Odds and ends
- The Boston
Globe calls for a “new diplomatic agenda with Cuba” beginning with
ending “the silly claim, reinstated by the Obama administration last
summer, that Cuba remains a ‘state sponsor of terrorism.’”
- Reuters
on the search for a partner to expand the Cienfuegos refinery, a project
where the Chinese showed interest but have not bought in.
- Diario
las Americas gets the first interview with Pedro Alvarez, the former
Alimport chief who defected in 2010 and now lives in Tampa.
- “People who don’t believe
strongly in immigration, they’ve lost confidence in the greatness of
America,” says former Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, a Cuban
American trying to show his party the light on immigration. He is profiled
in the Washington Post.
- AP’s
Andrea Rodriguez on how Venezuela’s Telesur, now on Cuban television
12 hours a day, has changed Cuban’s media mix for the better.
- Tracey Eaton has a
redacted version of the classified
annex of the Bush Administration’s Cuba transition commission report
from July 2006, much of which has been declassified. You can’t make a full judgment since
parts of it are blacked out, but it’s not as interesting as one might
expect.
- In the Herald,
from the guy who ran the USAID program that sent Alan Gross to Cuba: Gross’
predicament is all Castro’s fault, if you question the program you are
aligned with the Cuban government, and the program has a “measure of
tolerance for losses and failed initiatives” in places such as Cuba. So suck it up, Alan.
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