Miami

Cuba a Central Theme in State of the Union

As President Barack Obama gave his annual State of the Union address, Cuba was one of the central topics of the speech. President Obama’s goal of ending more than a half-century of standoff with Cuba though has a tough road ahead in Havana and Washington.

The U.S. delegation headed to Cuba is the highest level sent by Washington in decades. The Havana talks start Wednesday morning, only hours after Obama was to make his case in the State of the Union Address for seizing the opening with Cuba by ending the U.S. trade embargo of the island. Alan Gross, whose release from Cuba in a prisoner exchange last month cleared the way for a new relationship, was to sit next to Michelle Obama.

Republican leaders in the House and Senate are opposed to the rebuilding of relations with President Raul Castro still firmly in control of Cuba. At the State of the Union speech, House Speaker John Boehner, Senator Marco Rubio, and Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen brought Cuban activists who oppose any change in the U.S. relationship with the Castro government.

Still, even in Miami, the potential of a thawing of relations with Cuba has prompted support from many activists. A pair of bipartisan letters has been sent to the president expressing support for the change in Cuba policy. It’s a change from an area where any positive step towards establishing relations with Castro has typically been met with large protests.

“There were more cameras than people arguing,” said Raul Valdez-Fauli of a recent gathering in the wake of the Cuban change. “That was significant I think.”

From a polling perspective, sixty-eight percent of Americans support ending the trade embargo with Cuba and 74 percent support ending travel restrictions to Cuba, according to a December Washington Post poll.

Other obstacles include billions of dollars in economic claims against Cuba's government, American fugitives living freely in Cuba and the opposition of many Cuban-Americans.

But the biggest potential challenge is Castro's government itself, which needs a rapid infusion of cash into its stagnant economy, but fears Obama's new policy merely repackages the longstanding U.S. goal to push him from power.

Leading the U.S. delegation is Roberta Jacobson, Obama's top diplomat for Latin America and the most senior American official to visit Cuba in 35 years. The rosters on both sides include officials well-known to one another from years of cautious efforts to improve cooperation.

"We always have tough things to say to them but nevertheless this is a professional discussion," said John Caulfield, who headed the U.S. Interest Section in Havana until last year. "You don't have to break the ice. People understand each other."

Wednesday's conversations start with a continuation of efforts by both sides in recent years to promote what the State Department calls "safe, legal and orderly migration," covering everything from the security of charter flights that travel regularly between Miami and Havana to rooting out fraudulent passports and partnering on potential search and rescue missions.

Thursday's talks are trickier, dealing with the mechanics of re-establishing a U.S. Embassy in Havana headed by an ambassador, and a Cuban Embassy in Washington.

Immediate U.S. objectives include the lifting of restrictions on American diplomats' staffing numbers and travel inside Cuba, easier shipments to the current U.S. Interests Section and unfettered access for Cubans to the building. Cuba's government hasn't signaled how it will respond, but the Americans say restoration of full diplomatic ties depends on how quickly the Cubans meet the U.S. requests. Jacobson will also meet Cuban activists and civil society representatives.

The U.S. and Cuba haven't had diplomatic relations since 1961, soon after Fidel Castro seized power. Interests sections were established in the late 1970s as a means of opening a channel between the two countries, but any diplomatic goodwill they generated quickly evaporated. In the years since, both governments have enforced restrictions on the activity of each other's diplomats.

Some changes have come since December's declaration of detente. The Cubans last week released 53 political prisoners. Three days later, the Obama administration significantly eased travel and trade rules with Cuba.

On Monday, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez told a group of visiting U.S. lawmakers his country was ready to explore deeper ties. The delegation was led by Sen. Patrick Leahy, who helped secure Gross' release.

Cuban state media have heavily emphasized the restrictions on trade remaining under U.S. law. For many years, Cuba has pointed to the trade embargo as the primary cause of its dire economic woes.

But Cuban economists and ordinary citizens often don't agree. Cuba's state-run economy suffers from chronic underinvestment, inefficiency, low productivity and pilfering by employees. U.S. steps to soften the embargo may not solve these problems.

"The day that they lift the blockade, the world will realize that there are millions of things that don't function well here," said Maite Delgado, a 52-year-old accountant. "Inefficiency, lack of productivity, the fact that they don't pay people a living age," she said, "none of that results from the blockade."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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