US, Cuba may restore diplomatic ties by April

Reuters / Enrique De La Osa

Reuters / Enrique De La Osa

Diplomatic relations between the United States and Cuba may be restored within a couple of months if America declares its intention to remove Havana from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, a Cuban official said.

According to Reuters, the remarks by Josefina Vidal of the Cuban
Foreign Ministry mark the first time that Cuba has declared its
willingness to restore ties before being actually removed from
the terror list. After meetings with American officials last
week, Vidal said it was a “priority” – not a
pre-condition – for Cuba to be removed from list before both
countries could open embassies once again.

READ MORE: Progress made as US, Cuba meet for
round two of diplomatic normalization talks

“In our view it’s not necessary to put it all in one package
because if, for example, in a few weeks we receive some
satisfactory notification in regards to the matter of Cuba’s
removal from terrorist list, I think we will be ready to then
begin talking about how to formalize the re-establishing of
relations,”
Vidal said in an interview with Cubadebate on
Sunday.

If decoupled from the question of reopening embassies, the
détente could come before the regional summit in Panama,
scheduled for April 10. Cuban officials have also pointed out
that US laws forbidding banks to do business with Cuba remain in
force, further complicating the logistics of reopening embassies.

Once the Obama administration completes its review of Cuba’s
place on the terror-sponsor list – a designation established in
1982 for Cuba’s aid to Marxist insurgencies – it would have to
submit the proposal to Congress.

In an interview with Reuters on Monday, President Barack Obama
said: “My hope is that we will be able to open an embassy,
and that some of the initial groundwork will have been laid”

before the summit in Panama.

READ MORE: Fresh Castro photos published in Cuba after 6-month
hiatus

He also said the reopening of relations was being conducted
“in a way that ultimately will prompt more change in
Cuba.”

Obama announced the intent of normalizing relations with Cuba in
December last year, arguing that half a century of sanctions have
failed to force Cuba back into the fold. The blockade was
originally imposed after the 1959 revolution that overthrew the
pro-American dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista.

“After 50 years of a policy that didn’t work, we need to try
something new that encourages and ultimately I think forces the
Cuban government to engage in a modern economy,”
Obama said,
which would “create more space for freedom for the Cuban
people.

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