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Adios to all that
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Dec. 17, 1999 |
The right-wing consensus that once ruled the Cuban exile community with a conformity that mimicked communism is breaking down; the post-Soviet economic crisis is gradually making private enterprise acceptable in Cuba; the commercial and agricultural lobbies in Washington are pressing for access to the island's markets; and the sanctions that were expected long ago to destroy the Castro regime have failed. Walking along the sea wall of the Malecon one afternoon recently with hundreds of thousands of Cubans demonstrating for the return of Elian, it was remarkable to see how firmly Fidel still holds power. Workers, schoolchildren, students and soldiers lined up not only obediently but energetically to march against imperialismo. How any of the cheering demonstrators truly felt about the Elian affair and the future of their country was difficult to discern. Maybe they were all feigning enthusiasm to impress the Committee for the Defense of the Revolution cadres overseeing their performance. Or maybe they weren't. While the rhetoric blaring from the loudspeakers was strident and banal, the demonstrations nevertheless seemed like a huge citywide festival. Unlike their defunct Soviet sponsors, Castro and his cadres learned long ago how to season their authoritarianism with salsa. And whatever ultimately happens to Elian, his plight permitted the Cuban authorities to show that they still possess organizing muscle and considerable popular support -- even in a period of terrible economic deprivation. Judging by the size and spirit of the daily rallies outside the U.S. Interest Section, it appeared that the Miami exile directorate had overreached badly this time and offended the pride of the people back home. Their attempt to take a 6-year-old boy from his natural father presented Castro with a perfect symbol of the suffering inflicted on Cuban families by three decades of American sanctions. In a country where children fall ill and die because they lack medications that, if not for sanctions, would be available from U.S. drug companies, the loud professions of concern by the exile leadership for the well-being of one little boy ring unctuously hollow. Havana's Catholic prelate has urged the return of Elian to his father and the lifting of sanctions on food and medicine. Earlier, at the Miami airport, I had observed this political stalemate from the other side, as scores of exile families boarded a plane for Havana with enormous duffel bags of Christmas bounty. For a flight scheduled to depart around 8 a.m., all passengers were required to show up at least five hours earlier to fill out multiple forms and clear their baggage through security. Such onerous conditions didn't appear to discourage any of the travelers, however, as they sipped cafe con leche and waited patiently in long lines. A stewardess told me that the airline always flies a Boeing 777 on this route, because only the largest jets in its fleet can accommodate the crowds who now want to make the short trip across the Florida Strait. When we landed at José Martí International Airport, waiting outside the terminal to greet the flight was a large, excited crowd of people barely able to restrain themselves from rushing through the doors. The demand for travel to Cuba by Cuban-Americans is so intense that direct charter flights are now being allowed from New York and Los Angeles, besides Miami. The first New York flight on Dec. 3 was fully booked a month in advance.
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