Odds and ends
- From the right, here’s a critique
of USAID’s Cuba operations (a “sordid affair”) from Jacob Hornberger
of the libertarian Future of Freedom Foundation. Over-the-top in places, but his main
point is right: it’s wrong for the Administration to describe the Alan
Gross operation merely as an attempt to assist the Jewish community in
Cuba, and at the same time to present USAID’s overall program to its
Congressional champions and others as a muscular effort to change Cuba’s political order. If it were about helping the Jewish
community, the money wasted on Gross’ operation could have delivered more
than $1,000 to every Jewish household in Cuba. And every penny was wasted, right down
to the nice satellite equipment now owned by Cuban state security.
- Outgoing
National Assembly President Ricardo Alarcon continues his role in Cuban
diplomacy and is featured in Cuban media in recent weeks receiving
officials from Bolivia,
Brazil,
and France,
making it hard to conclude that his departure from legislative office is
anything but a retirement (or, we’ll see, semi-retirement).
- AP:
Yoani Sanchez got her passport and is preparing to travel, while a
passport was denied to a dissident who was released from jail but is
technically still serving a sentence under licencia extrapenal.
- The
Hill: Ric Herrero of the Cuba Study group writes about how former
Senator Hagel’s views on Cuba are in sync with those of Cuban democracy
advocates.
- AP
on the recreation of Sloppy Joe’s in Havana.
- El
Confidencial: “Sources close to the legal advisers” of Partido Popular
activist Angel Carromero say that he is preparing a lawsuit against the
Cuban government, alleging that its agents drove his car off the road,
causing the accident that killed dissidents Oswaldo Paya and Harold Cepero
last July. The car’s other
passenger, the Swede Aron “Rip van” Modig who has heretofore been silent
about the circumstances of the crash, is said to have delivered a sworn
statement supporting Carromero’s allegation. A contradictory Europa
Press report cites “sources close” to Carromero claiming there will be
no lawsuit; it adds that Carromero is “recuperating bit by bit.”
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