The BlogThe Cuban ArmadaWill post-Fidel migration fears trump democracy promotion?12:00 AM, Aug 2, 2007
• By DUNCAN CURRIE
Coral Gables, Florida
Not likely, says Peter Orr, a retired Foreign Service officer who served as Cuba coordinator at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) under President Clinton. Last summer, shortly after Castro went to the hospital for intestinal surgery, Orr emailed me a sobering analysis of America's immediate post-Fidel priorities, regardless of which party held power. (He abbreviated "U.S. government" as "USG.") "The biggest concern of the USG when it comes to Cuba is massive, uncontrolled migration," he wrote. "That threat is perceived to be greatest if there is a regime break which results in lack of control of the island and the populace. Consequently, despite rhetoric embracing the goal of a democratic Cuba and rejection of regime continuation after Fidel passes from the scene, the USG has in reality favored some sort of regime continuity to avoid a breakdown in authority." Orr added that he "considered this to be the most likely scenario well before 9/11. Now, with foreign policy dominated with the war on terror and the struggle with radical Islam, and with uncontrolled immigration being an even bigger political issue than in the past, I think it is even less likely that the USG will take a principled stance in favor of a real democratic transition in Cuba after Fidel is gone." In particular, the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security may resist an aggressive push for regime change. Their chief aim, as Orr indicated, will be to curb a possible tsunami of refugees. "Any widespread breakdown of law and order on the island," writes Cuba expert and former CIA officer Brian Latell, would "inevitably" trigger "the fourth massive seaborne migration to Florida." (The first three were in 1965, 1980, and 1994.) This is "a nightmare scenario for both Cuba and the United States." Bush's own record on Cuban refugees is mixed. He has upheld the Clinton administration's "wet foot, dry foot" policy, which stipulates that Cuban migrants who make it to shore can generally stay in the United States and earn legal status, while those captured at sea are either repatriated to Cuba or sent to a third country. (Until the mid-1990s, the United States rarely shipped Cuban refugees back to Castro.) This has led to harrowing interdictions by the Coast Guard and Border Patrol. Lately, the dangers for Cubans have gotten worse. "Amid a heated national debate over illegal immigration, and growing concerns about terrorism and border security," the Wall Street Journal reports, "federal agents are adopting ever-harsher interdiction methods at sea, colliding--sometimes tragically--with the vagaries of U.S.-Cuba policy. While the law offers permanent escape to Cubans who make it here, current terrorism policies compel agents to stop migrants almost any way they can. High-speed boat chases at speeds over 45 miles an hour in rough seas are commonplace. Many chases now end with federal agents firing live ammunition--a technique developed for drug traffickers--at boats filled with migrants."
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