2009年4月20日

Clinton admits Cuba policy failed


US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that US policy towards Cuba has failed, welcoming an offer to talk from the Cuban president.

She said the US was "taking a serious look" at how to respond to President Raul Castro's comments, which she called an "overture".

Mr Castro had said he was ready for discussions covering human rights, political prisoners and press freedom.

The US passed a law this week easing restrictions on Cuban Americans.
The move will allow Cuban Americans to visit relatives in Cuba and send money home more easily.

Veto threat
Correspondents say a series of exchanges between the US and Cuba suggest that both sides appear to be making efforts to find a way to end their 50-year stalemate.

US President Barack Obama has said it is now up to Cuba to make the next move if relations are to be further improved.

He said the US expected Cuba to "send signals that they're interested in liberalising". He also cautioned that relations would not mend "overnight".

Mrs Clinton made her comments about Cuba in the Dominican Republic, ahead of the Summit of the Americas that begins in Trinidad and Tobago later on Friday.

"We are continuing to look for productive ways forward because we view the present policy as having failed," she said at a press conference.

"We welcome his comments and the overture they represent, and we are taking a very serious look at how to respond," Mrs Clinton said.

Cuba is excluded from the summit, which includes 34 members of the Organisation of American States (OAS), though Latin American leaders have been calling for the communist country to be readmitted.

OAS Secretary-General Jose Miguel Insulza said on Friday he would ask the organisation's members to readmit Cuba, 47 years after it was suspended.

Mr Insulza said he would put the proposal to a meeting of the OAS general assembly in Honduras at the end of May.

Speaking to Latin American leaders in Venezuela on Thursday, President Castro said he had sent word to the US government "in private and in public" that he is open to negotiations as long as they are "on equal terms".

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said he would veto the final declaration from the OAS summit because of Cuba's exclusion.
Comment:
As we know, the U.S have had a very tense and poor relationship with Cuba since 1960s. There have been some In this period,there are some conflicts between this two countries. For instance, Cuban Missile Crisis is a classical case which made the WWⅢ possible. However,40 years passed,the situation of the world have changed a lot,Therefore,I think how to create a new start between each other and try to find a mutual cooperation is the much more important way to solve the problem.

In my opinion,I think the allocation of power in the world has changed a lot. There are some strong powers(entities) playing a critical role on every part of the world,such as the U.S,China,EU and so on. On the other hand,there are also some unstable regional conflicts making troubles in order to attract people's attention ,such as North Korea,the Middle East. As a result, I think the best diplomatic policy for the U.S is to eliminate the regional unstable forces and cooperate with those so called” strong power.

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