EFFORTS FOCUSING ON TRAVEL
Some Congressman still plan to press ahead with anti-embargo legislation. Senator Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, will introduce a bill to lift travel restrictions, which should have a greater chance of passage than a more ambitious proposal introduced earlier this year that sought to overturn the embargo itself.
A spokeswoman for Baucus said the new travel bill was meant to "get a foot in the door."
Jeff Flake, a Republican congressman from Arizona, plans to introduce his own travel bill soon, arguing through a spokesman that "easing the embargo isn't any kind of reward for Castro. Ultimately it will be the beginning of the end for him."
But even easing the travel ban now stands little chance of passage, analysts say. "Obviously, nobody wants to be seen pandering to a tyrant," said Stephen Johnson, with the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank.***
"Having Cuba serve again on the Human Rights Commission is like putting Al Capone in charge of bank security," Fleischer said. "It is an inappropriate action that does not serve the cause of human rights in Cuba or at the United Nations." Cuba's U.N. ambassador, Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla, accused the United States of executing minors and the mentally retarded people and abusing the rights of Afghan fighters long confined without charges in a U.S. base on Cuban territory.***