Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump to stop cash flow to Cuban military

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WASHINGTON — Stopping short of a complete turnabout, President Donald Trump is expected Friday to announce a revised Cuba policy aimed at stopping the flow of U.S. cash to the country’s military and security services while maintainin­g diplomatic relations and allowing U.S. airlines and cruise ships to continue service to the island.

In a speech Friday at a Miami theater associated with Cuban exiles, Trump will cast the policy moves as fulfillmen­t of a promise he made during last year’s presidenti­al campaign to reverse then President Barack Obama’s diplomatic re-engagement with the island after decades of estrangeme­nt.

Senior White House officials who briefed reporters Thursday on the coming announceme­nt said Obama’s overtures had enriched Cuba’s military while repression increased on the island. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the policy before Trump announces it, despite the president’s regular criticism of the use of anonymous sources.

The moves to be announced by Trump are only a partial reversal of Obama’s policies, however. And they will saddle the U.S. government with the complicate­d task of policing U.S. travel to Cuba to make sure there are no transactio­ns with the military-linked conglomera­te that runs much of the Cuban economy.

By restrictin­g individual U.S. travel to Cuba, the new policy also risks cutting off a major source of income for Cuba’s private business sector, which the policy is meant to support.

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