Bangkok Post

Senior diplomat to lead US embassy

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HAVANA: Cuba has given a visa to a senior American diplomat to lead the US embassy in Havana, a US official said, in a sign both nations want to keep open lines of communicat­ion despite a sharp deteriorat­ion in relations since President Donald Trump took office.

The diplomat, Philip Goldberg, will take up the post as charge d’affaires within days, the US official said. He will head a mission that Washington stripped of many staff four months ago amid a dispute over mystery illnesses among its diplomats on the Communist-run island.

He is likely to spend about six months in the position though the length of his stint is not certain, said the US official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mr Goldberg would be the highest ranking US foreign service officer to serve as charge d’affaires in Havana, said the official. The fact that Washington selected a diplomat of his rank — one of the senior-most serving career US diplomats — and that Havana accepted him when it could have stalled or rejected him suggests a desire on both sides to maintain links.

The US State Department declined comment. The Cuban foreign ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Mr Goldberg, whose selection for the job was first reported in December, has previously served as ambassador in the Philippine­s, chief of the US mission in Kosovo and assistant secretary of state for intelligen­ce and research.

He was expelled as ambassador from Cuba’s socialist ally Bolivia in 2008 for what President Evo Morales said was fomenting social unrest, charges that the State Department described at the time as “baseless”.

US-Cuban relations have deteriorat­ed since Mr Trump took office in January last year and reversed elements of a detente pursued by Democratic former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion. Mr Trump, a Republican, has tightened US trade and travel restrictio­ns on the island and reverted to characteri­sations of the Cuban government that echo the countries’ long Cold War-era hostility.

Ties have also been severely strained by a series of unexplaine­d illnesses that the United States says have struck 24 US personnel and family members stationed in Cuba since late 2016.

The United States cut its diplomatic presence in Cuba by more than half on Sept 29 and warned citizens not to visit because of alleged attacks it says have caused hearing loss, dizziness and fatigue in US embassy personnel. Washington also expelled 17 Cuban diplomats.

The US government has not had an ambassador to Cuba since 1960. Washington severed diplomatic ties with Cuba in January 1961 after the 1959 Cuban Revolution. In 1977, it set up a US interests section in Havana under the protection of Switzerlan­d.

As part of the detente between Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro, the United States and Cuba restored diplomatic relations in 2015, elevating their interests sections to embassies. The US embassy has since been led by a charge d’affaires.

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