MIAMI, (Reuters) – Repub-lican election gains may chill even modest moves by the United States to improve ties with Communist Cuba — unless President Barack Obama personally perseveres with his stated goal to recast ties with Havana.
After taking office last year with high hopes of delivering fresh U.S. policies, Obama promised a “new beginning” in half a century of U.S.-Cuban Cold War enmity and slightly eased the longstanding U.S. embargo against the cash-strapped Caribbean island still led by the aging Castro brothers.
But expected further relaxations stalled and may now go back into deep freeze after wins by Republicans in Tuesday’s midterm elections handed them control of the House of Representatives and boosted them in the Senate. It also put one of the most vocal anti-Castro foes in the United States in line to head the influential House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Florida’s Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban-American whose unrelenting castigation of the Castros has earned her the title of “ferocious she-wolf” in Cuban state media, is poised to take the committee chair, as the ranking Repub-lican. She firmly opposes any rapprochement with communist-led Cuba.
Congress’ Cuban exile contingent was also reinvigorated by the election as Florida Senator of Tea Party star Marco Rubio, 39, a Miami-born son of Cuban immigrants, who made a point of emphasizing his Cuban exile roots in his victory speech.
Advocates of widening contacts and trade with Cuba see Ros-Lehtinen as a potential major obstacle to any initiatives to lift travel restrictions on Americans visiting the island.
“The pro-sanctions forces have clearly been strengthened by the results of the election,” said Sarah Stephens, executive director of the Center for Democracy in the Americas.
She and other analysts said this expected congressional deadlock put the onus on President Obama himself to take the lead in advancing his vision — enunciated at a Summit of the Americas last year — of a reformed relationship with Cuba, and of a more active partnership with Latin America as a whole.
CHANGES IN CUBA?
Obama, who cannot lift the entangled Cuba embargo legislation without Congress but can use his executive authority to relax parts of it, has been careful to link improved ties with a call for Havana to free political prisoners and improve human rights.
Some observers argue the opportunity now exists after President Raul Castro, facing intense international pressure, struck a deal this year with the Catholic Church on the release into exile of more than 50 political prisoners.
While vowing no shift to capitalism on his watch, Castro is also introducing reforms of Cuba’s socialist economy that allow more private sector activities in a bid to boost productivity.
“Clearly, there are changes going on in Cuba … it means that if the president wants to stick with his own policy, and if he wants to have influence in Cuba, this would be a good time to make a reciprocal gesture,” said Phil Peters, a Cuba expert at the Lexington Insti-tute in Arlington, Virginia.
Peters said the Obama administration had before the elections prepared new rules to liberalize U.S.-Cuban “non-tourist travel,” a modest easing of the embargo favoring cultural, sporting, academic and religious trip contacts.