[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 6 (Tuesday, January 13, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H227-H228]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONCESSIONS TO CUBA ARE JUST THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, as an 8-year-old child, I was forced
to flee Havana, Cuba, with my family for the shores of the United
States of America, this shining city on a hill and a beacon of hope and
freedom to the world.
The Cuban American Members of Congress are all united by our love of
this great country and our love and respect for freedom, for democracy,
and the rule of law because of where we come from and whom we
represent. For us, these principles aren't concepts that we take for
granted. We cherish them because we know the alternative.
We need look no further than just 60 miles south of the United States
to see the alternative, where the Castro regime has been entrenched for
over 55 years and ruling the island with an iron fist.
This is Berta Soler, one of the leaders of Las Damas de Blanco, the
Ladies in White, a peaceful dissident group. Berta has been detained so
many times, she says to me, that she has lost count. That is why we
stand united in a bipartisan manner, in steadfast opposition to any
attempts by the Obama administration to normalize relations with the
Castro regime.
President Obama's audacity of hubris has resulted in one exercise in
folly after another, and engagement with Cuba is the height of that
folly. What have we gotten in return? Let me turn to the next poster.
This poster has a list of some of the many wanted criminals who have
sought refuge and have gotten it in Castro's Cuba. We haven't gotten
any reforms from this deal.
We haven't gotten the return of these dozens of criminals that Castro
has been harboring because they have fled from justice in America, like
convicted New Jersey State trooper killer Joanne Chesimard. After this
deal was announced, the Castro regime said: Oh, no, all of these
people, we will give them asylum. The FBI has put her on the most
wanted terrorist list; yet Castro says: We will give them asylum.
What have the Cuban people received as a result of this
administration's concessions? Well, 53 political prisoners supposedly
were released, Mr. Speaker, like some of these activists, who were
rounded up in a catch-and-release program of the Castro regime.
The administration hails this list of 53 as a victory, ignoring the
fact that hundreds of political and anti-regime activists like these
were arrested and detained immediately before and after the
announcement of the changes, and almost 2,000 people were arrested or
detained last year alone. This infamous list of 53 that has been
praised by this administration and the Castro regime is another ruse.
Over a dozen individuals on that list were released prior to the
December 17 announcement, including Carlos Andres Sanchez Perez. He was
released over 1 year ago. Some were arrested even before June. Catch-
and-release is the new program, the new playbook of the Castro regime,
and Obama deliberately has fallen for that ruse.
Now, the regime will feel emboldened because the United States has
just signed off on its mistreatment of its citizens, and President
Obama has extended an economic lifeline to the regime that will allow
it to continue this repression.
Before there can be any discussion of changing our policy toward
Cuba, Mr. Speaker, all political prisoners must be released, not this
fake list of 53; fair and multiparty elections must be held; and the
fundamental human rights of every Cuban must be respected.
Mr. Speaker, I warn my colleagues to pay close attention to what the
Obama administration is attempting to do in Cuba because this will
track with its attempts at reconciliation with Iran, another rogue
nation and state sponsor of terrorism. The administration's efforts in
Cuba have been the test case for Iran, and the two have paralleled each
other.
While the administration was holding secret talks with the Castro
regime, we know that he was penning secret letters to Iran's Supreme
Leader Khamenei and conceding to Iran the right to enrich uranium.
These concessions to Cuba are just the tip of the iceberg, and it
will open the doors to similar measures in Iran
[[Page H228]]
where the Supreme Leader will see what is happening in Cuba and says:
Hey, we can get away with that as well.
Both have serious consequences for our national security as other
nations see that we lack the courage of our convictions, and they will
be willing to test us. In fact, Nicolas Maduro after the prisoner
exchange said, ``We will exchange Leopoldo Lopez,'' a human rights
activist whom Nicolas Maduro has imprisoned in Venezuela, for one of
the criminals in prison here in the United States. They want to test
us; they want to see what they can get for holding innocents in prison.
Just look at the appeasements that this administration has made to
Russia, to Iran, to North Korea. These rogue regimes will continue to
act with impunity, and our allies have turned away from us because,
instead of working with our allies, we have been appeasing our enemies.
Mr. Speaker, in closing, I would like for this Congress to take a
close look at that list of 53 prisoners and remember that even if that
were a true list, which it is not, it is not about 53. It is about
freedom for all political prisoners, some of whose names we will never
know.
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