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Wayne S. Smith, a Leading Critic of the Embargo on Cuba, Dies at 91

A former State Department official, he resigned in protest in 1982 over Cuba policy, then spent decades trying to rebuild relations with the island nation.

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Wayne Smith, a man with a gray beard and glasses, stands at a lectern and speaks into a microphone. Behind him is a poster that depicts a dove, Abraham Lincoln and the Cuban and U.S. flags.
Wayne Smith spoke to a group of Cuban Americans in Miami in 2005. “He was one of the foremost spokespeople in favor of normalizing relations,” a Cuba expert said.Credit...Alan Diaz/Associated Press

Wayne S. Smith, a veteran Cuba expert at the State Department who, after resigning in protest over America’s embargo against the island nation in 1982, spent nearly four decades leading efforts to rebuild relations between Washington and Havana, died on June 28 at his home in New Orleans. He was 91.

His daughter, Melinda Smith Ulloa, said the cause was complications of Alzheimer’s disease.

For more than 24 years after he joined the Foreign Service in 1958, Mr. Smith was America’s man in Havana, whether he was physically in the Cuban capital or dealing with it from a desk in Washington.

Later, after leaving the State Department, he used his extensive experience to carry out a sustained campaign against America’s strategy of isolating Cuba, while also leading private and congressional delegations to the island in an attempt to build avenues of dialogue.

“He was one of the foremost spokespeople in favor of normalizing relations,” William LeoGrande, an expert on Cuba affairs at American University in Washington, said in an interview.

A witty and nimble writer, Mr. Smith turned out scores of opinion pieces, journal essays and books, including a memoir-cum-history, “The Closest of Enemies: A Personal and Diplomatic Account of U.S.-Cuban Relations Since 1957,” published in 1987.

“Cuba seems to have the same effect on U.S. administrations,” he liked to say, “as the full moon once had on werewolves.”

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Mr. Smith in 1983. “The administration is determined to make past mistakes all over again,” he wrote in the magazine Foreign Policy in 1982, weeks after he resigned from the State Department over the embargo on Cuba.Credit...Barton Silverman/The New York Times

Mr. Smith first arrived in Cuba in the midst of the revolution against the government of Fulgencio Batista. After the government fell on Jan. 1, 1959, he oversaw the evacuation of U.S. citizens from Cuba — including the future actress Kathleen Turner, whose father worked at the embassy.

He became a vocal critic within the State Department of America’s hardening stance against Cuba, and he was among the officials selected by President Jimmy Carter in 1977 to reopen relations. Two years later, Mr. Carter sent him to Havana to run the United States Interests Section, which represented the U.S. in lieu of an embassy.

Mr. Smith was no fan of the Cuban regime. But he believed in the power of diplomacy and dialogue, and firsthand experience convinced him that the embargo was self-defeating and counter to America’s interests.

The arrival of Ronald Reagan to the White House signaled a hardening of U.S. policy against Cuba, based in part on the assessment that Fidel Castro, the island nation’s leader, was funneling arms to leftist guerrillas in Central America.

Mr. Smith fired off a series of critical cables to the State Department; the department, in response, tried to shift him to a new post, in Uganda. Incensed, he resigned in protest in August 1982.

Weeks later, he published a jeremiad in the magazine Foreign Policy, accusing the administration of “myopia” concerning Cuba for continuing what he said was a long tradition of errors.

“The administration is determined to make past mistakes all over again,” he wrote. “Its approach to the Cuban problem is as hackneyed as it has been unsuccessful and evokes a powerful sense of déjà vu.”

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Mr. Smith in 2015, holding a photograph of himself with the Cuban leader Fidel Castro. The United States restarted relations with Cuba and reopened its embassy that year, and Mr. Smith was in Havana to watch the flag-raising ceremony.Credit...Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Wayne Sanford Smith was born on Aug. 16, 1932, in the town of Seguin, Texas, east of San Antonio, to Paul and Opal (Baldwin) Smith. His father was a geophysical analyst, a job that kept the family moving around Texas and Oklahoma throughout Wayne’s childhood.

After graduating from high school at 16, he persuaded his father to sign papers allowing him to enlist in the Marines as a minor. He served in combat during the Korean War, then as a drill instructor at Parris Island, S.C., one of the Marines’ primary training sites.

He received an honorable discharge in 1953, after which he enrolled at Mexico City College (which later became the Universidad de las Américas) on a football scholarship.

He joined the State Department in 1957 and worked on Cuban and Latin American affairs. He passed the Foreign Service exam the next year.

He married Roxanna Phillips, who also worked at the State Department, in 1958, just before being dispatched to Cuba — their trip south, by car and boat, became their honeymoon. She died in 2014.

Along with their daughter, he is survived by their son, Sanford; a sister, Mary Paul Smith Jespersen; and two grandchildren. A previous marriage, to Jacqueline Perkins, ended in divorce, and a son from that union, Wayne Smith Jr., died.

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Mr. Smith in Havana in 2002. The embargo against Cuba remains, and in that sense he did not live to see his efforts to rebuild relations between Washington and Havana succeed.Credit...Jose Goitia/Associated Press

Mr. Smith also served assignments in Argentina and Brazil. He received two master’s degrees from Columbia, in philosophy and international relations, both in 1962. He earned a Ph.D. in political science from George Washington University in 1977.

After retiring from government, he worked as a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington, taught at the School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University and, in 1992, joined the Center for International Policy, a progressive Washington think tank, as a senior fellow.

The embargo against Cuba remains, and in that sense Mr. Smith did not live to see his efforts succeed. But in 2015, the United States restarted relations with Cuba and reopened its embassy. Mr. Smith was on hand in Havana to watch the flag-raising ceremony.

“Cuba had been my life,” he said in a video interview with The New York Times in 2015. “I was there when we broke, so I’d like to be there again when we haul the Stars and Stripes above the old embassy. It will be a wonderful day for all of us, but especially me, because I was there when we pulled the flag down.”

A correction was made on 
July 7, 2024

An earlier version of this obituary, using information from Mr. Smith’s family, omitted the name of a survivor: Mr. Smith’s sister, Mary Paul Smith Jespersen. It also misstated the given name of a son who died before him. He was Wayne Smith Jr., not Michael Smith. And it misstated the original surname of his first wife. She was Jacqueline Perkins, not Jacqueline Richard.

A correction was made on 
July 9, 2024

An earlier version of this obituary referred incorrectly to Mexico City College, which Mr. Smith attended on a football scholarship. It later became the Universidad de las Américas; it did not become part of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

How we handle corrections

Clay Risen is a Times reporter on the Obituaries desk. More about Clay Risen

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 24 of the New York edition with the headline: Wayne S. Smith, 91; Tried to Rebuild Relations Between U.S. and Cuba. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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