By Paul Reynolds
World affairs correspondent BBC News website
Cuba is entering a danger zone faced by many societies where elderly
leaders set in their ways seek to hand over an unchanged system to
someone who shares their beliefs.
The Soviet Union collapsed partly because a series of dying men passed
power from one to another.
One of the reasons for China's success is that it is determined not to
saddle itself with such people. It is already moving younger men up the
chain of command.
Fidel remains
Yet in Cuba, Fidel Castro, while excluding himself from the top
positions, will hang on, in his words, as "a soldier of ideas".
He intends to keep on offering his "reflections", while promising to be
"careful". The impact of these reflections, careful or otherwise, is
bound to be huge.
It is unlikely that he will countenance much change and if his brother
Raul, aged 76 and the army commander, is selected as president by the
National Assembly on Sunday, the chance of reform in Cuba for the
immediate future is very limited.
It is probably limited in any case.
There could be tinkering around the edges but the fundamental philosophy
of the current Cuban leadership is still revolutionary. It has stood
tall on that in the past. It will stand or fall on that in the future.
The problem with liberalisation for such a government is that reform
does not satisfy demand. It feeds it.
For the rest of the world, this means that the decisive days in Cuba are
probably some way off.
US attitudes
Certainly the United States thinks so. A state department spokesman
dismissed Raul Castro as "Castro lite".
Unlike the US... in Cuba change is a rallying cry
Babalu
Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte (an old foe of Cuba who helped
suppress the revolutions in central America) said the US embargo on Cuba
would not end "anytime soon".
President Bush called for a "transition" to democracy, but without much
expectation that it would happen.
The mood among Cuban exiles in Florida appeared muted.
One of their favourite blogs, Babalu, called for change (echoing the
theme of the Democratic presidential candidates) but, again, more in
hope than expectation.
"The one word that Cubans dream of is "cambio" which means change.
Unlike the US where "change" is a trite slogan used by a politician's
wife who isn't proud of our country, in Cuba change is a rallying cry,"
it said.
There could be some change if Barack Obama becomes president. From time
to time over the Castro years, there has been a thaw in Cuban-American
relations. There was one for a time under President Jimmy Carter.
There could be another under a President Obama. For a start, the
restrictions on Americans travelling to Cuba could be eased. But that is
not the kind of change that will change very much.
In Europe, attitudes towards Cuba are not as hard as they are in the US.
(In Britain, the sale of buses to Cuba - much against American wishes -
is still remembered).
A statement from Foreign Secretary David Miliband reflected a European
recognition that good work on health and welfare has been done in Cuba,
while calling for that elusive change.
"The Cuban people will now be looking to the future, a future which we
hope will offer them political progress founded on democracy and human
rights, and continued progress based on social justice and individual
need. Like the rest of the EU, the UK is looking forward to productive
relations which will bring benefits to both of our nations."
Paul.Reynolds-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/7254337.stm
Published: 2008/02/20 09:47:08 GMT
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