Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Bonnie Goldstein What Was Alan Gross Doing in Havana?



$20 million allocation to "promote self-
determined democracy in Cuba."
Tirania mas vieja de Las Americas
1 Enero 1959
25 Agosto 2010

Bonnie Goldstein
Washington, D.C.
Last week President Obama released his proposed $52.8 billion 2011 budget for the U.S. Department of State. Included with the billions for programs in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq is a relatively minuscule $20 million allocation to "promote self-determined democracy in Cuba." For one unlucky consultant hired to do just that, however, the mandate is particularly thorny. During the first week of December, Alan Phillip Gross, an American from the Washington, D.C., suburb of Potomac, Md., was arrested at Havana's Jose Marti airport as he was boarding a plane to leave Cuba. He has not been formally accused, but is suspected by the Cubans of spying for the U.S. government.
Although he entered the island on a tourist visa, Gross was not in Cuba for the exceptional bird watching. The 60-year-old family man, synagogue member, and former Obama supporter is a technology expert and federal vendor whose specialty is bringing satellite signals to remote locations. Though uninvited by his hosts, he was on Castro's island as an "independent business and economic development consultant" to Development Alternatives, Inc., a State Department contractor that hired him under a $8.6 million contract from the Agency for International Development. Since his arrest, reporters have asked at State press briefings about Gross' detention and his precise assignment in Cuba. Few details have been released other than he was there to assist "civil society organizations" to better communicate through technology.
For more than 50 years Cuba has been quarantined by the United States because of our tiny neighbor's contrary position on democracy. The Cuban Republic is governed by communism, predicated on the socialistic ideology that a government provides cradle-to-grave care for its citizens in exchange for individual freedom.
Although once menacing (particularly when Cuba teamed with our Cold War enemies in a global posture that sought to "bury" us), the small but irritating neighbor 90 miles off the Florida coast has been kept largely in check by a strictly enforced trade embargo and travel restrictions. In the contest between the egalitarian Goliath and doctrinaire David, however, foreign policy slingshot attacks have dominated the narrative.
Since 1996, a small effort to stick our thumb in the island's eye developed with the formation of a "Cuba democracy program" within USAID to deliver "humanitarian aid" and "information" to "human rights and political activists" and families of dissidents. For years the democracy program's budget, about $2 million to start with, was funneled into grants to Cuban American groups in Miami that ostensibly used the money to somehow promote freedoms for Cubans still on the island.
Unfortunately, program funds were misused. A 2006 audit and investigation by the GAO highlighted taxpayer monies used to purchase Godiva chocolates, Nintendo GameBoys and cashmere sweaters. An alleged embezzlement scheme by another grantee was discovered in 2008, leading a member of the House to challenge USAID's annual program allocation, which had by then grown to $45 million per year. The agency agreed to more closely monitor its contractors, and soon after Alan Gross was hired via DAI to travel to Cuba.
The New York Times reported the lone consultant had already visited Cuba several times under his subcontract when he was arrested. Early accounts of his efforts say he was there to help a small number of Jewish citizens in Cuba obtain "unfiltered access" to the Internet, The Miami Herald reported, but prominent members of the Cuban Jewish community claim they don't know Gross.
Though his bosses deny he is an intelligence agent, there has been a lot of mystery surrounding Gross' mission. For over a week after he was detained, his arrest was kept secret from the press and Congress. After reporters learned of his detention, his supervisor at DAI released this statement: "The detained individual was an employee of a program subcontractor, which was implementing a competitively issued subcontract to assist Cuban civil society organizations.'' It was not disclosed what companies competed for the job.
A State spokesman dodged questions about the American's arrest because, he said, U.S. consular staff in Cuba had not been allowed to speak with him. "Since we haven't met with him, we don't have a privacy waiver, so it's difficult for us to get into any more specifics on that case." Although envoys were finally allowed to meet with the contractor, specifics remain scarce.
Cuba does not view the development expert's assistance
continuar el articulo de Mrs. Goldstein
favor de ir a :
http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/02/11/what-was-alan-gross-doing-in-havana/



Bonnie Goldstein
Reside en las
afueras de Washington, D.C.
Esposa del Escritor James Grady
Ambos tienen dos hijos adultos.

Miss
http://www.politicsdaily.com/2010/02/11/what-was-alan-gross-doing-in-havana/

4 comments:

Pedro Rholax said...

We have no shame. We are possible the only people on earth whose disidents support economically the dictatorial regime from which they escaped, whe we demand their resignation. Without our millions sent in money, food, clothing and medicines they would have been a civil unrest long ago. Every penny we send goes to the government which sells the Cubans in hard currency whatever is worth eating or wearing. There is no recycling : this money is used to construct hotels for the tourism and to keep the hospitals that are for foreigners only, which are the ones worth being admitted to.

Pedro Rholax said...

Sorry "which they escaped, while we demand..."

Conchita Bouza said...

Estimado Pedro

Usted tiene una claridad mental admirable.
Nuestro exilio se ha convertido en un exilio
economico. Desde enero del 1959. los
"Jovenes Rebeldes " han saqueado nuestro
patrimonio nacional. El primer departamento
que crearon fue Bienes Malversados. Hemos
sido despojados , marginados. Desde enero
del 1959 cientos de cubanos han perdido su
vida en los pelotones de fusilamiento , han
sido privados de su libertad. No creo en la disi-
dencia . Aun tengo en mi memoria de niña , los
gritos de Paredon que en la vecindad un grupo
de cubanos gritaba. Eso Sr. Rholax fue en el 1959

Pedro Rholax said...

Pues así es. Pero me dicen el bobo y otras lindezas. De hecho mi blog no recibe comentarios, y lo de menos es cualquier noción de ser un equivocado ,o un pesado, sino ver que la gente quiere otras creencias más simples. Jugamos contra un genio de la manipulación, alguien capaz de haber abaratado la delación a tal punto que por un pollo medio país chivatee al otro, y lo ha logrado con el autobloqueo interno.
¿qué les importará que no les vendan, si no tienen dicisa con quñe comprar, mientras les regalen? Por el contrario les conviene que se siga hablando de bloqueo para justificar las carencias, fruto del desastre minuciosamente cometido contra la produccción nacional de todo.

Los 1 de Mayo a desfilar agitando banderitas sonriendo a la prensa internacional, y por la noche a llamar a Miami pidiendo Mp5s...
Gracias por sus cumplidos, estimada Conchita.