The Sunday Guardian

Trump imposes restrictio­ns on Cuba travel

- REUTERS

President Donald Trump on Friday ordered tighter restrictio­ns on Americans traveling to Cuba and a clampdown on US business dealings with the Caribbean island’s military, saying he was canceling former President Barack Obama’s “terrible and misguided deal” with Havana.

Laying out his new Cuba policy in a speech in Miami, Trump signed a presidenti­al directive rolling back parts of Obama’s historic opening to the Communist-ruled country after a 2014 diplomatic breakthrou­gh between the two former Cold War foes.

But Trump left in place many of Obama’s changes, including the reopened US embassy in Havana, even as he sought to show he was making good on a campaign promise to take a tougher line against Cuba, especially over its human rights record.

“We will not be silent in the face of communist oppression any longer,” Trump told a cheering crowd in Miami’s CubanAmeri­can enclave of Little Havana, including Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who helped forge the new restrictio­ns on Cuba. “Effective immediatel­y, I am canceling the last administra­tion’s completely one-sided deal with Cuba,” Trump declared as he made a full-throated assault on the government of Cuban President Raul Castro.

Cuba later denounced the move as a setback in US-Cuban relations, saying Trump had been badly advised and was resorting to “coercive methods of the past” that were doomed to fail. The government remained willing to engage in “respectful dialogue,” it said in a statement.

Trump’s revised approach calls for stricter enforcemen­t of a longtime ban on Americans going to Cuba as tourists, and seeks to prevent US dollars from being used to fund what the Trump administra­tion sees as a repressive military-dominated government. But, facing pressure from US businesses and even some fellow Republican­s to avoid turning back the clock completely in relations with Cuba, the president chose to leave intact some of his Democratic predecesso­r’s steps toward normalizat­ion.

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