|
01 June 2012
As the story has it, President Ronald Reagan was deeply and personally moved upon seeing images of Pope John Paul II’s first visit to communist Poland; it is at least known that he was deeply convinced that the Pontiff shared common cause with him in seeing the Soviet Empire come to an end. History would prove him right on this point, as devoutly Catholic Poland (John Paul’s homeland, to which he returned several times) became the epicenter of an anti-Soviet movement that took hold across Eastern Europe. The cooperation between Reagan and John Paul II would eventually include consultation on Lech Walesa’s Solidarity movement, secret trips to the Vatican by CIA director William Casey, and even the sharing of American satellite images.
Recently, in one of the world’s last bastions of communism, the current pope touched down for a visit with far lower expectations for bringing about any changes that would benefit the American cause, and undoubtedly without prior conversations with American intelligence officials at any level. In fact, while Benedict XVI began his trip by explaining that “communism no longer corresponds to reality”, he ended it by criticizing the effects of the U.S. embargo on the island nation. One may be tempted to draw a number of conclusions from the comparison between the two popes and their respective visits: maybe the pope (or religion in general) matters less now, maybe Cuba falls too low on the list of American priorities at the moment to deserve much attention, maybe American and Vatican interests have diverged entirely.
Indeed, the contexts of the two popes’ visits are extraordinarily different: Benedict XVI is not the media darling that his predecessor was, nor does he share the same bond with (even devout) Cubans that John Paul II shared with the average Pole of his day. Neither is the world at large (including even the United States) as concerned with the current state of Cuba as it was with the Soviet Empire of the early 1980’s. But these are not the reasons that Benedict XVI’s visit is largely unimportant. These event lacks significance not simply because of personalities, politics, or scope, but for a far more profound and positive reason: the conflict of ideas represented by such visits to communist lands is already over.
As Benedict’s billion-strong flock continues to grow (despite no small amount of recent controversy), thousands of Cubans continue to risk their lives each year to flee the socialist paradise. It is widely accepted that communism there will not long outlive Fidel and Raul Castro and their inner circle. We can be sure of this because, to borrow a turn of phrase from Benedict XVI, communism in Cuba corresponds only to a reality in which old men cling desperately to their own power in the name of a failed ideology. While church attendance and religious observance numbers remain relatively low in Cuba, the pope still has one distinct advantage over the Cuban government: Benedict and his followers unquestionably believe in something; it is doubtful that the same can be said of the Castro brothers.
Kevin Duffy is a member of the Atlantic Council’s Young Atlanticist Working Group.
[DIPLOMATIC COURIER]
Copyright 2006-2012 The Diplomatic Courier™. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Latin America / Leading Stories
|
May 7, 2013 Behind the curtains of the European Crisis, the U.S. sluggish economic recovery, and the geopolitical battles in the Middle...FULL STORY |
April 12, 2013 On Sunday the people of Venezuela will decide who will be the next occupant of the Miraflores Presidential Palace. Forcibly...FULL STORY |
March 20, 2013 Compiled by Sean Goforth, and edited by Steve Keller.
Since 1999, Hugo Chavez has ruled Venezuela by exploiting the...FULL STORY |
|
January 24, 2013 It is not common knowledge that Mexico is the United States’ third largest trading partner, behind Canada and China. Every...FULL STORY |
September 6, 2012 El Boom, as Latin Americans coin their sensational economic renaissance of the last decade or so, has been triggered by...FULL STORY |
August 30, 2012 Former Mexico City Mayor Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) hates to lose. Narrowly defeated in Mexico’s 2006...FULL STORY |
|
July 28, 2012 Although Mexico’s July 1st elections officially gave a victory to Peña Nieto of the PRI, irregularities and disputes...FULL STORY |
May 23, 2012 The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool. – Richard P. Feynman, Nobel...FULL STORY |
April 13, 2012 Mexico has made the headlines for many reasons: violence, drug trafficking, mafias, cartels, massacres, police brutality,...FULL STORY |













