• electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    You don’t actually believe this, do you? The US is verrryy happy to deal with and even support antidemocratic regimes, as long as it suits our geopolitical interests. The “freedom and democracy” bullshit is so threadbare at this point, that it strains the imagination to think that there is anyone left who actually believes it.

    In the specific case of Cuba, the US has tried everything it could to undo the revolution in Cuba. Do you think “free, multiparty elections” would be held without overwhelming US interference?

    Just as a reminder: before the revolution, Cuba was run by a dictator who was hated by the Cuban people, but loved by the US political/corporate interests. Also, the nations of the UN regularly vote overwhelmingly to end the US sanctions, which the US vetoes.

    • mwguy@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      You don’t actually believe this, do you?

      We just did it in Venezuela. And politicians in the US have been looking for a reason to normalize relations with Cuba since the fall of the USSR.

      Elections are hardly some crazy thing to ask for.

      Do you think “free, multiparty elections” would be held without overwhelming US interference?

      Probably. Without the support of the USSR, we don’t have as much of an existential threat posed by Cuba. Especially since the support for the embargo in the US has fallen below 50% in recent years. Neither party will end it while the Castro Dictatorship is in power because of the political pull survivors concentrated in Florida have. So whomever does it needs a “see it worked” in order to do so.

      Just as a reminder: before the revolution,

      Bautista predats the Cold War. We supported a lot of dictatorships in the Cold War that we wouldn’t end up supporting long term. Gaddafi and Saddam are excellent examples of dictatorships we supported and then opposed post Cold War.