U.S. groups spend millions in push to ease embargo, build ties to
Cuba
Among the foundations are the Arca Foundation, based in Washington, D.C.; the Ford Foundation, based in New York City; and the General Services Foundation, based in Aspen, Colo. In the past three years, they have given almost $4 million to organizations that favor normalizing relations with Cuba.
The money funds several causes, among them:
Most of the money from the Arca, Ford and General Services foundations has been donated to public institutions and nonprofit organizations, among them the Cuban Committee for Democracy (CCD), based in Miami; the Center for International Policy, directed in Washington by former U.S. diplomat Wayne Smith, who once was the chief of mission at the U.S. Interest Section in Havana; the World Policy Institute, based in New York City; Oxfam-America, based in Boston; the American Association for World Health, based in Washington; and Inter-American Dialogue, also in the capital.
From 1995 to 1997, the CCD received $130,000 from the Ford Foundation and $88,500 from the Arca Foundation. With the money, the CCD funded its offices in Miami and Washington, the radio program Transition (broadcast in Miami by Union Radio, 1450 AM) and its efforts to promote normalizing U.S.-Cuba relations.
The CCD has become the most serious alternative to the Cuban American National Foundation. Until recently, the foundation's voice resounded in Congress almost exclusively, in favor of the embargo.
The Arca Foundation also has delivered funds to the Cuban American Defense League, based in Miami, which in 1996 received $15,000 ``to denounce the abuses committed in South Florida against constitutional rights,'' according to its president, Eddie B. Levy.
``Our concrete objective is to defend those rights, not in Cuba or in Haiti but here in South Florida, where some press media are responsible for those abuses and violations,'' Levy said.
Cambio Cubano (Cuban Change), directed in Miami by Eloy Gutierrez-Menoyo, is another organization that has received financial support from Arca. Cambio Cubano received $35,000 in 1996 ``to develop educational efforts in South Florida that will strengthen the voice of Cuban Americans who favor a peaceful solution to the conflict between Cuba and the United States,'' according to the annual report of the Arca Foundation.
However, the largest amounts of money have gone to the centers for documentation, information and analysis that make their influence felt among political parties, the media, academic institutions and business organizations.
Notable centers are:
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