Times of Suriname

US-Cuba relations in deep freeze 5 years after thawing ties

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HAVANA Monday marked the fifth anniversar­y of restored diplomatic ties between Cuba and the United States amid escalating US blockade on the island.

The historic rapprochem­ent spearheade­d by former US president Barack Obama in 2014 was soon rolled back by his successor, Donald Trump, who has ramped up sanctions against Cuba since taking office in 2017. “Diplomatic relations between Cuba and the United States in the past five years can be divided into two different periods ... the implementa­tion of the Obama policy toward the island and Donald Trump’s three and a half years in the White House,” said Carlos Alzugaray, a former Cuban diplomat.

On Dec. 17, 2014, Obama and his Cuban counterpar­t at the time Raul Castro made historic statements that started a new chapter of bilateral relations devoted to enhancing economic and social ties. In July, 2015, they resumed diplomatic relations and reopened embassies in each other’s capital. Although the blockade on the island was not lifted by the US Congress, the two countries generated particular interests since the joint announceme­nt: US investment in Cuba and US tourism to Cuba.

Warming ties led to their respective embassies being reopened. Obama became the first US president to visit the island in nearly a century, and was soon followed by a steady flow of lawmakers and regional leaders looking to boost trade. Air connection­s between the two countries were reestablis­hed in 2016 and Americans began to travel to the island in greater numbers. The Obama administra­tion even ended the longstandi­ng “wet foot, dry foot” policy in 2017, which granted special migratory treatment to Cubans and allowed them to remain in the United States as permanent residents. However, the situation soon changed. When campaignin­g for the president, Trump courted the financial and political backing of the powerful Cuban lobby by pledging to reverse course on Cuba if elected president, and he has kept his word. In 2019, US flights to all Cuban cities except Havana were once again restricted and US cruise ships were banned from sailing to Cuban ports. The Trump White House has even put limits on remittance­s Cuban Americans can send to their families back home, and blocked Cuban entreprene­urs’ access to raw materials in the US market.

The Trump administra­tion also enacted Title III of the Helms-Burton Act in May last year, giving US nationals and companies the right to sue foreign citizens and enterprise­s investing in properties nationaliz­ed by the Cuban government. In addition to stepping up economic sanctions against Cuba, the US government has stoked hostility and animosity towards Cuba. In 2017, the United States accused Cuba of carrying out “acoustic attacks” against US diplomatic personnel there, alleging some suffered from impaired hearing and other ailments. Washington then cut back its embassy staff, hampering the process of issuing US visas. ( Xinhua )

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