Bangkok Post

15 Cuban diplomats get marching orders

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WASHINGTON: The United States expelled 15 of Cuba’s diplomats on Tuesday to protest its failure to protect Americans from unexplaine­d attacks in Havana, plunging diplomatic ties between the countries to levels unseen in years.

Only days ago, the US and Cuba maintained dozens of diplomats in newly reopened embassies in Havana and Washington, powerful symbols of a warming relationsh­ip between longtime foes. Now both countries are poised to cut their embassies by more than half as invisible, unexplaine­d attacks threaten delicate relations between the Cold War rivals.

The State Department gave Cuba’s ambassador a list on Tuesday of 15 names and ordered them out within one week, officials said, in a move that aims to “ensure equity” between each nation’s embassy staffing. Last week, the US announced it was withdrawin­g 60% of its own diplomats from Havana because they might be attacked and harmed if they stay.

The dual moves marked a sharp escalation in the US response to attacks that began nearly a year ago and yet remain unexplaine­d despite harming at least 22 Americans — including a new victim identified this week.

Still, US officials emphasised they were not accusing Cuba of either culpabilit­y or complicity, merely a failure to stop whatever is happening to Americans working out of the US embassy in Havana.

Investigat­ors have explored the possibilit­y of a “sonic attack” harming diplomats through sound waves, but have discovered no device and identified no culprit.

“We continue to maintain diplomatic relations with Cuba, and will continue to cooperate with Cuba as we pursue the investigat­ion into these attacks,” said Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.

Havana blasted the US order, calling it “reckless” and “hasty”. Days earlier, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez had pleaded with Mr Tillerson not to take such a step. His appeals unsuccessf­ul, Mr Rodriguez called a news conference in the Cuban capital to again deny involvemen­t and defend his country’s efforts to assist in the US investigat­ion.

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly protests and condemns this unfounded and unacceptab­le decision as well as the pretext used to justify it,” Mr Rodriguez said.

He did not announce any retaliator­y measures.

The scope of the attacks has continued to grow. The US disclosed on Tuesday that a 22nd victim was confirmed the day before. In recent weeks the State Department had said there were 21 individual­s “medically confirmed” to be affected by attacks that harmed their hearing, cognition, balance and vision, some with diagnoses as serious as brain injury.

The additional victim was attacked in January but wasn’t confirmed to have been affected until symptoms prompted a new medical re-evaluation, said the State Department official, who briefed reporters on a conference call on condition of anonymity.

Both the US and Cuba will see their diplomatic staffing in their embassies drop to the lowest levels in years.

Before full diplomatic relations were restored in 2015, Cuba had about twodozen accredited staffers at what was then the Cuban interests section, according to a State Department list. That number at times climbed as high as more than 50, and the latest edition of the US “Diplomatic List” identifies 26 accredited Cubans at the embassy, almost all accompanie­d by spouses.

The removal of 15 will reduce the Cuban staffing to roughly a dozen accredited diplomats.

In Havana, the US had roughly 54 diplomats i n its embassy before it decided on Friday to pull more than half of them out and leave behind only “essential personnel”. The departing Americans are expected to have all left Cuba by week’s end, officials said.

The Cuban diplomats being expelled will not be deemed “persona non grata”, officials said, a designatio­n that would prevent them from ever returning to US soil. The government often uses that designatio­n to expel suspected foreign spies and ensure they can’t come back.

Lawmakers who had called on the Trump administra­tion to expel all of Cuba’s diplomats applauded the move on Tuesday. Senator Marco Rubio, a Florida Republican and vocal critic of Mr Castro’s government, called it “the right decision” in a Twitter post.

Yet US officials said the goal wasn’t to punish the communist-run island, but to ensure both countries have a similar number of diplomats in each other’s capitals.

Tensions between the two neighbors have been escalating amid serious US concern about the unexplaine­d attacks.

On Monday, The Associated Press reported that US spies were among the first and most severely affected victims. Though bona fide diplomats have also been affected, it wasn’t until intelligen­ce operatives, working under diplomatic cover, reported bizarre sounds and even stranger physical effects that the US realized something was wrong, several individual­s familiar with the situation said.

The mysterious “health attacks” started within days of US President Donald Trump’s election in November, the AP has reported.

Delivering a one-two punch to US-Cuba relations, the US last week also delivered an ominous warning to Americans to stay away from Cuba, a move that could have profound implicatio­ns for the island’s travel industry.

The US said some workers have been attacked in Havana hotels and it could not guarantee people’s safety.

 ??  ?? The US embassy in Havana is shown on Tuesday. Cuba said Washington is ‘unjustifie­d’ in expelling its diplomats.
The US embassy in Havana is shown on Tuesday. Cuba said Washington is ‘unjustifie­d’ in expelling its diplomats.

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