Diplomatic date
US and Cuban officials prepare for historic encounter
US Secretary of State John Kerry and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez held closed-door talks on Thursday evening, the highest-level meeting between Washington and Havana since they broke off diplomatic relations in 1961.
In addition, the presidents of the US and Cuba have spoken by phone for only the second time in more than 50 years, setting the stage for a historic encounter between the two leaders on the sidelines of the seventh Summit of the Americas on Friday and Saturday.
The extraordinary, latenight call between President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro came shortly after both leaders arrived in Panama City.
A senior US State Depart- ment official said that the meeting between Kerry and Rodriguez was “lengthy” and “very constructive”.
“The two agreed they made progress and that we would continue to work to resolve outstanding issues,” the official said.
It was the first meeting between the two top diplomats since Obama and Castro announced the beginning of normalization of relations in December.
The meeting comes as the US State Department has completed a review of Cuba’s status and recommended the White House remove Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism List.
Should Obama authorize the removal during the summit, it would mark a big step in the rapprochement between the two countries. But the status change will not take effect immediately because the White House has to submit the report to Congress for a 45-day review.
The US first put Cuba on the list of states sponsoring terror- ism in 1982, which has been a sticking point in the two nations’ efforts to restore diplomatic relations.
Obama and Castro are expected to cross paths at the summit.
Obama, after arriving in Panama City on Thursday, was whisked via helicopter to his waiting motorcade at an airport formerly known as Howard Air Force Base, from which the US launched its 1989 invasion of Panama. Castro’s plane landed on the tarmac minutes later.
When Obama and Castro announced their intention to restore diplomatic relations, it began a painstaking process that has brought to the surface difficult issues that have long fed in to the US-Cuban estrangement.
Hopes of reopening embassies in Havana and Washington before the summit failed to materialize. The US is still pushing Cuba to allow more freedom of movement for its diplomats, while Cuba wants relief from sanctions that only the US Congress can fully lift.
Three rounds of talks on restoring diplomatic ties and reopening embassies have been held since December.