Tuesday, April 14, 1998
Clinton Backs Bill to Ease Cuba Embargo
By JACK NELSON, Chief Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON--The Clinton administration, treading gently to
overcome strong
opposition from Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Jesse Helms
(R-N.C.), is working behind the scenes to marshal support for bipartisan
legislation to exempt food and medicine from the U.S. trade embargo
against Cuba.
Clinton has disclosed that he favors the bill, co-sponsored by
Sens.
Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.) and John W. Warner (R-Va.). But the
president is concerned about whether the bill's supporters can "get
around" the opposition of Helms, an adamant foe of the measure who has
criticized Clinton for acting "alone" in recently issuing an executive
order that eased curbs on sending medicine and money to Cuba.
Support for exempting food and medicine from the embargo has been
growing in both the Senate, where 25 members--including six
Republicans--have signed the Dodd-Warner bill, and in the House, where
another version of the legislation has been signed by 115 members,
including seven Republicans.
Dodd said he was pleased to learn that Clinton had expressed
support
for the bill, which would represent a significant expansion of his
executive order. Key Democratic aides in the Senate and House expressed
optimism that Congress will pass the measure.
* * * The United States has maintained a trade
embargo against Cuba since
the aborted 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, but support for it has ebbed as
Cuban President Fidel Castro has grown older and most of the world's
other Communist countries have turned to democracy.
Clinton announced the measures easing some sanctions in March,
after
Pope John Paul II's historic visit to Cuba. The measures--aimed at
improving conditions for individual Cubans in the hopes that support for
Castro would decline in the process--streamlined procedures for sending
medical supplies to Cuba, authorized direct humanitarian flights
from the
United States to the island and legalized limited remittances from Cuban
Americans to relatives there.
Dodd and Warner, in a letter to colleagues urging support for
their
bill, wrote of the "harmful impact of the current policy on the health of
the Cuban people--particularly with respect to the health of children,
the elderly and the infirm." The letter added: "We can no longer turn our
backs on the suffering of innocent people less than 100 miles from our
border."
Clinton expressed his support for the embargo legislation in a
recent
conversation with Peter Bourne, chairman of the American Assn. for World
Health.
* * * Momentum for eliminating food and medicine
from the embargo has been
building since early last year, when Bourne's organization released
results of a yearlong study by medical experts that showed lack of food
and medicine has caused suffering and deaths among Cubans.
Talking with the president at a book party in Washington that was
also
attended by a Times reporter, Bourne asked if Clinton supported the
Senate bill. Clinton said, "I do, but I just hope we can get around Jesse
Helms' opposition."
Bourne, an aide to former President Carter, suggested that
Clinton
send a positive signal on the matter to Congress. The president didn't
reply directly but pointed to his recent executive order easing some of
the sanctions.
At the White House, Press Secretary Mike McCurry expressed
surprise
that Clinton had disclosed his support for the Senate bill. But he
confirmed that the administration is "trying to find bipartisan
consensus" on lifting the food and medicine embargo. "We're trying to
thread the needle and get everyone together on this issue," McCurry said,
adding that, as a result of Clinton's executive order, "medicine for all
practical purposes already is exempted."
Clinton's expression of support for the trade embargo bill also
surprised Helms' office. Mark Thiessen, the senator's foreign policy
spokesman, said: "Our understanding. . . . was that the administration
intended to work with us to get humanitarian relief to the Cuban people.
Trying an end run would be extremely unconstructive."
Thiessen was referring to Helms' endorsement--after the pope's
visit
to Cuba--of a Cuban exile group's proposal to expand donations of
humanitarian aid to the island nation. Under the proposal, which Helms
plans to introduce in a bill soon, direct U.S. government emergency aid
of food and medicine would be distributed by the American Red Cross.
Helms recently made clear that, despite the pope's appeal for
ending
the food and medicine embargo, he would oppose such efforts. He was
co-author of a 1996 bill that toughened the embargo. Clinton at first
opposed that measure but signed it in 1996 under political pressure after
Cuban jet fighters shot down two unarmed small planes operated by a
Miami-based Cuban exile group, killing four people.
Dodd sees little room for compromise with Helms and said that,
because
Cuban officials do not let the Red Cross operate in Cuba, Helms'
plan for
expanded humanitarian aid won't work.
Copyright Los Angeles Times