Full diplomatic relations will be established, Cuba’s place on the list of terrorism sponsors reviewed and restrictions lifted on U.S. investment and most travel to Cuba. That liberalization will provide Havana with a fresh source of desperately needed hard currency and eliminate U.S. leverage for political reforms.
As part of the bargain, Havana released Alan Gross, a U.S. Agency for International Development contractor who was unjustly imprisoned five years ago for trying to help Cuban Jews. Also freed was an unidentified U.S. intelligence agent in Cuba — as were three Cuban spies who had been convicted of operations in Florida that led to Cuba’s 1996 shootdown of a plane carrying anti-Castro activists. While Mr. Obama sought to portray Mr. Gross’s release as unrelated to the spy swap, there can be no question that Cuba’s hard-line intelligence apparatus obtained exactly what it sought when it made Mr. Gross a de facto hostage.
No wonder Yoani Sánchez, Cuba’s leading dissident blogger, concluded Wednesday that “Castroism has won” and predicted that for weeks Cubans will have to endure proclamations by the government that it is the “winner of its ultimate battle.”...
The Vietnam outcome is what the Castros are counting on: a flood of U.S. tourists and business investment that will allow the regime to maintain its totalitarian system indefinitely. Mr. Obama may claim that he has dismantled a 50-year-old failed policy; what he has really done is give a 50-year-old failed regime a new lease on life.
.@WashingtonPost Slams Obama's Cuba Move http://t.co/Ggr5g4XbcQ
— National Review (@NRO) December 19, 2014
Castro's Hipster Apologists Want to Keep Cuba ‘Authentically’ Poor http://t.co/jCJnMWZC2i pic.twitter.com/Fbd05bsL33
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) December 19, 2014
Important essay from an insightful historian: "Why We Isolated Cuba for 53 Years" http://t.co/eBkgfIMHZN @DailySignal
— Ryan T. Anderson (@RyanT_Anderson) December 18, 2014
Q&A on Obama’s Policy Changes Toward #Cuba -- @Ana_R_Quintana http://t.co/gqB6E4ujAx
— The Daily Signal (@DailySignal) December 18, 2014
RT @Heritage: Q & A on the President’s Recent Policy Concessions Toward #Cuba @Ana_R_Quintana http://t.co/mvE2qHuPqJ
— James Jay Carafano (@JJCarafano) December 19, 2014
The 2016 Potentials React to Obama’s #Cuba Plan -http://t.co/joigv9Bw1c pic.twitter.com/Q0EvvPtW75
— Heritage Foundation (@Heritage) December 18, 2014