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Reviewing ‘Cuba: What Everyone Needs to Know’

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Julia E. Sweig’s book, ‘Cuba: What Everyone Needs to Know,’ is reviewed by the Los Angeles Times’ Marjorie Miller, who writes:

‘For most of Cuba’s history, and certainly since the revolution that brought Fidel Castro’s Communist government to power, U.S. policy has penetrated nearly every facet of life in Cuba, making it virtually impossible for average Cubans to forget about the superpower next door. ‘This is driven home in `Cuba: What Everyone Needs to Know,’ Julia E. Sweig’s forthcoming portrait of the country, where even chapters on domestic issues are as much about Cuba’s relationship with the United States as they are about Cuba itself. Beginning with the Cuban war of independence from Spain through the end of Castro’s rule in 2006, the long arm of the United States has reached across to the island.’

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You can read more from writer Sweig in the Washington Post earlier this month, where she wrote:

‘President Obama has promised to shut down the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, seeking to erase a blot on America’s global image. He has also reached out to Cuba, easing some travel and financial restrictions in an effort to recast Washington’s approach to the island. These two initiatives have proceeded on separate tracks so far, but now is the time to bring them together. Hiding in plain sight, the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay is the ideal place for Obama to launch a far-reaching transformation of Washington’s relationship with its Communist neighbor.’

--Deborah Bonello in Mexico City

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