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Post Info TOPIC: Why the american establishment REALLY doesn't want Fidel off the big chair.


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RE: Why the american establishment REALLY doesn't want Fidel off the big chair.
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 No lei' todo esto; pero dicen por ahi de que los gringos en realidad no pueden hacer nada contra Castro por los documentos de no agresion en contra de Cuba por que le temian a los misiles sovieticos que apuntaban hacia E.U.


Ahora que ya no existe ese peligro, algunos dicen que a los gringos les conviene tener a Castro como una excusa, como para dar cierto temor a la ciudadania gringa de que hay otro goviernos muy malos en contra de ellos.  Claro, que ellos no hacen nada por que saben que en realidad no hay peligro, con la excusa del comunismo pueden llegar a "ayudar" con su presencia a otros paises cercanos.


Eso es lo que dicen algunos, yo no se.



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Cuestionan uso de fondos para democracia en Cuba

OSCAR CORRAL y PABLO BACHELET / The Miami Herald
WASHINGTON

Los programas para promover la democracia en Cuba de la Agencia para el Desarrollo (USAID), gastaron millones de dólares sin la supervisión adecuada o licitaciones competitivas, lo que conllevó a dudosas compras, como por ejemplo, una sierra eléctrica, suéteres de casimir y chocolates Godiva, según un informe congresional.

El crítico informe cita ''debilidades en las políticas y en los procesos [administrativos] de la agencia y en la supervisión de la oficina del programa'', así como ''deficiencias internas de control''. La falta de personal en la USAID también representó largas demoras en el inicio de inspecciones sobre el programa.

The Miami Herald obtuvo una copia adelantada del reporte de 60 páginas que será publicado hoy por la Oficina Fiscalizadora del Gobierno (GAO), el brazo investigativo del Congreso.

El reporte provee la lista más detallada hasta la fecha sobre los $65 millones en ayuda de la USAID para la democracia en Cuba destinados 40 programas entre 1996 y 2005, de los cuales $62 millones fueron asignados ''en respuesta a proposiciones no solicitadas'', lo que significa que no hubo licitaciones competitivas. El Departamento de Estado usó mecanismos de competencia para otorgar otros $8 millones a otros cuatro programas, indicó la GAO.

La entidad realizó ''inspecciones limitadas'' de 10 programas y encontró ''gastos dudosos'' y ''significativas debilidades en el control'' en tres de ellos. Ninguno de los 36 programas que recibieron fondos de la USAID y del Departamento de Estado fueron identificados en el reporte.

Uno de ellos, indicó la GAO, usó fondos para comprar artículos como una sierra de motor, juegos de Nintendo y Playstations de Sony, una bicicleta de montaña, abrigos de piel, suéteres de casimir, carne de cangrejos y chocolates Godiva.

Juan Carlos Acosta, director ejecutivo de Acción Democrática Cubana, con sede en Miami, declaró a The Miami Herald en una entrevista ayer que, excepto por la sierra [por la que reembolsó a USAID], compró esos artículos y los envió a la gente en Cuba.

Agregó que compró la sierra para cortar una rama que había caído cerca de la puerta de su oficina después de un huracán. Compró ''cinco o seis'' latas de masas de cangrejo y algunas cajas de chocolate Godiva para enviar a Cuba.

''Esta gente se está muriendo de hambre. Allí no tienen chocolate'', comentó.

Acosta agregó que también compró una docena de chaquetas de piel y suéteres de casimir --en venta en Costco-- para enviar a disidentes en Cuba.

''Ellos [los auditores de GAO] se creen que allí no hace frío'', prosiguió Acosta. ``Un suéter de casimir de $30 es una ganga porque el casimir es costoso. En Cuba estaban pidiendo suéteres''.

Acosta señaló que ISAID nunca le dijo lo que podía, o no podía, enviar y que reembolsó a la USAID por la sierra.

Frank Hernández Trujillo, director ejecutivo de Grupo de Apoyo a la Democracia, que ha recibido más de $7 millones de USAID, afirmó que envió unos juegos de Nintendo a Cuba. Acosta agregó que él también lo hizo.

''Defenderé esa decisión hasta que muera'', subrayó Hernández Trujillo. ``Es parte de nuestro trabajo: demostrarle al pueblo cubano lo que podría conseguir si no estuviera viviendo bajo el sistema [comunista]''.

La USAID está investigando los tres casos que reveló la GAO, señaló la agencia congresional en su informe.

El estudio fue solicitado por los representantes Jeff Flake (republicano por Arizona) y Bill Delahunt (demócrata por Massachusetts), ambos opuestos a las sanciones de Estados Unidos contra Cuba. Los dos tienen programada para hoy una conferencia de prensa para hablar sobre el informe.

La administración Bush ha convertido la ayuda adicional para la democracia en Cuba en una parte fundamental de sus esfuerzos para socavar el gobierno comunista de Fidel Castro, y es muy probable que el informe alimente aun más el debate sobre la efectividad de esta ayuda.

En el 2004, en un informe que realizó la Comisión para Asistencia a una Cuba Libre, ésta recomendó entregar $36 millones a la USAID y a otras agencias gubernamentales que trabajan a favor de Cuba. En julio, un informe de seguimiento recomendó entregar $80 millones adicionales durante un período de dos años y $20 millones anuales hasta ``el fin del régimen de Castro''.

''Durante mucho tiempo, este programa ha tenido la re****ción de ser políticamente efectivo en Miami, tener poco impacto en Cuba, y estar deficientemente administrado'', declaró Philip Peters, un severo crítico de la política del gobierno de Bush hacia Cuba, quien trabaja en el Lexington Institute, en Arlington, Virginia. ``Ha hecho falta durante mucho tiempo la supervisión del Congreso''.

David Snider, portavoz de la USAID, no quiso hacer comentarios, ya que la agencia todavía no ha visto una copia final del informe.

Investigadores de la GAO señalaron que entrevistaron a varios disidentes en La Habana, y que éstos dijeron que agradecían el respaldo norteamericano, al tiempo que la ayuda ''no hacía sino demostrar el compromiso del gobierno de Estados Unidos con la democracia en Cuba'', según el informe.

La GAO señaló que después del 2004 tanto la USAID como el Departamento de Estado utilizaron ''competencia formal para seleccionar a los destinatarios [de los fondos]'', y que recientemente el Departamento de Estado y la USAID tomaron medidas con el fin de mejorar la supervisión del programa.

De igual modo, el informe de la GAO revela nueva información acerca de la naturaleza de los programas para la democracia en Cuba.

Gran parte de los materiales enviados a Cuba fueron entregados por diplomáticos estadounidenses en La Habana que a menudo no sabían qué era lo que se había enviado. En algunas ocasiones, algunos libros fueron considerados ''inapropiados'' y fueron rechazados, agregó el informe, sin dar más detalles.

Durante mucho tiempo el gobierno cubano ha criticado a la misión diplomática de EEUU en La Habana, argumentando que pretende derrocar el régimen comunista. Bajo las leyes de Cuba, los ciudadanos cubanos pueden ser condenados a penas de cárcel de hasta 20 años por recibir ayuda norteamericana.

De acuerdo con la información dada por la USAID a la GAO, desde 1996 el gobierno de EEUU ha entregado 385,000 libras de medicinas, alimentos y ropa y más de 23,000 radios de onda corta, entre muchos otros materiales. El informe amplió que algún material fue objeto de ''robo y confiscación'' por parte de las autoridades cubanas.

Funcionarios norteamericanos dijeron que la GAO tiene planeado emitir una versión clasificada del informe con información extra sobre cómo la ayuda de EEUU se entrega en Cuba, así como los pasos que deben darse para ``reducir las pérdidas de la asistencia que se envía a la isla''.

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Bien profundo.........................

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VIVA MI GENTE HISPANA/LATINA EN CANADA Y EL MUNDO ENTERO!


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cuz it brings in cuban voters! Which would explain why the elections 2004 were decided in Florida.

For those without time, patience or will to read the entire thing... the bottom line of the article seems to be that sucessive US administrations ran their programs of support to anti-revolutionary groups in Cuba through a logic of actually preserving the status quo there! Not that this is any news to anyone who's been willing to listen, but it's a great step ahead that they're actually acknowledging how screwed up the US's opposition to the Cuban government is!


From Miami's El Nuevo Herald


Ten years ago, a Republican-led Congress pressed President Clinton to help bring democracy to communist Cuba in the wake of Cuban MiGs' shootdown of two unarmed Brothers to the Rescue planes and mounting U.S. fears of yet another rafter crisis.

Today, the program -- funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) -- has spent $55.5 million, for studies on a future Cuba without strongman Fidel Castro, for exile groups to lobby foreign governments to sanction the island, and to ship children's books, food, medical equipment, laptops and clothes to dissidents and their families.

None of that money has reached the dissidents in cash.

Most of the USAID money has remained in Miami or Washington -- creating an anti-Castro economy that finances a broad array of activities, ranging from university studies to spending millions to ship goods surreptitiously to the island's opposition. An intricate network of ''mules'' are paid at least $13 a pound to smuggle medicines, laptops and books into Cuba. That's 13 times more than it costs to ship to many other Caribbean countries.

Several Cuba experts in the Bush and Clinton administrations blame arbitrary USAID rules that ban sending cash directly to dissident groups in Cuba for derailing the program's purpose.

Now that President George W. Bush has promised $80 million over the next two years to amp up pro-democracy programs for Cuba -- a strategy announced before an ailing Castro ceded power July 31 to his brother, Raúl -- the philosophical battle over whether to send cash directly to Cuban dissidents endures. And the question of USAID's effectiveness in Cuba has become all the more relevant.

Bush's plan, likely to be taken up by a majority Democratic Congress next year, comes as the General Accountability Office prepares to release on Wednesday its audit on how well USAID's Cuba program is working.

Although no USAID funding is allowed to go to Cuba, at least one other taxpayer-funded program that promotes democracy in Cuba -- the National Endowment for Democracy -- allows its money to go to the island in cash. NED has sent about $970,000.

Millions of dollars get spent locally on companies and people that specialize in slipping goods into Cuba. Washington struggles to verify how much aid and information actually reaches the island -- or whether they've had any effect in promoting democracy.

What's more, the Cuba program's first USAID director, Peter Orr, and other Clinton era officials said it was designed to be weak as a divided adminstration bickered over the goals of pursuing regime change and some worried about exile groups' using the money for militancy.

''Shipping stuff into the island is an incredible waste. It's very expensive, it can get confiscated, all these arguments were raised by me and others at the time,'' Orr told The Miami Herald. ``And my opinion -- I can prove it -- is that the decision was consciously made to distance the program from the ground in Cuba, and to make it less effective.''

A Miami Herald review of USAID Cuba programs found that many of the same accountability problems raised by a 2000 outside examination remain unresolved. That study, conducted for USAID, found Congressional disagreements over Cuba policy hindered the program; USAID had no one in Cuba to ensure supplies made it; the program was ''severely constrained'' by its policy prohibiting cash to be sent to opposition groups in Cuba.

The Miami Herald reviewed hundreds of USAID records -- some requested more than two years ago through the Freedom of Information Act -- and interviewed more than 100 people for this series. The Herald found:

• Paying mules and other shipment costs swallowed nearly half of the $7.4 million spent by Grupo De Apoyo a la Democracia, the largest USAID recipient, and almost half the $3.2 million spent by Cuba OnLine to send pro-democracy mailings to Cuba from 2001 to 2004, according to tax records and interviews. As a result, Grupo De Apoyo spent about 13 percent of its U.S. funds, or $986,000, on food and medicine.

• USAID still has no employee at the U.S. Interests Section in Havana to monitor the program's effectiveness there. Successes are often based on media reports -- something as minor as someone taking the glasses from a John Lennon statue at a Havana park -- or statements from the relatives of dissidents on the island.

• A 1996 confidential memo from USAID reveals there was broad bipartisan support -- from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to the State Department -- to let USAID groups send as much as $400 at a time to ''victims of repression'' in Cuba.

• Two top USAID managers who helped create the program said it was set up to preserve the status quo in Cuba; Clinton's senior Cuba advisor, Richard Nuccio, believed both the Clinton and Bush administrations used the programs to court Cuban-American voters.

''My impression is that during the second Clinton term and continuing into the Bush administration, the way the program was administered turned it more into a program to garner political support from the Cuban American community...than to actually produce things inside Cuba to benefit a democratic transition,'' Nuccio said.

Several Clinton officials also feared that directly funding dissidents could subject them to persecution in Cuba, which routinely accuses dissidents of being U.S. mercenaries.

Nuccio now thinks it was a bad decision. ``We shouldn't be so arrogant as to decide for them [the dissidents] that they could be contaminated by this, and therefore we won't provide it.''

Orr said he left USAID's Cuba post by 1997, frustrated that he was unable to convince higher-ups to have Cuba's program work the same way USAID operates in Haiti and most troubled countries -- with cash sent to reformers working inside the country.

Instead, Clinton's inner circle opted for a go-slow, indirect approach, Orr said, because the Democratic president worried that political instability in Cuba could result in mass migration to the U.S. Clinton had lost re-election as Arkansas governor after Mariel refugees rioted at a prison there.

''The shocking conclusion was that nobody in the administration wanted to rock the boat in Cuba,'' Orr said.

Larry Byrne, an assistant USAID administrator from 1993 to 1997, never wanted to send money directly to dissidents. He called the program he helped devise -- under pressure from Republicans in Congress -- ``a waste of U.S taxpayer dollars.''

''It's just ridiculous that someone would think this program would destabilize Cuba,'' he said. I thought it was a good idea to open up a dialogue with Cuba. I didn't think the program was ever going to work. It was ill conceived, ill thought-out, underfinanced.

Clinton did not respond to repeated requests for comment. A spokesman at the William J. Clinton Foundation referred questions to Mark Schneider, the assistant administrator of Latin America and the Caribbean at USAID from 1993 to 1999.

Schneider said the program was designed to get ''non-controversial'' support into Cuba.

''These programs by themselves cannot bring about change,'' he said. ``The people carrying it out tried hard to make it work, but it's very hard.''

Even supporters of the no-cash policy concede the bulk of the money is getting siphoned off by exorbitant shipping costs.

''There is a strong philosophical debate here and it's a tough one,'' said Roger Noriega, former undersecretary of State for the Western Hemisphere during President Bush's first term. He said the policy ``created a ridiculous situation where we were spending 10 times the cost of shipping to send in materials that could be bought on the market [in Cuba] if we just gave cash and got a receipt.''

Getting items into Cuba is art for USAID groups: Documentaries about dissidents' struggles and human right abuses are packed in DVDs with covers of Cuban musical bands.

Still, there are no guarantees that supplies make it to the island.

University of Miami Professor Jaime Suchlicki, who runs Cuba OnLine and the UM's Institute for Cuban and Cuban American Studies, both USAID-funded programs, said he relies on phone calls and letters as proof that his mailings reach Cuba. He estimates that ''50 to 60 percent'' of Cuba OnLine's mailings get through. Mailings are sent because few Cubans have access to the Internet, and Cuba blocks many of the e-mails CubaOnLine sends.

''We assume a great percentage get in,'' Suchlicki said. ``This has to be based on partial evidence.''

David Mutchler, the USAID Cuba program's director, would not elaborate on how the agency verifies if shipments reach dissidents: ``We do have ways to check.''

Mutchler points to a study, published by USAID-funded Directorio Democrático Cubano, which chronicles instances of civil disobedience in Cuba.

Based in Miami, Directorio has received more than $3 million in federal money. It has documented an increase in peaceful anti-government activities, such as dissident meetings, in Cuba from 44 in 1997 to 1,805 in 2004.

Adolfo Franco, USAID's Latin America and Caribbean program director, said sending money to dissidents would result in a Cuban government crackdown, as happened in 2003 when 75 dissidents, independent journalists and librarians were jailed.

The Cuban government considers the USAID program subversive and imprisons or harasses Cubans who dissent.

Franco said the program is effective: ``If it's such a waste of time and money and patronage, I think they'd be laughing about it in Havana as money down the rat hole. But I think that's a measurement -- [the Cuban government], they've put a lot of effort into trying to derail this program.''

During a recent tour of the Washington office of the Center for a Free Cuba, director Frank Calzón pointed to a toy water gun the size of his palm, not far from a ''Hello Kitty: Use Your Imagination'' coloring book.

''This is one of the counter-revolutionary things we send to Cuba,'' Calzón joked of the water pistol. ``We send arms.''

Calzón's human-rights group received more than $5 million from USAID from 1998 through 2004, according to the group's March 2004 quarterly report. The group sent more than 209,244 books, pamphlets, magazines and videos to Cuba, the report states.

Calzón also lobbies foreign governments to condemn Cuba's human rights abuses. In 2004, a Cuban diplomat knocked Calzón unconscious in Geneva after a United Nations vote that condemned Cuba's human rights record.

''Our basic mission is to encourage and help build a democratic, civil society in Cuba,'' Calzon said. ``That cannot be done if Cubans have no access to books, tapes and other material explaining democratic ideas.''

Among other items shipped by USAID-financed groups to Cuba: books by former Czech President and Soviet-era dissident Vaclav Havel, veterinary manuals, powdered milk, children's videos -- along with the Harry Potter series and wheelchairs,

''It's a complicated program to quantify,'' said Xavier Utset, who directs the Cuba Democracy Project at Freedom House, which received $2.7 million in USAID funds from 1996 to 2005. ``Internal repression makes it difficult to evaluate a program that supports people inside the island.''

Federacion Sindical de Plantas Electricas, Gas y Agua, a Miami-based group of exiles who once worked at Cuban electric, gas or water plants, got almost $600,000 from USAID since 2003 and tens of thousands more from the National Endowment for Democracy, NED.

The group sent $9,000 from NED directly to two women in Cuba -- only to learn they were Cuban agents, said Joel Brito, former director of Federacion.

''It's very difficult to tell from Miami who the people are that we help in Cuba,'' he said.

Vladimiro Roca, a pro-democracy activist in Cuba, said in a telephone interview from Havana that fax machines, computers and more can be bought in Cuba's black market.

''What we need most is money,'' he said.

Herald researcher Monika Z. Leal and writer Jasmine Kripalani contributed to this report.


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