WASHINGTON
(AP) — Fidel Castro's passing removes what was long the single greatest
psychological barrier to a warmer U.S.-Cuba relationship. But it also adds to
the uncertainty ahead with the transition from an Obama to a Trump
administration.
"A
brutal dictator" of a "totalitarian island," declared
President-elect Donald Trump, underscoring the historical trauma still
separating the countries.
A more
restrained President Barack Obama, carefully promoting and working to preserve
his own attempt to rebuild those ties, said history would assess Castro's
impact and that the Cuban people could reflect "with powerful
emotions" about how their longtime leader influenced their country.
In
death as in life, Castro has divided opinion: a revolutionary who stood up to
American aggression or a ruthless dictator whose movement trampled human rights
and democratic aspirations.
President
Raul Castro, Fidel's younger brother, is 85. Their Communist Party shows no
signs of opening up greater political space despite agreeing with the United
States to re-establish embassies and facilitate greater trade and investment.
As
Obama leaves office in January, his decision to engage rather than pressure
Havana in the hopes of forging new bonds could quickly unravel. Trump has
hardly championed the effort and Republican leaders in Congress fiercely
opposed Obama's calls to end the 55-year-old U.S. trade embargo of the island.
"We
know that this moment fills Cubans — in Cuba and in the United States — with
powerful emotions, recalling the countless ways in which Fidel Castro altered
the course of individual lives, families and of the Cuban nation," Obama
said.
He
offered neither condemnation nor praise for Castro, who outlasted invasion and
assassination plots, and presided over the Cuban missile crisis, which took the
world to the brink of nuclear war.
"History
will record and judge the enormous impact of this singular figure on the people
and world around him," Obama said, adding that U.S.-Cuban relations
shouldn't be defined "by our differences but by the many things that we
share as neighbors and friends."
Trump
didn't pass off his evaluation to the historians.
"Today,
the world marks the passing of a brutal dictator who oppressed his own people
for nearly six decades," Trump said in a statement. "Fidel Castro's
legacy is one of firing squads, theft, unimaginable suffering, poverty and the
denial of fundamental human rights."
Trump
expressed hope that Castro's death would mark a "move away from the
horrors" toward a future where Cubans live in freedom. But he said nothing
about Obama's project to reset ties, and even hailed the election support he
received from veterans of the failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion that was backed
by the CIA.
Such a
statement probably will irritate Havana, coming after a two-year period of
intense diplomatic discussions with Washington that have done more to improve
relations between the countries than anything in the past 5 ½ decades.
Castro's
reign began when his improbable insurrection ousted the U.S.-backed strongman
Fulgencio Batista in 1959. Only 32 at the time, Castro was the youngest leader
in Latin America and inspired revolutionaries as far afield as Africa and Asia.
But
Castro's socialist Cuba was anything but an idyll, and the United States
quickly became his fiercest opponent.
Members
of Batista's government went before summary courts, with at least 582 executed
by firing squad in the first two years of Castro's rule. Independent newspapers
were closed. Gays were herded into camps for "re-education." Tens of
thousands were held as political prisoners. Hundreds of thousands of Cubans
fled. After the Soviet Union vanished, Cuba's economy collapsed.
In
Miami and other American cities, a powerful emigre community emerged that was
bitterly opposed to any improvement in U.S. relations with Castro's government.
For many years, their threat alone was enough to sink any attempts to bridge
divides.
The
dynamic began changing a decade ago, as Castro stepped back from public life.
His health ailing, he handed over power to brother Raul in 2008 and a period of
limited economic reforms was ushered in.
After
Cuba's government released American prisoner Alan Gross and agreed to a spy
swap with Washington in 2014, Obama and Raul Castro felt they finally had
enough trust to embark on a journey of rapprochement.
While
some U.S. investment has opened up and travel rules for Americans are now
greatly eased, the normalization has been limited because Obama could never get
Republican lawmakers to end the vast restrictions tied up in the trade embargo.
Triumphant alongside Trump in November, some GOP leaders have vowed to reverse
Obama's effort.
"Now
that Fidel Castro is dead, the cruelty and oppression of his regime should die
with him," House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said in a statement Saturday.
"Sadly, much work remains to secure the freedom of the Cuban people."
Democratic
Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who is pushing legislation to scrap the
embargo, said in an interview that Castro's shadow "loomed over all the
government's decisions" even though he had left power. She hoped Trump and
Republican leaders would respond to Castro's death by at least not rolling back
Obama's openings to Cuba and perhaps advancing them.
During
his campaign, Trump criticized Obama for striking a "very weak
agreement" and threatened to reverse Obama's executive orders "unless
the Castro regime meets our demands." He never laid out those demands, and
at other times hinted about being amenable to more U.S. investment in Cuba.
As with
much of his foreign policy, Trump never outlined clearly a set of policy
objectives with Cuba. The ambiguity leaves much of the recent warming on
uncertain ground. It's unclear if Castro's death, however powerful for
castigators and champions, will dramatically sway Trump one way or the other.

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