I fully understand the familiar arguments for lifting the embargo. The
Cold War is over. Castro is on the ropes. Pumping money into his economy
would benefit the long-suffering masses. This is the way to ``open up''
Cuba, export democracy, and promote entrepreneurship and independence from
the state. We need to put the past behind us.
Each of those arguments is bogus.
The Cold War is indeed over, but it would be instructive to remember
the
role that Castro played in the struggle between -- yes -- good and evil.
He
turned his island over to his Soviet patrons. He was quite willing to have
nuclear missiles, launched from Cuban soil, destroy American cities. He
exported revolution to Central and South America. He abetted Libyan
terrorism. He gave asylum to murderers. He posted troops in Africa.
More important, he turned his nation into a maximum-security prison.
His
regime controls every aspect of human life -- access to food, medical
assistance, schools and employment. Castro has not mellowed with age.
Terror continues to reign. The secret police are unrestrained. The
disappearance and beatings of citizens are still tools of civilian
control,
as is the suppression of free speech. Castro's ruthless domination of the
Cuban people has not lessened even as his regime crumbles.
The real cause of misery of the Cuban people is Castro's
Marxist-Leninist economic system -- not the U.S. embargo. Castro's Cuba is
a brutal police state; Castro rules through terror, intimidation and
brutality.
Castro urgently wants the United States to lift the embargo because he
is desperate for hard currency to keep his faltering communist economy
afloat. Now, without the generous subsidies from the Soviet Union --
between $5-7 billion dollars a year -- Cuba's economy is reeling.
Of course, he would love Donald Trump to come to Havana and build
casino
hotels. Why? Not to raise the standard of living for the people of Cuba.
Quite the contrary. Almost every dollar would go to prop up his
police-state. Why? Because foreign investors cannot legally do business
with private Cuban citizens. They can go into business only with the
Castro
government. It is highly illegal in Cuba for anyone except for the regime
to employ a Cuban citizen.
Foreign investors are not allowed to hire or pay Cuban workers. They
must pay the government directly for the workers. Castro then pays the
workers in worthless Cuban money and keeps the rest. Under these
circumstances, my investment cannot help average Cubans -- it can only
replace the Soviet subsidy Castro no longer receives.
If I opened a casino/hotel in Havana, I would be required to pay Castro
about $10,000 per year for each Cuban worker. But the workers would not
benefit. Castro would pay them the equivalent of $10 a month. The rest he
uses to pay for the brutal and violent system that keeps him in power --
and deprives the Cuban people of basic human rights. In other words, my
investment in Cuba would directly subsidize the oppression of the Cuban
people.
Yes, the embargo is costly. If I formed a joint venture with European
partners, I would make millions of dollars. But I'd rather lose those
millions than lose my self-respect. I would rather take a financial hit
than become a financial backer of one of the world's most-brutal
dictators,
a man who was once willing to aid in the destruction of my country. To me
the embargo question is no question at all. Of course, we should keep the
embargo in place. We should keep it until Castro is gone.
A choice for human rights
Several large European investment groups have
asked me to take the ``Trump Magic'' to Cuba. They have ``begged'' me to
form partnerships to build casino-hotels in Havana. With the influx of
foreign tourists, we would make a fortune, they promise, and they are no
doubt right. They are also right to say that this type of arrangement
would
allow me to skirt the U. S.-imposed embargo.