Cuba’s American Hostage: New Strategy Needed
Jose Cardenas at InterAmerican Security Watch:
Cuba’s American Hostage: New Strategy Needed
This week marks the third anniversary of the Cuba’s arrest of USAID subcontractor Alan Gross for the “crime” of delivering internet equipment to a Jewish group in Havana. Working under a U.S. program to support the Cuban people — as opposed to the Cuban regime — Mr. Gross was subsequently sentenced in a Cuban kangaroo court to 15 years in prison for acts “against the state.”
The ordeal has taken a terrible toll on Mr. Gross. He has reportedly lost more than 100 pounds, may have cancer, and has been unable to see his elderly mother, similarly stricken with cancer. Not that that is of any concern to the Castro regime.
In fact, the regime has made it clear that Mr. Gross is merely a bargaining chip, dangling his possible release in exchange for five convicted Cuban intelligence operatives serving prison sentences for illegal activities in the United States, including spying on U.S. defense facilities.
To its credit, the Obama administration has spurned the offer, rightly rejecting any equivalence between the cases. This week, 31 U.S. Senators co-sponsored a resolution similarly rejecting any ransom deal and demanding Mr. Gross’s unconditional release.
Mr. Gross’s case has also benefited from his wife Judy’s indefatigable campaign to secure his release. In recent days, she launched a flurry of activity to increase pressure on both Cuba and now the U.S. to resolve her husband’s ordeal, including launching a $60 million lawsuit against the U.S. government and the contractor that employed him and becoming more critical of the Obama administration, calling on it now to make the concessions necessary to gain Mr. Gross’s freedom.
One can only imagine the pain and desperation Judy Gross is feeling knowing her husband is in the hands of an unaccountable group of thugs that remain in power by brutalizing others. Yet, the sad reality is that Judy Gross has been victimized twice: first by the Castro government’s unjust incarceration of her husband, and, secondly, by misguided advice from her attorneys that has prolonged and continues to prolong her husband’s incarceration.
Her first legal team advocated “quiet diplomacy,” relying on the imagined good will of the Castro regime to eventually recognize the error of their ways and summarily release Mr. Gross. Two years later, not surprisingly, that approach was an utter failure, as Mrs. Gross came to realize.
She then signed on with human rights attorney Jared Genser, who has launched a much more aggressive campaign, including appealing the case to the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture. Unfortunately, however, Mr. Genser also apparently believes in now treating the U.S. government as a virtual co-conspirator in Mr. Gross’s continued incarceration.
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This week marks the third anniversary of the Cuba’s arrest of USAID subcontractor Alan Gross for the “crime” of delivering internet equipment to a Jewish group in Havana. Working under a U.S. program to support the Cuban people — as opposed to the Cuban regime — Mr. Gross was subsequently sentenced in a Cuban kangaroo court to 15 years in prison for acts “against the state.”



Any REAL Cuba expert could have clued in the Gross family from the beginning as to what needed to be done and by whom. Either they didn’t ask the right people or they chose to ignore their advice—and three years have been wasted and miserably spent as a result. Yes, the US government absolutely has a role to play here, and it couldn’t be more obvious: make it too costly for Cuba to retain Gross. Simply saying Gross was unjustly imprisoned and Cuba should release him is beyond useless; it MUST be backed up with significant consequences or the Castro regime will continue playing its favorite role, that of the small third world country giving the great American superpower the finger. Alas, this country has lost all sense of propriety and dignity, or certainly its government has, and an inveterate opportunist like Castro, Inc. will only take that and run with it, as it’s been doing for ages.