This is too much! We are expected to believe anything
US: Cuba is a State Sponsor of Terrorism
The
United States is grasping at straws in justifying
the continued economic embargoon
Cuba by claiming the country is in a category with Iran, Sudan,
and Syria as officially recognized state sponsors of terrorism.
Washington,
of course, refuses to provide any evidence of this, even as the
charge of Cuba’s “support for acts of international
terrorism” is increasingly questioned.
Responding
to press reports that Obama’s new Secretary of State John Kerry was
considering lifting the harsh economic sanctions on Cuba, State
Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland such rumors are false.
“This
department has no current plans to remove Cuba from the state
sponsor of terrorism list,” said Nuland. “We review this
every year, and at the current moment we — when the last review was
done in 2012 –didn’t see cause to remove them.”
Cuba
has elicited particular ire from Washington ever since the Eisenhower
administration, a byproduct of Cold War justifications for US grand
strategy, which seeks to maintain hegemony and crush economic,
geo-political, or ideological defiance.
The
claim of being a state sponsor of terrorism is a mere pretext, a
blanket accusation Washington applies to any government it doesn’t
like (and one that ignores America’s own history of supporting and
carrying out international terrorism). A State
Department report last
year found that Cuba’s ties to so-called terrorist groups are
tenuous at best.
Cuba
has repeatedly
reached out Washington,
as President Raul Castro did last summer, insisting that Cuba “is
willing to mend fences with bitter Cold War foe the United States and
sit down to discuss anything, as long as it is a conversation between
equals,” The Associated Press reported.
“Any
day they want, the table is set. This has already been said through
diplomatic channels,” Castro said. “If they want to talk, we will
talk.”
But
the Obama administration has refused, intent on continuing to isolate
Cuba and maintain the embargo.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.