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Cuban Embargo Analysis

Decent Essays

Although the first and second image analyses are valid, the third image also presents a strong argument as to why the US nominalized relations with Cuba. International opinion on the Cuban embargo has been overwhelmingly negative. Since the end of the Cold War, the international community has largely recognized that the necessity for the US to continue its embargoes has diminished. When Cuba shot down two American planes in 1996, sanctions against Cuba were tightened as retaliation. There exists a hypocrisy that the US would back dictators elsewhere but continue to punish Cuba.
Institutionalism plays a significant role in this image’s analysis. Every year since 1992, the UN General Assembly has passed a resolution condemning the Cuban embargoes, with every member nation except for US and Israel voting in favor of it. Other institutions, such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, have also been critical of the embargoes, citing a violation of human rights. More recently, Pope Francis himself has assisted with dialogue between the US and Cuba, and has voiced support for the end of the embargoes. These institutions confer a large amount of pressure upon the US …show more content…

The international community has been conferring a great deal of disapproval upon the embargoes, and likewise many Americans also believe that the embargoes are a human rights violation as it deprives Cuba of vital goods. Steven David’s theory of omni-balancing is somewhat sensible in this argument, for it states that a state has to take into consideration both international and domestic pressure to craft its international relations policy. In this case, the international community has been calling for the lifting of the Cuban embargoes for decades, and American opinion has similarly been shifting in favor of it. Therefore it makes sense for the US to nominalize relations with

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