The Day President Kennedy (Almost) Broke the Cuban Embargo | Epoch Times
Epoch Times
Search
The Day President Kennedy (Almost) Broke the Cuban Embargo

Former US President John F Kennedy signing the order of naval blockade of Cuba, on October 24, 1962 in White House, Washington DC.   (AFP/Getty Images)

Former US President John F Kennedy signing the order of naval blockade of Cuba, on October 24, 1962 in White House, Washington DC. (AFP/Getty Images)

Kennedy smiled, opened his desk, and took out a long paper that he immediately signed.

Despite increasing bans on tobacco use, cigars have, and will continue to have universal appeal. As a trade embargo on Cuban cigars in the United States is still in place, it is good to remember one of the Cuban cigars’ greatest fans, the late U.S. President John F. Kennedy.

We can also remember a historic moment in U.S.-Cuba relations when President Kennedy almost broke his own embargo against the Caribbean country. We know the details from Kennedy’s former press secretary, the ebullient Pierre Salinger.

Kennedy is just one of many famous historical figures who loved to smoke cigars. Sigmund Freud was a big addict, smoking up to 20 cigars a day, which probably was the reason for the mouth cancer that led to his death.

In a conversation with Carl Gustav Jung, where they were probably discussing the allegoric meaning of cigars, Freud is supposed to have said, “You know, Carl, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.”

Winston Churchill, who loved to dunk his cigars in port wine or brandy, was an iconic figure during WWII holding a cigar in his hand. In more recent times, former President Bill Clinton was known to have enjoyed smoking cigars, although this is a pleasure now denied him out of concerns for his health.

Aside from Cuban cigars, Kennedy is known to have enjoyed Philippine cigars, probably the Alhambra brand, one of the mildest cigars made by the largest cigar maker in the Philippines, La Flor de la Isabela. Kennedy’s favorite Cuban cigar was the Petit Upmann, also considered a mild to medium kind of cigar.

In an article published in 1996 in Cigar Aficionado and titled “Cigars & Che & JFK,” Richard Goodwin tells of a little-known incident involving Che Guevara and Kennedy. Goodwin served in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations and was instructed by Kennedy to draw up the executive order invoking the Trading With the Enemy Act against Castro’s Cuba.

In August 1961, there was a meeting of all the American nations at Punta del Este, a seaside resort in Uruguay. It was there that Richard Goodwin met Che Guevara. Aware of Kennedy’s preference for Cuban cigars, Guevara gave Goodwin two cigar boxes, one for him and the other for Kennedy.

The cigar box for Kennedy was inlaid with the Cuban seal and had a note to Kennedy in Spanish that said, “Since I have no greeting card, I have to write. Since to write to an enemy is difficult, I limit myself to extending my hand.” The note was signed “Che” over the typewritten “Comandante Ernesto Che Guevara.”

Further details of Kennedy’s predilection for Cuban cigars are detailed by Salinger in an article published in 2002 in Cigar Aficionado. Several months after the Bay of Pigs fiasco in April 1961, Kennedy called Pierre Salinger to his office and told him that he needed some help.

Always solicitous, Salinger asked him what he wanted. “I need a lot of cigars, Pierre,” Kennedy told Salinger.

“How many do you need, Mr. President,” asked Salinger. “About 1,000 Petit Upmanns,” said Kennedy.

When told that Kennedy needed them by next morning Salinger shuddered, knowing how difficult it would be to get them. However, being a cigar aficionado himself, Salinger knew of places where he could obtain them.

So next morning, as soon as he arrived at his office, he was called by Kennedy, who asked him how he had done on his errand. “Very well, Mr. President,” answered Salinger. He had gotten 1,200 Petit Upmanns, among the best of Cuban cigars, which he handed to Kennedy.

Kennedy smiled, opened his desk, and took out a long paper that he immediately signed. It was a decree by which he broadened trade restrictions originally imposed by former President Dwight Eisenhower to a ban on all trade with Cuba. The embargo on Cuban cigars has been effective since Feb. 7, 1962.

For Sigmund Freud, a cigar was probably no more than a cigar. For President Kennedy, though, a notorious admirer of beautiful women, a cigar was best defined in some lines from Rudyard Kipling’s poem “The Betrothed,” when he says, “And a woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke.”

Dr. César Chelala, a New York writer, is a co-winner of an Overseas Press Club of America award.