
View of San Lazaro street in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, March 21, 2023. Photo: AP/Ramon Espinosa.

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View of San Lazaro street in Havana, Cuba, Tuesday, March 21, 2023. Photo: AP/Ramon Espinosa.
By Arturo DomĂnguez – Jul 14, 2023
More than 50 of the worldâs top economists have slammed Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) for recent remarks he made about Cuba and Venezuela, asking that he âstop spreading the false narrative that there is no association between economic sanctions and the economic and humanitarian crises inâ in the two countries.
First, a bit of backstoryâŠ
On May 10, Reps. Veronica Escobar (D-TX), RaĂșl Grijalva (D-AZ), and 19 of their fellow Congressmembers sent a letter to President Joe Biden in which they call attention to the unprecedented number of migrants from Cuba and Venezuela arriving at the U.S. borders, arguing that the increase was the direct outcome of U.S. sanctions on both countries.
Sen. Menendez reacted by sending his own letter to the president, blasting his colleagues and urging Biden to keep the sanctions in place.
Then, on July 5, the economists sent a letter to Sen. Menendez, slamming him for his remarks and asking that he stop spreading âthe false narrative.â
The letter to President Biden from Rep. Escobar and others underscored how the majority of modern-day Cuban and Venezuelan refugees werenât leaving their home countries merely due to political ideology and repression, but primarily because of dire economic conditions brought about by U.S. sanctions enacted under former President Donald Trump and his predecessors, which the Biden administration has chosen to keep in place.
âWhile your administration enacted new temporary parole programs over the last year for both Venezuelan and Cuban migrants outside of the United States âand these programs have allowed a limited number of eligible Venezuelans and Cubans to be paroled into the country for a temporary period of up to two yearsâ migrants continue to leave their home countries because of instability and dire economic uncertainty,â Rep. Escobar said in the letter to the president.
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The letter went on to cite the administrationâs commitment to identifying the root causes of irregular migration, its promise to support countries in the Western Hemisphere, and to create conditions to improve quality of lifeâpromises that were made during the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles in June 2022.
âCuba is experiencing the largest migrant exodus in its modern history, with more than 220,000 Cubans fleeing the country in 2022, far exceeding both the 1980 Mariel boatlift and the 1994 rafter crisis,â Rep. Escobar said. âVenezuelans, meanwhile, currently comprise the second-largest group of displaced people in the world, with more than 7 million having fled the country since the start of its economic crisis.â
Rep. Menendez responded in his letter to the president by saying that Venezuelans and Cubans were leaving because of âbrutal dictatorshipsâ in both countries. Instead of backing his claims with evidence, Rep. Menendez took the opportunity to promote his âMenendez Plan,â in which he calls on the United States to enact a more robust response to âsecure the U.S. border, bolster humanitarian assistance, expand lawful migration pathways for migrant and refugee populations, and dedicate additional financial resources towards programs to help migrants integrate into communities hosting them across the Americas.â
âThe truth is that Cubans and Venezuelans are leaving their homeland because of one simple fact: they are suffering under the yoke of brutal dictatorships that violently repress their citizens and that have destroyed their countriesâ economies through widespread mismanagement and graft,â Rep. Menendez wrote.
Rep. Menendez then echoed similar right-wing talking points in mentioning the âfailed statesâ of Nicaragua and Haiti, without addressing the decades of U.S. intervention in both countries leading to their continued instability. Similarly, he ignored the economic success Cuba experienced when former President Barack Obama began thawing relations with Cuba and the turmoil the island nation has seen since former President Trump added sanctions that crippled Cubaâs economic ambitions.
âRemoving U.S. sanctions on Cuba and Venezuela will only betray our democratic values and further empower criminal dictators,â said Menendez. âSuch an approach would do nothing to resolve the underlying factors driving these crises, nor address the broader hemispheric challenges that are leading to unprecedented levels of migration, including another criminal dictatorship in Nicaragua, a failed state in Haiti, worsening criminal activity in Mexico and Central America, and enduring economic challenges related to the COVID-19 pandemic.â
The economists later responded to Menendezâs letter to the president with several studies and reports showing that economic sanctions are doing the most damage to Cubaâs economic and political stability.
âUnlike Rep. Escobarâs letter, your letter fails to cite any research or evidence supporting your central claim that U.S. economic sanctions have not been a significant driver of migration from Cuba and Venezuela,â reads the economistsâ letter to Rep. Menendez. âThis is hardly surprising, as there is, in fact, no serious research supporting this claim. In contrast, as a recent report on the human consequences of sanctions has highlighted, dozens of peer-reviewed academic studies document the substantive negative âand often lethalâ effects of economic sanctions on peopleâs living conditions in target countries.â
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As noted in the economistsâ letter, U.S. Customs and Border Protection reported the arrival of 414,127 migrants from Venezuela and Cuba at U.S. borders in 2022âmarking a 361 percent increase from the previous year. The U.S. has already seen nearly 280,000 arrivals from both countries so far this year.
âWe respectfully ask that you stop spreading the false narrative that there is no association between economic sanctions and the economic and humanitarian crises in countries targeted by those sanctions,â the economists wrote. âIf you truly believe in protecting the human rights of ordinary Cubans and Venezuelans, you should stop leveraging your considerable power in the Senate to maintain the cruel measures that cause profound human suffering, fuel humanitarian emergencies, and push many more people to migrate to the US.â
In June, a separate group of House Democrats âincluding Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY), ranking member of the House Foreign Relations Committeeâ also sent a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, asking that they consider adopting measures to ease the ongoing economic and political crises in Venezuela, including the lifting of certain sanctions.
Arturo DomĂnquez is a first-generation Cuban American, anti-racist, journalist, and the publisher of The Antagonist magazine. Twitter: @ExtremeArturo