``We immediately said we needed an in-depth investigation. And for that
we had to let into the United States the four Cubans who had been picked
up by the Coast Guard,'' said one participant in the hourlong conference
call.
As a result of that decision, the government was able to prevent
deportation of the Cubans and placate the Cuban-American community in
Miami, even while denying that it had changed policy or caved in to exile
pressure.
Re-creating the Clinton administration's reactions to the refugee saga
that unfolded off Surfside shows government officials trying to get a grip
on the facts as Cuban exiles pulled, pushed and sometimes even abused
them.
Still to be resolved, however, is how the U.S. government will deal
with any would-be Cuban refugees who might resist when approached by Coast
Guard vessels with crews bent on returning them to Cuba, according to one
of the participants.
``There is no review of policy but we will be looking at how to improve
the implementation of the policy in the face of this kind of
aggressiveness,'' said a U.S. official.
One likely possibility: stepping up the Coast Guard and Border Patrol
presence around the Florida Straits and increasing prosecutions of
suspected immigrant smugglers.
In Washington, Tuesday's events first raised alarm when Radio Marti
director Herminio San Roman called the State Department around 4 p.m.,
according to one official. He reported that ``something really big, not
just another crisis,'' was taking place.
Within the hour, virtually every Cuban exile group and leader had
telephoned their best contacts in the U.S. government to complain bitterly
about the Coast Guard actions and demand redress, another official
said.
Among the callers: The League of Cuban Municipalities; Agenda Cuba, a
human rights group; Miami Major Joe Carrollo; Hialeah Mayor Raul Martinez;
Cuban human rights activist Ruth Montaner; and the Cuban American National
Foundation.
All three Cuban-American members of Congress -- Lincoln Diaz-Balart and
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Miami Republicans, and Bob Menendez, Democrat of New
Jersey -- also called. So did Miami-Dade Mayor Alex Penelas, who called
``every half-hour'' to relay updates on the situation and make
suggestions.
They called the State Department's Michael Ranneberger, head of the
Cuba Desk, and Stuart Eisenstat, undersecretary for economic affairs. They
called Lula Rodriguez, Cuban-born assistant secretary of state for public
affairs, and the White House's National Security Council.
``Some people were really abusive, shouting and swearing,'' said one
official in Washington. ``We had to assign a person just to handle the
complaints while we tried to handle the situation.''
By about 5:30 p.m., the Cuba Desk initiated the first of two telephone
conference calls with working-level officials at the INS, the NSC, the
Coast Guard and the State Department's Bureau of Public Affairs.
The Coast Guard reported on the incident, noting that initial evidence
indicated that the six might have been smuggled in from the Bahamas. Then,
by admitting fault in the pepper-spraying, the Coast Guard cleared the way
for resolving the concerns of callers over the fate of the six refugees
who had been picked off the water. Two reached shore.
As potential witnesses in an investigation of alien smuggling, they
would be allowed into the United States. Otherwise, they would have joined
thousands of other would-be refugees returned to Cuba.
``This was about an investigation, not a humanitarian gesture or any
bowing to exile pressures, or any change in policy,'' said one participant
in the conference call who, like the others interviewed, requested
anonymity.
The telephone conference lasted about one hour, and the five agencies
held a second conference call around 8 p.m. to discuss details of a news
conference to announce the decisions reached at the earlier meeting.
The five agencies held another conference call Wednesday morning to
again review the previous day's events and plan for the future.U.S. cools off exiles' wrath, denies cave-in