Bush Held Up Cuba Help Over Politics
September 13, 2005
By: Wayne S. Smith
What a shame. Not even in the face of the massive human suffering
caused by Hurricane Katrina could the Bush administration put
aside its knee-jerk rejection of anything coming out of Cuba.
Only two days after the storm hit the Gulf Coast, the Cubans quietly
offered humanitarian assistance. No response.
On Sept. 1, the Cuban National Assembly expressed solidarity
with the American people and on Sept. 2, Fidel Castro publicly
offered to send some 1,100 doctors, with 25 tons of medicines
and medical equipment, to the devastated areas. They could be
dispatched on Cuban aircraft immediately, he said, and to emphasize
that they were ready to travel, the next day had them gather at
the School of Public Health with their backpacks on. He also increased
the number to 1,586 doctors and the medicines to 37 tons. Castro
stressed that there was no political motive behind his offer.
The U.S. and Cuba had disagreements, yes, but they should now
call "a time out" to address this catastrophe.
Had there been any difficulty in sending the doctors on Cuban
aircraft, Fort Lauderdale-based Gulfstream Airways had immediately
offered to fly them all up free of charge. "I couldn't think
of a better way to help our brothers and sisters on the Gulf Coast
than to get these excellent Cuban doctors to them as quickly as
possible," said CEO Tom Cooper.
Given the desperate situation on the Gulf Coast, one might have
expected a rapid response from Washington, especially as MEDICC
(Medical Education Cooperation With Cuba), a nonprofit association
based in Atlanta, described the Cuban doctors as highly trained
and noted that "Cuba's experience and expertise in disaster
management is so relevant to the current crisis and its aftermath
in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast."
And certainly the assistance was needed. Local TV channels in
New Orleans were reporting people to be begging for doctors and
any medical assistance they could get. A prominent New Orleans
citizen, Randy Poindexter, who had been on Gov. Kathleen Blanco's
delegation to Cuba some months ago, expressed appreciation for
the Cuban offer and said that if it were up to the governor, the
doctors, who were desperately needed, would already be there.
It was the Bush administration, she said, that didn't want them
in.
She was right. On Sept. 8, the State Department officially rejected
aid from Iran and Cuba, apparently on grounds that the U.S. does
not have full diplomatic relations with them.
But the issue here was not politics; rather it was the well-being
of tens of thousands of people on the Gulf Coast in light of deteriorating
health conditions there. Whatever problems Cuba may have, it has
an excellent public health system and has been recognized as a
leader in disaster response. It could have lent a very important
helping hand to the victims of Hurricane Katrina. But never mind
about them. Even in these dire circumstances, the Bush administration
could not put aside its antipathy for anything emanating from
Cuba -- even if it is its own stricken citizens who suffer for
it.
Many Americans, of course, strongly disagree with this response
on the part of the Bush administration. The Congressional Hispanic
Caucus, for example, on Sept. 8 urged the administration to accept
the Cuban offer, in light of the mounting public health crisis
along the Gulf Coast. And even Mel Martinez, the Republican senator
from Florida and a Cuban-American who is usually opposed to any
initiative out of Cuba, on Sept. 7 welcomed the offer. "If
we need doctors, and Cuba offers them and they provide good service,
of course we should accept them," he said.
Our hats are off to him. He obviously is more open-minded than
the Bush administration, which in another knee-jerk rejection
earlier in the week refused visas to Cuban National Assembly President
Ricardo Alarcón and the rest of the Cuban delegation that
was to have attended the Second World Conference of Parliamentary
Presidents at the United Nations.
It has been a bad week for the U.S. image all the way around.
Bush's stumbling response to the hurricane has been derided by
governments and media all over the world. And in its response
to the Cuban offer of doctors, the Bush administration looks uncaring,
inflexible and dogmatic. Cuba comes out of it looking responsive
to the needs of the afflicted on the Gulf Coast and with a real
empathy for them. In terms of P.R., Cuba wins hands down.
Wayne Smith, a former chief of the U.S. Interests Section in
Havana, is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy
in Washington, D.C.
Copyright © 2005, South Florida Sun-Sentinel