Would Cubans Choose Annexation or Independence?

Erasmo Calzadilla

HAVANA TIMES — In recent years, the citizens of Puerto Rico and the Falkland Islands (a.k.a Islas Malvinas) were consulted regarding the status of their respective territories. Both preferred annexation or integration to a First World country over independence. If Cuba were granted the possibility of choosing, what would its citizens decide?

More than half a century of “socialism” has eroded Cubans’ sense of belonging to a territory and culture. In Cuba, “homeland” is a word about to become extinct. No dictatorship, no blockade, not even US neo-colonialism was able to achieve this.

A good part of Cubans living on the island, particularly the young, longs to escape. Preferably towards the north, but Ecuador, Chile, China and other destinations will also do. The point is to leave for any corner of the planet where there’s at least some hope of getting ahead, even at the cost of enormous sacrifice.

Illustration by Manuel Herrera

I myself am a good example of an uprooted citizen: I am not proud of a people who acquiesce to dictatorship. The symbols of the homeland disgust me. If it weren’t for my folks, I would have picked up and left a long time ago.

This, however, doesn’t make me blind to the perversity that surrounds the issue of annexation. Of course the inhabitants of a country saddled by chronic poverty long to “become integrated” into any rich neighbor willing to open its doors to them, but that’s only part of the story.

The responsibility of the rich for the chronic and structural poverty of the poor is the other. Evoking the first without recalling the second would be highly unjust.

Uncertainty

In less than twenty years, fossil fuel shortages and climate change will unleash a global crisis. We’ll have wars, massive exoduses and shifting national borders. Some analysts believe that, as a result of this, small nations will fuse into larger blocs and lose their sovereignty in the process.

If that were to happen, what bloc would Cuba gravitate towards? Towards the north or towards the south? The current trend points toward the south, but who knows what will happen tomorrow.

In any event, civil liberties and individual rights will be hard to preserve in the midst of the coming social upheavals. We’re already experiencing this.

This is the end of my predictive, geo-strategic analysis of annexation.

14 thoughts on “Would Cubans Choose Annexation or Independence?

  • I dream of a free and independent cuba one day for the commies to be pushed into the sea and hard working cubans to return home and realize the island full potential….would very much like too see her join the union and place a large naval base on her shores to give america full dominance of our coast lines and prevent drugs from being smuggled in by sea and air…not to mention the climate is perfect for growing medicinal plants and also for launching space craft

  • Cuba, fully sovereign and in control of its own destiny. Unfortunately that decision, reflect what is going on today, assassination, oppression, persecution, intervention, slavery indoctrination, hungry, discrimination, and other things. I can not risk my family to into unsecure future, that comes another tyrant, with sweets, words, and false promises, and the cycle continue, over and over again, because the problem is that Cuban never learn, by their mistakes, History has show it, since the first day of independence in 1902.

  • The lost opportunity.

    Cuba lies 90 miles off the coast of Florida.
    This proximity to the United States lent to the viewpoint among many American decision makers, referred to as the law of political gravitation, that annexation of Cuba would be a logical extension of the United States’ borders, and fulfillment of manifest destiny. Cuba’s proximity to the United States also meant that its harbors were of strategic importance, Cuba’s harbors could be used by enemies to threaten war on
    the United States conversely the United States could use those harbors as a first line of defense against enemies. Thomas Jefferson considered the Western hemisphere, especially Cuba and Florida, to be a jumping off from an “empire for liberty.
    Cuba also factored into the economic system of the United States and equally the United States greatly impacted Cuban economics. Beginning with illicit trade in the 1700s, the United States quickly became not only the primary market for exports from Cuba but also the primary

    (database). Available from World Wide Web: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu.
    The Right of the United States to Interfere in
    Cuba”. The Albany Law Journal: A Weekly Record. Volume LVII, From January to
    July, 1898, 278-281. Albany NY: Albany Law Journal Co. 1898.
    Greg Grandin. Empire’s Workshop: Latin America,
    the United States and the Rise. New York: Henry Holt and Company,
    The United States
    began to expand that trade with Cuba, including sugar, tobacco, and tourism. As time went on, due to politics and commerce between the United States and Cuba, the United States began to have more of a vested interest in Cuba and thoughts of annexing Cuba became more prevalent among United States policy makers.
    While annexation was a vision shared by many Cubans, who felt that it would bring stability and wealth to Cuba, it was not
    without its opponents. Cuban Independentistas held the dream of an independent Cuba, fully sovereign and in control of its own destiny. Unfortunately that decision, reflect what is going on today, assassination, oppression, persecution, intervention, slavery indoctrination, hungry, discrimination, and other things. I can not risk my family to in the future, when comes another tyrant, with sweets, words, and false promises, and the cycle continue, over and over again, because the problem is that Cubans, never learn, by their mistakes, History has
    show it, since the first day of independence in 1902. Cuba will be better be part of the strongest Democracy in the World, rather to be governed by another tyrant in the future

    Michael Anguelo http://www.nutrihealthyou.com

  • Cuba, fully sovereign and in control of its own destiny. Unfortunately that decision, reflect what is going on today, assassination, oppression, persecution, intervention, slavery indoctrination, hungry, discrimination, and other things. I can not risk my family to into unsecure future, that comes another tyrant, with sweets, words, and false promises, and the cycle continue, over and over again, because the problem is that Cuban never learn, by their mistakes, History has show it, since the first day of independence in 1902.

  • I as Cuban American since 1955, USA Air Force Vet. I can assure you, with his fatal experience of 50 years of tyranny, I rather live under the protection of USA, that take a chance of other 50 years of another tyranny.

  • The lost opportunity.

    Cuba lies 90 miles off the coast of Florida. This
    proximity to the United States lent to the viewpoint among many American
    decision makers, referred to as the law of political gravitation, that
    annexation of Cuba would be a logical extension of the United States’ borders
    and fulfillment of manifest destiny. Cuba’s proximity to the United States also
    meant that its harbors were of strategic importance, Cuba’s harbors could be
    used by enemies to threaten war on the United States conversely the United States could use those harbors as a first line of defense against enemies. Thomas Jefferson considered the Western hemisphere, especially Cuba and Florida, to be a jumping off from
    an “empire for liberty.

    Cuba also factored into the economic system of the United States and equally the United States greatly impacted Cuban economics.
    Beginning with illicit trade in the 1700s, the United States quickly became not
    only the primary market for exports from Cuba but also the primary William McKinley, State of the Union address, 1899, John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters,The American Presidency Project [online]. Santa Barbara, CA: University of California (hosted), Gerhard Peters(database). Available from World Wide Web: http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu.

    The Right of the United States to Interfere in Cuba”. The Albany Law Journal: A Weekly Record. Volume LVII, From January t
    July, 1898, 278-281. Albany NY: Albany Law Journal Co. 1898.Greg Grandin. Empire’s Workshop: Latin America, the United States and the Rise. New York: Henry Holt and Company, source of imports into Cuba. The United States
    began to expand that trade with Cuba, including sugar, tobacco, and tourism. As
    time went on, due to politics and commerce between the United States and Cuba, the United States began to have more of a vested interest in Cuba and thoughts of annexing Cuba became more prevalent among United States policy makers.

    While annexation was a vision shared by many Cubans, who felt that it would bring stability and wealth to Cuba, it was not without its opponents. Cuban Independentistas held the dream of an independent Cuba, fully sovereign and in control of its own destiny. Unfortunately that decision, reflect what is going on today, assassination, oppression,
    persecution, intervention, slavery indoctrination, hungry, discrimination, and
    other things. I can not risk my family to in the future, come another tyrant,
    with sweets, words, and false promises, and the cycle continue, over and over
    again, because the problem is that we never learn, by our mistakes, History has
    show it, since the first day of independence in 1902.

    Michael Anguelo http://www.nutrihealthyou.com

  • I.C.,
    Since you seem to have some difficulty in understanding the meaning of a dictatorship , I’ll take a few minutes to explain it in more depth.
    On the nuclear family: traditionally and before capitalism’s failure for the working class, the nuclear family in the U.S consisted of the father as head of the family because of both his physical strength and his economic power as the only wage earner in the family.
    The father , in most families , wielded and still wields dictatorial power over his wife and children.
    His world is law and in the overwhelming majority of homes was not to be questioned.
    That is a fair description of a dictatorship and cannot by any stretch of the term be considered a democracy.
    On capitalism:
    Let me preface the explanation with DUH!
    Go up to your boss tomorrow and tell him you’d like a say on the kind of work you do, how much you will be paid, the hours you’d like to work , pension, time-off , pension etc.
    Let me know how that works out .
    That capitalism is not only a dictatorship as far as each persons workplace goes , is magnified enormously in the running of the country’s government because it takes the enormous contributions from mega-corporations and wealthy individuals for any candidate for national office to get elected.
    Once elected,those government officials must do what the mega-corporations and the very wealthy want them to do or not be funded for the next election.
    On the definition of communism:
    Go to any institution of higher learning wherein such subjects are taught and inquire of those teaching what communism is .
    You could also just go to the internet and read how communism is defined in the classic sense of the philosophy and not in the ignorance-based popular understanding of it such as you exhibit.
    Then perhaps you’ll see just who is doing the “damn fool” thinking.

  • We are not ripe apple at all to gravitate towards USA. Thanks for the bad idea thinking!

  • Sir, the Constitution does not require the states vote to admit new states. In fact, as far as I know, it has never been done. The Constitution grants Congress that right. And Congress can enact and enable legislation to admit a new state. Let’s keep in mind that, unlike Cuba, Puerto Rico became a US territory in 1898 and it’s residents became Americans by birth in 1917 (several years before citizenship was extended to Native Americans), and in 1952, Congress passed a law that created the Commonwealth’s constitution. The island is organized like any other state of the nation.

  • Argentina, and all the rest of South, Central and North America, and the Caribbean were all colonies. Are you saying that fact makes all of the existing countries of the New World illegitimate? The Falkland Islands are no different, except that there were no indigenous people on the island before the Europeans came.

    Just as the Falkland Islands are off the coast of Argentina, so Cuba is off the coast of the USA. So are you arguing that Cuba belongs to the USA?

    Twice in the last century, France held onto it’s land by force, against invaders from Germany. Does that make France an illegal country?

    Argentina briefly occupied parts of the Falkland Islands, just as the USA briefly occupied Cuba. So are you saying that Cuba therefore belongs to the USA?

    The British established the first colony in the islands and have maintained the most consistent presence there since then. The people who live on the islands voted overwhelmingly to stay part of the UK. That makes the Falkland Islands British, no matter what a fascist general or a limousine socialist might say. Just because the Argentine government needs a distraction to their domestic troubles is no basis for asserting sovereignty over another land.

    By what possible basis are the Falkland Islands to be considered as part of Argentina?

  • you really do live in your own fantasy world. .,…a world of one.

    I mean who else thinks of the ‘nuclear family” as a dictatorship and believes capitalism is somehow the antithesis of a democratic government. You even have your own damn fool definition of communism.

  • Given the unspoken basis to resistance to immigration reform legislation, it is clear that a powerful minority of US voters have no desire to make Puerto Rico the 51st State of the Union any time soon. To do so would take 2/3 of the 50 State legislatures to vote yes. Therefore, it is not worth mentioning the possibility of making Cuba a part of the US. Given the lack of natural resources, the historically low productivity rate and the longstanding ‘welfare’ mentality of the Cuban people, there is simply no attraction held by moderates and conservatives in the US for Cuban statehood. My wife was taught all her life growing up in Cuba that the ultimate goal of the US was to “annex” Cuba. She was indoctrinated to believe that the US was dying to get our resource-grubbin’ hands on Cuban nickel mines in Moa. It was not until she came to the US that she learned that most Americans couldn’t find Cuba on a map, and beyond singers Pit Bull and Gloria Estefan, couldn’t name a single Cuban. Most Americans don’t know AND don’t care if Fidel Castro is still alive. Annexing Cuba is less important to Americans than … well, just about everything.

  • Do you not feel a bit strange advocating for democracy when you support capitalism -which cannot be described accurately as anything but a top-down dictatorship – and the U.S government form which is an oligarchy: rule by the ( few) wealthy over the majority and also a totalitarian form in function ?
    Do you not see the contradiction in what you say you believe and what you actually believe ?
    But then, if you can believe that the Malvinas, located off the coast of Argentina, logically belong to Britain simply because they colonized them and hold them by force, I suppose you can believe anything.

  • Beware of apocalyptic forecasts of impending doom for the world. People have been talking like that for millenia, and yet the world stumbles on.

    Puerto Rico was annexed by the US over a century ago. Recently, the people of Puerto Rico have voted for statehood with the US, not for “annexation”. It’s unclear how most Americans feel about that, but sooner or later, Puerto Rico will become the 51st state.

    The people of the Falkland Islands are British by decent. They have no connection to Argentina, which has no serious territorial claim on the islands. The Falklanders voted overwhelmingly to remain part of the UK, and not to be annexed by Argentina. To claim that Argentina is the rightful owner of the Falkland Islands is as absurd and illegal as claiming the USA is the rightful owner of Cuba.

    There is zero political will in the USA to annex Cuba. I doubt more than 1% of Cubans would vote for such a thing anyway.

    How about independence, sovereignty, freedom and democracy for Cuba? That would be nice for a change.

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