“Pingpong diplomacy” thawed relations between the US and China in 1971. Can “baseball diplomacy” help do the same for the US and Cuba?
Americans ranging from 12-year-old ballplayers to softballing senior citizens are visiting the communist country to engage in their own kind of field work, and there is talk of another trip by a major league team.
These bat-and-ball initiatives come as the administration of US President Barack Obama takes steps toward improving relations with the Cold War rival, such as loosening financial and travel restrictions on Americans with relatives on the island.
“I think it would be good,” said former World Series top player Livan Hernandez, who defected from Cuba in the 1990s. “I want to come back to my own country. I miss my family, I miss my friends. I think it’s time to do something like that.”
Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos, who staged exhibition games with the Cuban national team in Havana and Baltimore a decade ago, told reporters that he hopes to so again next spring. Two groups of baseball youths from Florida are planning to visit next year as well.
This weekend, four teams from a Massachusetts slow-pitch softball senior league will travel to Cuba for a series of games. They are taking equipment, uniforms and pins for the Cuban players with them.
“It’s got to help diplomacy. Sports does that,” said Stu Gray, commissioner of the Eastern Massachusetts Senior Softball Association and head of this weekend’s delegation.
The association has designed a logo for the trip featuring US and Cuban flags crossing over a softball.
Baseball enthusiasts feel the time is right for this type of outreach. In September, the US sent a senior diplomat to Havana for unannounced meetings with Cuban officials — believed to be the highest-level talks between the two nations in decades. And last month, Cuba’s foreign minister said his country was willing to hold talks with the US “on any level.”
If Angelos gets his way, next spring his Orioles will play in Cuba, as well as host the Cuban national team, in a repeat of the exhibition games staged in 1999 during the administration of former US president Bill Clinton.
He said he decided to do so now because of the Obama administration’s overtures toward Cuba.
“Hopefully as next spring approaches, both governments will see clearer to improve the relations and make it rather easy for there to be a reciprocal arrangement,” said Angelos, a prolific Democratic donor. “Personally, I think the relations between the two countries should be clearly and emphatically re-established.
Angelos said there have been informal talks with the US government about sending his team to Cuba next year, but he hasn’t heard back yet. The Treasury Department would have to approve.
“The basic question is, does baseball have the ability to transcend conflict, and the answer is yes,” said Harvey Schiller, the outgoing president of the International Baseball Federation, which spearheaded an unsuccessful attempt to make baseball an Olympic sport for the 2016 Summer Games. “Baseball has been a bridge between the two countries in a way that I don’t think you’ve seen in many other sports.”
Steve Bull, once an aide to former US president Richard Nixon, oversaw the visit of the Chinese table tennis team to the White House Rose Garden in 1972, following the US team’s trip to China the year before. He said that baseball diplomacy could offer a parallel story line.
“The more that Cubans and other people see Americans — who are fundamentally good people — the better our formal governmental relations can be,” he said. “Sport is a great equalizer, it’s a great means of overcoming political barriers.”
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