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White House Tightens Travel Limits, Financial Squeeze on Cuba

The action is aimed at placating exiles, who want a tougher anti-Castro stance.

The World

May 07, 2004|Peter Wallsten, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration Thursday pledged to further limit U.S. travel to Cuba while spending millions to promote democracy on the communist island, moving to mollify Cuban American critics who said the president risked losing exile support if he did not fulfill promises to get tougher on Fidel Castro.

The proposals to strengthen sanctions, from a report by a presidential commission headed by Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, will become U.S. policy immediately, officials said.


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The allocation of the money -- $59 million over the next two years to help families of dissidents and to evade jamming of U.S.-sponsored radio and television transmissions for Cubans -- does not require congressional action, officials said.

"It is a strategy that says we're not waiting for the day of Cuban freedom, we are working for the day of freedom in Cuba," the president said after a White House meeting with Powell and other members of the commission. He created the panel last fall amid complaints from Cuban Americans that the U.S. was letting the problem of the Cuban president fester despite Bush's election-year promises in 2000 to take a hard line against him.

That year, Bush won the support of more than 80% of the nearly half a million Cuban Americans who voted in Florida -- a state he won by only 537 votes.

Some recent polls have indicated concern among Cuban American voters over the administration's approach to Cuba, even as Democrats are laying aggressive plans to peel away some of Bush's exile support.

Thursday's announcement, coming a month after senior White House political advisor Karl Rove delivered a speech to Cuban Americans in Miami assuring them of the president's position, showed that Bush does not intend to let Democrats exploit exiles' complaints of administration inaction.

Specifically, the policy announced Thursday would restrict the "remittances" that Cuban Americans send to family members on the island -- specifically prohibiting money from being sent to Cuban officials and Communist Party members.

The U.S. will also restrict family visits to once every three years -- reduced from once a year -- and reduce the sum that licensed visitors are allowed to spend to $50 a day from $164. The goal, officials said, is to limit the cash that flows to Castro's government.

The announcement drew praise, albeit tepid, from one of Bush's most vocal exile critics.

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