The Cuba debate exploded into the nascent Republican presidential race on Friday — and this time it’s personal.
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, the lone Republican 2016 prospect to back the White House’s plans to restore relations with its neighbor 90 miles to the south, picked a high-profile fight with Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, the move’s leading national critic, in a series of tweets. The exchange marked a new level of combativeness among the potential presidential field as GOP primary season approaches.
Hey @marcorubio if the embargo doesn't hurt Cuba, why do you want to keep it?
— Senator Rand Paul (@SenRandPaul) December 19, 2014
Senator @marcorubio is acting like an isolationist who wants to retreat to our borders and perhaps build a moat. I reject this isolationism.
— Senator Rand Paul (@SenRandPaul) December 19, 2014
The United States trades and engages with other communist nations, such as China and Vietnam. So @marcorubio why not Cuba?
— Senator Rand Paul (@SenRandPaul) December 19, 2014
.@marcorubio what about the majority of Cuban-Americans who now support normalizing relations between our countries? http://t.co/0qhSOeD9Va
— Senator Rand Paul (@SenRandPaul) December 19, 2014
Paul, who only publicly came out against the Cuba embargo for the first time in a radio interview this week, elaborated on his position in a post Friday on Facebook that challenged Rubio by name as well. Later in they day, he published an op-ed in TIME magazine arguing that “once enslaved people taste freedom and see the products of capitalism they will become hungry for freedom themselves.”
“The supporters of the embargo against Cuba speak with heated passion but fall strangely silent when asked how trade with Cuba is so different than trade with Russia or China or Vietnam,” Paul wrote. “It is an inconsistent and incoherent position to support trade with other communist countries, but not communist Cuba.”
RELATED: Rand Paul sides with White House on Cuba, bucking GOP 2016 trend
Rubio, whose parents are Cuban immigrants, has been on a media blitz this week condemning President Obama’s decision to reopen diplomatic relations with the Castro regime in the harshest possible terms. He took a shot at Paul’s position in an interview Thursday on Fox News that also veered into personal territory, setting the stage for Paul’s all-out response the next day.









