From: PL <
P...@pandora.be>
Subject: Cuba blew its
chance
Date: Sunday, March 25, 2001 4:13 PM
Tuesday 20 March
2001
Cuba blew its chance
LAWRENCE MARTIN
Southam
News.
Cuba had its chance, says Lloyd Axworthy from his new digs in
British
Columbia. "We gave them an opportunity but they didn't come through
the
door."
So it is only right, says the former minister of foreign
affairs, that the
Castro regime not be invited to the Summit of the Americas
in Quebec City a
month from now.
John Manley, Axworthy's successor,
slammed the summit door shut on Cuba last
week. It may be one of the few
times the two men, who represent somewhat
different ideological swaths,
concur. "What John is expressing," said
Axworthy, "is the policy direction of
the last year and a half."
In fact, says Mark Entwistle, a former
Canadian ambassador in Cuba, there
was never any realistic chance Castro
would be invited to the confab of 35
nations. "It's a pre-ordained decision."
Invite Cuba, Entwistle says, and
you lose the United States. "No host is
going to throw that monkey wrench
into the works. The Americans would have
just bolted."
Still, the idea that even Axworthy is down on the little
island to the point
where he doesn't want it at Quebec is significant. If
there was anyone who
could have made peace and progress with Cuba, it was the
left-leaning
Axworthy. He wasn't exactly our man in Havana. But he was close
to the mold
of Pierre Trudeau in terms of his liberal attitude. Castro, we
recall, was
such a hit with Trudeau that he took front and centre stage at
the former
prime minister's funeral in Montreal last autumn. This will likely
be the
dictator's last appearance here for some time to come.
Signs of
Co-Operation
Prime Minister Jean Chretien said two years ago in Santiago
that Cuba should
be welcomed into the "gran familia" of the Americas. Ottawa
signed
agreements with Cuba on economic development and women's rights.
Axworthy
wanted its support on the creation of an international criminal
court. There
were signs, thought Axworthy, that Havana would be co-operating
with the
United Nations on its economic and social-rights agenda.
But
then the chill set in. It coincided, oddly, with the aftermath of the
visit
of the pope to Cuba in January 1998. Hard-liners seemed to get the
upper
hand. There was no follow-up on some of the earlier promises. What
really
angered Ottawa was the arrest and trial of dissidents and the
severe
sentences doled out to them. Axworthy complained but "we were
basically told
to mind our own business."
In the last year or two, he
said, "the Castro regime has almost gone out of
its way to oppose progress."
Axworthy is at a loss to explain it but others,
like Entwistle, say it's
likely due to increasing tensions with the
Cuban-American community in Miami.
It is that relationship, the former
ambassador notes, that plays havoc with
the complex internal politics of
Cuba.
Questions of
Consistency
The Canadian position on the Quebec summit raises questions
of consistency.
It's OK for Ottawa to do business and head off on trade
missions with the
very undemocratic China - though Chretien did criticize
Bejing's
human-rights record while so doing. And Ottawa is also inviting
countries
like Haiti and Colombia, with their dubious democratic-rights
records, to
Quebec.
Axworthy, who is director of the Liu Centre for
the Study of Global Issues,
is no fan of these two states. "But I wouldn't
say it's hypocritical. At
least in terms of their commitments they abide by
the rules. In the case of
Cuba, they're saying, 'We'll do it our way.'
"
While expressing his discouragement with Castro, he did say that in the
long
term, the door must be kept open to progress. Some things the Cubans
do
should not be ignored. "Cuba really does have a first-class
public-health
system. In this area Canada should continue to engage
actively."
The former foreign affairs minister will not be attending the
Summit of the
Americas. As the date for it approaches, any optimism that it
will
accomplish much diminishes. There is little chance of any
significant
progress toward hemispheric free trade. In any event, experts
agree that if
ever such a pact comes about, economic advantages for Canada
would be very
small.
But, says Axworthy, there can be great value to
the summit in the larger
context of shining a light on democratic development
in the hemisphere. Even
without Cuba's presence, it is this, he says, that
should constitute "the
Canadian signature" on the conference.
-
Lawrence Martin is Ottawa-based national-affairs columnist for
Southam
News.
http://www.montrealgazette.com/editorial/pages/010320/5033343.html