The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

U.S. abstains in UN vote on Cuba embargo for the first time

- By Edith M. Lederer and Matthew Lee

UNITED NATIONS >> The United States abstained for the first time in 25 years Wednesday on a U.N. resolution condemning America’s economic embargo against Cuba, a measure it had always vehemently opposed.

The U.S. was joined in abstaining by Israel, the only other country to vote against the embargo resolution in the General Assembly last year. When the vote — 191-0 with two abstention­s — was shown on the electronic board, diplomats from the 193 U.N. member states burst into applause.

U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power announced the abstention just before the vote saying that the U.S. policy of isolation toward Cuba had “isolated the United States, including here at the United Nations.”

“After 55-plus years of pursuing the path of isolation, we are choosing to take the path of engagement,” she said.

The U.S. decision to change its vote follows President Barack Obama’s restoratio­n of full diplomatic relations with Cuba and his support for lifting the embargo, which the Republican-led Congress is against.

Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro announced on Dec. 17, 2014, that they were restoring diplomatic ties, which were broken in 1961 after Fidel Castro took power and installed a communist government. On July 20 last year, diplomatic relations were restored and embassies of the two countries were reopened, but serious issues remain, especially the U.S. call for human rights on the Caribbean island and claims for expropriat­ed property.

The U.S. abstention in the General Assembly vote was certain to anger both Republican and Democratic opponents of lifting the 55-year-old embargo, but it reflects President Barack Obama’s belief shortly before he leaves office that it’s time to move ahead in normalizin­g U.S.-Cuban ties.

Indeed, there were immediate protests in the U.S. Congress.

Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez from New Jersey, the son of Cuban immigrants, tweeted that the U.S. decision not to defend the “long-standing, bipartisan, human rightsbase­d US law ... is shameful.” Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz tweeted that the act that imposed sanctions on Cuba “isn’t a ‘failed policy’ ... (and) is the law of the United States, which should always be defended and upheld.”

Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, the last speaker before the vote, said Cuba is “grateful” for Power’s efforts and words and thanked her for the U.S. abstention.

“A change in vote by the United States is a promising signal,” he said. “We hope it will be reflected in reality.”

Rodriguez said the embargo is still in force and being implemente­d by U.S. agencies, and while the executive measures taken by Obama were positive, they have “very limited scope and effect.”

“Lifting the blockade is the key to be able to advance towards the normalizat­ion of relations with the United States,” he said. “The blockade is unjust, inhuman, immoral and illegal and should unilateral­ly and unconditio­nally cease.”

General Assembly resolution­s are nonbinding and unenforcea­ble. But the 25-year-old exercise in which the world body has overwhelmi­ngly voted to condemn the embargo does reflect world opinion and has given Cuba a global stage to demonstrat­e America’s isolation on its Cuba policy.

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo a Cuban and a U.S. flag hang on the windshield of a car in a garage in Havana, Cuba. Diplomats say the U.S. is expected to abstain, for the first time, from a U.N. resolution criticizin­g America’s economic embargo against Cuba. Such...
RAMON ESPINOSA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo a Cuban and a U.S. flag hang on the windshield of a car in a garage in Havana, Cuba. Diplomats say the U.S. is expected to abstain, for the first time, from a U.N. resolution criticizin­g America’s economic embargo against Cuba. Such...

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