaningless. That's the
truth. Es la verdad. In the 2003 National Assembly elections in Cuba, Cuba has
the opportunity to offer Cuban voters the substance of democracy, not its
hollow, empty forms.
Opposition parties should have the freedom to organize, assemble, and speak,
with equal access to all airwaves. All political prisoners must be released and
allowed to participate in the election process. Human rights organizations
should be free to visit Cuba to ensure that the conditions for free elections
are being created. And the 2003 elections should be monitored by objective
outside observers. These are the minimum steps necessary to make sure that next
year's elections are the true expression of the will of the Cuban people.
I also challenge Cuba's government to ease its stranglehold, to change its
stranglehold on private economic activity. Political and economic freedoms go
hand in hand, and if Cuba opens its political system, fundamental questions
about its backward economic system will come into sharper focus.
If the Cuban government truly wants to advance the cause of workers, of
Cuban workers, surely it will permit trade unions to exist outside of government
control. If Cuba wants to create more good-paying jobs, private employers have
to be able to negotiate with and pay workers of their own choosing, without the
government telling who they can hire and who they must fire.
If Cuba wants to attract badly needed investment from abroad, property
rights must be respected. If the government wants to improve the daily lives of
its people, goods and services produced in Cuba should be made available to all
Cuban citizens. Workers employed by foreign companies should be paid directly by
their employers, instead of having the government seize their hard-currency
wages and pass on a pittance in the form of pesos. And the signs in hotels
reading "Solamente Turistas" should finally be taken down.
Without major steps by Cuba to open up its political system and its economic
system, trade with Cuba will not help the Cuban people. (Applause.) It's
important for Americans to understand, without political reform, without
economic reform, trade with Cuba will merely enrich Fidel Castro and his
cronies. (Applause.)
Well-intentioned ideas about trade will merely prop up this dictator, enrich
his cronies, and enhance the totalitarian regime. It will not help the Cuban
people. With real political and economic reform, trade can benefit the Cuban
people and allow them to share in the progress of our times.
If Cuba's government takes all the necessary steps to ensure that the 2003
elections are certifiably free and fair -- certifiably free and fair -- and if
Cuba also begins to adopt meaningful market-based reforms, then -- and only then
-- I will work with the United States Congress to ease the ban on trade and
travel between our two countries. (Applause.)
Meaningful reform on Cuba's part will be answered with a meaningful American
response. The goal of the United States policy toward Cuba is not a permanent
embargo on Cuba's economy. The goal is freedom for Cuba's people. (Applause.)
Today's initiative invites the Cuban government to trust and respect Cuban
citizens. And I urge other democracies, in this hemisphere and beyond, to use
their influence on Cuba's government to allow free and fair National Assembly
elections, and to push for real and meaningful and verifiable reform.
Full normalization of relations with Cuba -- diplomatic recognition, open
trade, and a robust aid program -- will only be possible when Cuba has a new
government that is fully democratic, when the rule of law is respected, and when
the human rights of all Cubans are fully protected. (Applause.)
Yet, under the Initiative for a New Cuba, the United States recognizes that
freedom sometimes grows step by step. And we'll encourage those steps. The
current of history runs strongly towards freedom. Our plan is to accelerate
freedom's progress in Cuba in every way possible, just as the United States and
our democratic friends and allies did successfully in places like Poland, or in
South Africa. Even as we seek to end tyranny, we will work to make life better
for people living under and resisting Castro's rule.
Today I'm announcing a series of actions that will directly benefit the
Cuban people, and give them greater control of their economic and political
destiny. My administration will ease restrictions on humanitarian assistance by
legitimate U.S. religious and other non-governmental organizations that directly
serve the needs of the Cuban people and will help build Cuban civil society. And
the United States will provide such groups with direct assistance that can be
used for humanitarian and entrepreneurial activities.
Our government will offer scholarships in the United States for Cuban
students and professionals who try to build independent civil institutions in
Cuba, and scholarships for family members of political prisoners. (Applause.) We
are willing to negotiate direct mail service between the United States and Cuba.
My administration will also continue to look for ways to modernize Radio and
TV Marti, because even the strongest walls of oppression cannot stand when the
floodgates of information and knowledge are opened. And in the months ahead, my
administration will continue to work with leaders all around our country,
leaders who love freedom for Cuba, to implement new ways to empower individuals
to enhance the chance for freedom.
The United States will continue to enforce economic sanctions on Cuba, and
the ban on travel to Cuba, until Cuba's government proves that it is committed
to real reform. (Applause.) We will continue to prohibit U.S. financing for
Cuban purchases of U.S. agricultural goods, because this would just be a foreign
aid program in disguise, which would benefit the current regime. (Applause.)
Today's initiative offers Cuba's government a different path, leading to a
different future -- a future of greater democracy and prosperity and respect.
With real reform in Cuba, our countries can begin chipping away at four decades
of distrust and division. And the choice rests with Mr. Castro.
Today, there is only one nation in our hemisphere that is not a democracy.
Only one. There is only one national leader whose position of power owes more to
bullets than ballots. Fidel Castro has a chance to escape this lonely and
stagnant isolation. If he accepts our offer, he can bring help to his people and
hope to our relations.
If Mr. Castro refuses our offer, he will be protecting his cronies at the
expense of his people. And eventually, despite all his tools of oppression,
Fidel Castro will need to answer to his people. (Applause.)
Jose Marti said, "Barriers of ideas are stronger than barricades of
stone." For the benefit of Cuba's people, it is time for Mr. Castro to cast
aside old and failed ideas and to start to think differently about the future.
Today could mark a new dawn in a long friendship between our people, but only if
the Castro regime sees the light.
Cuba's independence was achieved a century ago. It was hijacked nearly half
a century ago. Yet the independent spirit of the Cuban people has never
faltered. And it has never been stronger than it is today. The United States is
proud to stand with all Cubans, and all Cuban-Americans, who love freedom. And
we will continue to stand with you until liberty returns to the land you love so
well.
Viva Cuba Libre. (Applause.)
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