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U.S. remains top food source for Cuba
By WILL WEISSERT, Associated Press Writer
Sun Mar 25, 2:40 PM ET

Since 2003, one country has been the main supplier of food to Fidel Castro's Cuba: the United States.

Surprised? You have good company.

Many Americans think their government's 45-year-old embargo blocks all trade with the communist government, but the United States is the top supplier of food and agricultural products to Cuba. In fact, many Cubans depend on rations grown in Arkansas and North Dakota for their rice and beans.

Since December 1999, governors, senators and congressmen from at least 28 U.S. states have visited Cuba, most to talk trade. They keep coming: Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman was flying in Sunday with a farm delegation. Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter of Idaho plans a visit next month.

Washington's sanctions choke off most trade with Cuba, but a law passed by Congress in 2000 authorized cash-only purchases of U.S. food and agricultural products and was cheered by major U.S. farm firms like Archer Daniels Midland Co. interested in the untapped Cuban market.

Cuba refused to import one grain of rice for more than a year because of a dispute over financing, but finally agreed to take advantage of the law after Hurricane Michelle in November 2001 cut into its food stocks.

Since then, Cuba has paid more than $1.5 billion for American food and agricultural products, said John Kavulich, senior policy adviser at the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council of New York.

The $340 million in exports in 2006 represented a drop of about 3 percent from 2005, which was down from nearly $392 million in 2004. Kavulich said the decline was caused mostly by generous subsidies and credits from Venezuela and China.

But the U.S. remains on top. Its main exports to Cuba include chicken, wheat, corn, rice and soybeans — much of it doled out to Cubans on the government ration. The United States also sends Cuba brand-name cola, mayonnaise, hot sauce and candy bars, as well as dairy cows.

Kirby Jones, founder of the U.S.-Cuba Trade Association in Washington, said Cuba's food import company Alimport has an entire department dedicated to American purchases.

Jones was in Cuba this month with Arkansas chicken exporters, Nebraska bean growers and officials from the Port of Corpus Christi, Texas.

"Hundreds and hundreds of American executives have come down here," he said. "(Cuban officials) know how to talk to us."

An assistant to Pedro Alvarez, Alimport's chairman, said the company could not comment without authorization from Cuban press officials.

But Cuban parliament speaker Ricardo Alarcon has said Havana does not expect the U.S. embargo to be eased under President Bush. The current administration tightened restrictions in 2004, further limiting U.S. travel and imposing stricter rules for Cuban payments on U.S. goods.

Don Mason of the Iowa Corn Growers Association agreed, saying he was "less than optimistic" Washington will make it easier to trade with Cuba any time soon. He said the association ships on the order of 450,000 metric tons of corn to the island each year.

Any significant change in U.S. policy would be difficult under the 1996 Helms-Burton law, which prohibits normalization of relations with Cuba as long as 80-year-old Fidel Castro or his brother Raul are in charge. Fidel temporarily ceded power to Raul after emergency intestinal surgery in July.

Despite repeated moves in Congress to ease or eliminate the sanctions, the embargo still has supporters from both parties in both houses.

U.S. Rep. Jerry Moran (news, bio, voting record), a Kansas Republican, introduced a bill in February seeking to promote American agricultural sales to the island by letting Cuba directly wire payments to U.S. banks rather than route them through third countries. But a similar measure introduced in 2005 was not approved.

Some believe American interest in Cuba's new oil exploration efforts could change the political tide.

The island plans deep-water drilling, searching for deposits of crude oil less than 100 miles from Florida's coast. Energy companies from China, India, Spain and elsewhere are interested in investing, but American firms are shut out.

U.S. senators Larry Craig (news, bio, voting record), an Idaho Republican, and Byron Dorgan (news, bio, voting record), a North Dakota Democrat, introduced a measure this month that would open Cuban waters to U.S. oil and natural gas companies.

"If that passes, the embargo goes out the window," Jones said. "We're not talking about mayonnaise now. We're talking about million and millions of dollars."

Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

pblee

Saw this article in the Los Angeles Times.
This has to be the greatest definition of irony
pblee Wrote:Saw this article in the Los Angeles Times.
This has to be the greatest definition of irony


Yepper, the biggest food supplier..and $0 owed to the US by Cuba
Ummm
there is more....

Cuba agrees to buy more pork and wheat from Nebraska
By staff and wire reports
Wednesday, Mar 28, 2007 - 12:07:57 pm CDT
HAVANA —  Cuba agreed Tuesday to buy an additional $15.75 million in Nebraska wheat and pork.

Nebraska Gov. Dave Heineman, in Havana to help negotiate agreements, was making his third visit to Cuba since taking office a bit more than two years ago.

He said that “in spite of the challenges between our two countries, and how we export products down here, we intend to increase the number of Nebraska products sold.” A local newspaper of Las Tunas Cuba, reported on its Web site that Heineman spoke in favor of normalized relations between the United States and Cuba.

But CBSNews.com reported Heineman ducked questions about whether it was time to rethink the embargo.  That Web site quoted Heineman saying "that's for the president and the Congress. They make their decisions. I'll operate under those rules."

The embargo prohibits most American travel and trade to Cuba, but a law passed by Congress in 2000 permitted Fidel Castro’s government to directly purchase U.S. farm goods on a cash-only basis. Havana at first rejected the measure but began taking advantage of it in late 2001.

The communist island nation has spent $108 million on American food and agricultural products so far this year but would have spent far more if not for Washington’s 45-year-old embargo, a top Cuban official said.

Pedro Alvarez, director of the island’s food import company, Alimport, made the comments as he signed agreements to purchase the additional wheat and pork from Nebraska producers.

He said Cuba spent $560 million on U.S. food and agricultural products last year, and more than $2.2 billion since December 2001.

Alvarez’s figures on Cuba-U.S. food and agricultural trade are substantially higher than other estimates, which disagree with Cuba’s inclusion of shipping and other costs.

Alvarez said that if the embargo were lifted, U.S.-Cuba trade in goods and services — including tourism — could swell to $21 billion in the first five years.

“Alimport keeps the door open to American exporters, but sadly their own laws prohibit doing business with Cuba,” he said.

Even though America is the island’s leading source of food and agricultural products, Alvarez said Cuba can never be sure Washington will allow its country’s exporters to make good on contracts they sign with Havana. He said U.S. powdered milk and other perishables have spoiled on ships in Cuban ports because American authorities held up cash payments sent from the island.

“Even though American companies are efficient in providing their products, there continue to be too many uncertainties for us,” he said. “We never know when a shipment is going to be held up and that can’t be.”

John Kavulich, senior policy adviser at the U.S.-Cuba Trade and Economic Council of New York, said earlier this month that the communist-run island bought $340 million in American farm products last year — down about 3 percent from 2005.

Excluding shipping and other logistical costs, Cuba has spent more than $1.5 billion for food and agricultural products since December 2001, according to Kavulich.

http://www.journalstar.com/articles/2007...449394.txt
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