E-MAIL THIS LINK
To: 

Castro proposes prisoner swap for U.S. talks
Bet no one saw this coming ...
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Cuban President Raul Castro proposed on Thursday a swap of prisoners with the United States as a goodwill "gesture" to pave the way for talks with incoming U.S. President Barack Obama. His offer to release political dissidents in exchange for the release of five convicted Cuban spies in U.S. prisons was the most specific proposal yet to ease ties with the United States since Obama, who takes office on January 20, was elected in November.
As nice as it would be to get the dissidents freed, the people we're holding are criminals and shouldn't get out easily.
Castro's comments are likely to fuel growing expectations in Latin America that the Obama administration will help thaw U.S.-Cuba ties that have been frozen since Washington imposed an economic embargo in 1962.

"Let's do gesture for gesture," Castro told reporters during a visit to the Brazilian capital Brasilia. "These prisoners you talk about -- they want us to let them go? They should tell us tomorrow. We'll send them with their families and everything. Give us back our five heroes. That is a gesture on both parts," he said, referring to the convicted Cuban spies.

On Tuesday, 33 Latin American and Caribbean leaders urged Obama to lift the embargo on the Communist country as soon as he takes office. They also demanded the immediate lifting of measures taken in the past five years by President George W. Bush to toughen the embargo against Cuba, where Fidel Castro seized power in a 1959 revolution. "It's not Cuba who has to ask for the end of the embargo," said President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who held the news conference with Castro. "There is no more justification for the embargo."
It's a simple issue: either Castro and Cuba believe that we're Satan incarnate or they believe we're just truculent trading partners. If the former, they shouldn't want to end the embargo since it would contaminate their pure revolution. If the latter, what do they offer in exchange?

So far it's the usual communist ploy: what's theirs is theirs and what's ours is negotiable.
Obama has said he was open to talks and has pledged to ease limits on Cuban-Americans who travel to their homeland and send money to relatives living there. But he has said he would keep the four-decade-old U.S. trade embargo as leverage to influence changes in the one-party state.

Obama has so far not commented on remarks made by Raul and his brother, former Cuban president Fidel Castro, signaling a willingness to hold talks with his administration.

Castro said he was open to meet Obama anywhere but that the encounter had to be on equal terms, with U.S. recognition of the island's sovereignty. "Without a shadow (of doubt) over our sovereignty," said Castro.
The past fifty years have demonstrated that we get along pretty well without Cuba. In fact, the more we ignore them the better we do, something Jack Kennedy and Jimmuah Carter demonstrated to us. Cuba doesn't have anything we need. It's Cuba that wants an end to the embargo. What do they offer in return?

Posted by: Steve White 2008-12-19
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=257641