World Socialist Web Site
Enter email address
to receive news
about the WSWS


Add
Remove
SEARCH WSWS


ON THE WSWS
Donate to
the WSWS!


RSS Feed News Feed
Contact the
WSWS

Editorial Board
New Today
News & Analysis
Workers Struggles

Arts Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About WSWS
About the ICFI
Help
Books Online

OTHER
LANGUAGES

German

French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian

LEAFLETS
Download in
PDF format

 

WSWS : News & Analysis : South & Central America

Dissension on Cuba

By Bill Vann
29 April 1998

While Fidel Castro was not invited to the Santiago summit, because Washington vetoed his presence, the issue of Cuba was never far from the agenda. Canada and a number of Latin American governments made it clear they have no intention of bowing to the US trade embargo against the Caribbean nation. Clinton stood virtually alone in opposing Cuba's eventual participation in a free trade area of the Americas.

Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien said his government's policy was to "reintegrate Cuba into the region." Within a week of the summit he paid a two-day visit to the island, where he joined Castro in cutting the ribbon on a new Canadian-built terminal at Havana's airport. Canada has become Cuba's leading trade and investment partner, with more than $500 million in two-way trade in 1997 and nearly $450 million in direct investment. US displeasure over Chretien's imminent visit to Cuba was evident at the summit, where Canada merited not a single mention in Clinton's speeches.

A number of Latin American leaders expressed their opinion that Cuba should be invited to the next summit meeting. Trade and finance ministers from these countries also made it clear they did not intend to let US sanctions prevent business interests in their countries from seeking profits on the island.

Meanwhile, Clinton's rhetoric about a free market from Alaska to Tierra Del Fuego rang hollow, given that he came to the Santiago summit having failed to convince the US Congress to give him the "fast track" authority to negotiate trade agreements with the countries of the hemisphere. While Washington remains paralyzed on this issue, the Latin American countries have gone ahead without the US, signing free trade agreements between themselves and a bilateral treaty between the Mercosur, the southern cone trade zone, and the European Union.

Top of page

The WSWS invites your comments.



Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved