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Judi Lynn

(162,384 posts)
Sat Jul 1, 2023, 08:18 PM Jul 2023

Cuban entrepreneurs get business training from US, hope Biden lifts sanctions

ANDREA RODRÍGUEZ Associated Press 56 min ago

Biden Administration Moves To Ease Some Trump-Era Restrictions On Cuba

The Biden administration says it will expand flights to Cuba, take steps to loosen restrictions on U.S. travelers to the island, and lift Trump-era restrictions on remittances that immigrants can send to people on the island.The State Department said in a statement Monday that it will remove…


HAVANA, Cuba — Musicians Ana María Torres and María Carla Puga started making bracelets and necklaces at home in Cuba during the pandemic, and they now have a flourishing business. On an island that for decades prohibited private enterprise, they have had an unlikely adviser: the U.S. Embassy.

Torres and Puga are part of a small group of entrepreneurs that benefited from a business training program the embassy recently offered in Cuba, where many young entrepreneurs are less wary of the American government than those in previous generations.

“We see it as a great opportunity,” says Torres, 25, who co-founded a store and workshop named Ama, which has a cafeteria and employs 12 people.



Maria Carla Puga, right, and Ana Maria Torres at their jewelry store and workshop named Ama, which also has a cafeteria, in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, on June 27. Torres and Puga are part of a small group of entrepreneurs benefiting from a business training program the U.S. Embassy is offering in Cuba.

Ismael Francisco, Associated Press

Ama is one of almost 8,000 small- and medium-sized companies that were legally authorized to operate in Cuba over the past year and a half.

More:
https://ravallirepublic.com/news/nation-world/government-politics/cuban-entrepreneurs-get-business-training-from-us-hope-biden-lifts-sanctions/article_93d98423-8f96-5b46-b7ea-d47d98f42633.html

(Multiple photos within article.)

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Cuban entrepreneurs get business training from US, hope Biden lifts sanctions (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jul 2023 OP
What are Biden's reasons for not restoring Obama relaxations? Sneederbunk Jul 2023 #1
Haven't heard a peep on it, have been looking continually. Hoping he will reinstate Obama's steps. Judi Lynn Jul 2023 #2
Why, after all these years? Deuxcents Jul 2023 #3
You might want to consider this piece by Jimmy Carter's man in Havana, in 1982. Judi Lynn Jul 2023 #4

Judi Lynn

(162,384 posts)
2. Haven't heard a peep on it, have been looking continually. Hoping he will reinstate Obama's steps.
Sat Jul 1, 2023, 08:59 PM
Jul 2023

It's too much progress to have stollen by Trump for points with the right-wing hate-fueled racists.

Deuxcents

(19,709 posts)
3. Why, after all these years?
Sat Jul 1, 2023, 09:30 PM
Jul 2023

We’ve relaxed our restrictions and trade with others that we have had “conflicts” with and our neighbor, just 90 miles from US, have been shunned and their economy hurts the everyday people. We trade with China and other countries we aren’t politically in line with. We used to have a robust trade relationship with them and others in the Caribbean..why not now?

Judi Lynn

(162,384 posts)
4. You might want to consider this piece by Jimmy Carter's man in Havana, in 1982.
Sun Jul 2, 2023, 12:18 AM
Jul 2023

Last edited Sun Jul 2, 2023, 03:39 AM - Edit history (1)

I read over 20 years ago his excellent observation:

“Cuba seems to have the same effect on American administrations that the full moon once had on werewolves.”



Bush and Cuba: Still the Full Moon


Wayne S. Smith
September 25, 2007

If I am remembered at all (which isn’t likely), it will probably be for having said in my first op-ed piece in the New York Times after leaving the U.S. Foreign Service back in 1982 that “Cuba seems to have the same effect on American administrations that the full moon once had on werewolves.” Twenty-two years later, that is unchanged. Indeed, as one analyzes the Bush administration’s policies toward Cuba, one imagines a distant (and distinctly irrational) howling!

The cold war is long since over. Our own Pentagon acknowledges that Cuba poses no threat whatsoever to U.S. security. There is no evidence that Cuba is or has been in any way involved with terrorist efforts against the United States. On the contrary, Castro has offered to cooperate fully in the fight against terrorism and even proposed signing agreements to that effect with the United States. But none of that has softened Bush’s approach one bit. Instead, his is the harshest policy yet against the island nation. Bush indeed seems to have entered the White House with the intention of getting rid of the Castro regime, not to negotiate with it or to reach some modus vivendi. As Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega put it to Congress on October 2 last year: “The President is determined to see the end of the Castro regime and the dismantling of the apparatus that has kept him in office for so long.”

This past January, Bush closed all channels for dialogue, even suspending the twice-yearly migration talks. He also appointed a Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba to recommend ways, first, of bringing about “an expeditious end of the dictatorship,” and then to develop a plan for assisting the Cuban people in “a post-dictatorship Cuba.”

For 45 years now, Washington has used pressure and threats against Castro. The embargo has been in place for 44 years, travel controls of one kind or another almost as long. So now Bush simply proposes more of the same, only in strengthened doses.

The first thing that must be said is that it won’t work. It takes us in exactly the wrong direction. There is a hard-and-fast rule that no U.S. administration has understood (or at least accepted): the more we threaten and pressure, the more we try to choke Cuba economically, the more defensive will be the reaction of the Cuban government, and the more it will call for greater internal discipline and for all to rally around the flag against the threat from the Colossus of the North. In other words, it leads not to liberalization but to tighter internal controls. We must remember that since at least 1902, when the Platt Amendment turned Cuba into a U.S. protectorate, Cubans have seen the United States as the principal threat to their sovereignty and independence. They react to our policies accordingly.

More:
https://nacla.org/article/bush-and-cuba-still-full-moon

~ ~ ~

Very interesting piece on Wayne Smith, for someone who might like a look at Cuba through the eyes of someone who knows quite a bit about it.



P U B L I C P O L I C Y A N D I N T E R N A T L. A F F A I R S
Candid about Cuba
By Joanne P. Cavanaugh



WAYNE SMITH STEPS INTO A PRIVATE TAXI on a street corner in Havana, the big man folding himself into the back seat. The Cuban taxi driver glances back at his passenger.
"Hola, Wayne Smith," the young man says, growing excited. "You have done so much for Cuba. You are a hero. A donde vamos, Smith? Where are we going?"

Others are asking Smith the same question. In scenes repeated in Cuban cafés, hotel corridors, and along crumbling streets, ordinary Cubans recognize and welcome the burly, bearded ex-Marine. This former top American diplomat in Cuba, and longtime critic of U.S. policy, is well known here. And he is often called upon to predict the country's future by those on both sides of the Florida Straits.

Flash to the Levering cafeteria at Hopkins's Homewood campus. Smith, a Hopkins visiting professor, is eating a quick lunch: spiced curly fries, a fried fish filet, and a hunk of chocolate pie, before he teaches class--Cuba and U.S. Decision-Making: Case Studies. Students and colleagues stop by every 10 minutes. They want to discuss careers in the U.S. Foreign Service, pose a question about Smith's course, or just chat. He nods and smiles, answering them quickly and diplomatically.

Wayne Sanford Smith is a celebrity--with all the controversy that entails for someone who speaks his mind about a topic as emotional as Cuba. During Pope John Paul II's historic visit to Cuba in January, Smith was on hand in Havana for interviews with Good Morning America, The Today Show, CNN, NPR, and a litany of networks, newspapers, and radio stations. In broadcast debates, he sparred with Cuban exile leaders on the U.S. embargo and other policies. He is what's known in the news business as a "quote machine."

In his role as Cuba analyst-- tapped by the press, politicians, academics, and students --Smith often swims against the mainstream. In Op-Ed pieces in newspapers, and in academic and political forums, he calls for dialogue with Castro's government. That can be a volatile position to an outspoken Miami-based Cuban exile community that opposes any deal-making with Castro. It also rankles anti-communist crusaders elsewhere in the United States. A formerly high-ranking diplomat, Smith also brutally criticizes U.S. foreign policy, calling U.S. decisions regarding Cuba-- mostly a series of ever-tightening sanctions--"specious," "irrational," and reaching "new heights of absurdity." Yet he also criticizes Castro and his government, citing restrictions on free speech and other human rights abuses.

More:
https://pages.jh.edu/jhumag/0498web/cuba.html
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