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Obama's Cuba stand breaks rank          Send a link to a friend

[August 22, 2007]  MIAMI (AP) -- Barack Obama's desire to ease U.S.-Cuba travel restrictions stands in contrast to the stances of Democratic presidential rival Hillary Rodham Clinton and most of the Republican contenders.

The question is whether his position will help him in Florida.

Cuban-Americans make up a small but growing number of Democrats in this swing state, but most are still either Republicans or independents, meaning they will have little say in the party's Jan. 29 primary.

Many Cuban-Americans also remain conflicted about the Bush administration's 2004 restrictions that slashed the amount of money they can send and cut the number of visits they can make to families on the island. They want to be able to travel home and help their needy relatives, but they also want to see ailing Fidel Castro's communist government fall.

The Bush administration says the restrictions, on top of the government's 45-year-old economic embargo against Cuba, promote such change. But Obama disagrees.

"The primary means we have of encouraging positive change in Cuba today is to help the Cuban people become less dependent on the Castro regime in fundamental ways," the Illinois senator wrote in an op-ed piece published in Tuesday's Miami Herald.

Clinton, the New York senator and Democratic front-runner, issued a statement reiterating her support for the current policy toward Cuba, adding, "Until it is clear what type of policies might come with a new government, we cannot talk about changes in the U.S. policies toward Cuba."

She has recently sought to portray Obama as naive on foreign policy.

Among other Democratic candidates, Sen. Joe Biden also supports the status quo. Former Sen. John Edwards staked out the middle ground Tuesday, calling for an end to the family travel restrictions but saying he would not immediately change the remittance limits.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson has also called for an end to the travel and money restrictions for Cuban-Americans, while Sen. Chris Dodd has said he would lift all travel restrictions. U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich supports scrapping the embargo.

Republicans criticized Obama's proposal.

"We're in a very critical moment where many of us are hoping that we will see a transition as opposed to a transfer of power. Frankly I think his comments are ill-timed," said Florida Sen. Mel Martinez, chairman of the Republican National Committee. "It shows that he either didn't think it through very well or simply hasn't had enough experience on these tough foreign policy problems."

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Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, the leading GOP presidential candidates, both said easing sanctions would only help the Castro government.

"We must not weaken our policy on Cuba until the Castro regime is dismantled, all political prisoners are freed and Cuba transitions to free and fair elections," Romney said.

Still, Andy Gomez, a senior fellow at the University of Miami's conservative Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies, said Obama's position is in line with what many academics have long tried to tell Washington.

"We have to lift the travel ban, not only to allow families to reunite but to allow us to provide information to the Cuban people that will help them form their decisions as to what kind of government they would like for the future," he said.

Another factor: The Cuban-Americans most likely to support lifting the travel restrictions are often recent immigrants who are not yet U.S. citizens and cannot vote.

That could suggest Obama was pointing to the general election, hoping a bold foreign policy statement would demonstrate his command in the international arena not only to Democrats but also to independents and Republicans -- Cuban or not.

Leonard Verdugo, 39, is among the conflicted independents Obama will have to win over. The Havana native initially said he had no desire to return to the country he fled a decade ago and opposed Obama's position.

A minute later he conceded that he sends money home to his mother and sister there, adding reluctantly, "I guess I agree that if your immediate family is there, you can visit."

[Associated Press; by Laura Wides-Munoz]

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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