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<text id=91TT2079>
<title>
Sep. 23, 1991: Cuba:So Long, Amigos
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Sep. 23, 1991 Lost Tribes, Lost Knowledge
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 36
CUBA
So Long, Amigos
</hdr><body>
<p>Moscow's planned troop pullout and embrace of free trade intensify
Havana's political and economic isolation
</p>
<p>By Susan Tifft--Reported by Cathy Booth/Miami and Yuri
Zarakhovich/Moscow
</p>
<p> The Bay of Pigs invasion. The Cuban missile crisis.
Communist adventurism in Africa and Central America. Some of the
hottest moments of the cold war were the result of the Soviet
Union's three-decade-long military presence in Cuba. But with
the superpower face-off a fading memory and postcoup Moscow
desperate for Western aid, it seemed well past time to say
goodbye to all that--which is what Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev finally did last week. Flanked by Secretary of State
James Baker, who was in Moscow on a fact-finding mission,
Gorbachev announced that thousands of Soviet servicemen
stationed in Cuba would soon be coming home. He also vowed to
put economic ties with Cuba, which has long enjoyed Soviet
subsidies, on a free-trade basis. "We will remove elements from
that relationship that were born in a different era," he said.
</p>
<p> Moscow's gesture, which Baker hailed as "very
substantial," is a critical first step toward terminating a
relationship that has bedeviled the U.S. since 1960, when Nikita
Khrushchev first sent Soviet advisers to Cuba to shore up the
communist government of Fidel Castro. If fully carried out, it
will also help smooth the way for broader U.S. aid, which
Washington has tied to an exodus of the Soviet contingent.
Coupled with a U.S.-Soviet agreement announced late last week
to halt arms shipments to the warring factions in Afghanistan,
the Cuban pullout signaled Moscow's desire to disengage from
costly commitments abroad and concentrate on more urgent
priorities at home.
</p>
<p> Although Gorbachev gave no timetable for the Cuban
withdrawal, he indicated it should not take "many months" to
complete. Less certain is the number of troops involved. In his
statement the Soviet leader referred to a "training brigade" of
11,000. But the State Department estimates the entire Soviet
military presence in Cuba to be no more than 7,600, including
2,800 soldiers, 1,200 civilian technical advisers, 1,500
military advisers and 2,100 technicians assigned to the huge
Lourdes facility outside Havana, which eavesdrops on U.S.
telecommunications. Moscow did make apparent, however, that it
expects Washington to match its retreat from Cuba by withdrawing
from Guantanamo Bay naval base on the island's southeast shore,
which the U.S. has occupied since 1903.
</p>
<p> Havana's reaction was predictable: outrage. In a sharply
worded statement, Cuba's Foreign Ministry criticized Moscow for
"inappropriate behavior" in failing to consult with its ally
before announcing the pullout. The breach of protocol aside,
Havana acknowledged that the Soviet military presence had become
largely symbolic. The number of Soviet troops on the island
peaked at more than 42,000 in 1962, and has been in decline ever
since. Far more worrisome to Havana is Moscow's planned change
in its conduct of trade, which promises to intensify Cuba's
political isolation and economic deprivation.
</p>
<p> The Soviets now supply more than 85% of the island's
imports, including most of its oil, which Moscow swaps for Cuban
sugar at such high valuations that it amounts to an effective
annual subsidy worth millions. Putting this arrangement on a
free-market basis, as Gorbachev promised to do, will knock out
one of the few remaining pillars of the crumbling Cuban economy.
</p>
<p> That support had been shrinking for some time. Gorbachev
began distancing himself from Castro's orthodox regime in 1989.
Last year Moscow started removing special trade terms for Cuba
and pared back its subsidy of sugar, citrus and other Cuban
goods from $5 billion annually to about $3.5 billion. Oil
shipments dipped 25%, prompting Cuba to adopt draconian
energy-saving measures. Bicycles imported from China now
supplement gas-guzzling public transit, and oxen are gradually
substituting for farm machinery. With dwindling foreign-exchange
reserves, Cuba has few alternatives if trade with the Soviets
dries up altogether.
</p>
<p> Most of the 1 million Cuban exiles in the U.S. were
gleefully certain that discontent over worsening economic
conditions would soon unhorse the 64-year-old Castro. But in the
short term, that seems unlikely. His regime is kept firmly in
place with the help of a battle-tested 180,000-man armed forces
headed by his brother Raul, and the slightest gesture of
opposition is swiftly put down.
</p>
<p> Moreover, Washington, which has been obsessed with
scuttling Castro ever since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis
brought the superpowers to the brink of nuclear war, now seems
oddly reluctant to hasten his fall by tightening the 31-year-old
U.S. embargo. But that is understandable: the White House does
not want to risk disrupting U.S.-Soviet relations or angering
its Latin American allies. Besides, with communism in eclipse
worldwide and the economic noose rapidly tightening around the
aging Castro's neck, it may only be a matter of time before one
of the hemisphere's most notorious dictators tumbles of his own
weight--or dies.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>