Cuban flag. Image credit: Paul Brennan/Public Domain

Tomorrow, on June 23, the United Nations General Assembly will vote to condemn the six-decade-long United States embargo of Cuba. Again.

The world has been doing this since 1992. In 2019, 187 countries supported the motion, with only three (the US, Israel and Brazil) opposing.

What makes this year’s vote more pressing, and more distressing, is that U.S. President Joe Biden — who vowed during last year’s presidential campaign he’d reverse 240 Trump administration measures that “inflicted harm on the Cuban people and [did] nothing to advance democracy and human rights” — is now making life worse instead of better for the Cuban people.

In May, Biden renewed Trump’s determination Cuba is not “cooperating fully” in U.S. anti-terrorism efforts. It’s a bogus claim that has everything to do with winning favour with South Florida voters and nothing to do with anti-terrorism or reality.

But it inflicts harm on the Cuban people by penalizing companies and countries that dare trade with Cuba.

The original intent of what is now the longest lasting trade embargo in modern history was to force regime change in Cuba. In 2018, the United Nations calculated the embargo had cost Cuba over $130 billion.

The U.S. has not achieved its regime change ambition. But it has succeeded in making life ever harder for the Cuban people.

Cuba is facing especially difficult times. Tourism has dried up. COVID-19 continues. The embargo exacerbates every hardship.

Consider just a few examples.

Because of the embargo, Cuba has to source supplies from around the world instead of its more convenient — and cheaper — next-door neighbour. But global suppliers, nervous about U.S. extra-territorial laws, often refuse to trade with Cuba. If they do, they tack on a large markup to cover their risk. It is risky. The U.S. government has slapped sanctions on dozens of companies and financial institutions simply for doing business with Havana.

But perhaps the most troubling aspect of the escalating embargo is its escalating impact on the health of Cubans.

In 1997, the American Association for World Health issued a detailed 300-page report, subtitled “Denial of Food and Medicine” which condemned the “de facto embargo on medical supplies” that “has wreaked havoc” on the Cuban medical system.

It’s worse now.

When two traditional European suppliers of ventilators for Cuban hospitals — IMT Medical AG and Acutronic — were purchased by an American company recently, for example, they immediately announced they could no longer be able to sell to Cuba.

Last year, when the Cuban government sought to update contacts with U.S.-based drug companies, Eli Lilly refused to have further commercial dealings with the island, Bayer claimed its licence no longer permitted it to deal with Cuba and Pfizer and Merck Sharp didn’t even bother to respond to requests to purchase badly needed medicines.

Last March, as COVID-19 spread across the world, a Chinese company, Alibaba, tried to donate badly needed ventilators, diagnostic kits and masks to Cuba. But the major shareholder in the airline it hired to deliver those medical supplies was American. Fearing U.S. retaliation, it refused to fly them to Cuba.

In April, several Swiss banks (UBS, Banque Cler and Banco Cantonal de Basilea) also fearing sanctions, refused to transfer funds so local organizations there could purchase testing equipment and PPE for Cuba.

In January, Congressman James McGovern — who described U.S. efforts to block humanitarian assistance to Cuba as an “outrage” — urged Biden to “act early, quickly and comprehensively” to reverse all Trump-imposed anti-Cuba measures and “immediately end the application of any sanctions against food, medicine and other humanitarian assistance to Cuba.”

He hasn’t.

Nor has Biden responded to a March letter signed by 80 House of Representatives Democrats calling for an immediate end to restrictions on travel and travel remittances. “With the stroke of a pen, you can assist struggling Cuban families and promote a more constructive approach,” they wrote.

When Biden was vice president, his boss, Barack Obama, recognized the obvious and, in 2014, declared U.S. efforts to isolate Cuba a failure. “It’s time for a new approach,” he said.

That is even more true today. The question is, will Joe Biden finally listen to the united voices of the world?

Stephen Kimber is a professor of journalism at the University of King’s College and the author of 11 books, including the award-winning What Lies Across the Water: The Real Story of the Cuban Five. John Kirk, a professor emeritus of Latin American studies at Dalhousie University, is the author or co-editor of 18 books on Latin America. 

This article originally appeared in Canadian Dimension

Image credit: Paul Brennan/Public Domain

Stephen Kimber

Stephen Kimber

Stephen Kimber is an award-winning writer, journalist and broadcaster. He is the author of one novel and nine books of non-fiction, including the best-selling Flight 111: The Tragedy of the Swissair...