http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090629/jelly-schapi ro/single
An Empire of Vice
By Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
This article appeared in the June 29, 2009 edition of The Nation.
June 10, 2009
Three days before Christmas in 1946, Havana's Hotel Nacional was
closed for a private meeting. Armed guards blocked entry to its lovely
grounds atop a seaside bluff in the plush El Vedado district. Inside
the stately cream-colored Art Deco hotel, a group of distinguished
foreign visitors tucked into a feast of local delicacies. There were
crab and queen conch enchiladas from the southern archipelago;
swordfish and oysters from the nearby village of Cojímar; roast breast
of flamingo and tortoise stew; grilled manatee, washed down with añejo
rum. It is unknown whether the attendees--whose number included about
twenty of North America's most notorious gangsters--ended their meal
with a cake like the one served at their feast's fictional rendering
in The Godfather Part II. But as in the film, the purpose of the
gathering was clear: to divvy up shares in the empire of vice they
were busy establishing in Havana.
During the next decade, the mafia built a seaside gambling resort,
which soon rivaled in profits and glamour its sister project in dusty
Las Vegas. Under the canny direction of Meyer Lansky, the Jewish don
who'd risen from the streets of New York's Lower East Side, members of
the Havana Mob became fabulously wealthy. So too did Cuba's US-backed
dictator, Fulgencio Batista, whose stake in the mob's affairs exceeded
the sacks of cash delivered weekly to the presidential palace. With
Lansky and fellow mobsters like Santo Trafficante employed as "tourism
experts" in his government, Batista eliminated taxes on the tourism
industry, guaranteed public financing for hotel construction and--as
T.J. English shows in Havana Nocturne, an exacting and lively account
of the era--even granted responsibility for Cuba's infrastructure
development to a new mob-controlled bank, BANDES. In December 1957 the
opening of the Riviera, a $14 million mafia show palace just down the
seawall from the Nacional, was celebrated by a special episode of The
Steve Allen Show on US television and a gala in Havana featuring
Ginger Rogers. Three months later, the twenty-five-story Havana
Hilton--mortgage holder: BANDES--became Cuba's biggest hotel yet.
The party ended on New Year's 1959, when Batista fled the island as
Fidel Castro's barbudos advanced on its capital. Castro and his
bearded rebels established their headquarters in the Havana Hilton and
loosed a truckload of pigs on the sleek lobby of the Riviera. Castro
announced the "socialist nature" of his revolution. Nikita Khrushchev
sent Soviet missiles. President John F. Kennedy--who, during a visit
to Havana the previous year as a senator, had spent an afternoon with
three mob-supplied prostitutes under the gaze, from behind a two-way
hotel-room mirror, of Santo Trafficante--instituted the embargo that
defines US-Cuba relations to this day.
"I couldn't get that little island off of my mind," Lansky remarked
after his first visit to Cuba in the 1920s. The gangster was no less
covetous of Cuba, and proved no less fixated on controlling it, than a
series of US presidents reaching back to the founders. "I have ever
looked on Cuba," wrote Thomas Jefferson to President James Monroe when
the United States gained control of the Florida peninsula in 1821, "as
the most interesting addition which could ever be made to our system
of States." Monroe's secretary of state, John Quincy Adams, was more
blunt. "The annexation of Cuba to our federal republic," he wrote,
"will be indispensable to the continuance and integrity of the Union
itself." After the United States took possession of Texas and
California by war in 1848, many in Washington advocated annexing Cuba
by force as well. The impulse was quashed for a time. Nevertheless,
with Spain's empire sunk in a long decline, the United States'
eventual possession of Cuba was viewed as inevitable for most of the
nineteenth century. In a political cartoon from 1897, one of a trove
of such images Louis A. Pérez Jr. uses to illustrate his brilliant
book Cuba in the American Imagination, Uncle Sam stands beneath a
fruit tree with a basket of plums, each bearing the name of a foreign
territory already attained--Louisiana, Florida, Texas. From an upper
branch hangs a "Cuba" plum, upon which Sam gazes keenly, his look
distilling the common view: if America refrained from picking Cuba
with a forceful hand, the ripe prize would eventually fall to its
basket simply by dint of geography and time.
When the warship USS Maine mysteriously exploded while docked at
Spanish Havana in February 1898, the United States had a pretext for
shaking the tree of its remaining fruit. A few months later, Cuban
rebels and invading US forces expelled Spain from the island, and Cuba
(along with Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines) was annexed to the
United States. "We went to war for civilization and humanity,"
President William McKinley eulogized, "to relieve our oppressed
neighbors in Cuba." Humanity's gains were hazy, but what the United
States certainly gained from the war was an empire. Puerto Rico and
the Philippines became de facto American colonies; and with the
passage of the Platt Amendment in 1901, Washington arrogated to itself
the right to intervene in Cuba's affairs whenever it wished--providing
also for the seizure of Cuban territory at Guantánamo Bay to establish
a US naval base purposed "to enable the United States to maintain the
independence of Cuba" (and conveniently positioned to protect what
would soon be a key sea lane to the Panama Canal).
Gaining control of Cuba fulfilled a long-sought strategic aim. But
equally important for the United States was how the invasion of Cuba
came to shape its foreign policy and self-image at large. The
Spanish-American War--the Union's first large-scale military campaign
since Reconstruction--bolstered American unity and inaugurated
America's self-conception as a "universal nation" endowed with the
moral mission of projecting its power abroad. Before 1898, as Pérez
stresses, quoting the historian Norman Graebner, "the foreign policies
of the United States were rendered solvent by ample power to cover
limited, largely hemispheric, goals." Afterward, those policies became
global, their stated aims--universal democracy and freedom for all
humanity--abstract in nature and unobtainable in practice. As Pérez
writes, the template for US foreign wars, up to the "war on terror,"
with its crusading aim to "rid the world of evil," was cast in
America's war for Cuba.
The argument that the Spanish-American War was a watershed in the
United States' fashioning of its national identity isn't new. The
value of Pérez's study--the latest in a series of perceptive books on
US-Cuba relations by this prolific historian--is to illustrate how an
avid US self-interest was transformed into selfless moral
enactment. While Cuba in the American Imagination is hampered by
confusing chronology, Pérez shows clearly how in the late nineteenth
century politicians in the United States and their allies in the press
employed language--and a series of figurative metaphors
specifically--to nurture in Americans' minds a conception of Cuba as
object and stage for fulfilling the United States' imperial
destiny. Early on, there was the image of Cuba as ripening fruit that
would "naturally" and inevitably one day be Uncle Sam's. Later came
references to Cuba as "our Armenia," implying that the United States,
by defending Cuba's rebels against Madrid's repression, could prove
its humanitarian mettle where Europe's nations had failed to prevent
the recent Armenian genocide at their door. And finally, as invasion
approached, there were invocations of Cuba as a virtuous lady whose
protection against Spain's depredations was a test of American
manhood.
This last figure was yanked out of the political funny pages and
foisted upon Evangelina Cossío Cisneros, the 18-year-old daughter of a
Cuban rebel leader purportedly arrested for sedition in August 1897
who was also, according to William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal,
"the most beautiful girl in the island." Evangelina's picture became a
tabloid staple, her ordeal at the hands of her captors the topic of
regular lurid updates. The melodrama ended only when Hearst's paper
announced, two months before the explosion of the USS Maine, that it
had arranged for Evangelina's escape to the United States. To
celebrate her arrival as a "Cuban Joan of Arc," Hearst organized a
mass rally to which more than 75,000 New Yorkers arrived chanting
"Viva Cuba Libre!"
In the aftermath of the Spanish-American War, the US agenda changed
from justifying invasion to legitimating a continued military and
economic presence. Accordingly, the representation of Cuba as a comely
woman in distress--usually depicted, like Evangelina, as white in
complexion (and thus a fair reflection of American virtue)--changed
too. The mixed-race isle was now depicted in tabloid cartoons as a
pitiable black child holding the hand of a beneficent Uncle Sam on the
path to progress. Previously, US opponents of annexing Cuba had often
based their arguments in racism. "The white inhabitants form too small
a proportion of the whole number," as one diplomat put it in 1825;
moreover, explained a Congressman in 1855, "the Spanish-Creole
race...are utterly ignorant of the machinery of free institutions."
Now the same logic justified a strong imperial hand. The Cubans, the
commanding US general in the 1898 war declared, were "no more capable
of self-government than the savages of Africa."
If once Cuba had figured as a virtuous lady in need of saving by an
imperial enterprise cloaked in a mission civilitrice, it soon came to
be seen as a different sort of woman, one whose mission was servicing
others. "We gave Cuba her liberty," declared a US Army veteran on
holiday in Havana in 1925, "and now we are going to enjoy it." The
island's bustling main seaport had never been a stranger to
prostitution. But as the tourist trade grew, so did Havana's
reputation as "the brothel of the New World." The island "was like a
woman in love," touted a typical travel writer's account, and "eager
to give pleasure, she will be anything you want her to be."
Simultaneously overseas and right next door, Cuba became the place
where Americans--especially American men--went to escape the stolid
mores of wife and home. With the passage of Prohibition in 1919, legal
booze fortified Cuba's libertine lure. When It's Cocktail Time in Cuba
was the title of a popular US tourist guide, and Havana bartenders
concocted new rum-based elixirs like the Cuba Libre and mojito to coax
more cash from Northern visitors. A short cruise from Florida--or,
after Pan-American Airways launched its first international passenger
route with Miami-Havana flights in 1928, an even shorter plane
ride--Cuba was, by the 1930s, receiving more US visitors than even
Canada.
By the time the US mob launched their Havana plot in earnest in 1946,
tourism was already well established as a key portion of Cuba's
economy. Mob designs for "the Monte Carlo of the Caribbean" evoked
European playgrounds, with hotels named the Riviera, Deauville and
Capri. But by the 1950s, "Havana" had acquired its own cachet for
American consumers as both brand and idea. On television Desi Arnaz
was the all-purpose Latin Lover, and advertisements hawked Havana
perfume, Havana soft drinks, Havana lingerie. "Waving palms, a cool
island breeze," went the slogan for El Paso brand Cuban Black Bean
Dip. "Visit a forbidden paradise of silky black beans, sweet red
pepper and an undercurrent of rich gold rum, resulting in a Cuban
sensation that may taste mild, but is definitely hot, hot, hot!"
The cold war ended Havana's viability as marketing hook for consumers
to the north. That it also made Cuba legally forbidden to American
travelers, though, doubtless contributes to a still-thriving trade in
Cuba-related books in the United States--volumes that (no matter their
particular topic or politics) often find it impossible not to trade in
shopworn clichés about pulsing rhythms and caramel skin and crashing
waves on the Malecón. Even in a book like T.J. English's authoritative
and otherwise sharply written Havana Nocturne, everything from
Batista's facial features to the city's jazz scene is described as
"exotic." Never mind that the cultures of Cuba and the United States
have always been more deeply intertwined than partisans of either
nation have sometimes cared to admit. The jazz bands that thrilled
American tourists in 1950s Havana borrowed from the inventions of
musicians in New York and Chicago; and no less a touchstone of
Americana than rock 'n' roll, as the music historian Ned Sublette has
convincingly shown, owed as much in its genesis to Cuban rhythms
ringing out of Havana as it did to blues riffs busting out of Memphis
or New Orleans. Indeed, for two centuries up until 1960, the cultures
of New Orleans and Havana were joined and nurtured by the streams of
migrants and goods flowing between them.
What the "exotic" label also tends to conceal about Cuba is that to
its own people as well as outsiders, the island has long been as much
an idea as a country. At least since José Martí, the great poet
laureate of Cuban independence, began composing odes to the island's
"half-breed" soul in the late 1800s, there has existed in Cuba an
obsession with reflecting upon and debating the national
character. This tradition is perhaps most memorably manifested in the
seminal anthropologist Fernando Ortiz's argument, in Cuban
Counterpoint (1940), that all of Cuban identity and culture--from the
rumba to the mulata to the cigar--can be understood as outgrowths of
an economy based in producing tobacco and sugar for export. The
discussion has taken many forms, but perhaps the dominant current in
Cuba's politics and intellectual culture has always been the struggle
over cubanía, or Cubanness. Fidel's revolution, before it was
Marxist-Leninist or Castroist or anything else, has always been framed
and experienced in Cuba as a nationalist struggle. Accordingly, it was
not solely on the grounds of Marxian virtue but also cubanía that
Fidel battled cocaine and prostitution as "un-Cuban" in the 1960s
(never mind the Havana Mob's avoidance of the drug trade, or that
sex-for-pay held a prominent place in Cuban society long before its
exploitation by yanquis) and contended, during the 1970s, that Cuba's
military involvement in Angola and Mozambique was driven by Cuba's
core identity as an "Afro-Latin" nation.
Fidel's custodianship of cubanía has deep roots in a much longer
history of Cuban men of privilege (and usually light skin) defining
the nation's identity. Batista was a mulatto cane-cutter's son; Fidel
and his brother Raúl were the children of wealthy Spanish
landowners--putative members, that is, of a class of Cubans who
thought the déclassé rule of an uneducated army colonel a national
shame. Not every member of Cuba's elite who came to support Castro
against Batista in the 1950s was driven by prejudice; Fidel has always
been a strong antiracist, in his way. But the machista worlds of elite
Cuban politics and culture have always been paternalistic, whether in
José Martí's wishful 1891 declaration that in Cuba "there are no
races," or the longstanding tradition--from Nicolás Guillén's iconic
1930 poem "Mulata" to innumerable paintings of the copper-skinned
Virgen de la Caridad--of holding up the sexy mulata as embodiment of
cubanía, while affording to actual brown-skinned Cuban women little
place in that nation beyond its brothels and kitchens.
After racial discrimination was officially banned in 1960 by his
revolution, Fidel blithely declared that racism was defeated in
Cuba. As in 1891, the actual situation was more complex. The masses of
Afro-Cubans who'd lived in illiterate destitution since slavery--and
seen 6,000 of their forebears massacred in a horrific 1912 race
war--had the most to gain from socialist projects in housing,
healthcare and education. That Cuba's 4 million blacks still provide a
key base of Communist Party support is a measure of how much their
lives have improved under Fidel. But as Carlos Moore writes in a
poignant new memoir, Pichón, Castro's blind spots with regard to race
have at times also been pernicious. Pichón takes its title from a
Cuban slur for Jamaican and Haitian laborers who survived the
Depression by scrounging for slaughterhouse scraps in the manner of
ugly black buzzards, or pichónes. The book begins with Moore
recounting a rural Cuban childhood of being tormented by the fists and
epithets of white schoolmates. Then comes the story of his personal
epic: leaving for New York City at 16 in the late 1950s and falling
into the black radical demimonde of Maya Angelou and Malcolm X, then
returning to Cuba as an ardent Fidel admirer in the early 1960s, only
to be imprisoned and exiled by Fidel's revolution for daring to
protest the race prejudice of certain of its ministers.
Moore renders this tragic tale with frank clarity. He met his mentor
Angelou in a Harlem bookshop shortly after his arrival to the
cosmopolis in 1958; scarcely two years later, he directed an
occupation of the UN General Assembly to protest the US-sponsored
killing of the Congolese freedom fighter Patrice Lumumba. It was
during Castro's own 1960 visit to the UN--during which Fidel stayed at
the Hotel Theresa in Harlem to convey solidarity with those oppressed
by the US empire at home--that Moore decided it was his revolutionary
duty to join the cause.
Returning to Havana in June 1961, Moore sought to put his skills as an
English speaker to work at the Foreign Ministry. He became convinced
that the bureaucrat denying his requests for a job was doing so on
account of his dark skin, and he took the audacious step of traveling
to a provincial army barracks to demand a meeting with the only
Afro-Cuban member of Fidel's inner circle, the guerrilla hero Juán
Almeida. Almeida indulged the headstrong youth with a warning to "stop
talking as you do," but once back in Havana, Moore was "detailed" by
the revolutionary police and tossed into a new jail made from a
converted mansion on the city's outskirts. He was released a few weeks
later with no charge or explanation and eventually found work in
another branch of the government. But in late 1962, after some months
of increasing disquiet about the revolution's puritanical
excesses--with police sending homosexuals to labor camps and forcibly
shuttering Afro-Cuban social clubs--Moore encountered his old nemesis
in the Foreign Ministry. Furious that the young negrito was still at
large, the bureaucrat promised to ensure that Moore was "take[n] care
of" for good. That afternoon Moore knocked at the door of the Havana
embassy of the new West African nation of Guinea and requested asylum;
a few weeks later he left Cuba on a freighter bound for
Africa. Eventually settling in Paris, he went on to write Castro, the
Blacks, and Africa (1989), a controversial radical critique of the
revolution's race mores whose exaggerated animus, given the
experiences related in Moore's more personal and worthwhile memoir, is
perhaps now clearer at its source.
When Moore went into exile in the early 1960s, most Cubans who fled
the island belonged to its white upper classes. The arch-right-wingers
among them nurtured a deep anger about Castro's "giving it all away"
to the riffraff and pichónes. Their story is perhaps less tragic than
that of exile families with more liberal pasts like the Bacardis,
owners of the eponymous liquor empire, whose story Tom Gjelten traces
in his splendid family chronicle Bacardi and the Long Fight for
Cuba. The tale begins with the penniless Catalan immigrant Facundo
Bacardi's discovering, in the 1860s, a new way to distill sugar cane
into clear white rum. His son Emilio Bacardi became a key ally of José
Martí in the fight for independence in the 1890s, and the Bacardis'
1950s heirs were fervid Fidel supporters--but then left the island and
became fervid Castro-haters when he ordered a state takeover of the
company they'd spent a century building from scratch. (One of Fidel's
great claims to revolutionary virtue is that he did not spare his own
parents' latifundio from being nationalized and split up in the first
agrarian reform.) Family sagas about seized storehouses and abandoned
mansions compose the sacred text of mainstream Cuban-exile
politics. But as stories like Carlos Moore's show, belonging to a
class of Cubans whose lot the revolution improved granted no exemption
from being tyrannized by party discipline and hierarchy.
When Fidel Castro took command of Havana in January 1959, few in or
outside Cuba knew much about him beyond his magnetism and rousing
oratory; apart from Castro's loathing of Batista and idolizing of
Martí, his politics--as the Eisenhower administration's "watch and
wait" approach to his government shows--were vague even to close
observers. Soon enough, his strident nationalism and messianic bent
were clear. But even as Castro's government began seizing lands owned
by US companies as part of its first agrarian reform in June 1959--and
powerful Washington interests began urging Eisenhower to respond by
ending the longstanding US agreement to purchase most of Cuba's
sugar--few foresaw the antagonisms and escalation to come.
With Cuba's continued access to the chief market for its main crop
looking unsure, and radicals like Che Guevara at Fidel's ear, whatever
doubts Castro had about Leninism disappeared. In February 1960 a
delegation of Soviet ministers arrived in Havana and signed an
agreement to purchase much of Cuba's sugar; Che traveled to Moscow a
short while later to secure Havana's ties to the Eastern Bloc. Three
years after Khrushchev had promised "we will bury you," the Soviets
had established a Communist beachhead in easy range of Florida, on an
island, moreover, that the United States had regarded as an amour
propre. The trauma was deep. In Washington a flurry of panicked
recriminations over how this could have been allowed to happen--traced
by Lars Schoultz with insightful verve in That Infernal Little Cuban
Republic, a comprehensive history of US-Cuba relations since World War
II--was translated into an ill-conceived CIA-sponsored invasion in
April 1961. The Bay of Pigs fiasco did Fidel the great favor of
allowing him to oversee the defeat of imperialist invaders on Cuba's
beaches. In the months following, the Kennedy administration hatched a
tragicomic series of attempts to kill Castro with explosive seashells
and poisoned cigars (a job for which the CIA contracted the
president's old Havana pimp, Santo Trafficante, now in Miami). But no
matter. In October 1962, Washington's worst fears were realized when a
US spy plane over Cuba's countryside snapped photos of Soviet missile
launchers nestled amid royal palms.
Whether or not the Cuban missile crisis was the most dangerous and
direct confrontation of the cold war, it's clear that Cuba's role was
that of pawn or prop. This did not comfort Castro, who harbored deep
resentment when Khrushchev failed to consult him before Moscow agreed
to remove its nuclear missiles--a reaction that reveals the
particularly Cuban pathos of this puffed-up leader of a smallish
island driven by the need to be treated and seen as head of a big
powerful nation (or at least a sovereign one). The longstanding US
irritation with Cuba, Schoultz observes, stems from its leaders'
persistent denial of the base precept of political realism distilled
in Thucydides' dictum that the strong do what they can and the weak
suffer what they must. Schoultz presents his history as a "case study
in the trials and tribulations of realism"--an investigation into how
for the past fifty years a weak state has "gotten away" with standing
up to its vastly stronger neighbor and how, conversely, the stronger
was made to let the weaker do so.
For three decades, of course, a large part of how Cuba "stood up" to
the US empire lay also in its becoming the client state of another
empire. This truth did not prevent Cuba from becoming a new kind of
symbol across a Latin America long frustrated by the condescension of
its Northern hegemon. Across the hemisphere, the mythic story of
Cuba--a miraculous fable about a merry band of longhairs who went into
their country's mountains and a few years later swept into its capital
on the shoulders of its poor--was one that women and men who loved
justice would seek to re-create from El Salvador to Colombia to
Bolivia and Peru. In Washington, conversely, a new guiding metaphor
for Cuba emerged: that of a malignant cancer whose spread had to be
contained at all costs. And so it was that many thousands of those
Latin Americans who went to the continent's jungles during the '60s,
'70s and '80s, some toting photos of Che and Fidel in their knapsacks,
died awful deaths with those whose cause they raised, too often the
"disappeared" victims of US-backed dictatorships and death squads.
Since the cold war's end, US policy mavens have argued over the extent
to which those dark decades' abuses were, if not justifiable,
understandable given the strategic threat posed by the prospect of
another Soviet satellite in its "backyard." What the years since the
USSR's fall have also laid bare, however, is the extent to which
Washington's approach to Cuba itself has been driven by other than
simply rational aims like containment. "Castro is not merely an
adversary, but an enemy," a 1993 report from the US Army War College
observes, "an embodiment of evil who must be punished for his defiance
of the United States.... There is a desire to hurt the enemy that is
mirrored in the malevolence that Castro has exhibited towards us." For
US politicians in national campaigns, being "tough on Cuba" long ago
took its place with being "a friend to Israel" as a sine qua non of
victory. As Cuba's potential threat to US security has progressively
dwindled to nearly nil, US antagonism toward its government has only
deepened. The Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 codified the embargo as US
law and was toughened in the Helms-Burton Act signed by Bill Clinton
in 1996, which prohibited US companies from dealing with foreign firms
engaged in business with Cuban property seized by the revolution, and
also mandated that the embargo could not be lifted until such time as
Cuba is run by a government "that does not include Fidel Castro or
Raúl Castro."
More recently, George W. Bush, who owed his presidency to south
Florida, used his office in 2004 to funnel $59 million in new funding
to no-bid Miami-Cuban boondoggles like the propaganda networks Radio
and TV Martí. He also moved to close one of the embargo's few
loopholes by introducing strict limits on remittances Cuban-Americans
may send to family members on the island and on the number of trips
they may take to visit them. Bush also placed Cuba on the US list of
"state sponsors of terror" (based on an alleged chemical weapons
program whose existence his own State Department doubted) and, in the
long run-up to the 2004 election, established, at the heart of the
executive branch and under the chairmanship of Secretary of State
Colin Powell, a Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba. It was
charged with determining how "to hasten the end" of the Castro
dictatorship and in May 2004 produced a report recommending, for
example, that in the wake of an anticipated violent transition, Cuban
schools be kept open "in order to keep children and teenagers off the
streets."
As Daniel Erikson shows in The Cuba Wars, a sharp and deeply reported
account of dynamics informing US-Cuba policy since the Clinton
administration, Castro's government was concerned that Cuba's
involvement in Bush's "war on terror" would go beyond the United
States' use of its imperial relic at Guantánamo Bay to hold certain
prisoners beyond the jurisdiction of US courts. The Cubans "were
really worried," Lawrence Wilkerson, longtime chief of staff to Colin
Powell, tells Erikson of a visit he made to Havana just after leaving
the State Department in 2005. "They wanted me first of all to assure
them that we weren't going to invade." In the spring of 2003, Fidel
Castro--practiced in paranoia, always more comfortable on a war
footing than not--responded to the new provocations by ordering the
trial for treason of some seventy-five "dissidents," some of whom were
indeed Cubans being paid by the United States to tweak (if hardly, in
practice, to destabilize) their government, but most of whose offenses
amounted to writing articles and circulating petitions. Some fifty-odd
of "the 75" remain jailed today.
In 2003 I was living in Havana, and as at so many other times when
Cuba had become the subject of hyperventilated fits abroad, the
arrests and diplomatic volleys were little more than background noise
to the struggles of quotidian life. People who sought more food than
allotted by their ration card broke the law daily. That spring, an
architect I was friendly with began selling stolen shellfish to feed
his family, and his cousin had taken to earning new clothes by
satisfying the bedroom predilections of Italian sex tourists. More
significant to Cubans than Washington's longstanding obsession with
upending their government were concerns over what that government
might do to repair a broken economy. Such grave ills aside, not a few
Cubans remain proud that theirs is a poor country in which "no
children sleep in the streets," as a propaganda billboard near my
Havana apartment touted truly. The Communist Party enjoys significant
support, especially in the provincias--where peasants fifty years ago
lived in dirt-floored huts and still do so today, but now regard free
healthcare for their parents and good schools for their kids as
birthrights. More generally, it's open to debate whether the Cuban
state's solicitude toward its young and its aged is "worth" the
repression too often endured by everyone else. But from the standpoint
of a failed fifty-year attempt by the United States to change the
island's government by isolation, the salient facts about Cuba are
that it enjoys good relations and strong economic ties to every other
country in the hemisphere, including Canada (not to mention China and
the European Union), and that it has a stable government, in evidently
firm control of its military and police, which has carried off its
recent change to a new head of state with apparently minimal fuss.
Raúl Castro--longtime head of Cuba's military, a dour party man--has,
with the illness of his brother, been cast in the unlikely role of
reformer. Many in Cuba express hope that Raúl's early gestures at
reform, like his opening of the grounds of tourist hotels such as the
Hotel Nacional to ordinary Cubans, may augur a larger opening of the
Cuban economy. During the presidential campaign, Barack Obama called
Raúl's bluff by suggesting that he'd be willing to sit down with
Cuba's new leader with a view toward improving relations. Realists
predictably think this prospect, like Raúl's proffering of Cuba's
"willingness to discuss on equal footing the prolonged dispute" with
the United States, is a nonstarter: Obama's secretary of state, back
when she was not his head diplomat but primary rival, called his
willingness to meet with "foreign dictators" like Cuba's new leader
"irresponsible." But during its first weeks, the Obama
administration--no doubt cognizant of polls showing that younger
Cuban-Americans voice little support for the hardline stance of the
past, and that even a symbolic thaw with Cuba would be an easy way to
improve relations with the rest of Latin America--successfully
marshaled a bill through Congress overturning Bush-era restrictions on
family visits and remittances. All this move does is return the United
States' Cuba policy to its 2003 status. But it was a key signal that a
larger overhaul of the Cuba policy will be on the table in Obama's
Washington. At April's Summit of the Americas, the president observed
that Cuba's thousands of doctors dispersed throughout the region were
"a reminder for us in the United States that if our only interaction
with many of these countries is...military, then we may not be
developing the connections that can, over time, increase our
influence." Obama also declared that a "new beginning with Cuba" could
be near. That initial signal, it seems, has been confirmed.
In 1891, José Martí, the most articulate of Cuban nationalists and
also perhaps his generation's most perceptive writer on inter-American
relations, wrote in Nuestra América, "One must not attribute, through
a provincial antipathy, a fatal and inbred wickedness to the
continent's fair-skinned nation simply because it does not speak our
language, or see the world as we see it, or resemble us in its
political defects, so different from our own." For many Cubans, the
election of Obama represents an overcoming of political defects, and
in his brown face they see not a "fair-skinned nation" but something
of themselves; their hope is that Obama will be a leader free of many
of his country's old neuroses. The ultimate test of those hopes will
be ending the long-running embargo, which Wilkerson, expressing a
widely held but rarely stated Washington view, called, in an interview
with GQ, "the dumbest policy on the face of the earth." No less
incontestable is a remark made in 1974 by the now-ailing barbudo in
Havana, who recently expressed doubt that he'd live to see the end of
Obama's first term. "We cannot move, nor can the United States," Fidel
Castro observed in an interview. "Speaking realistically, someday some
sort of ties will have to be established."
An Empire of Vice
By Joshua Jelly-Schapiro
This article appeared in the June 29, 2009 edition of The Nation.
June 10, 2009
Three days before Christmas in 1946, Havana's Hotel Nacional was
closed for a private meeting. Armed guards blocked entry to its lovely
grounds atop a seaside bluff in the plush El Vedado district. Inside
the stately cream-colored Art Deco hotel, a group of distinguished
foreign visitors tucked into a feast of local delicacies. There were
crab and queen conch enchiladas from the southern archipelago;
swordfish and oysters from the nearby village of Cojímar; roast breast
of flamingo and tortoise stew; grilled manatee, washed down with añejo
rum. It is unknown whether the attendees--whose number included about
twenty of North America's most notorious gangsters--ended their meal
with a cake like the one served at their feast's fictional rendering
in The Godfather Part II. But as in the film, the purpose of the
gathering was clear: to divvy up shares in the empire of vice they
were busy establishing in Havana.
During the next decade, the mafia built a seaside gambling resort,
which soon rivaled in profits and glamour its sister project in dusty
Las Vegas. Under the canny direction of Meyer Lansky, the Jewish don
who'd risen from the streets of New York's Lower East Side, members of
the Havana Mob became fabulously wealthy. So too did Cuba's US-backed
dictator, Fulgencio Batista, whose stake in the mob's affairs exceeded
the sacks of cash delivered weekly to the presidential palace. With
Lansky and fellow mobsters like Santo Trafficante employed as "tourism
experts" in his government, Batista eliminated taxes on the tourism
industry, guaranteed public financing for hotel construction and--as
T.J. English shows in Havana Nocturne, an exacting and lively account
of the era--even granted responsibility for Cuba's infrastructure
development to a new mob-controlled bank, BANDES. In December 1957 the
opening of the Riviera, a $14 million mafia show palace just down the
seawall from the Nacional, was celebrated by a special episode of The
Steve Allen Show on US television and a gala in Havana featuring
Ginger Rogers. Three months later, the twenty-five-story Havana
Hilton--mortgage holder: BANDES--became Cuba's biggest hotel yet.
The party ended on New Year's 1959, when Batista fled the island as
Fidel Castro's barbudos advanced on its capital. Castro and his
bearded rebels established their headquarters in the Havana Hilton and
loosed a truckload of pigs on the sleek lobby of the Riviera. Castro
announced the "socialist nature" of his revolution. Nikita Khrushchev
sent Soviet missiles. President John F. Kennedy--who, during a visit
to Havana the previous year as a senator, had spent an afternoon with
three mob-supplied prostitutes under the gaze, from behind a two-way
hotel-room mirror, of Santo Trafficante--instituted the embargo that
defines US-Cuba relations to this day.
"I couldn't get that little island off of my mind," Lansky remarked
after his first visit to Cuba in the 1920s. The gangster was no less
covetous of Cuba, and proved no less fixated on controlling it, than a
series of US presidents reaching back to the founders. "I have ever
looked on Cuba," wrote Thomas Jefferson to President James Monroe when
the United States gained control of the Florida peninsula in 1821, "as
the most interesting addition which could ever be made to our system
of States." Monroe's secretary of state, John Quincy Adams, was more
blunt. "The annexation of Cuba to our federal republic," he wrote,
"will be indispensable to the continuance and integrity of the Union
itself." After the United States took possession of Texas and
California by war in 1848, many in Washington advocated annexing Cuba
by force as well. The impulse was quashed for a time. Nevertheless,
with Spain's empire sunk in a long decline, the United States'
eventual possession of Cuba was viewed as inevitable for most of the
nineteenth century. In a political cartoon from 1897, one of a trove
of such images Louis A. Pérez Jr. uses to illustrate his brilliant
book Cuba in the American Imagination, Uncle Sam stands beneath a
fruit tree with a basket of plums, each bearing the name of a foreign
territory already attained--Louisiana, Florida, Texas. From an upper
branch hangs a "Cuba" plum, upon which Sam gazes keenly, his look
distilling the common view: if America refrained from picking Cuba
with a forceful hand, the ripe prize would eventually fall to its
basket simply by dint of geography and time.
When the warship USS Maine mysteriously exploded while docked at
Spanish Havana in February 1898, the United States had a pretext for
shaking the tree of its remaining fruit. A few months later, Cuban
rebels and invading US forces expelled Spain from the island, and Cuba
(along with Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines) was annexed to the
United States. "We went to war for civilization and humanity,"
President William McKinley eulogized, "to relieve our oppressed
neighbors in Cuba." Humanity's gains were hazy, but what the United
States certainly gained from the war was an empire. Puerto Rico and
the Philippines became de facto American colonies; and with the
passage of the Platt Amendment in 1901, Washington arrogated to itself
the right to intervene in Cuba's affairs whenever it wished--providing
also for the seizure of Cuban territory at Guantánamo Bay to establish
a US naval base purposed "to enable the United States to maintain the
independence of Cuba" (and conveniently positioned to protect what
would soon be a key sea lane to the Panama Canal).
Gaining control of Cuba fulfilled a long-sought strategic aim. But
equally important for the United States was how the invasion of Cuba
came to shape its foreign policy and self-image at large. The
Spanish-American War--the Union's first large-scale military campaign
since Reconstruction--bolstered American unity and inaugurated
America's self-conception as a "universal nation" endowed with the
moral mission of projecting its power abroad. Before 1898, as Pérez
stresses, quoting the historian Norman Graebner, "the foreign policies
of the United States were rendered solvent by ample power to cover
limited, largely hemispheric, goals." Afterward, those policies became
global, their stated aims--universal democracy and freedom for all
humanity--abstract in nature and unobtainable in practice. As Pérez
writes, the template for US foreign wars, up to the "war on terror,"
with its crusading aim to "rid the world of evil," was cast in
America's war for Cuba.
The argument that the Spanish-American War was a watershed in the
United States' fashioning of its national identity isn't new. The
value of Pérez's study--the latest in a series of perceptive books on
US-Cuba relations by this prolific historian--is to illustrate how an
avid US self-interest was transformed into selfless moral
enactment. While Cuba in the American Imagination is hampered by
confusing chronology, Pérez shows clearly how in the late nineteenth
century politicians in the United States and their allies in the press
employed language--and a series of figurative metaphors
specifically--to nurture in Americans' minds a conception of Cuba as
object and stage for fulfilling the United States' imperial
destiny. Early on, there was the image of Cuba as ripening fruit that
would "naturally" and inevitably one day be Uncle Sam's. Later came
references to Cuba as "our Armenia," implying that the United States,
by defending Cuba's rebels against Madrid's repression, could prove
its humanitarian mettle where Europe's nations had failed to prevent
the recent Armenian genocide at their door. And finally, as invasion
approached, there were invocations of Cuba as a virtuous lady whose
protection against Spain's depredations was a test of American
manhood.
This last figure was yanked out of the political funny pages and
foisted upon Evangelina Cossío Cisneros, the 18-year-old daughter of a
Cuban rebel leader purportedly arrested for sedition in August 1897
who was also, according to William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal,
"the most beautiful girl in the island." Evangelina's picture became a
tabloid staple, her ordeal at the hands of her captors the topic of
regular lurid updates. The melodrama ended only when Hearst's paper
announced, two months before the explosion of the USS Maine, that it
had arranged for Evangelina's escape to the United States. To
celebrate her arrival as a "Cuban Joan of Arc," Hearst organized a
mass rally to which more than 75,000 New Yorkers arrived chanting
"Viva Cuba Libre!"
In the aftermath of the Spanish-American War, the US agenda changed
from justifying invasion to legitimating a continued military and
economic presence. Accordingly, the representation of Cuba as a comely
woman in distress--usually depicted, like Evangelina, as white in
complexion (and thus a fair reflection of American virtue)--changed
too. The mixed-race isle was now depicted in tabloid cartoons as a
pitiable black child holding the hand of a beneficent Uncle Sam on the
path to progress. Previously, US opponents of annexing Cuba had often
based their arguments in racism. "The white inhabitants form too small
a proportion of the whole number," as one diplomat put it in 1825;
moreover, explained a Congressman in 1855, "the Spanish-Creole
race...are utterly ignorant of the machinery of free institutions."
Now the same logic justified a strong imperial hand. The Cubans, the
commanding US general in the 1898 war declared, were "no more capable
of self-government than the savages of Africa."
If once Cuba had figured as a virtuous lady in need of saving by an
imperial enterprise cloaked in a mission civilitrice, it soon came to
be seen as a different sort of woman, one whose mission was servicing
others. "We gave Cuba her liberty," declared a US Army veteran on
holiday in Havana in 1925, "and now we are going to enjoy it." The
island's bustling main seaport had never been a stranger to
prostitution. But as the tourist trade grew, so did Havana's
reputation as "the brothel of the New World." The island "was like a
woman in love," touted a typical travel writer's account, and "eager
to give pleasure, she will be anything you want her to be."
Simultaneously overseas and right next door, Cuba became the place
where Americans--especially American men--went to escape the stolid
mores of wife and home. With the passage of Prohibition in 1919, legal
booze fortified Cuba's libertine lure. When It's Cocktail Time in Cuba
was the title of a popular US tourist guide, and Havana bartenders
concocted new rum-based elixirs like the Cuba Libre and mojito to coax
more cash from Northern visitors. A short cruise from Florida--or,
after Pan-American Airways launched its first international passenger
route with Miami-Havana flights in 1928, an even shorter plane
ride--Cuba was, by the 1930s, receiving more US visitors than even
Canada.
By the time the US mob launched their Havana plot in earnest in 1946,
tourism was already well established as a key portion of Cuba's
economy. Mob designs for "the Monte Carlo of the Caribbean" evoked
European playgrounds, with hotels named the Riviera, Deauville and
Capri. But by the 1950s, "Havana" had acquired its own cachet for
American consumers as both brand and idea. On television Desi Arnaz
was the all-purpose Latin Lover, and advertisements hawked Havana
perfume, Havana soft drinks, Havana lingerie. "Waving palms, a cool
island breeze," went the slogan for El Paso brand Cuban Black Bean
Dip. "Visit a forbidden paradise of silky black beans, sweet red
pepper and an undercurrent of rich gold rum, resulting in a Cuban
sensation that may taste mild, but is definitely hot, hot, hot!"
The cold war ended Havana's viability as marketing hook for consumers
to the north. That it also made Cuba legally forbidden to American
travelers, though, doubtless contributes to a still-thriving trade in
Cuba-related books in the United States--volumes that (no matter their
particular topic or politics) often find it impossible not to trade in
shopworn clichés about pulsing rhythms and caramel skin and crashing
waves on the Malecón. Even in a book like T.J. English's authoritative
and otherwise sharply written Havana Nocturne, everything from
Batista's facial features to the city's jazz scene is described as
"exotic." Never mind that the cultures of Cuba and the United States
have always been more deeply intertwined than partisans of either
nation have sometimes cared to admit. The jazz bands that thrilled
American tourists in 1950s Havana borrowed from the inventions of
musicians in New York and Chicago; and no less a touchstone of
Americana than rock 'n' roll, as the music historian Ned Sublette has
convincingly shown, owed as much in its genesis to Cuban rhythms
ringing out of Havana as it did to blues riffs busting out of Memphis
or New Orleans. Indeed, for two centuries up until 1960, the cultures
of New Orleans and Havana were joined and nurtured by the streams of
migrants and goods flowing between them.
What the "exotic" label also tends to conceal about Cuba is that to
its own people as well as outsiders, the island has long been as much
an idea as a country. At least since José Martí, the great poet
laureate of Cuban independence, began composing odes to the island's
"half-breed" soul in the late 1800s, there has existed in Cuba an
obsession with reflecting upon and debating the national
character. This tradition is perhaps most memorably manifested in the
seminal anthropologist Fernando Ortiz's argument, in Cuban
Counterpoint (1940), that all of Cuban identity and culture--from the
rumba to the mulata to the cigar--can be understood as outgrowths of
an economy based in producing tobacco and sugar for export. The
discussion has taken many forms, but perhaps the dominant current in
Cuba's politics and intellectual culture has always been the struggle
over cubanía, or Cubanness. Fidel's revolution, before it was
Marxist-Leninist or Castroist or anything else, has always been framed
and experienced in Cuba as a nationalist struggle. Accordingly, it was
not solely on the grounds of Marxian virtue but also cubanía that
Fidel battled cocaine and prostitution as "un-Cuban" in the 1960s
(never mind the Havana Mob's avoidance of the drug trade, or that
sex-for-pay held a prominent place in Cuban society long before its
exploitation by yanquis) and contended, during the 1970s, that Cuba's
military involvement in Angola and Mozambique was driven by Cuba's
core identity as an "Afro-Latin" nation.
Fidel's custodianship of cubanía has deep roots in a much longer
history of Cuban men of privilege (and usually light skin) defining
the nation's identity. Batista was a mulatto cane-cutter's son; Fidel
and his brother Raúl were the children of wealthy Spanish
landowners--putative members, that is, of a class of Cubans who
thought the déclassé rule of an uneducated army colonel a national
shame. Not every member of Cuba's elite who came to support Castro
against Batista in the 1950s was driven by prejudice; Fidel has always
been a strong antiracist, in his way. But the machista worlds of elite
Cuban politics and culture have always been paternalistic, whether in
José Martí's wishful 1891 declaration that in Cuba "there are no
races," or the longstanding tradition--from Nicolás Guillén's iconic
1930 poem "Mulata" to innumerable paintings of the copper-skinned
Virgen de la Caridad--of holding up the sexy mulata as embodiment of
cubanía, while affording to actual brown-skinned Cuban women little
place in that nation beyond its brothels and kitchens.
After racial discrimination was officially banned in 1960 by his
revolution, Fidel blithely declared that racism was defeated in
Cuba. As in 1891, the actual situation was more complex. The masses of
Afro-Cubans who'd lived in illiterate destitution since slavery--and
seen 6,000 of their forebears massacred in a horrific 1912 race
war--had the most to gain from socialist projects in housing,
healthcare and education. That Cuba's 4 million blacks still provide a
key base of Communist Party support is a measure of how much their
lives have improved under Fidel. But as Carlos Moore writes in a
poignant new memoir, Pichón, Castro's blind spots with regard to race
have at times also been pernicious. Pichón takes its title from a
Cuban slur for Jamaican and Haitian laborers who survived the
Depression by scrounging for slaughterhouse scraps in the manner of
ugly black buzzards, or pichónes. The book begins with Moore
recounting a rural Cuban childhood of being tormented by the fists and
epithets of white schoolmates. Then comes the story of his personal
epic: leaving for New York City at 16 in the late 1950s and falling
into the black radical demimonde of Maya Angelou and Malcolm X, then
returning to Cuba as an ardent Fidel admirer in the early 1960s, only
to be imprisoned and exiled by Fidel's revolution for daring to
protest the race prejudice of certain of its ministers.
Moore renders this tragic tale with frank clarity. He met his mentor
Angelou in a Harlem bookshop shortly after his arrival to the
cosmopolis in 1958; scarcely two years later, he directed an
occupation of the UN General Assembly to protest the US-sponsored
killing of the Congolese freedom fighter Patrice Lumumba. It was
during Castro's own 1960 visit to the UN--during which Fidel stayed at
the Hotel Theresa in Harlem to convey solidarity with those oppressed
by the US empire at home--that Moore decided it was his revolutionary
duty to join the cause.
Returning to Havana in June 1961, Moore sought to put his skills as an
English speaker to work at the Foreign Ministry. He became convinced
that the bureaucrat denying his requests for a job was doing so on
account of his dark skin, and he took the audacious step of traveling
to a provincial army barracks to demand a meeting with the only
Afro-Cuban member of Fidel's inner circle, the guerrilla hero Juán
Almeida. Almeida indulged the headstrong youth with a warning to "stop
talking as you do," but once back in Havana, Moore was "detailed" by
the revolutionary police and tossed into a new jail made from a
converted mansion on the city's outskirts. He was released a few weeks
later with no charge or explanation and eventually found work in
another branch of the government. But in late 1962, after some months
of increasing disquiet about the revolution's puritanical
excesses--with police sending homosexuals to labor camps and forcibly
shuttering Afro-Cuban social clubs--Moore encountered his old nemesis
in the Foreign Ministry. Furious that the young negrito was still at
large, the bureaucrat promised to ensure that Moore was "take[n] care
of" for good. That afternoon Moore knocked at the door of the Havana
embassy of the new West African nation of Guinea and requested asylum;
a few weeks later he left Cuba on a freighter bound for
Africa. Eventually settling in Paris, he went on to write Castro, the
Blacks, and Africa (1989), a controversial radical critique of the
revolution's race mores whose exaggerated animus, given the
experiences related in Moore's more personal and worthwhile memoir, is
perhaps now clearer at its source.
When Moore went into exile in the early 1960s, most Cubans who fled
the island belonged to its white upper classes. The arch-right-wingers
among them nurtured a deep anger about Castro's "giving it all away"
to the riffraff and pichónes. Their story is perhaps less tragic than
that of exile families with more liberal pasts like the Bacardis,
owners of the eponymous liquor empire, whose story Tom Gjelten traces
in his splendid family chronicle Bacardi and the Long Fight for
Cuba. The tale begins with the penniless Catalan immigrant Facundo
Bacardi's discovering, in the 1860s, a new way to distill sugar cane
into clear white rum. His son Emilio Bacardi became a key ally of José
Martí in the fight for independence in the 1890s, and the Bacardis'
1950s heirs were fervid Fidel supporters--but then left the island and
became fervid Castro-haters when he ordered a state takeover of the
company they'd spent a century building from scratch. (One of Fidel's
great claims to revolutionary virtue is that he did not spare his own
parents' latifundio from being nationalized and split up in the first
agrarian reform.) Family sagas about seized storehouses and abandoned
mansions compose the sacred text of mainstream Cuban-exile
politics. But as stories like Carlos Moore's show, belonging to a
class of Cubans whose lot the revolution improved granted no exemption
from being tyrannized by party discipline and hierarchy.
When Fidel Castro took command of Havana in January 1959, few in or
outside Cuba knew much about him beyond his magnetism and rousing
oratory; apart from Castro's loathing of Batista and idolizing of
Martí, his politics--as the Eisenhower administration's "watch and
wait" approach to his government shows--were vague even to close
observers. Soon enough, his strident nationalism and messianic bent
were clear. But even as Castro's government began seizing lands owned
by US companies as part of its first agrarian reform in June 1959--and
powerful Washington interests began urging Eisenhower to respond by
ending the longstanding US agreement to purchase most of Cuba's
sugar--few foresaw the antagonisms and escalation to come.
With Cuba's continued access to the chief market for its main crop
looking unsure, and radicals like Che Guevara at Fidel's ear, whatever
doubts Castro had about Leninism disappeared. In February 1960 a
delegation of Soviet ministers arrived in Havana and signed an
agreement to purchase much of Cuba's sugar; Che traveled to Moscow a
short while later to secure Havana's ties to the Eastern Bloc. Three
years after Khrushchev had promised "we will bury you," the Soviets
had established a Communist beachhead in easy range of Florida, on an
island, moreover, that the United States had regarded as an amour
propre. The trauma was deep. In Washington a flurry of panicked
recriminations over how this could have been allowed to happen--traced
by Lars Schoultz with insightful verve in That Infernal Little Cuban
Republic, a comprehensive history of US-Cuba relations since World War
II--was translated into an ill-conceived CIA-sponsored invasion in
April 1961. The Bay of Pigs fiasco did Fidel the great favor of
allowing him to oversee the defeat of imperialist invaders on Cuba's
beaches. In the months following, the Kennedy administration hatched a
tragicomic series of attempts to kill Castro with explosive seashells
and poisoned cigars (a job for which the CIA contracted the
president's old Havana pimp, Santo Trafficante, now in Miami). But no
matter. In October 1962, Washington's worst fears were realized when a
US spy plane over Cuba's countryside snapped photos of Soviet missile
launchers nestled amid royal palms.
Whether or not the Cuban missile crisis was the most dangerous and
direct confrontation of the cold war, it's clear that Cuba's role was
that of pawn or prop. This did not comfort Castro, who harbored deep
resentment when Khrushchev failed to consult him before Moscow agreed
to remove its nuclear missiles--a reaction that reveals the
particularly Cuban pathos of this puffed-up leader of a smallish
island driven by the need to be treated and seen as head of a big
powerful nation (or at least a sovereign one). The longstanding US
irritation with Cuba, Schoultz observes, stems from its leaders'
persistent denial of the base precept of political realism distilled
in Thucydides' dictum that the strong do what they can and the weak
suffer what they must. Schoultz presents his history as a "case study
in the trials and tribulations of realism"--an investigation into how
for the past fifty years a weak state has "gotten away" with standing
up to its vastly stronger neighbor and how, conversely, the stronger
was made to let the weaker do so.
For three decades, of course, a large part of how Cuba "stood up" to
the US empire lay also in its becoming the client state of another
empire. This truth did not prevent Cuba from becoming a new kind of
symbol across a Latin America long frustrated by the condescension of
its Northern hegemon. Across the hemisphere, the mythic story of
Cuba--a miraculous fable about a merry band of longhairs who went into
their country's mountains and a few years later swept into its capital
on the shoulders of its poor--was one that women and men who loved
justice would seek to re-create from El Salvador to Colombia to
Bolivia and Peru. In Washington, conversely, a new guiding metaphor
for Cuba emerged: that of a malignant cancer whose spread had to be
contained at all costs. And so it was that many thousands of those
Latin Americans who went to the continent's jungles during the '60s,
'70s and '80s, some toting photos of Che and Fidel in their knapsacks,
died awful deaths with those whose cause they raised, too often the
"disappeared" victims of US-backed dictatorships and death squads.
Since the cold war's end, US policy mavens have argued over the extent
to which those dark decades' abuses were, if not justifiable,
understandable given the strategic threat posed by the prospect of
another Soviet satellite in its "backyard." What the years since the
USSR's fall have also laid bare, however, is the extent to which
Washington's approach to Cuba itself has been driven by other than
simply rational aims like containment. "Castro is not merely an
adversary, but an enemy," a 1993 report from the US Army War College
observes, "an embodiment of evil who must be punished for his defiance
of the United States.... There is a desire to hurt the enemy that is
mirrored in the malevolence that Castro has exhibited towards us." For
US politicians in national campaigns, being "tough on Cuba" long ago
took its place with being "a friend to Israel" as a sine qua non of
victory. As Cuba's potential threat to US security has progressively
dwindled to nearly nil, US antagonism toward its government has only
deepened. The Cuban Democracy Act of 1992 codified the embargo as US
law and was toughened in the Helms-Burton Act signed by Bill Clinton
in 1996, which prohibited US companies from dealing with foreign firms
engaged in business with Cuban property seized by the revolution, and
also mandated that the embargo could not be lifted until such time as
Cuba is run by a government "that does not include Fidel Castro or
Raúl Castro."
More recently, George W. Bush, who owed his presidency to south
Florida, used his office in 2004 to funnel $59 million in new funding
to no-bid Miami-Cuban boondoggles like the propaganda networks Radio
and TV Martí. He also moved to close one of the embargo's few
loopholes by introducing strict limits on remittances Cuban-Americans
may send to family members on the island and on the number of trips
they may take to visit them. Bush also placed Cuba on the US list of
"state sponsors of terror" (based on an alleged chemical weapons
program whose existence his own State Department doubted) and, in the
long run-up to the 2004 election, established, at the heart of the
executive branch and under the chairmanship of Secretary of State
Colin Powell, a Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba. It was
charged with determining how "to hasten the end" of the Castro
dictatorship and in May 2004 produced a report recommending, for
example, that in the wake of an anticipated violent transition, Cuban
schools be kept open "in order to keep children and teenagers off the
streets."
As Daniel Erikson shows in The Cuba Wars, a sharp and deeply reported
account of dynamics informing US-Cuba policy since the Clinton
administration, Castro's government was concerned that Cuba's
involvement in Bush's "war on terror" would go beyond the United
States' use of its imperial relic at Guantánamo Bay to hold certain
prisoners beyond the jurisdiction of US courts. The Cubans "were
really worried," Lawrence Wilkerson, longtime chief of staff to Colin
Powell, tells Erikson of a visit he made to Havana just after leaving
the State Department in 2005. "They wanted me first of all to assure
them that we weren't going to invade." In the spring of 2003, Fidel
Castro--practiced in paranoia, always more comfortable on a war
footing than not--responded to the new provocations by ordering the
trial for treason of some seventy-five "dissidents," some of whom were
indeed Cubans being paid by the United States to tweak (if hardly, in
practice, to destabilize) their government, but most of whose offenses
amounted to writing articles and circulating petitions. Some fifty-odd
of "the 75" remain jailed today.
In 2003 I was living in Havana, and as at so many other times when
Cuba had become the subject of hyperventilated fits abroad, the
arrests and diplomatic volleys were little more than background noise
to the struggles of quotidian life. People who sought more food than
allotted by their ration card broke the law daily. That spring, an
architect I was friendly with began selling stolen shellfish to feed
his family, and his cousin had taken to earning new clothes by
satisfying the bedroom predilections of Italian sex tourists. More
significant to Cubans than Washington's longstanding obsession with
upending their government were concerns over what that government
might do to repair a broken economy. Such grave ills aside, not a few
Cubans remain proud that theirs is a poor country in which "no
children sleep in the streets," as a propaganda billboard near my
Havana apartment touted truly. The Communist Party enjoys significant
support, especially in the provincias--where peasants fifty years ago
lived in dirt-floored huts and still do so today, but now regard free
healthcare for their parents and good schools for their kids as
birthrights. More generally, it's open to debate whether the Cuban
state's solicitude toward its young and its aged is "worth" the
repression too often endured by everyone else. But from the standpoint
of a failed fifty-year attempt by the United States to change the
island's government by isolation, the salient facts about Cuba are
that it enjoys good relations and strong economic ties to every other
country in the hemisphere, including Canada (not to mention China and
the European Union), and that it has a stable government, in evidently
firm control of its military and police, which has carried off its
recent change to a new head of state with apparently minimal fuss.
Raúl Castro--longtime head of Cuba's military, a dour party man--has,
with the illness of his brother, been cast in the unlikely role of
reformer. Many in Cuba express hope that Raúl's early gestures at
reform, like his opening of the grounds of tourist hotels such as the
Hotel Nacional to ordinary Cubans, may augur a larger opening of the
Cuban economy. During the presidential campaign, Barack Obama called
Raúl's bluff by suggesting that he'd be willing to sit down with
Cuba's new leader with a view toward improving relations. Realists
predictably think this prospect, like Raúl's proffering of Cuba's
"willingness to discuss on equal footing the prolonged dispute" with
the United States, is a nonstarter: Obama's secretary of state, back
when she was not his head diplomat but primary rival, called his
willingness to meet with "foreign dictators" like Cuba's new leader
"irresponsible." But during its first weeks, the Obama
administration--no doubt cognizant of polls showing that younger
Cuban-Americans voice little support for the hardline stance of the
past, and that even a symbolic thaw with Cuba would be an easy way to
improve relations with the rest of Latin America--successfully
marshaled a bill through Congress overturning Bush-era restrictions on
family visits and remittances. All this move does is return the United
States' Cuba policy to its 2003 status. But it was a key signal that a
larger overhaul of the Cuba policy will be on the table in Obama's
Washington. At April's Summit of the Americas, the president observed
that Cuba's thousands of doctors dispersed throughout the region were
"a reminder for us in the United States that if our only interaction
with many of these countries is...military, then we may not be
developing the connections that can, over time, increase our
influence." Obama also declared that a "new beginning with Cuba" could
be near. That initial signal, it seems, has been confirmed.
In 1891, José Martí, the most articulate of Cuban nationalists and
also perhaps his generation's most perceptive writer on inter-American
relations, wrote in Nuestra América, "One must not attribute, through
a provincial antipathy, a fatal and inbred wickedness to the
continent's fair-skinned nation simply because it does not speak our
language, or see the world as we see it, or resemble us in its
political defects, so different from our own." For many Cubans, the
election of Obama represents an overcoming of political defects, and
in his brown face they see not a "fair-skinned nation" but something
of themselves; their hope is that Obama will be a leader free of many
of his country's old neuroses. The ultimate test of those hopes will
be ending the long-running embargo, which Wilkerson, expressing a
widely held but rarely stated Washington view, called, in an interview
with GQ, "the dumbest policy on the face of the earth." No less
incontestable is a remark made in 1974 by the now-ailing barbudo in
Havana, who recently expressed doubt that he'd live to see the end of
Obama's first term. "We cannot move, nor can the United States," Fidel
Castro observed in an interview. "Speaking realistically, someday some
sort of ties will have to be established."