Thursday, October 24, 2024

Letter to President Biden on the Crisis in Cuba


The Honorable Joseph R. Biden                                                                                                         President of the United States of America                                                                                               The White House                                                                                                                        Washington, DC

Dear President Biden,

The nationwide failure of the power system in Cuba offers opportunity and necessity for the US to act from humanitarian concern for the wellbeing of close neighbors already suffering from shortages of food and medical supplies. 

Failure to do so will result in greater pain for innocent people and additional spill-over of migrants to the US who will seek admission and residence under the Cuban Adjustment Act.   

We urge you to provide immediately substantial emergency nutritional and medical assistance through American and international religious and non-governmental organizations working with Cuban health agencies and educational institutions.

As much as possible the US in consultation with the government of Cuba should also provide assistance that directly responds to the power system failure, such as enabling supplies of fuel oil and providing technical expertise and parts to repair the aging electrical grid.   (The experience and expertise of Puerto Rico may be applicable.)

US failure to respond in a timely fashion to the fire in the oil tanks in Matanzas in August 2022 contributed to the current crisis by the loss of storage capacity and may have cost 14 lives.  The US gift of firefighting equipment was deeply appreciated but came too late to help that situation.

As persons who have sought productive engagement for many years, we understand and regret that the policies and priorities of both countries have contributed to current grave problems.  We urge that Cuba and the US address underlying factors that created the present economic, energy, health and migration crisis after our Presidential election. 

Most urgent is to completely undo President Trump’s politically motivated restrictions on travel and his legally unjustified listing of Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism, as well as to encourage Cuba's release of July 2021 protestors of the devastating economic impact of his policies.   It is also appropriate to foster direct and multilateral investment in renewable energy systems such as wind and solar.
 
In closing Mr. President, we recall that during your presidential campaign you promised to restore positive initiatives with Cuba and forge a path towards greater normalization of relations between our two deeply connected nations.  Potentially this terrible humanitarian crisis is an opportunity for you as the leader of the most powerful nation to do the right thing now and provide the people of Cuba with US aid.

Sincerely,

Dr. Philip Brenner, Emeritus Professor of International Relations, American University, author of “Cuba Libre: A 500-Year Quest for Independence” and “Contemporary Cuba: The Post-Castro Era”, involved 50 years

Harold Cardenas Lema, Director, La Joven Cuba, MIA Columbia University, born in Cuba, involved 14 years

Dr. Aisha Z. Cort Hamilton Assistant Professor of Afro-Laitnx Issues & Social Movements, Bucknell University, forthcoming book “Representing Race in Revolutionary Cuba: Afrocubania, negrometraje, and cultural production, 1961-1996”, involved 28 years  

Dr. Susan Eckstein, Professor Emerita, Boston University, author of seven books including "Cuban Privilege: The Making of Immigrant Inequality in America" and “The Immigrant Divide: How Cuban Americans Changed the U.S. and Their Homeland”, involved 30 years 

Jorge Ignacio Fernandez, Founder & President, Hope for Cuba Foundation, born in Cuba, involved 27 years

Vicki Gass, Executive Director, Latin America Working Group, organization involved 20 years

Peter Kornbluh, co-author “Back Channel to Cuba:  The Hidden History of Negotiations between Washington and Havana”, involved 32 years

Rosa Lowinger,  Distinguished Visiting Professor of Conservation, New York University Institute of Fine Arts, author of "Dwell Time", "Tropicana Nights", "Promising Paradise". born in Cuba, involved 32 years

John F. McAuliff, Executive Director, Fund for Reconciliation and Development, NGO advocacy, research on Irish links to Cuba, involved 27 years

Dr. Louis A. Pérez Jr., Professor, Department of History, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, author of seven books including “Cuba: Between Reform and Revolution” and “On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality and Culture”, involved 30 years

Lee Schlenker, Policy Director at ACERE, MA candidate in Latin American Studies, Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, involved 10 years



If you wish to be added to the list of signers, write jmcauliff@ffrd.org with your name, title, affiliation, books if applicable and number of years involved with Cuba

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