Havana Cuba Hotel Swimming Pool |
President Barack Obama announcement permitted any US airport that handles international flights to serve as a gateway to Cuba for charter flights. About a dozen have been approved by US and Cuban authorities. Tampa has proven most successful and its elected officials are proactive, in contrast to Miami which grudgingly profits from its primacy. However, charter flights from Atlanta, Chicago, a second one from JFK and from other cities without a large Cuban American population have been suspended or never begun. The weekly Baltimore-Havana flight that starts March 21 will find it challenging to sustain itself unless the White House further liberalizes travel for the rest of us. (Full schedule of flights prepared by Marazul here.)
A major error by the White House was to leave too much discretion in the hands of the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), the instinctively suspicious embargo enforcement arm of the Treasury Department. OFAC is proving to be a choke point rather than a facilitator, apparently most concerned about not angering hard line opponents of travel in Congress.
OFAC felt the environmental study program, where we met with Cuban professionals and other Cubans every day on mornings, afternoons and evenings, did not have enough intimate contact with Cubans. Applications are "denied without prejudice" because of a subjective judgment that
"substantial portions of the proposed activities set forth in the itineraries do not appear to include arrangements for educational exchanges that will result in meaningful interaction between the travelers and individuals in Cuba."
WHITE HOUSE AND CUBA TRAVEL
The only solution is for the White House to constrain OFAC's ability to subvert the President's goals.
The President could use his authority to give all people to people travelers a general license.Their ability to rent cars, pick up omnipresent hitchhikers, use public buses and trains, and stay in casas particulares (bed and breakfasts) will foster greater spontaneous engagement with Cubans than is afforded by the group tours currently required by OFAC and available only through Cuban government sanctioned ground operators. Their dollars will also provide more direct support to the emerging private sector rather than to state enterprises.
Every American should be able to attest to a purpose of non-tourist people to people educational travel, just as every self-identified Cuban American simply attests to having relatives within three generations. Certainly some will take advantage, gaming the system, to just hang out at the beach. That happens already with the tens of thousand of Americans who feel morally justified to simply ignore travel restrictions--without legal sanction since the last year of the Bush Administration.
Not every Cuban American who travels is doing so for family reunion and support reasons, but the Administration has decided that the control of cheating is less important than maximizing the volume and breadth of interaction. The same logic applies to the rest of us. Real liberalization will far better implement the President's goals for purposeful travel, substantially increasing the number, diversity and authenticity of American visits--and significantly reducing costs so travel by families and back-packers becomes feasible.
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The biggest organizers of study abroad programs are commercial and non-profit companies that bundle students from different schools. They have been totally shut out by OFAC and have lost a full academic year of business. The President should allow all US travel agents and tour operators to book authorized travel instead of only 250 licensed Travel Service Providers that are mostly Cuban American and mostly located in Florida. Finally, all Americans should have a general license to attend and organize educational and professional conferences in Cuba.
The Cuban American caucus in Congress will oppose these steps as it vehemently has every single opening to date. Senator Marco Rubio attacked on the floor of the Senate the excellent programs of Insight Cuba and the Center for Cuban Studies. Representative Mario Diaz-Balart failed in his legislative effort to roll back Cuban American travel to the hyper-restrictive Bush era. Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen went off the deep end about commercial trips offered by the Smithsonian Institution.
They are terrified that too many Americans will draw their own conclusions about the complicated and evolving reality in Cuba. The hard liners' argument that travel provides economic support for Cuba's "evil regime" is nonsensical and disingenuous. Even 100,000 non-tourist travelers in the context of over 2.7 million foreign tourists plus 400,000 Cuban Americans will have marginal financial impact. Were their objections actually based on principle, they would similarly oppose travel to China, Vietnam, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and many other countries.
In addition to increasing the impact of exchanges on the people of both countries, a stronger initiative by the President will create thousands of jobs in the US travel industry and support services. He must end the immoral Jim Crow system which gives unequal access to the right of non-tourist travel by Cuban Americans over that of everyone else. He can even gain politically if he responds to the pro freedom of travel sentiment of two thirds of Americans, including 57% of Cuban Americans, rather than accommodates to bullying by a special interest that is committed to his defeat.