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While some Arkansas politicians expressed hope that Fidel Castro's death will mark a fresh start in U.S.-Cuba relations, Sen. Tom Cotton on Saturday focused on the longtime Cuban leader's afterlife.

"Fidel Castro created hell on earth for the Cuban people. He will now become intimately familiar with what he wrought," Cotton said in a statement.

Castro ruled communist Cuba for decades after he rode a revolution to power in 1959. He opposed the United States frequently, especially as an ally to the Soviet Union during the Cold War. His brother Raul Castro, Cuba's current president, announced his death late Friday on state TV.

When the United States restored diplomatic relations with the Caribbean island in July 2015, Cotton, a Republican from Dardanelle, called it a "grave mistake," citing "the Castro brothers' continued oppression of the Cuban people and their efforts to oppose U.S. interests."

Cotton also opposed 2015 legislation that would allow Americans to "provide payment or financing terms for sales of agricultural commodities to Cuba or an individual or entity in Cuba."

He said then that any kind of trade deal would benefit the Castros and not the Cuban people.

Republican Rep. French Hill of Arkansas' 2nd District echoed Cotton in a Facebook post that called Castro a "brutal dictator" who tore families apart and took away the rights of Cuba's people.

"History will not look down on this brutal dictator with kind regard -- and neither should we," he wrote. "Today, I am hopeful that the Cuban people are one day closer to the type of freedom they deserve."

Contrary to Cotton, the other U.S. senator from Arkansas, Republican John Boozman, expressed openness to a trade deal with Cuba in 2015, saying the U.S. trade embargo hadn't worked. He also was optimistic on his Twitter account Saturday.

"I hope the death of Fidel Castro marks a new beginning for an American-Cuban partnership and brings light to democracy in #Cuba," Boozman tweeted.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson was on the same page, tweeting that Castro's death had opened a "freedom window for the oppressed Cuban people." But he said that freedom isn't guaranteed and that the United States must "seize the moment."

U.S. Rep. Rick Crawford, a Republican representing Arkansas' 1st District, also took to Twitter on Saturday, calling Castro's death "a sign of an opportunity for change."

"Through my own visits to Cuba I've seen people ready for change," Crawford tweeted. "With Fidel dead, America needs to help lead Cuba toward a better future."

Last year, Crawford sponsored a bill that would allow Americans to extend credit to private agricultural businesses in Cuba.

"[The United States] should continue to expand its trade relationship with Cuba to allow our private sector to help shape post-Fidel Cuba," he tweeted Saturday.

A Section on 11/27/2016

Print Headline: Good riddance, say some Arkansans; others see opening; Cotton wishes Castro afterlife in ‘hell’; Boozman hopes for new ‘partnership’

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Archived Comments

  • DEE672
    November 27, 2016 at 11:58 a.m.

    The general public has no idea of the history of the Fidel Castro led revolution that overthrew an actual brutal dictator, General Batista, under whose reign there were two classes, the rich and the poor. When Batista was overthrown the rich fled to Miami and fought unsuccessfully for years, including the Bay of Pigs invasion, to regain their special privileges by way of political power in our politics. Fidel was a hero to his people and his revolution provided free medical care and education to all. Havana, under Batista, was America's brothel and casino run by the American Mafia . The poor living conditions of the Cubans after the revolution were primarily due to the US embargo of trade going to supply Cuba. It's a complicated and long, interesting story. Research it for yourself.

  • mrcharles
    November 27, 2016 at 1:28 p.m.

    Let me address the remarks on Obama & opening Cuba. Some bad mouth Obama just because he is Obama.
    I would submit for your open minded consideration that you have read where most gop arkansas leaders say of course Castro bad.. but most say business opportunities with Cuba, so we can conclude that perhaps this one time Obama said action is a business move that most gop want.
    Our state leaders are dealing with China & Vietnam... & our young men were killed by Vietnamese, so yes Castro bad & his afterlife don't know one way or other but probably time to use business sense & get trade going as Bro. Raoul probably only has so many breathes left himself.
    Lol LR

  • DEE672
    November 27, 2016 at 1:49 p.m.

    MR Charles, I see you have noticed money always wins over principle. AR rice growers are pulling hard for open trade with Cuba, to name only one.

  • mrcharles
    November 28, 2016 at 8:46 a.m.

    Dee we have to work in the world, the world is thus
    THUS WE HAVE MADE THE WORLD!

    I notice TC is about only arkansas politician not wanting to deal with Cuba. As to principal , we are talking $ and politics... that TRUMPS principal and being delicate now won't even mention hypocrisy of dealing with other dictatorships & not Cuba.

  • RaylanGivens
    November 28, 2016 at 9:15 a.m.

    My Cuban friend is very happy to see this scumbag gone; her parents were not rich by any means whatsoever but they took a boat to get here and escape a brutal dictator who was Fidel. Another older friend who passed many years ago came over here the same way and built a very successful business in Ft. Smith.
    I'm sure Fidel, Hitler, Mussolini, and Kim Jong Il have a weekly foursome now set up in Hell

  • MaxCady
    November 28, 2016 at 10:04 a.m.

    I have no doubt that some day Cotton will join him.

  • JPRoland
    November 28, 2016 at 11:19 a.m.

    Well Dee, as a boy who was born in Miami in 1955 to an old Florida family, I can tell you that hearing the news of Fidel Castro filled me with emotion. My family had a business in Havana which, by the way, was not a brothel. Cuba was a beautiful, tropical paradise with a spectacular tourism trade. People were attractive, intelligent and hospitable. Growing up in the 50's, 60's and 70's just a short boat ride away from the devil himself was quite frightening. We use to drive out by the US missile site west of Miami which was a stark reminder that it was in response to Castro who had a missiles pointed at us at very close range. That always loomed large. Every Cuban kid I grew up with in Miami and their families longed for Fidel Castro's demise. Castro had affected each one of these families in some horrific way. Tribunals and firing squads were the order of the day under the evil dictator. We expected Castro's death sooner rather than later since the early 60's. For you to blame Cuba's economic problems on the US is shocking. I am not defending Fulgencio Batista's reign because it was certainly flawed. I am also certain that young revolutionaries such as Fidel Castro and Che Guevara had good intentions. Economic disparity has long been a problem in Latin American countries and there needed to be governmental reforms in Cuba. In hind site, there was a better way than Castro's brutal way. He not only wanted the old regime out, he wanted to punish anyone who was a part of it or were even sympathetic towards it. And punish he did! As it is with many dictators, greed and egos get in the way. It has not been a good 55 years for Cubans in Cuba. Castro stripped each citizen of even their most basic rights. You mentioned education and medical care. When you stack up a handful of good reforms against a pile of bad, it pales in comparison. Actor Andy Garcia, a native of Cuba who grew up in Miami at the same time I did, said it best: "Fidel Castro didn't serve the people of Cuba for the past 55 years. The people of Cuba have served him." As a native from Miami, I have been filled with empathy for my Cuban friends the past few days because this is an emotional and sensitive week for them. To live your whole life knowing that the person responsible for tearing apart your family and murdering your relatives is not only still alive, but dining with pope's, kings and presidents is gut wrenching! Castro's death is a closure of sorts for these families. Castro is not to be honored. Ding Dong the wicked witch is dead! Let the healing begin.

  • hurricane46
    November 28, 2016 at 11:19 a.m.

    I agree with Travis 100%.

  • arkateacher54_aol.com
    November 28, 2016 at 11:34 a.m.

    I don't buy the line that the American trade embargo was responsible for the poor conditions in Cuba. Since when has it been our job to support communists dictatorships that pointed nuclear missiles at us? Are there not other countries Cuba could have traded with? Castro could afford to send troops to Nicaragua, Angola, Mozambique, Grenada to spread his revolution, but not to uplift his own people. By his own words he hated capitalism but blamed us for his problems. Hypocrisy. He chose the wrong side and when the Soviet Union collapse his support was gone. Yes Batista was a two-bit dictator as have been most of the rulers in Latin American history. That doesn't change the fact that Castro was also a two-bit brutal dictator. He was the brutalist Cuban of them all, which is why he lasted so long.

  • cliffcarson
    November 28, 2016 at 1:25 p.m.

    Cuba and the U S could have been good and faithful trading partners all the time that Castro ran Cuba and DEE672 is right. The trouble with Cuba started when Castro Nationalized the Industrial U S holdings that were born during the Batista Regime and his dealings with Neo Con Business men who were getting fat with Batista. There was only two classes under Batista, the Elite and the Poor. And yes there were exceptions, a low percent who were neither poor nor elite.
    And if you don't remember anything else remember what DEE672 mentioned, let your memory note that in Castro's Cuba Education and medical care is free. Think what life could be here in the US if our medical cost and educational costs were totally free. Finally do not try to denigrate that free education as being substandard - Cuba trains and exports more doctors than any other Nation on Earth.
    And the reason that the Cuban economy is at a lower standard is because of the embargo by the U S for the last 40 years or so. And if you think he was a bloody dictator who didn't mind killing his people, think back and recall Operation Northwoods and judge how a country could plan to kill their own people and blame it on "terrorist from another country" to justify invading that that Country. Next try making a list of all those massacres that Castro performed on his own people. The Problem between the U S and Castro was that he cleansed out the Gangster Element in Cuba and the U S Gangsters didn't like that.

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