People
to people travel rescued but not safe
by John McAuliff, Fund for Reconciliation and Development
In January of 2011
President Obama finally returned travel for most Americans to more or
less the situation under President Clinton. “More” in that
universities and religious organizations received general, no need to
apply, licenses. “Less” because third party providers of study
abroad were shut out completely and licenses were issued for only one
year.
The category that
opened the door to all Americans to visit Cuba was people to people,
in which the only prerequisite was willingness and ability to pay for
a group trip with a “full-time
schedule of educational exchange activities...that will result in
meaningful interaction between the traveler and individuals in Cuba.”
The
devil was in the details, how would such amorphous language be
implemented. What subjective and political screen would be in place
behind the very closed doors of the Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC), still led by a Bush appointee. In the first year OFAC
approved about one in three license applications, and imposed a one
year time limit. It seemingly had more enthusiasm for trips that
looked more like high end educational tourism, and less for those
focused on substantive interaction.
http://www.thehavananote.com/2012/01/one_year_semi_opening_cuba_travel
But even that was
too much for the hard liners in Congress. They hid behind the claim
that the small increment of Americans in a universe of 2.5 million
tourists significantly subsidized the regime they hate. In reality
their accurate fear was that the more people travel to Cuba the more
challenge will arise to the US diplomatic and economic embargo.
The
ultras tried to slip in a rider to the comprehensive appropriations
bill in December that would gut travel, but the President faced them
down.
http://www.thehavananote.com/2011/12/day_cuban_people_won_thanks_president
Their next tactic was hostage
taking. Rubio denounced on the Senate floor both the biggest
(Insight Cuba) and oldest (Center for Cuban Studies) providers of
open registration travel, then put on hold the confirmation of the
Assistant Secretary of State and several ambassadors. He only
withdrew his unilateral objection when, he claimed, the
Administration agreed to tighten licensing for travel.
http://cubapeopletopeople.blogspot.com/2012/09/how-sen-rubio-derailed-people-to-people.html
OFAC dutifully produced new guidelines in May but they seemed only
face saving for Rubio in that the new language was in an either/or
format allowing easy renewal.
“Describe
how the educational and people-to-people exchanges you propose
would enhance contact with the Cuban people, and/or support civil
society in Cuba, and/or help promote the Cuban people’s
independence from Cuban authorities.”
However
in practice, OFAC demanded unreasonable amounts of detail and
justification and turned down completely qualified renewals.
http://cubapeopletopeople.blogspot.com/2012/09/well-regarded-p2p-trashed-by-ofac.html
The
head of an organization that actually received a license renewal
wrote me:
- Well, the first version totaled 17,000 words as I did not toss out a generic template but rather specified two or so events each AM and PM.
-
- A few weeks after they received that, I received an email from OFAC staff stating that it was not immediately clear in all instances how "[our] encounters resulted in meaningful engagement for both travelers and Cubans."
-
- This sort of surprised me. For instance, in stating that with met with a grandparent's group in Línea street to discuss the challenges that seniors face on both sides of the Straits seemed pretty obvious to me what the meaningful engagement component was. Thus, I copied and pasted the above phrase after every encounter and then spelled out plainly (with some tautology it seems to me) the value added: "Both groups shared their experiences with senior health-care issues. Cubans did not complain about the price of health care, but rather the lack of prescription drugs, food, and linens in hospitals. Americans complained about the cost. Both groups agreed that seniors should be valued more in their respective countries."
-
- That sort of thing.
-
- Bottom line: I had to send them a 25,000 word document!
-
- And what skills do OFAC staff have in assessing what is meaningful engagement? Why is UST meddling in that nonsense? And where is the Tea Party and the strict constitutionalists when you need them?
Insight Cuba, Rubio's prime target
went through an excruciating process, being forced to cancel trips
and lay off staff as it sought to write and rewrite more than 140
pages of detail OFAC ostensibly sought.
In
late August, Ellen Creager blew the roof off with an article in the
Detroit Free Press. Many additional stories in mass media and trade
publications followed. Three petitions were launched and pro-travel
Congressional staff met with OFAC.
http://cubapeopletopeople.blogspot.com/2012/08/people-to-people-in-bureaucratic-danger.html
Six
weeks later the log jam appeared to break.
http://cubapeopletopeople.blogspot.com/2012/10/more-cuba-tour-operators-receiving.html
Insight Cuba was renewed, and even our license finally came
through after six revisions and a year and a half of waiting.
Presumably someone in the Administration or Obama campaign noticed
that the President's opening and credibility were at stake. However
organizations that were licensed later than Insight are still
awaiting renewal, including Smithsonian Journeys, National Geographic
Expeditions, National Trust for Historic Preservation, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and Austin-Lehman.
OFAC justifies the delay on the grounds
that it is understaffed. However, that is a self-created problem
based on a policing mentality which treats Cuba as an enemy and
suspects the motives of anyone who wants to go there. Were OFAC
simply registering programs and checking the credentials of
organizations rather than trying to second guess intentions and
censoring those it dislikes, the process would be far simpler and
faster.
The Administration
could solve the problem easily by just removing OFAC and
Congressional pressure from the process. All purposeful travel can
receive the same kind of general license as was granted to Cuban
American, universities and religious organizations. The
Administration should also allow all US travel agents and tour
operators to book flights and programs for authorized travelers.
This will make Cuba available to a far wider American population,
including families and backpackers, and reduce costs significantly by
allowing use of public transportation, rental cars and privately
owned casas particulares (bed and breakfasts).
The
perverse character of current US policy is that Americans are forced
by OFAC to use group trips which can only be organized in-country by
state companies which naturally use state hotels, restaurants and
transportation. OFAC has denied licenses because they included
visits to private markets and cuenta
propistas (the
self-employed) and self-directed time to personally explore life at
the grass roots. Programs and facilities provided by the state
companies are generally quite good, but it is odd for the US
government to be their source of clients.
OFAC
reached new heights of absurdity by requiring in July that all visas
be issued by the Cuban consulate that is part of the Interests
Section in Washington. Up until then charter airlines and Travel
Service Providers (TSP) simply issued tourist cards, marking up the
cost to around $40. The Cuban consulate collects $75 per visa and
the TSP adds a service charge for assembling and forwarding
documents. Unless OFAC has a secret agenda of employing Cuban
government workers and increasing state revenues, its only
conceivable motive was to make arranging travel more complicated and
time-consuming. Ironically Americans who use the five day a week
commercial flight from Grand Cayman to Havana can with complete
legality pay $20 for a tourist card at check in.
https://www.caymanairways.com/
If President Obama
is reelected, he could fundamentally transform the US-Cuba
relationship, as outlined by NPR's Nick Miroff in the Global Post
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/cuba/121017/us-election-cuba-obama-romney-cuban-american-trade-embargo
However, just as
with license renewals, public opinion matters. A SignOn/MoveOn.org
petition that advocates trusting the American people and provision of
a general license for all purposeful non-tourist travel is attracting
signatures here
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