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The Test Ahead in Nicaragua
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13125 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
11 / 1987 |
2,299 Words |
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William Ratliff William Ratliff, a research fellow at Stanford University's
Hoover Institution, has visited Cuba four times in the past
fifteen years, talked with Castro, and authored many books and
articles on Cuba. In 1988 he drafted the Cuban American
National Foundation's policy statement, "Towards a New U.S.-
Cuba Policy." |
President Reagan is considered to be a very political animal, and yet he has flunked the political test on one of the key issues of his administration: building a strong consensus for his position on the conflict in Central America. Even as peace talks get under way in the region, most Americans still don't know what the conflict there is all about or just how much is at stake. Thus, they have no idea how unlikely the current talks are to bring a solution to the problems of the region.
This state of affairs has arisen in large part because, even after all these years, the administration, its allies in Congress and outside, and the Nicaraguan resistance movement itself, still have not grasped - or learned to deal adequately with - the fact that the conflict over Central America is above all else political. Moreover, much of it is not even taking place in Central America. Critical battles have been fought, and often lost - or ignored altogether - in the World Court, the byways of the Third World, the halls of the U.S. Congress, and the editorial pages of the world's daily newspapers.
Lacking a strong consensus on the Central American conflict, the administration has had to turn to unreliable, inadequate, and perhaps illegal funding. Policies have been born to squirm or die, blown by the winds of prejudice and by uninformed and constantly shifting public opinion.
By way of contrast, the Sandinistas and their Cuban allies know a political battle when they see one, and despite some stupid moves in the past, they have made their case much more consistently and successfully throughout the
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