Cuba experienced demonstrations over the weekend (July 10, 2021) in which people took to the streets to protest economic shortages and a surge in Covid-19 cases. At CODEPINK, we support the right of people anywhere to protest peacefully. However, we vigorously denounce the outrageous and irresponsible calls for U.S. intervention coming from some Cuban Americans, including Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.
We also denounce the Biden administration’s policy towards Cuba. For six months, it has been “reviewing” its policy, all the while continuing Trump’s strategy of economic warfare that is designed precisely to create the shortages Cubans are now experiencing. We call on President Biden to take immediate action to ease the economic crisis in Cuba by lifting the restrictions on remittances that prohibit Cuban Americans from sending critical financial support to their loved ones. Then there must be a rollback of ALL Trump sanctions and a return to the Obama policy of normalization.
It even restricted the amounts of money Cuban Americans can send home and closed the Cuban branch of Western Union, the main vehicle for sending remittances.
The protests in Cuba should be understood in the context of a brutal economic war waged by the United States against the island nation for over 60 years. This was laid out clearly by the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in 1960, when he explicitly called for “denying money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.”
There was a brief opening under President Obama, but the Trump administration reversed this, tightening sanctions on tourism, energy, and other key economic sectors. It even restricted the amounts of money Cuban Americans can send home and closed the Cuban branch of Western Union, the main vehicle for sending remittances. These policies have had a disastrous impact on the Cuban economy, especially when the Covid-induced shutdown of the tourist industry has deprived the island of billions of dollars and thousands of jobs. The result has been a severe shortage of medicine, food and other basic needs.
The U.S. blockade of Cuba, just as its sanctions on Venezuela, Iran, Nicaragua, Syria and others, is designed to hurt ordinary people to the point where they feel they have no choice but to rebel against their own government. It is coupled with a strategy of promoting opposition by funding dissident groups through USAID to the tune of about $20 million a year, and broadcasting an endless stream of anti-government propaganda.
The US-funded Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which runs the opposition networks Radio and TV Martí, has over 100 employees and an annual budget of about $28 million. Imagine the outcry if Cuba were pumping $50 million into the United States to fund regime change!
The propaganda extends beyond radio and television into social media. The hashtag #SOSCuba began trending in Florida days before the protests began, suggesting that there was a coordinated campaign to target the Cuban government and blame it for the hardships the Cuban people are facing.
Ostensibly, this hashtag was used to denounce an increase in Covid-19 cases in the city of Matanzas. However, this surge—as onerous as it is on the people of Matanzas—should also be kept in perspective. Cuba, a nation of roughly 11 million people, has had under 240,000 cases of Covid-19 and 1,537 deaths.