Here are four reasons why President Barack Obama's decision last week to re-establish diplomatic relations with Cuba was a good idea.
1. The US attempt to bring down the Castro regime by isolating the country economically and diplomatically is 54 years old, and hasn't worked. To go on doing the same thing and expect a different result next time is a clear indication of stupidity, and possibly of insanity.
2. President Obama, as a "lame duck" president with only two years to go, has nothing to lose by reopening the American embassy in Havana and loosening travel restrictions on American citizens. He gets credit for being bold and sensible, and he can do it by executive decision without having to go through Congress.
3. A quarter-century after the end of the Cold War, there is ample popular support in the United States for ending the long and absurd anti-Communist crusade against Cuba. An Atlantic Council poll early this year found 56 per cent of Americans back a more direct US engagement with the Castro regime, or even full normalisation of relations. Among Hispanic-Americans, the number rises to 63 per cent.
4. Even in Florida, where the Cuban-American population is concentrated, the heat has gone out of the issue. The ageing leaders of the community, who arrived as refugees from Cuba half a century ago, still resist closer US relations with Cuba, but the US-born generation wants to end the war. The same Atlantic Council poll showed 79 per cent of voters of Cuban descent in Florida supported increased engagement or normalisation.