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		<title>OPINION: Sabotaging U.S.-Cuba Détente in the Kennedy Era</title>
		<link>https://www.ipsnews.net/2015/01/opinion-sabotaging-u-s-cuba-detente-in-the-kennedy-era/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2015 08:58:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert F. Kennedy Jr</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=138507</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is the third of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the second – “JFK’s Secret Negotiations with Fidel” – was run on January 5.]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><p class="wp-caption-text">This is the third of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the second – “JFK’s Secret Negotiations with Fidel” – was run on January 5.</p></font></p><p>By Robert F. Kennedy Jr<br />WHITE PLAINS, New York, Jan 6 2015 (IPS) </p><p>I grew up in Hickory Hill, my family’s home in Virginia which was often filled with veterans of the failed <a href="http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/JFK-in-History/The-Bay-of-Pigs.aspx">Bay of Pigs</a> invasion. <span id="more-138507"></span></p>
<p>My father Robert F. Kennedy, who admired the courage of these veterans and felt overwhelming guilt for having put the Cubans in harm’s way during the ill-planned invasion,  took personal responsibility for finding each of them jobs and homes, organising integration of many of them into the U.S. Armed Forces.</p>
<div id="attachment_138434" style="width: 210px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot.jpg"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-138434" class="size-medium wp-image-138434" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-200x300.jpg" alt="Robert F Kennedy Jr" width="200" height="300" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-200x300.jpg 200w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-684x1024.jpg 684w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-315x472.jpg 315w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-900x1345.jpg 900w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot.jpg 1648w" sizes="(max-width: 200px) 100vw, 200px" /></a><p id="caption-attachment-138434" class="wp-caption-text">Robert F Kennedy Jr</p></div>
<p>But as the process of détente unfolded, suspicion and anger were so widespread that even those Cubans who loved my father and were always present at my home when I was a boy, stopped visiting Hickory Hill.</p>
<p>To the CIA, détente was perfidious sedition.  Adlai Stevenson [at the time U.S. ambassador to the United Nations] had warned President John F. Kennedy that “unfortunately the CIA is still in charge of Cuba.”  The agency, he said, would never allow normalisation of relations.</p>
<p>JFK was involved in secret negotiations with Fidel Castro designed to outflank Foggy Bottom [Washington] and the agents at Langley [CIA], but the CIA knew of JFK’s back-channel contacts with Castro and endeavoured to sabotage the peace efforts with cloak and dagger mischief.</p>
<p>In April 1963, CIA officials secretly sprinkled deadly poison in a wetsuit intended as a gift for Castro from JFK’s emissaries James Donovan and John Nolan, hoping to murder Castro, blame JFK for the murder, and thoroughly discredit him and his peace efforts.</p>
<p>The agency also delivered a poison pen to hit man Rolendo Cubelo in Paris, with instructions that he use it to murder Fidel. William Attwood [a former journalist and U.S. diplomat attached to the United Nations asked by JFK to open up secret negotiations with Castro] later said that the CIA’s attitude was: “To hell with the President it was pledged to serve.”“There is no doubt in my mind. If there had been no assassination, we probably would have moved into negotiations leading to a normalisation of relations with Cuba” – William Attwood, U.S. diplomat asked by John F. Kennedy to open secret negotiations with Castro, speaking of JFK’s assassination<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>Many exile leaders openly expressed their disgust with the White House “treachery”, accusing JFK of engaging in “co-existence” with Fidel Castro.  Some Cubans remained loyal to my father, but a small number of hard, bitter homicidal Castro haters now directed their fury toward JFK and there is credible evidence that these men and their CIA handlers may have been involved in plots to assassinate him.</p>
<p>On April 18, 1963, Don Jose Miro Cardona, Chair of the Cuban Revolutionary Council, resigned in a fusillade of furious denouncements aimed at JFK and my father, saying that “the struggle for Cuba is in the process of being sabotaged by the U.S. government.”</p>
<p>Cardona promised: “There is only one route left to follow and we will follow it:  violence.”</p>
<p>Hundreds of Cuban exiles in Miami neighbourhoods expressed their discontent with the White House by hanging black crepe from their homes.  In November 1963, Cuban exiles passed around a pamphlet extolling JFK’s assassination. “Only one development,” the broadside declared, would lead to Castro’s demise and the return to their beloved country – “If an inspired act of God should place in the White House within weeks in the hands of a Texan known to be a friend of all Latin America.”</p>
<p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santo_Trafficante,_Jr">Santo Trafficante</a>, the Mafia boss and Havana casino czar who had worked closely with the CIA in various anti-Castro assassination plots, told his Cuban associates that JFK was to be hit.</p>
<p>On the day JFK was shot, Castro was meeting with French journalist Jean Daniel, editor of the socialist newspaper <em>Le Nouvel Observateur</em> and one of JFK’s secret channels to Castro, at his summer presidential palace in Varadero Beach.  At 1.00 p.m. they received a phone call with news that Jack had been shot.  “Voila, there is the end to your mission of peace,” Castro told Daniel.</p>
<p>After JFK’s death, Castro persistently pushed Lisa Howard [ABC newswoman who served as an informal emissary between JFK and Fidel], Adlai Stevenson and William Attwood and others to ask Kennedy’s successor Lyndon Johnson to resume the dialogue.  Johnson ignored the requests and Castro eventually gave up.</p>
<p>Immediately following JFK’s assassination, many clues appeared – later discredited – suggesting that Castro may have orchestrated President Kennedy’s assassination.</p>
<p>Johnson and others in his administration were aware of these whispers and apparently accepted their implication. Johnson decided not to pursue rapprochement with Castro after being told by his intelligence apparatus, including Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) boss J. Edgar Hoover, that Lee Harvey Oswald may have been an agent of the Cuban government.  This despite Oswald&#8217;s well-established anti-Castro bona fides.</p>
<p>After JFK’s death, my father continued to press Lyndon Johnson’s State Department to analyse “whether it is possible for the United States to live with Castro.”</p>
<p>“The present travel restrictions are inconsistent with traditional American liberties,&#8221; my father, then-U.S. Attorney General, argued in a behind-the-scenes debate over the ban on U.S. citizens traveling to Cuba.</p>
<p>In December 1963, the Justice Department was preparing to prosecute four members of the Student Committee for Travel to Cuba who had led a group of 59 college-age Americans on a trip to Havana. My father opposed those prosecutions, as well as the travel ban itself.</p>
<p>In a December 12, 1963 confidential memorandum to then Secretary of State Dean Rusk, he wrote that he favoured &#8220;withdraw[ing] the existing regulation prohibiting trips by U.S. citizens to Cuba.”</p>
<p>My father argued that restricting Americans&#8217; right to travel went against the freedoms that he had sworn to protect as Attorney General. Lifting the ban, he argued, would be &#8220;more consistent with our views as a free society and would contrast with such things as the Berlin Wall and Communist controls on such travel.&#8221;</p>
<p>Secretary of State Dean Rusk thereafter excluded my father from foreign affairs discussions.  He was still Johnston’s Attorney General but the roaming portfolio that had previously empowered him to steer U.S. foreign policy during the Kennedy administration years was now revoked.</p>
<p>The CIA would continue its efforts to try to assassinate Castro during the first two years of the LBJ administration.  Johnson never knew it.  Castro provided Senator George McGovern with evidence of at least ten assassination plots during this period.</p>
<p>In 1978, Castro told visiting Congressmen, “I can tell you that in the period in which Kennedy’s assassination took place, Kennedy was changing his policy toward Cuba.  To a certain extent we were honoured in having such a rival.  He was an outstanding man.”</p>
<p>William Attwood later said: “There is no doubt in my mind. If there had been no assassination, we probably would have moved into negotiations leading to a normalisation of relations with Cuba.”</p>
<p>When I first met Castro in 1999, he acknowledged the recklessness of his brash gambit of inviting Soviet nuclear arms into Cuba.  “It was a mistake to risk such grave dangers for the world.”  At the time, I was lobbying the Cuban leader against Havana’s plans to open a Chernobyl-style nuclear plant in Juragua.</p>
<p>During another meeting with the Cuban leader in August 2014, Fidel expressed his admiration for John Kennedy’s leadership and observed that a nuclear exchange at the time of the <a href="http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/JFK-in-History/Cuban-Missile-Crisis.aspx">Cuban missile crisis</a> could have obliterated all of civilisation.</p>
<p>Today, five decades later and two decades after the Soviets left Cuba, we are finally ending a misguided policy that at times has done little to further America’s international leadership or its foreign policy interests. (END/IPS COLUMNIST SERVICE)</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
<p><em>The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to, IPS &#8211; Inter Press Service. </em></p>
<p>*             Robert F. Kennedy Jr serves as Senior Attorney for the National Resources Defense Council, Chief Prosecuting Attorney for the Hudson Riverkeeper and President of Waterkeeper Alliance. He is also a Clinical Professor and Supervising Attorney at Pace University School of Law’s Environmental Litigation Clinic and co-host of <em>Ring of Fire</em> on Air America Radio. Earlier in his career, he served as Assistant Attorney General in New York City.</p>
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<li><a href="http://www.ipsnews.net/2014/12/opinion-we-have-so-much-to-learn-from-cuba/" >OPINION: We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba</a> – Column by Robert F. Kennedy Jr</li>
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</ul></div>		<p>Excerpt: </p>This is the third of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the second – “JFK’s Secret Negotiations with Fidel” – was run on January 5.]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>OPINION: JFK’s Secret Negotiations with Fidel</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Jan 2015 07:49:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Robert F. Kennedy Jr</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ipsnews.net/?p=138505</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This is the second of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the third – “Sabotaging U.S.-Cuba Détente in the Kennedy Era” – will run on January 6.]]></description>
		
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><font color="#999999"><p class="wp-caption-text">This is the second of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the third – “Sabotaging U.S.-Cuba Détente in the Kennedy Era” – will run on January 6.</p></font></p><p>By Robert F. Kennedy Jr<br />WHITE PLAINS, New York, Jan 5 2015 (IPS) </p><p>On the day of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in November 1963, one of his emissaries was secretly meeting with Fidel Castro at Varadero Beach in Cuba to discuss terms for ending the U.S. embargo against the island and beginning the process of détente between the two countries.<span id="more-138505"></span></p>
<p>That was more than 50 years ago and now, finally, President Barack Obama is resuming the process of turning JFK’s dream into reality by re-establishing diplomatic relations between the two countries.</p>
<div id="attachment_138434" style="width: 210px" class="wp-caption alignleft"><a href="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot.jpg"><img decoding="async" aria-describedby="caption-attachment-138434" class="size-medium wp-image-138434" src="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-200x300.jpg" alt="Robert F Kennedy Jr" width="200" height="300" srcset="https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-200x300.jpg 200w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-684x1024.jpg 684w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-315x472.jpg 315w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot-900x1345.jpg 900w, https://www.ipsnews.net/Library/2014/12/Robert-F-Kennedy-Jr-Headshot.jpg 1648w" sizes="(max-width: 200px) 100vw, 200px" /></a><p id="caption-attachment-138434" class="wp-caption-text">Robert F Kennedy Jr</p></div>
<p>Those clandestine discussions at Castro’s summer presidential palace in Varadero Beach had been proceeding for several months, having evolved along with the improved relations with the Soviet Union following the 1962 <a href="http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/JFK-in-History/Cuban-Missile-Crisis.aspx">Cuban missile crisis</a>.</p>
<p>During that crisis, JFK and Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, both at odds with their own military hardliners, had developed a mutual respect, even warmth, towards each other.  A secret bargain between them had paved the way for removing the Soviet missiles from Cuba – and U.S. Jupiter missiles from Turkey – with each side saving face.</p>
<p>Fidel, on the other hand, was furious at the Russians for ordering the withdrawal of the missiles without consulting him.  After the missile crisis, Khrushchev invited an embittered Fidel to Russia to smooth over the Cuban leader’s anger at the unilateral withdrawal of Soviet missiles.</p>
<p>Castro and Khrushchev spent six weeks together, with the Russian leader badgering Fidel to seek détente and pursue peace with President Kennedy.  Khrushchev’s son Sergei would later write that “my father and Fidel developed a teacher-student relationship.”  Khrushchev wanted to convince Castro that JFK was trustworthy.</p>
<p>Castro himself recalled how “for hours [Khrushchev] read many messages to me, messages from President Kennedy, messages sometimes delivered through Robert Kennedy [JFK’s brother]…”.  Castro returned to Cuba determined to seek a path toward rapprochement.“I cannot help hoping that a leader will come to the fore in North America (why not Kennedy, there are things in his favour!), who will be willing to brave unpopularity, fight the corporations, tell the truth and, most important, let the various nations act as they see fit.  Kennedy could still be this man” – Fidel Castro in an interview with French journalist Jean Daniel, one of JFK’s secret channels to Castro<br /><font size="1"></font></p>
<p>The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was spying on all parties.  In a top secret January 5, 1963 memo to his fellow agents, Richard Helms (later to become Director of the CIA in 1966) warned that “at the request of Khrushchev, Castro was returning to Cuba with the intention of adopting with Fidel a conciliatory policy toward the Kennedy administration for the time being.”</p>
<p>JFK was open to such advances.  In the autumn of 1962, he and his brother Robert had dispatched James Donovan, a New York attorney, and John Dolan, a friend and advisor to my father Robert Kennedy, to negotiate the release of Castro’s 1500 Cuban prisoners from the <a href="http://www.jfklibrary.org/JFK/JFK-in-History/The-Bay-of-Pigs.aspx">Bay of Pigs</a> invasion.</p>
<p>Donovan and Nolan developed an amiable friendship with Castro.  They travelled the country together.  Fidel gave them a tour of the Bay of Pigs battlefield and then took them as his guests to so many baseball games that, Nolan told me, he vowed to never watch the sport again.</p>
<p>After he released the last 1200 prisoners on Christmas Day 1962, Castro asked Donovan how to go about normalising relations with the United States.  Donovan replied: “The way porcupines make love, very carefully.”</p>
<p>My father Robert and JFK were intensely curious about Castro and demanded detailed, highly personal, descriptions of the Cuban leader from both Donovan and Nolan.</p>
<p>The U.S. press had variously caricatured Fidel as drunken, filthy, mercurial, violent and undisciplined. However, Nolan told them: “Our impression would not square with the commonly accepted image. Castro was never irritable, never drunk, never dirty.”  He and Donovan described the Cuban leader as worldly, witty, curious, well informed, impeccably groomed, and an engaging conversationalist.</p>
<p>From their extensive travel with Castro and having witnessed the spontaneous ovations when he entered baseball stadiums with his small but professional security team, they confirmed the CIA’s internal reports of Castro’s overwhelming popularity with the Cuban people.</p>
<p>JFK was intuitively sympathetic towards the Cuban revolution.  His special assistant and biographer Arthur Schlesinger wrote that “President Kennedy had a natural sympathy for Latin American underdogs and understood the source of the widespread resentment against the United States.”</p>
<p>He said that “the long history of abuse and exploitation had turned Fidel against the United States and toward the Soviets at a time when he might have turned toward the West.  JFK’s objection was to Cuba’s role as a Soviet patsy and platform for expanding the Soviet sphere of influence and fomenting revolution and Soviet expansion throughout Latin America.”</p>
<p>Castro had his own nationalistic reasons to bridle at Soviet dependency, particularly after the missile crisis.  He made his desire for rapprochement clear during private talks with ABC newswoman Lisa Howard, who served as another informal emissary between JFK and Fidel.</p>
<p>Howard reported back to the White House that, “in our conversations [Fidel] made it quite clear that he was ready to discuss the Soviet personnel and military hardware on Cuban soil, compensation for expropriated American lands and investments, the question of Cuba as a base for communist subversion throughout the hemisphere.</p>
<p>Once the Cuban prisoners were free, JFK began seriously looking at rebooting relations with Castro.  That impulse took him sailing into perilous waters.  The very mention of détente with Fidel was political dynamite as the 1964 U.S. presidential elections approached.</p>
<p>Barry Goldwater [the Republican Party&#8217;s nominee for president in the 1964 election], Richard Nixon [Vice-President under Eisenhower and JFK’s rival for the presidency in 1960] and Nelson Rockefeller [Goldwater’s competitor for nomination as Republican presidential candidate] all regarded Cuba as the Republican Party’s greatest asset.</p>
<p>Certain murderous and violent Cuban exiles and their CIA handlers saw talk of co-existence as hell bound treachery.</p>
<p>In September 1963, JFK secretly asked William Attwood, a former journalist and U.S. diplomat attached to the United Nations, to open secret negotiations with Castro.</p>
<p>Atwood had known Castro since 1959 when he covered the Cuban Revolution for <em>Look</em> magazine before Castro turned against the United States.</p>
<p>Later that month, my father told Attwood to find a secure location to conduct a secret parlay with Fidel.</p>
<p>In October, Castro began arranging for Atwood to fly surreptitiously to a remote airstrip in Cuba to begin negotiations on détente.  On November 18, 1963, four days before JFK’s assassination in Dallas, Castro listened to his aide, Rene Vallejo, talk by phone with Attwood and agreed to an agenda for the meeting.</p>
<p>That same day, JFK prepared the path for rapprochement with a clear public message.  Speaking to the Inter American Press Association in the heart of Cuba’s exile community in Miami, he declared that U.S. policy was not to “dictate to any nation how to organise its economic life.  Every nation is free to shape its own economic institution in accordance with its own national needs and will.”</p>
<p>A month earlier, JFK had opened another secret channel to Castro through French journalist Jean Daniel, editor of the socialist newspaper <em>Le Nouvel Observateur</em>.  On his way to interview Fidel in Cuba on October 24, 1963, Daniel visited the White House where JFK talked to him about U.S.-Cuba relations.</p>
<p>In a message meant for Castro’s ears, JFK criticised Castro sharply for precipitating the missile crisis.  He then changed tone, expressing the same empathy toward Cuba that he had evinced for the Russian people in his June 10, 1963 <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_University_speech">American University speech</a> announcing the nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviets.</p>
<p>Kennedy launched into a recitation of the long history of U.S. relations with the corrupt and tyrannical regime of Fulgencio Batista. JFK told Daniel that he had supported that Castro’s <a href="http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/cuban-rebels/manifesto.htm">Sierra Maestra Manifesto</a> at the outset of the Cuban revolution.</p>
<p>Between November 19 and 22, 1963, Castro conducted his own series of interviews with Daniel.  Castro carefully and meticulously debriefed the Frenchman about every nuance of his meeting with JFK, particularly JFK’s strong endorsement of the Cuban Revolution.</p>
<p>Then Castro sat in thoughtful silence, composing a careful reply that he knew JFK was awaiting.  Finally he spoke carefully, measuring every word.  “I believe Kennedy is sincere,” he began.  “I also believe that today the expression of this sincerity could have political significance.”</p>
<p>He followed with a detailed critique of the Kennedy and Eisenhower administrations which had attacked his Cuban Revolution “long before there was the pretext and alibi of Communism.”</p>
<p>But, he continued, “I feel that [Kennedy] inherited a difficult situation; I don’t think a President of the United States is every really free, and I believe Kennedy is at present feeling the impact of this lack of freedom.  I also believe he now understands the extent to which he has been misled, especially, for example, on Cuban reaction at the time of the attempted Bay of Pigs invasion.”</p>
<p>He told Daniel: “I cannot help hoping that a leader will come to the fore in North America (why not Kennedy, there are things in his favour!), who will be willing to brave unpopularity, fight the corporations, tell the truth and, most important, let the various nations act as they see fit.  Kennedy could still be this man.”</p>
<p>Castro continued: “He still has the possibility of becoming, in the eyes of history, the greatest President of the United States, the leader who may at last understand that there can be coexistence between capitalists and socialists, even in the Americas.  He would then be an even greater President than Lincoln.” (END/IPS COLUMNIST SERVICE)</p>
<p>(Edited by <a href="http://www.ips.org/institutional/our-global-structure/biographies/phil-harris/">Phil Harris</a>)</p>
<p><em>The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of, and should not be attributed to, IPS &#8211; Inter Press Service. </em></p>
<p>*             Robert F. Kennedy Jr serves as Senior Attorney for the National Resources Defense Council, Chief Prosecuting Attorney for the Hudson Riverkeeper and President of Waterkeeper Alliance. He is also a Clinical Professor and Supervising Attorney at Pace University School of Law’s Environmental Litigation Clinic and co-host of <em>Ring of Fire</em> on Air America Radio. Earlier in his career, he served as Assistant Attorney General in New York City.</p>
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</ul></div>		<p>Excerpt: </p>This is the second of three articles written by Robert F. Kennedy – son of late U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of President John F. Kennedy – which address relations between the United States and Cuba during the 60-year period of the U.S. embargo against the island nation. The first article – “We Have So Much to Learn From Cuba” – was run on December 30, 2014, and the third – “Sabotaging U.S.-Cuba Détente in the Kennedy Era” – will run on January 6.]]></content:encoded>
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