The fault is Cuba's system but our embargo just worsens the suffering | Opinion

I have had a hankering to go back to Cuba. Over Christmas, I went back, just to Havana, that dowager city, and lost myself in the best of Cuba: its architecture, its food, its music, and its people.

But around me were plenty of signs of the other Cuba, the Cuba which is in extremis — the Cuba which is driving its citizens to leave in record numbers.

In 2022, by some accounts, about 400,000 Cubans left for work and a new life wherever in the world they could find it. The Customs and Border Protection agency estimates that in a recent two-year period, 425,000 sought entry to the United States.

Cityscape with american green vintage car on the main street in Havana City Cuba - Serie Cuba Reportage
Cityscape with american green vintage car on the main street in Havana City Cuba - Serie Cuba Reportage

Havana — like some of the smaller colonial towns that I visited previously — is a delight. It is among the great “built cities” of the world, like Paris, Vienna and St. Petersburg. However, as Havana is compact, it is easily seen; it is the kind of place you feel you can get your arms around.

The grandeur of its colonial past, its wealth of another time, is everywhere. So is the poverty of today. Some streets are sad, indeed, with all the manifestations of poor countries: people picking over garbage, pedal carts, even bullock carts. There are few overweight people, and while Cuban food is complex and sophisticated, I’m told that Cubans survive on rice and beans.

Cubans also queue. Jokingly, one Cuban told me, “When we see a line, we go and stand in it — must be something good and, like all good things here, in short supply.”

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Food for those outside the dollar-driven tourist economy is a struggle, as are medicines and simple things, like a favorite shampoo or paper products of all kinds. For travelers, one of the pleasures of Havana is that you always get a cloth napkin, not of choice but of necessity. Our new, comfortable hotel ran out of toilet paper. The American obsession with carrying Kleenex came in handy.

The 1950s cars are as plentiful as ever, but many are re-engineered with modern Japanese or Russian engines; some declare they are all original parts and use Cubans abroad to scavenge junkyards and send parts back in relatives’ luggage.

The sanctions, with small modifications, have lasted since 1962 and are the longest-ever in U.S. history — and they haven’t worked. They haven’t brought down the Communist Party, freed the press or made the lives of Cubans any better. Instead, they have subtracted hope.

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The embargo is a peculiar cross that Cuba alone bears, especially when you think of the many dictatorial regimes we tolerate and befriend.

The Hill reported that Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador told President Joe Biden in a phone call that he could help reduce migration in the region if he could loosen the sanctions on Cuba. It is hard to find a Cuban who wants to leave the island but wouldn’t if he or she could.

After 20 years, I had hoped to find a more prosperous Cuba, but it hasn’t happened. The small areas of free enterprise allowed by the state have created little oligarchies. Taxi drivers and waiters make much more money than doctors and engineers. These professionals count among Cuba’s exports, its brain drain. On the upside, many private restaurants have a thriving food culture for those who can afford it.

Llewellyn King
Llewellyn King

The fault is the failed Cuban communist model, but the United States hasn’t helped. I have felt, now for 40 years, that Cuba would throw off communism if we let it alone and got rid of the embargo, which is more about U.S. politics than the politics of Cuba.

Meanwhile, do visit Cuba while you can. It is a treat for the eyes, the ears, and the palate. You won’t regret it.

Llewellyn King is the executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Cuba: A beautiful place but US embargo worsens poverty