
Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez met with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson this week to deny the Castro regime’s culpability in mysterious “sonic attacks” against U.S. diplomatic personnel in Havana. We should all be skeptical.
Nearly one year after U.S. diplomats began reporting mysterious physiological ailments while serving in Cuba, an array of physicians, scientists, and intelligence experts have reportedly concluded is that the mild brain damage and loss of hearing resulted from some sort of acoustic device directly targeting U.S. personnel.
The stakes for holding the Castro regime accountable are high. U.S. diplomats serve in any number of difficult environments around the world representing and promoting U.S. interests. If our adversaries determine that it is open season for attacks on U.S. personnel serving abroad, fewer Americans will be interested in joining the foreign service, and U.S. interests and our image will suffer for it. In short, the bad guys win.
According to media reports, here’s what we know to date:
treated told McClatchy report including reported embassy security keep quiet harassingThe evidence is damning. After five Republican senators from the Intelligence Committee sent a letter to Tillerson calling on him to expel all accredited Cuban diplomats in the United States and consider closing the embassy in Havana, Tillerson acknowledged shuttering the embassy is “under review.”
It is for that reason that defenders of Obama’s rapprochement with the Castro regime are working overtime to deflect Cuba culpability in the matter. They suggest another hostile government could have been responsible, such as Russia. But the idea that another foreign intelligence service could be operating in police-state Cuba without the knowledge of the Castro regime, targeting U.S. diplomats no less, defies belief.
Others speculate a rogue hard-line element in the Cuban regime that opposes rapprochement with the United States could have been out to sabotage relations. Again, this is farfetched. Not only does it presuppose that Raúl Castro is something other than a hard-liner — it also ignores the fact that if anything has defined this regime since 1959, other than its capacity for repression, it is its unity. Dissenters are either dead, living abroad, or internally exiled. Besides, the fact that Canadians were also targeted dispels this myth.
No, what concerns them is that these incidents threaten to collapse another Obama “legacy.” As they should. It matters little whether the attacks were deliberate or a surveillance operation gone awry. If the Castro regime cannot guarantee the basic safety of U.S. diplomats, then what really is the point of “normalizing” relations?
The Trump administration should immediately reduce the U.S. embassy in Havana to skeleton staff and order the same for the Cuban embassy in Washington. Beyond that, the United States has important global interests in ensuring that the Castro regime pays a steep price for its hostile behavior towards our diplomats. Rogue regimes around the world must be put on notice that there is a red line here — and that they violate it at their own peril.
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