The Honorable Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Professor Jaime Suchlicki,
presenters and participants in this seminar on Cuba transition
planning:
It's a great honor for me, a Cuban exile and the son of Cuban
exiles, to speak to you today, as the Assistant Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development.
At this landmark seminar of the University of Miami Cuba Transition
Project, I want to discuss ways in which we can all work together as
Americans to support President George Bush, Secretary of State Colin
Powell, Assistant Secretary Otto Reich, USAID Administrator Andrew
Natsios and the rest of the U.S. team in helping to plan a peaceful
transition to democracy in Cuba.
There is no substitute for American leadership in defending
democracy around the world.
There is no substitute for American leadership in promoting human
rights and economic prosperity throughout the Western Hemisphere.
There is no substitute for American leadership in exposing the
continuing human rights abuses and repression of the Castro regime in
Cuba.
Despite a concerted propaganda campaign by the Cuban Government,
Fidel Castro has not mellowed, and he is no friend of the United
States. As President Bush stated in his speech to the American people
on May 20 of this year, "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." Make no mistake about it,
the President's commitment to a free Cuba is unequivocal.
It is up to us, as Americans for a free Cuba, to lead and to
continue to focus world attention on Fidel Castro's failed forty-three
year old repressive dictatorship.
The Cuban people have suffered enough. Forty-three years of
totalitarian tyranny and bungled central planning is enough. Now is
the time for all of us and for all free men and women everywhere to
redouble our efforts in solidarity with the peaceful democratic forces
on that imprisoned island.
Now is the time to increase international pressure on the Castro
regime, not to ease up. If Castro is sincere in his desire for
international respect, he must earn that respect. He must stop
throwing Cuban journalists and peaceful activists into prison, stop
tolerating sexual tourism, stop promoting tourist apartheid, stop
religious discrimination, abandon censorship, end his internal embargo
of information, stop panhandling for international credits and other
hand-outs, and permit others to carry forward a true transition to
democracy in Cuba.
To those who would ease U.S. sanctions against the Castro regime,
President Bush and those of us who serve in his Administration say:
first, let the Castro regime release all Cuban political prisoners.
Let the Castro regime stop denying religious freedom. Let the Castro
regime lift restrictions on a free press. Let the Castro regime
schedule free elections. Let the Castro regime permit constitutional
reform, and a transition to democracy, with full respect for human
rights.
However, if the Castro regime continues its repression, continues
its refusal to reform, continues its refusal to respect fundamental
human rights, continues to deny the International Committee of the Red
Cross to inspect its prisons, continues its failed economic
experiments, then we must accelerate and intensify our efforts to
communicate directly with the Cuban people and with Cuba's nascent
independent civil society, which will become the vital core around
which Cuba's democratic transition will take place.
The United States Agency for International Development is proud of
the USAID Cuba program and its sponsorship of the University of
Miami's landmark Cuba Transition Project. This project is a vital part
of our efforts to promote a rapid, peaceful transition to democracy in
Cuba and to prepare for assistance to a future transition government
in Cuba.
In January of this year, on behalf of USAID, I presented the
University of Miami with a check for $1,045,000 to initiate this
program. I want to compliment Professor Jaime Suchlicki and his
colleagues for the tremendous amount of work they have accomplished
over the last nine months in developing the data bases, commissioning
the papers and organizing the seminars that make this project so
valuable. I must also thank Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and
Congressman Lincoln Diaz-Balart for their tireless efforts in
promoting this novel project.
We all look forward to the day, not far in the future, when a Cuban
transition government will help Cuba regain its rightful place in the
ranks of free and prosperous nations.
As you know, the United States will only recognize a transition
government in Cuba which satisfies the definition contained in U.S.
legislation and specifically, Section 205 of the Cuban Liberty and
Democratic Solidarity (Libertad) Act of 1996.
Under that definition, a Cuban transition government is a
government that has, among other things:
- legalized all political activity;
- released all political prisoners and allowed for investigations
of Cuban prisons by appropriate international human rights
organizations;
- made public commitments to organizing free and fair elections
for a new government;
- made public commitments to and is making demonstrable progress
in establishing an independent judiciary;
- made a commitment to respect internationally recognized human
rights and basic freedoms as set forth in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, to which Cuba is a signatory nation;
- and which does not include either Fidel or Raul Castro.
-
Once these conditions are met, The United States is prepared to
step in itself and will enlist the efforts of other friends of freedom
to offer to the transition government comprehensive and coordinated
technical assistance and training programs to facilitate the
transition to democracy.
The U.S. is prepared to offer a variety of assistance to a
transition government during its early days when basic issues
concerning stability and food security may be uppermost in people's
minds.
Among other things, if requested, the United States will
immediately send humanitarian assessment teams to Cuba to help the
transition government evaluate the need for emergency food relief and
other humanitarian assistance. These teams will recommend specific
measures to address their findings.
If requested, the U.S. will also commission U.S. non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to manage large-scale public works projects in
order to provide immediate jobs paid with food-for-work or
cash-for-work to ensure basic income for families that are most at
risk during the economic transition.
To help the transition government reduce levels of violent crime,
the U.S. is also prepared to offer a food-for-weapons program, so that
those who have access to firearms can turn them in to the government
in exchange for food.
The U.S. will encourage a Cuban transition government to work with
U.S. and international non-governmental organizations, with the Red
Cross, and UN agencies. These groups should form their own
coordination unit to engage government ministries with a single
humanitarian voice.
If asked, we will provide assistance for the planning of free and
fair multi-party elections and to help launch the process of restoring
democratic governance in Cuba.
As Professor Jorge Dominguez has pointed out, constitutional change
is necessary in Cuba. Mere constitutional change, however, is not
sufficient for restoring democratic governance. The Cuban people will
also require an accountable government, a government that respects
human rights, a government that operates under the rule of law, with
an independent judiciary which protects the rights of individuals,
safeguards private property and enforces legal contracts. The U.S.
will support a transition government that seeks to realize that
vision.
Once democracy is restored to Cuba, the United States will respond
immediately to requests for help in securing Cuba's social safety net.
A Cuban transition government and a democratically-elected government
will face serious challenges in maintaining social services. The U.S.
can help the government expand and improve services in a sustainable
manner so they become financially solvent.
In order to secure the social safety net, Cuba will require
fundamental reforms in health care, education, and social security
pensions. The country will require loans for housing construction, and
the private sector can and must play a central role in all of these
activities.
The United States will work with a Cuban transition government and
with the international financial institutions to help attract the
foreign direct investment required to transform the Cuban economy into
a viable production and distribution system.
As Professor Carmelo Mesa-Lago has written, the core institutions
of free enterprise-private property ownership, corporate governance,
capital markets, convertible currencies, and international trade-are
transferable to Cuba. These are enormously powerful instruments of
economic development.
The United States is prepared to work with the international
financial institutions and with other democracies to help a Cuban
transition government begin to establish these core institutions, to
permit private markets to operate competitively and without
distortions, and to guarantee the right to effective and
nondiscriminatory asset ownership and transfer.
Experience from elsewhere in Latin America, from Asia and the
former Soviet Union, demonstrates that small- and micro-enterprise
development is essential to the creation of a growing and sustainable
economy that widely shares the benefits of growth.
If requested, USAID will provide technical assistance to help the
Cuban transition government create an enabling environment for Cuban
small-and micro-enterprise development.
Micro-enterprise lending programs, so successful throughout Latin
America and the rest of the world, should be introduced in Cuba. U.S.
non-governmental organizations and private firms can play a major role
in developing micro-lending institutions on the island.
The collapse of Cuba's command economy--its sugar sector, its food
production and distribution systems--mandates the privatization of
state enterprises, promotion of foreign investment, and encouragement
of Cuban entrepreneurial talent.
Under the Castro regime, the dismantling of state enterprises has
already begun, with the forced closure of more than 70 state-owned and
operated sugar mills. The displacement of thousands of sugar workers
and their families will further increase unemployment and depress real
wages.
For these and other Cuban workers, micro-, small- and
medium-enterprise development can provide a critical employment
option. A viable micro- and small business sector has the potential to
redistribute income and political power in ways that spread material
wealth and political influence over a broad spectrum of society.
Micro- and small enterprise and entrepreneurial spirit are also
important sources of innovation and technological change and an engine
of economic development.
If requested, USAID will assist the Cuban transition government and
its democratically-elected successor in the design and implementation
of a fundamental land reform program, to return Cuba's agricultural
lands to private ownership and sound management.
The U.S. will encourage the Cuban transition government to begin as
soon as possible to put into place a legal, regulatory, and judicial
framework that ensures that private markets operate competitively and
without distortions.
There is much more that we, together, can do. The challenges are
significant. Efforts to tackle them are past due. Let us now begin to
plan for the day when a new government in Cuba shows itself dedicated
to freeing the Cuban people to pursue their destiny.
Your discussions here this morning provide a vital starting point,
and the Cuba Transition Project of the University of Miami can serve
as the blueprint for the free Cuba of the future. Today you have
discussed the key roles that education and civic values must play in
the formation of a democratic Cuba. You have also discussed the need
to combat corruption and the importance of establishing the rule of
law under a democratic constitution.
This afternoon, you will examine the transition experience in
Eastern Europe, in the attempt to find lessons that may help guide the
Cuban transition.
These are all critically important issues, and it is important for
you to examine them in an open forum. It is even more essential that
you and we reach out to the Cuban people and to their true
representatives-Cuba's human rights activists-to engage them in these
discussions.
It is only when the Cuban people are able to enter into dialogue
with each other and with the outside world on these and other critical
issues that the Cuban transition to democracy will truly begin.
I want to congratulate you all for the passion, intelligence, and
creativity with which you have approached your task, and for your
insight and recommendations, and I want to thank the University of
Miami and Dr. Suchlicki's team for its leadership and dedication in
building a program that will continue to generate knowledge and debate
on some of the most historic issues of our time.
Thank you.