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<text id=94TT1186>
<link 94TO0199>
<title>
Sep. 05, 1994: Cover:Cubans, Go Home
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Sep. 05, 1994 Ready to Talk Now?:Castro
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
COVER STORIES, Page 28
Cubans, Go Home
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Clinton is determined to turn the rafters back rather than open
talks with Fidel Castro
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Cathy Booth/Havana, James Carney and Ann M. Simmons/Washington
and Elaine Shannon/Guantanamo Bay
</p>
<p> Guantanamo Bay may be geographically in Cuba, but the U.S.
naval station there is another world. A fence, a gate locked
on both sides and two minefields--one Cuban, one American--separate it from Fidel Castro's domain. By the time
the Caribbean winds slide over mountains to reach "Gitmo"
on the southeastern shore, they have dropped all their
rainfall. The 32 acres of U.S.-leased land on both sides
of the bay resemble less the lush semitropical island across
the minefields than the set for a Hollywood western: sandy,
rock-strewn hills and beaches, barren except for a random
dotting of cactus. Hardly the site anyone would choose
to build from scratch what amounts to a new city for 65,000
people.
</p>
<p> But when Bill Clinton sat down with his top advisers last
week to figure out what to do with the thousands of Cuban
refugees floating toward Florida on every kind of makeshift
raft they could tie together, there seemed no other choice.
The President had already insisted he would not let the
boat people into the U.S. proper--that was politically
unacceptable--but the refugee flow swelled rather than
ebbed. Blockade the island? Not really; that would be an
act of war. Send the refugees back to Castro? Too heartless,
and besides, he would not take them.
</p>
<p> Well then, negotiate some kind of deal with Fidel to replace
the U.S. embargo that has been in place for 32 years--and Clinton has just tightened? Castro coolly declared
that he was ready and willing to talk, seizing the high
ground in a game he largely controls. His ability to provoke
or stop a flow of refugees almost at will gives him a power
to bedevil Washington that he is using with relish. This
week American and Cuban officials will resume low-level
talks, focused strictly on migration, that were suspended
last December. But as for wide-ranging negotiations--no way, responded Clinton; that would look like capitulation.
Yet something had to be done with the balseros, or rafters,
as Cubans dubbed them. So Secretary of Defense William
Perry calmly assured his Administration colleagues that
a tent city under construction at Guantanamo to house the
first Cuban refugees could be rapidly expanded to hold
many more.
</p>
<p> So Gitmo it is, and never mind that shipping the Cubans
there is the ultimate in stopgap solutions. "It's a day-by-day
situation, and that's how we're looking at it," acknowledges
a top White House aide. Another Administration official
declines to discuss how stashing the fugitives at Guantanamo
might fit into any long-term policy toward Cuba. Says he:
"We're focused now on the immediate problem--handling
the refugees." Nor will anyone speculate just how long
the Cubans might have to stay in Guantanamo. The standard
answer is "Indefinitely," but does that mean months? Years?
Until the 68-year-old Castro falls from power or dies?
One official huffs, "Indefinitely--that's what it means."
</p>
<p> It is neither an easy nor a cheap policy to carry out.
Expanding facilities to house up to 65,000 refugees--14,000 Haitians already camped at Gitmo plus as many as
51,000 Cubans, of whom nearly 14,000 were in residence
by Saturday--will cost $100 million for openers, the
Pentagon estimates. Keeping them in food, water and other
"consumables" will take an additional $20 million a month.
That spending would come on top of $230 million the U.S.
has already shelled out since last Oct. 1 to care for the
Haitian refugees.
</p>
<p> Finding land on which to pitch tents for the balseros is
no problem--except to the 3,000 U.S. service members
who will lose the company of their families and the use
of recreational facilities. Tents, flown in from the U.S.
mainland, are being set up on the base's softball and baseball
diamonds, a soccer field, even the paltry sand-and-rock
golf course; the beach where the soldiers and sailors swim
will soon house the headquarters of a military-civilian
task force that will oversee the camps. Military spouses
and children are being flown out because of electric-power
and water rationing. But enough land is available to put
up tents for the Cubans in clusters holding about 2,500
people each, and to keep plenty of elbow room between their
quarters and those of the Haitians.
</p>
<p> Since Castro cut all connections between the base and the
rest of the island in 1964, Guantanamo is entirely dependent
on its own resources and supplies flown in from mainland
U.S. or floated by barge from the Florida Keys. Massive
new shipments of water, desalinating and generating equipment
may be needed. Plus food, of course. And people--maybe
4,000 more U.S. troops to build, cook for and police the
camps.
</p>
<p> A tougher problem will be to keep the Cubans occupied.
The camps are bleak, though not squalid: many of the tents,
housing 20 people each, have no floors, but contain comfortable
cots with clean sheets; they are served by rows of portable
toilets and curtainless outdoor showers. The yards, though,
are sweltering, dusty and bare, and ringed by concertina
wire. Humanitarian organizations and community-relations
specialists from the Justice Department intend to set up
church services, school classes, recreation programs. But
for now there are no radios or TV sets, no music, no toys
for the children, nothing to do except sit or wander back
and forth, nothing even to look at except one another.
</p>
<p> Early arrivals feel betrayed. American journalists visiting
the camps found not a single refugee who knew that the
Administration now refused to let them into the U.S. When
they heard the news from the reporters, they were stunned,
overwhelmed, disbelieving. "There is no way to go for us?"
stammered Reynaldo Valido, a professor of English in Matanzas
province until he fled in a rickety boat Aug. 18, the day
before Clinton announced the exclusion policy. He was too
shocked to say anything more for several minutes, and then
murmured, "It's a big deception of the U.S. government
if they say that." Carlo Vilajeras, a Pentecostal minister,
agrees: "Clinton is not just. We hope that God will come
into his heart."
</p>
<p> If not? The refugees do not want to talk about anything
but their burning desire to get out of Gitmo and be united
with family members in the U.S. The visiting journalists
were mobbed by people begging them to accept tiny slips
of paper or bits of Kleenex boxes scrawled with names and
numbers. "Call my mother," refugees pleaded. "Please let
my uncle know I'm O.K." They do not even want to talk about
what they will do if they have to stay in Guantanamo for
good, and refuse to believe that will happen. Says Lazaro
Rubio, a 30-year-old sculptor who has both parents, three
brothers and three sisters living in Miami: "Our only struggle
is to be unified with our families."
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, that is what the Clinton Administration insists
will not happen soon or ever. But interning the refugees
in Guantanamo is an expedient, not a policy. A contradictory
expedient at that. The U.S. long lashed Castro for keeping
his people prisoner; now it is urging him to stop them
from fleeing--while simultaneously cutting off family
remittances and worsening the poverty driving most of the
balseros to brave the perils of the Straits of Florida.
Clinton loudly proclaims he will not let Castro "dictate
American immigration policy"--in the very act of reversing
the 35-year policy of welcoming Cuban refugees with "an
open heart and open arms," as Jimmy Carter put it in 1980.
</p>
<p> The expedient, however, is the only thing the Administration
can think of at the moment. Officials seem to have no good
idea of what might happen next. It is conceivable that
they can put off further the day when they will have to
rethink basic Cuban policy--or their lack of one. The
flood of refugees could slow to manageable proportions.
After almost 6,500 Cubans were plucked from the waters
on Tuesday and Wednesday last week, the Thursday-Friday
total dropped to a bit more than 2,000. But the drop-off
may have resulted only from the heavy rain, high winds
and stormy waters that threatened to swamp the pitifully
unseaworthy rafts before they could reach the picket line
of more than 70 U.S. Coast Guard and Navy vessels patrolling
beyond the 12-mile territorial limit off Cuba's northern
coast.
</p>
<p> It is equally possible that the refugee tide will rise
again when the seas subside, until it eventually overwhelms
any facilities that can be built in Guantanamo, or in Panama
and the 11 other Caribbean, Central and South American
countries that the U.S. is asking to help take some refugees
off its hands. (They had agreed earlier to take some Haitians,
but the U.S. found it unnecessary to send any.) As loudly
as the U.S. proclaims that it will never let any of those
interned in Guantanamo enter the American mainland, many
Cubans preparing to flee, as well as those already in Gitmo,
refuse to believe it. Others might even prefer camp life
with three meals a day in Guantanamo to hunger in Cuba.
</p>
<p> If the disaffected keep coming in numbers sufficient to
overflow Guantanamo, Clinton will have to look again at
the options he has tried mightily to dodge. His major goal
so far has been to avoid, at almost all costs, a replay
of the Mariel boat lift. That 1980 exodus dumped 125,000
refugees in five months into Florida and from there to
other Southern states unready to receive them. The fiasco
badly hurt not only President Carter but also Bill Clinton,
who believes he was defeated for re-election as Governor
of Arkansas in part because Cuban refugees sent to Fort
Chaffee rioted, and dozens of people were injured. Even
after reclaiming the statehouse in 1982 and going on to
the presidency, he remembers Mariel all too well. In discussions
of what to do with the new wave of refugees, says a senior
Administration official, "the fundamental issue" in the
President's mind "was that there was not to be a repetition
of the Mariel boat lift, that we were not going to tolerate
that happening again."
</p>
<p> In addition, Clinton has let his policy be driven by the
hard-nosed anti-Castro Cuban exile community in the U.S.,
or rather the faction of it composed of early exiles, many
of whom are grouped in the Cuban American National Foundation.
It was after meeting with them at the White House that
Clinton followed up his decision to bar the refugees by
forbidding U.S. residents to send money to relatives in
Cuba and by cracking down on the charter flights by which
families could visit those left behind. The moves especially
distressed younger and more recent refugees who still have
relatives in Cuba. But the steps were urged by the Cuban-American
foundation, whose members have often had little contact
with the island since the early 1960s, whose relatives
have long ago immigrated, and who support anything that
would hurt Castro--regardless of the impact on ordinary
Cubans.
</p>
<p> Clinton's solicitude for the foundation might seem misguided.
Its members are mostly staunch Republicans unlikely to
boost the President's meager chances of carrying Florida
in 1996, whatever he does. But a foundation-spurred surge
against Democrats could cost Florida Governor Lawton Chiles
his job in November. Also, generosity toward Cubans seeking
to enter the U.S. would put Clinton at odds with a powerful
sentiment against illegal immigration that is gaining strength
in key states like Texas and California.
</p>
<p> But suppose the flood of refugees continues? White House
aides admit, though only as a theoretical possibility,
that Clinton would then either have to allow the very entry
of refugees into the U.S. that he considers so politically
disastrous or institute a still tougher policy. Yet an
outright blockade to bottle them up is not a practical
alternative when scores of friendly nations trade actively
with Cuba. In fact, Washington has enough on its plate
lining up hemispheric support for a possible invasion of
Haiti: this week high-ranking officials will travel to
a meeting of the Caribbean community in hopes of formalizing
their approval. The obvious alternative is to open wide-ranging
discussions with Castro aimed at swapping an end to the
U.S. trade embargo for Cuban reforms leading to a freer
economy and politics. Some Administration policymakers
are known to favor the idea, but Clinton and his top aides
are adamantly opposed. Defense Secretary Perry dismisses
the idea as "a loser."
</p>
<p> Administration aides have some intellectual arguments for
maintaining a cold war stance toward Cuba. Washington officials
insist that the U.S. embargo is not a significant cause
of Cuba's economic desperation, which stems primarily from
the loss of its Soviet lifeline and Castro's subsequent
refusal to make free-market reforms. While the U.S. negotiates
with other repressive communist regimes like Vietnam, North
Korea and China, officials say these are cases where the
U.S. has important strategic interests to safeguard: nuclear
nonproliferation in the case of North Korea, a booming
trade with China. In contrast, says an Administration official,
"we have no interest in Cuba other than the promotion of
democracy and the containment of immigration."
</p>
<p> But the real reason for refusing to engage in any broad
negotiation is emotional. The weight of 35 years of demonizing
Castro is not easy to shrug off. Clinton is afraid that
Republicans--and plenty of Democrats--will scorch him
for cozying up to a communist devil. Yet that fear may
be exaggerated: the Wall Street Journal editorial page,
a powerful voice of conservatives, came out last week in
favor of lifting the embargo, arguing that the best way
to undermine communist regimes is to open them up to outside
goods, exchanges of people and ideas. It worked with the
Soviet empire. But Clinton does not yet dare risk taking
that advice.
</p>
<p> The best outcome Washington can wish for is a sudden transformation
of Cuba into an open-market democracy, preferably by evolution,
though maybe by internal revolutionary upheaval. But it
would be unwise to count on such a lucky break. For all
his economic bungling, Castro retains strong political
control and the loyalty of many Cubans, probably still
a majority of them. The new surge of people fleeing is
sometimes seen as the beginning of the end for Fidel, but
it might equally provide him with a safety valve that drains
away the most seriously discontented--as well as illustrating
once again his unrivaled ability to torment American Presidents.
</p>
<p> It is true that discontent is more widespread and vocal
than ever before. The refugee crisis came in the wake of
a melee on Aug. 5, when hundreds of young Cubans, watched
by thousands of amazed onlookers, rioted over the suspension
of a Havana bay ferry that had been hijacked three times
to Florida. As some of the rioters dared to shout, "Down
with Fidel!" the demonstration was quickly halted. But
the message was not lost on Castro. Unleashing refugees
has proved an effective attention getter for him in the
past, and he has been disappointed that a Democratic Administration
in Washington has not proved more receptive to dealing
with him. So Castro let it be known that his police would
no longer arrest or even try to stop Cubans attempting
to flee by makeshift boat or raft. Ergo, two problems solved
at once: angry Cubans were distracted from turning their
despair against Fidel, and he certainly got Washington's
attention.
</p>
<p> Castro primarily has himself to blame for Cuba's current
travails. Some reforms he instituted since mid-1993 had
begun to pull the country back from the brink of disaster
after the collapse of the Soviet bloc cut Moscow's aid
from a torrent to a trickle and then to nothing. When he
legalized individual private business last September, Havana
suddenly sprouted plumbers, hairdressers, restaurateurs,
repairmen and other overnight entrepreneurs permitted to
work for themselves. But the July 1993 legalization of
dollar holdings was a two-edged sword. It brought much
needed hard currency into Cuba, but also split what had
been a largely egalitarian society into two classes: the
haves, who had access to dollars earned in the tourist
industry or sent by relatives in the U.S.; and dollarless
have-nots, who could not shop in the new hard-currency
stores.
</p>
<p> Castro then returned, disastrously, to Marxist principle.
In February and March he cracked down on the flourishing
black markets that had sprung up, particularly in food.
Police stopped all vehicles coming from the countryside
into cities and searched them for contraband food to make
sure that farmers sold only to the state, not to private
buyers. Food shortages intensified.
</p>
<p> Even so, Castro seems thoroughly in control. The ability
of many Cubans to describe harrowing privation and in almost
the same breath profess loyalty to Fidel--or at worst
a kind of numb resignation--is startling. Raise, 31,
an engineer, pauses along the Almendares River in western
Havana to watch the return of several rafts that had tried
to make it across the Straits of Florida but were forced
by bad weather to turn back. "These people are out of their
minds," he says. "This is a difficult period of the revolution,
but I wouldn't even think about doing it, no matter how
bad things get here. It's just too dangerous." Felix, 38,
manager of a government-run bodega, complains that supplies
are the leanest he has ever seen. "I don't see how they
can send any less and expect us to survive," he says. He
feels guilty when customers complain. "But what can I do?"
he asks--a depressingly familiar refrain throughout Cuba
these days.
</p>
<p> Some experts think Castro's most likely course is to emulate
China, combining a turn toward economic freedom with continued
political control. While that would be far from ideal,
it would still be in the U.S. interest to encourage it
and seek through negotiation to promote political loosening
too. The best way to do that would be to talk to Castro.
Trade and investment that might relieve Cuba's economic
despair are the only ways to reduce the refugee flow permanently,
even if Castro stays in power. His days of encouraging
red revolution throughout the hemisphere are long since
over; continuing to isolate Cuba only promotes hunger,
desperation and floods of refugees that are not in anyone's
interest--including the interest of a U.S. now driven
to violate its cherished principles of offering asylum
to the oppressed.
</p>
<p>RIDING THE FREEDOM CURRENT
</p>
<p> In the Straits of Florida, the ocean currents flow eastward
past the coast of Cuba, then turn northeast along the edge of
Florida. In this part of the Gulf Stream, opposing sea currents
and wind patterns generate exceptionally steep waves, which
the passage is notorious for. Conditions are often tricky for
large ships and treacherous for boats fashioned only from Styrofoam
and plywood.
</p>
<p>-- More than 70 U.S. vessels are patrolling just outside Cuba's
12-mile limit.
</p>
<p>-- Under good conditions, a raft without sail, motor or oars
could reach Florida in three days. Average crossing time for
an unpropelled craft: six to eight days.
</p>
<p>-- Rafters rarely carry enough food or water for the trip. Dehydration
causes hallucinations that can lead to death. Other hazards
include sharks and sunstroke.
</p>
<p>STUCK IN GUANTANAMO
</p>
<p> No one knows how many Cuban raft people have perished so far
while attempting to cross the Florida Straits, but 13,684 refugees
have been plucked from the sea by American ships since Aug.
20, the day President Clinton closed entry to the U.S. In order
to absorb that wave of humanity, Guantanamo Bay Naval Station
has been turned, virtually overnight, into a small city. By
the end of this week it will be capable of accommodating 40,000
Cubans in addition to the 14,000 Haitian refugees already interned
there.
</p>
<p>-- Total area of the naval base: 32 sq. mi.
</p>
<p>-- Number of American service personnel currently employed on
the base: 3,000. Total expected: 8,000 to 9,000.
</p>
<p>-- Maximum expected capacity for the camps: 65,000 refugees.
</p>
<p>-- Number of hot meals given to each refugee each day: 2. The
third is a cold Army ration called Meal, Ready-to-Eat.
</p>
<p>-- Start-up costs to American taxpayers for the expanded facilities:
$100 million. Subsequent cost of maintaining the camps: $20
million per month.
</p>
<p>-- Average daily temperature at Guatanamo: 84 degrees F.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>