President Barack Obama said his plan to normalize relations with Cuba gives the US a chance to influence events at an important moment of change for the communist nation, and he brushed off critics who accuse him of kowtowing to dictators.
Obama said a half-century of trying to push out the Castro government through isolation hasn't worked. He said his administration is taking a look at whether to remove Cuba from the US list of state sponsors of terror, acknowledging that Havana's inclusion makes it difficult for the US to pursue closer ties.
"If we engage, we have the opportunity to influence the course of events at a time when there's going to be some generational change in that country," Obama told CNN's "State of the Union" in an interview set to air today. "And I think we should seize it and I intend to do so."
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Obama's move to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba elicited cheers from longtime opponents of the strict US position toward Cuba. But his announcement last week also drew fierce opposition, including from some US lawmakers in both parties who said Obama failed to win any commitments from Cuba to democratise before the easing of US penalties and travel restrictions.
Yesterday, Cuban opposition leaders in Miami joined Cuban-American politicians and activists, pledging to oppose Obama's plan.
Cuban President Raul Castro, speaking to his National Assembly, said that the Caribbean country wouldn't renounce its communist system despite the normalisation of ties with the US He paraded three convicted spies just released from US prison, and they shook their fists in victory in front of parliament.
Obama said it's wrong to accuse him of letting dictators outmanoeuvre him, citing Russian President Vladimir Putin as an example. After all, Russia's currency is now collapsing under the weight of US and European penalties, he pointed out.
"There is this knee-jerk sense, I think, on the part of some in the foreign policy establishment that, you know, shooting first and thinking about it second projects strength," Obama said.
"We have been very firm with respect to those countries that we think are violating international law or are acting against our interests. But I have been consistent in saying that where we can solve problems diplomatically, we should do so.