Cuba and the United States: A triumph of political realism.
Cuba and the United States: A triumph of political
realism.
Roberto M. Yepe Papastamatin
Professor and researcher
Centro de Estudios Hemisféricos y sobre
Estados Unidos
Universidad de La Habana
The diplomatic rapprochement between Cuba and the United States has
profound implications for both countries and for the inter-American relations
system as a whole.
First, this historic event signals a long overdue rectification and the
recognition of the Cuban Revolution’s legitimacy by the most powerful nation that
has ever existed, after decades of aggressions and hostility. Therefore it
represents a well-deserved outcome for the resilient Cuban people, its firm
political leadership and for all those across the world that have offered its
unconditional solidarity to the Cuban revolutionary process.
But I want to focus here on the possible meaning of this process in the
wider picture of U.S. foreign policy.
Historically two main and divergent approaches have contended in order
to influence the formulation of U.S. foreign policy: realism and
interventionist idealism. Even President Barack Obama raised this theme in a
controversial but interesting speech last May at the Military Academy in West
Point.[1]
In a brief description, realism emphasizes that foreign policy must be
centered in national interest and national security considerations, instead of
moral and ideological ones. As it establishes a clear distinction between
domestic politics and foreign politics, realism advocates for a prudent
management of foreign affairs and for avoiding any pretension of moral
superiority and missionary tendency to judge and try to change the internal
order of foreign societies.
To a great extent, interventionist idealism can be described by its
opposition to the realist postulates above mentioned. It became one of the main
branches in American international thought during the two Woodrow Wilson
presidential terms (1913-1921)[2]
and its most extreme contemporary manifestations –usually associated with
neoconservative conceptions- have paved the way to the well-known doctrines of
«regime change», «humanitarian intervention» and «responsibility to protect»
applied (only) against the foreign governments disliked by western powers.
U.S. foreign policy has never reflected either of these two approaches
in a pure manner, but has tended to assume a complex, eclectic and pragmatic
position between both views.
To the American scholar Ted Galen Carpenter, the willingness to restore
diplomatic ties with Havana suggests that perhaps the suffocating Wilsonian
approach to U.S. diplomacy may finally be weakening.[3]
Let us hope that this is really the case and that the reestablishment of
diplomatic relations between Havana and Washington will be only the beginning
of an irreversible process that can be extended to the inter-American relations
system as a whole, through the creation and institutionalization of a general
framework of respectful relations among all countries in the Western
Hemisphere. If successful, future historians could see this event as a turning
point in the U.S. policy towards Latin America and the Caribbean, the true new
beginning of the inter-American relations so many times promised by U.S.
presidents, including Barack Obama in the Summit of the Americas in Port of
Spain in 2009.
The normalization of relations between Cuba and the United States will
certainly face powerful and recalcitrant enemies that are already preparing
their counter attack to complicate, to halt and eventually, to reverse this
process. The personal insults against president Obama and members of his
cabinet will intensify. But everything indicates that these forces will not be
able to prevail, because they are fighting against an unstoppable historic
trend and the most profound social factors acting in both Cuban and American
societies that converge toward a renewed relation of normality.
When announcing its new Cuba policy, the White House assured solemnly:
«Today, we are renewing our leadership in the Americas».[4]
But that leadership will not be
achievable closing a conflict with Cuba just to open another one with Venezuela
or any other Latin American country. The tendency towards a more just, proud
and united Latin America is another fact of reality that U.S. foreign policy
must take seriously into account.
[1]
The White House: «Remarks by the President at the United States Military
Academy Commencement Ceremony» (http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/28/remarks-president-united-states-military-academy-commencement-ceremony)
[2] In the history of inter-American
relations, Wilson´s government has the record of more military interventions
against Latin American nations, particularly in the region of Mexico, Central
America and the Caribbean.
[3] Ted Galen Carpenter: «The Cuba Opening: American Foreign
Policy Meets Reality», The National Interest» (http://nationalinterest.org/feature/the-cuba-opening-american-foreign-policy-meets-reality-11883).
[4] The White House: «Fact Sheet: Charting a New Course on
Cuba» (http://iipdigital.usembassy.gov/st/english/texttrans/2014/12/20141217312123.html)
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