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PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay in Baltimore.
In Venezuela, Hugo Chávez's health situation seems to have taken a turn for the worse.
That might be a cause for some celebration in some American foreign policy circles, as
U.S. policy towards Venezuela and towards Cuba remains essentially rooted in the Cold
War.
Now joining us to talk about this is Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson. He's the former chief
of staff for U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell. He's currently an adjunct professor
of government at the College of William & Mary and a regular contributor for The Real News.
So what do you make, first of all, of the sort of general outlook of the main U.S. foreign
policy circles, State Department and such, and slash neocons adjunct to that foreign
policy machine towards Venezuela and Cuba? 'Cause they seem to have a somewhat similar
outlook, even though, frankly, if you're going to talk about democratic rights and such,
at least at the political level, it's quite a different situation in Venezuela than in
Cuba. But they talk about them the same way.
LAWRENCE WILKERSON: Quite a different situation, Paul. And I like to look at it in terms of
U.S. policy vis-á-vis Latin America. And I think that policy is broken, dysfunctional,
and even in some ways nonexistent, because it only has two poles. The one pole is Cuba
and an embargo led essentially by a small minority in the United States that has influence
way out of proportion to its real power and policy towards Venezuela. I in the past would
have put Colombia in there because of drugs, but I think that has even receded, because
we think that policy is somehow on an even keel. So our Latin American policy can be
called Cuba and Venezuela.
The countries in Latin America that really matter, significantly matter, like Brazil
and Argentina, and CELAC, the new organization that is going to put the OAS out to pasture
and recently elected Raúl Castro as its head for the year--and only two countries are prohibited
from membership in it, Canada and the United States--this is the future of Latin America.
We are isolated. We are isolated partly because they're sick and tired of our policies and
our predatory capitalism, but mostly because of our own policies, which is some irony,
Paul. Our policy of embargoing Cuba and our policy of treating Hugo Chávez as if he's
a cancer in the region have isolated us, not Hugo Chávez and not the Castros.
JAY: Yeah, we could see that from the last meeting of the OAS, where the United States
blocked Cuba from attending. But I think all the OAS states, with the exception of U.S.
and Canada--and I include in that Colombia and Mexico, which are close allies of the
United States in Latin America--but they all said that this has to end. Cuba's going to
come to the next meeting.
WILKERSON: Exactly. I think at the Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, I think President
Obama got that message delivered to him in spades. I think he was ill prepared for that
summit.
That said, I don't see a lot of action on the Latin American front. And, Paul, I think
this is low-hanging fruit. I think that Obama's been elected with--twice, twice without the
hard-line Cuban-American vote in Florida. Obama's position vis-á-vis Cuba, tentative
though it has been through his first term, with at least allowing freer travel and so
forth, these have set the foundation for him to make an abrupt, if you will, change in
policy with regard to Cuba and to begin a process of normalizing relations.
He could start by releasing the Cuban Five and having the Cubans release Alan Gross.
I made this proposal in Havana in December. I believe the Cubans would go along with it.
We would get Alan Gross back to his family. He needs to be back. He's older and older
and he's not in good condition. And we get these very, very injudiciously (without any
justice whatsoever) convicted Cuban so-called intelligence agents out of our jails, where
they've been for 15-plus years and back into Cuba and reunited with their families. This
would be a humanitarian positive. It would bring Alan Gross back. He's a Jewish American--it
would resonate with the American Jewish community. These are all positives for President Obama.
All it requires is a little moral courage.
JAY: And just very quickly, for people that haven't followed the story, who the Cuban
Five are.
WILKERSON: Well, the Cuban Five are those people who in the late '90s were involved
in, essentially, spying in Southern Florida against the Cuban Americans who were carrying
out terrorist attacks in Cuba. And they turned this information that they gathered on these
terrorists--terrorists, Paul, on American soil--over to the FBI. And the FBI initially
was going to move in favor of the findings. They got a new head, I think, backed principally
by Ileana Ros-Lehtinen in the House of Representatives and others like her. They got a new head in
Miami, a new FBI station head, and he turned the whole thing around and caused the Cuban
Five to be arrested, these agents, and caused them to go on trial.
And at the same time, you had the shoot down of the Brothers to the Rescue ship by Cuban
MiGs, and Clinton felt trapped by that situation, I think, and we wound up with the lead member,
for example, Gerardo, of the Cuban Five got two life sentences plus 15 years--an incredible
sentence. The least sentence, I think, was 15 years. And we have one out now who's on
parole in Southern Florida and finally been reunited with his family. And these people
have been kept in isolation and so forth and so on. It's just nonsense, Paul. They had
a bad trial. Justice was not done. It was a caricature of justice. And they've served
time. So let's get this over with. Let's get Alan Gross home, let's get the Cuban Five
home, and let's use that as a vehicle to start a better stead of relations.
JAY: But we don't see any sign of a shift in the Obama policy towards Cuba, and the
same thing towards Venezuela. So, I mean, do you think this is all about the Florida
vote? Or especially when it comes to Venezuela, is it about you can't raise royalties on oil
companies, you can't have this kind of nationalist policy without us being antagonistic to you?
WILKERSON: There's some of that, Paul. But you know what I really think it's about? And
people think I'm crazy when I say this, but I have been there and they ain't. I think
it's about energy in the Oval Office. I think Iran, I think Russia, I think China, I think
Syria, I think the whole business of Western Asia, what we call the Middle East, in this
so-called Arab Awakening and so forth, has so sucked the energy out of the Oval Office
that there isn't any time for any other issues.
I also think it has to do with a very, now, overblown idea that the Democrats can't show
any angle on national security issues at all, because my party, the Lindsey Grahams, the
John McCains, will eat their lunch. Well, I say let them eat your lunch. They're all
so discredited with the American people right now, launch more attacks into their chest,
hit them right in the place where they hurt, because these people are losing Americans,
not gaining them. The last poll I saw, 25 percent of Americans polled identified with
the Republican Party. Attack, attack, attack. Don't be afraid on national security issues
to go after my party, Mr. President.
JAY: And one way to do that would be a more rational approach to both Cuba and Venezuela.
WILKERSON: And that would be in the national interests of this country, too--even more
resounding.
JAY: Alright. Thanks for joining us, Larry.
WILKERSON: Thanks for having me, Paul.
JAY: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.