Cuba Summit: Facts, Frustration And Hope

To no one’s surprise, the third National Summit on Cuba, held recently at the University of Tampa, yielded no surprises. It is the nature of such gatherings, whether they are called conferences, seminars or “summits.” That’s the way it (embar)goes.

There are the requisite Fidel Castro-denouncing banners and placards set up outside. On the inside, expect a myriad of literature promoting everything from doing business in Cuba to renouncing any effort to “reward” Castro’s dictatorship with tourism, trade and investments. The conferees typically range from politicians, former ambassadors and spokespersons for agenda-driven organizations to port officials, consultants and entrepreneurs. Cherry-pickings from history will be served. The rhetoric will include emotional, embargo-bashing, applause lines — as well as unyielding voices for continued recrimination and retribution. There’s never a fence to sit on.

This summit, which drew about 250 attendees, was ably moderated by Fox News Channel’s senior correspondent and host, Rita Cosby. To her credit, the occasional point-counterpoint disagreements never grew overly disagreeable. She also reiterated often that the summit regrettably failed — but not for lack of effort — to land a balanced representation of views among its more than two dozen presenters. Among those unable or unwilling to accept an invitation: members of Congress, the Bush Administration and the Cuban American National Foundation.

But the summit did land Frank Calzon, executive director of the Washington-based Center for a Free Cuba. Some of his observations:

*It’s unrealistic — and wrong — to assume that American tourism will significantly change Cuba, averred Calzon. He took issue with the analogy of Western visitors influencing the erstwhile Communist bloc of Eastern Europe. “It was not American tourists enjoying Soviet ballets in Leningrad that brought down communism,” he said. Instead, stressed Calzon, it was the likes of Radio Free Europe and strong leaders, such as President Ronald Reagan, “who kept the pressure on.”

*”Private enterprise doesn’t exist in Cuba. The government owns all businesses, and Cuba’s military controls tourism.”

*”Americans have the right to travel to Cuba, but that right has to take account of other rights. For example, when an American tourist goes to Cuba and stays in a hotel that only Cuban prostitutes can go to, that’s shameful. That American tourist is subsidizing economic apartheid.”

*”I’m all for selling to Fidel Castro for cash. But selling to Cuba and getting paid are not the same thing. Ask Mexico. Cuba owes Mexico $380 million and has stopped payment in a dispute with (President Vicente) Fox. Castro is broke and owes billions. If the U.S. were to give Fidel Castro credits on exports, then watch your wallet. You will subsidize Castro.”

*”Cuba remains a rogue state. It supports terrorism.” And that’s reason enough, underscored Calzon, to keep the sanctions.

Attorney Robert Muse of Washington-based Muse & Associates, offered these embargo-related insights:

*”U.S. laws have consistently subordinated business interests to shifting political goals. Both Congress and the executive branch are fully complicit. It’s been the path of least resistance.”

*Muse also laid blame on corporate America. According to Muse, corporations couldn’t see beyond modest, short-term prospects of a “relatively small, unattractive market.” Moreover, they harbored largely unspoken “fears of a consumer boycott.”

Then there’s the take of Kirby Jones, president of Washington-based trade consultants, Alamar Associates:

*”Those who maintain that Cuba is but an out-of-date, leftover country which fanatically is clinging to a rigid and static state-controlled economy are simply misinformed, wrong or purposely misrepresenting the economic reality in Cuba to promote and achieve their own political agenda. Cuba has instead proven itself — more than once — to be willing to implement radical changes in the manner in which it manages its economy in order to adapt to a new world economic order.”

*”Basically nothing you see existed 10 years ago. What you see is a 10-year-old, economic experiment. Right or wrong, it’s charting its own course. The jury is still out on the mix.” Since the end of 2001, that mix has included Cuba’s purchase or signed contracts for approximately $1 billion of agricultural and food products from the U.S., added Jones. Cuba, it should be noted, is a cash-only customer for America.

*”Cuba is one of the most highly privatized countries in the world — if you define it as the state selling its assets to private investors. There are more than 340 joint-ventures now — from telecommunications with the Italians, oil exploration with the Spanish to office construction and citrus production with Israelis.”

*Cuba, said Jones, has created dozens of free-standing holding companies that operate “as free from day-to-day government control and oversight as any private-sector firm in any country in the world.” And they have but one shareholder — the government, points out Jones.

*While the aforementioned changes and others came about under Castro’s watch, Jones emphasized, don’t expect much deviation in the post-Castro period. “Castro has brought in an entire new generation of ministers, vice ministers and middle level officials and managers,” he said. “Alimport (Cuba’s powerful trade-negotiation agency), for example, is run by a 28 year old. All of this, initiated under Castro — is not dependent on Castro. This new generation will still be there the day Castro moves on.”

*”Fidel Castro has already implemented much of the very transition that some still say will come only after he no longer leads Cuba.”

And for historical context and geo-political projection, there is the perspective of Wayne Smith, former chief of the U.S. Interest Section in Havana and current senior fellow at the Washington-based Center for International Policy:

*When the U.S. embargo was imposed, noted Smith, it was part of the U.S. “containment policy” and was “eminently sensible at the time.”

*”The Bush Administration has the most counterproductive, most illogical policy toward Cuba I’ve seen, and I’ve been watching it for 46 years

Zook: A Year Away

Call it another entry in the “Timing is everything” file. After that disappointing and dispiriting Florida Gator loss to LSU, ESPN analyst Mike Gottfried had some encouraging things to say about UF.

Gottfried frankly doesn’t think the Gators are far from contending for the national championship. “I think next year,” he said.

“I wouldn’t want Ron hearing me say this,” added Gottfried, “but next year this is going to be a great football team. They are a year away.”

Unfortunately for Zook, who didn’t help himself with that fraternity-shouting incident, he is even money to be less than a year away from being fired. He may have to beat BOTH Georgia and Florida State to save his job coaching a national championship contender next season.

Bob Graham Blasts Post 9/11 Foreign Policy

Should George W. Bush not be re-elected, there will be considerable speculation about where Sen. Bob Graham’s name will be on several John Kerry Administration short lists. That includes the CIA, where some think Graham could confer, in effect, footnote status upon Porter Goss — for having the shortest tenure of any CIA director.

For now, however, the outgoing, three-term Florida senator — and former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee — isn’t encouraging any such speculation. He dismissed such scenarios and told a recent luncheon crowd at the Tiger Bay Club of Tampa that he was more interested in enjoying his 11 grandchildren.

What he wasn’t reluctant to offer, though, were criticisms of America’s intelligence failures leading up to Sept. 11 and denunciations of subsequent Bush Administration missteps. The former were familiar assertions from his book, “Intelligence Matters.” The latter largely focused on the decision to go to war in Iraq — at the expense of flushing out Osama bin Laden. Some outtakes:

*”We’re no longer protected by oceans. We need anticipatory information. This is an enemy that was less known to us than the Soviets were in 1947. A tribe of tribes

Central Park: Plan C

For those who have been following the sad soap opera that is the crumbling, 28-acre Central Park Village — and its seedy environs — it has come down to this. If all goes well with a Tampa public housing plan, the 484-unit CPV, the nether world between downtown and Ybor City, could become a nicer public housing project — still surrounded by all that seediness. That will have to qualify as progress.

When the Hillsborough County Commission nixed the Civitas proposal, a public-private partnership that planned a mix of subsidized and market-priced housing on 157 acres, it eliminated the only scenario for meaningful success.

Then the Tampa Housing Authority was forced to scramble — unsuccessfully — to land a federal grant to replace the complex.

Now there’s a new plan afoot — cobbled from low-interest, tax-exempt bonds plus HUD tax credits and project-improvement funds — calling for a $56-million, 590-unit “Historic Central Park.”

For the residents and the city, anything is better than the status quo. But that never should have been the standard.

Voter Responsibility Should Count

We really don’t ask much of voters in this country.

We’re not particularly interested in their literacy or familiarity with the issues. Early and absentee voting obviates the need to queue up at the polls. We just want them to participate and respond — if that’s what it takes — to get-out-the-vote campaigns, whether sponsored by hip-hop performers, swift boat vets or Michael Moore-ons.

But is it asking too much of voters to register properly? The Florida Voter Registration Form requires an answer to an inarguably pertinent question: Are you a U.S. citizen? It then provides two boxes, labeled appropriately enough “Yes” and “No.”

Secretary of State Glenda Hood, while not necessarily the paragon of all things bipartisan, says an unchecked “Yes” box is a pretty good reason to deny a vote. Others, such as the League of Women Voters, Florida ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) and the Kerry campaign, are crying foul — or at least much ado about a technicality.

Such scenarios of sloppiness tend to proliferate where there are third-party groups doing the registering — as in Florida. It also appears would-be Democratic voters are largely affected.

Pasco Elections Supervisor Kurt Browning put it best: “Voters have to take some responsibility to make sure that form is completed.”

What a concept.

Uniform Recognition For USF

In many contexts USF is still a relative upstart in the world of big-time college athletics. So, it’s noteworthy that the Bulls were prominently mentioned in “Sports Illustrated’s” 50th Anniversary Issue. Among all the chronicling of a half-century’s worth of prominent players, big games and notable trends.

That’s the good news.

The bad news is that SI focused on the female basketball player who, as a recent convert to Islam, had wanted to take the court and represent USF in a Muslim head scarf, long pants and a long-sleeved shirt. Ultimately the student, Andrea Armstrong, left the team amid an unfortunate, if predictable, backlash of negative public opinion.

Included in the SI piece was this quote from Ahmed Bedier, a spokesman for the Council of American-Islamic Relations: “Had Andrea been a Buddhist, Jew or even a Satan worshipper, she would not have sparked this kind of controversy.”

That’s probably true unless, of course, the Satan-worshipping power forward was holding out for a devilishly customized look. Or she wanted to wear a Gators’ jersey.

Needless to say, these are extraordinarily sensitive times for all post-9/11 Americans. We can’t mandate that ethnocentrism be purged; xenophobia be banned; or common sense be uniformly applied.

But we should be able to say to public university, scholarship-subsidized athletes: You can wear your religion on your sleeve — of your uniform.

Freedumb Flag Flap

Here’s a suggestion to the administration of Tampa’s Freedom High School. You’re the adults; act like it.

Allowing an arbitrary rule about a national flag (that of Colombia) — during Hispanic Heritage Month — to fuel a furor of student overreaction and suspensions is an absolute abdication of common sense. How would you handle a real problem?

Freedom’s Hispanic enrollment is about 18 percent. Whatever demographic fissures might have existed, it’s likely some have now become fault lines. Quite the educational experience.

NASCAR Priorities

Let’s hear it, albeit temperately, for NASCAR. It made good on a warning to its drivers that swearing in broadcast interviews wouldn’t be tolerated. So it fined Dale Earnhardt and assessed him a stiff 25-point penalty. He had blurted out on air — in Victory Lane — that his win at the EA Sports 500 at Talladega “don’t mean shit, (oops, earthy expletive).”

Of course NASCAR had been motivated by the Federal Communications Commission’s crackdown on foul language over the airways. But it’s more than that.NASCAR is alone among the major sorts in this country in ensuring that its well-cultivated fan base — including a number of families — always comes first. This is a function of that. A refreshing one.

Riverfront Hat Trick

Mayor Pam Iorio’s recent announcement to set aside primo real estate for the new home of the Children’s Museum of Tampa spoke volumes about the city’s commitment to the downtown riverfront. The property, worth some $3 million, is adjacent to the Poe Parking garage and near the proposed Riverwalk along the Hillsborough River and just north of the future Tampa Museum of Art. It had been ogled as a condo tower during the last days of the Greco administration, but Iorio never signed off on it and looked to a more public use.

The new, 25,000-square-foot Children’s Museum would be part of a nationwide trend — and could attract an estimated 100,000 visitors a year. Its projected opening is 2007. A $10-million capital campaign would still await.

Also in the wings — a Pamglossian scenario: Key cultural synergy with the new art museum and the Performing Arts Center; a leg up on downtown as more of a destination point; and the opportunity for critically important, early learning activities and experiences for children.

That may be as close to a hat trick as we’ll see around here for a while.

Debris Tip

Call this a public service tip.

Chances are there are other MacKay Bay Transfer Station rookies out there, who need to clear debris and all kinds of junk quicker than the city can officially get around to it. Thanks to some three dozen decrepit, raftered screens that have been displaced in my garage by plywood, I had reason to come calling on MacKay at 112 South 34th St., about a half-mile south (on the left) of Adamo Drive.

It’s an easy process to drive in and drop off — and a lot of it is gratis.

Here’s what’s free of charge: appliances (2 per visit); televisions (2 per visit); carpet; tires (4 per visit); furniture and mattresses; yard waste (no stumps over 100 lbs. or limbs over 4 feet in length.)

Here’s what you pay a fee for: commercial waste; items delivered in commercial vehicles; large quantities of items that appear to come from a commercial establishment; construction debris such as bricks, tile, concrete, plywood, roofing material, plaster, cabinets, doors, windows, etc.; large automotive parts; household garbage; and mixed loads of free and chargeable items.

Hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and Wednesday and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Closed on Sunday. Phone number is 242-5320.

By the way, it cost about $4 to jettison those screens.