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Havana, May 21 (Prensa Latina) Three years after
its announcement and despite an aggressive White
House strategy oriented to its implementation,
all the so-called Bush Plan for Cuba has
collected is a series of failures
In May 2004 President George W. Bush decided
"to speed the day when Cuba will be a free
country," in his own words, and approved new
measures aimed at ousting the Cuban government
and applying an alleged transition plan.
This plan included tightening the US blockade
imposed on the Island for over 45 years, giving
additional millions of dollars to aggressive
anti-Cuban groups based in Florida and seeking
formulas to give more money to those who want to
destabilize Cuba from within.
In fact, it was a broadening of the scope of
actions started in 2003 with the establishment
of the Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba,
led by then Secretary of State Colin Powell.
This sort of offensive was resisted by
Havana, despite obvious damage caused to the
Island's economy and society by an unprecedented
siege and the US official collusion with the
most notorious terrorists.
Three years after the US president proclaimed
his plan, the Island's economy reached a
12.5-percent growth and, besides covering local
needs with social services, it also aids other
countries in the fields of health and education.
One of the aspects that has been more
criticized in the US effort is its greater
interference and disrespect for
self-determination of Cuba, illustrated by the
appointment of a "governor" for Cuba, once the
revolutionary government was finished.
Cubans also make fun of US claims for a
so-called transition, vowing to improve
education in a country that has already reached
the highest levels in the field, or vowing to
cut the free and ample social assistance of the
population.
The Bush Plan also envisaged the impossible
mission of securing the devolution of businesses
and other properties that were nationalized
after the triumph of the Revolution.
The failure of this sort of project, which by
all means ignores Cuba's current reality, is
another of the long-standing setbacks of the US
Cuban policy. |