Despite the cost of doing business with Americans, Cubans are still interested in buying goods from their northern neighbors. They want an end to the embargo, so Americans could do business with Cuba and travel there freely. Cuban officials pointed out that they welcome American business officials and that they have paid for the goods they had purchased. Many critics say Cubans are known for defaulting on their debts to trading partners. ***
In a Feb. 4 letter to four key legislators, White House Budget Director Mitchell Daniels warned that Bush considers the embargo of Cuba ''vitally important'' and might veto any bill that tinkered with efforts to lessen economic sanctions of the Fidel Castro regime. Opponents of the embargo on Capitol Hill, whose ranks are growing, have won majority votes for three consecutive years to lift a ban on most U.S. travel to Cuba -- but the Republican House leadership has just as consistently derailed the proposals.
The spending bill contained at least one provision related to enforcement of the embargo. Sen. Byron Dorgan, a North Dakota Democrat, had included a provision in the Senate version of the spending bill that would have relaxed restrictions prohibiting most U.S. citizens from travel to Cuba. His provision would have given anyone applying for a license to travel to Cuba automatic approval if the Treasury Department delayed beyond a 90-day window in ruling on an application. A spokesman for Dorgan, Barry Piatt, said clashes over Cuba policy on Capitol Hill would resume later this year. ''Both chambers have expressed their will on numerous occasions that relations with Cuba get better. In every case, in back-room deals, Republican leaders have stripped these provisions, thwarting the will of both chambers,'' Piatt said.
A House staffer knowledgeable about the struggle over the Cuba language said pro-embargo legislators fought a temptation to ''cut a deal,'' permitting some weakening of the embargo. ''With the president's support, we're winning. We don't have to capitulate,'' he said. [End]