Baltimore Sun

Cuba, U.S. to resume mail, but not posthaste

- By Michael Weissenste­in

HAVANA — Cuba and the United States announced Friday they have struck a deal to re-establish direct mail service, which was cut in 1963 at the height of Cold War tensions.

They gave no date for the permanent resumption of service, but indicated that it would not be imminent, saying that technical, operationa­l and safety aspects remained under discussion.

The announceme­nt came six days before the anniversar­y of the announceme­nt by Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro that they were reestablis­hing diplomatic relations.

The Obama administra­tion has been trying to show tangible results of the new policy ahead of the anniversar­y.

The government­s have been speaking about restoring a postal link since Obama entered office, but the talks stalled when Cuba imprisoned U.S. contractor Alan Gross, who was freed under last year’s deal. Although direct mail service was halted in 1963, a relatively small number of letters and packages travel back and forth through countries like Canada and Mexico.

The major effect of regular mail service would be in opening a new channel for the movement of goods between the U.S. and Cuba, which suffers from widespread shortages of basic consumer products. Mail is, however, unlikely to rival the informal networks of importers that pay couriers to bring goods into the country in their checked bags.

Cuba maintains strict limits on the size, weight and value of packages sent by mail in order to maintain its state monopoly on imports and exports. Further complicati­ng matters is the renowned inefficien­cy of the Cuban postal service, the subject of frequent complaints about lost and delayed mail.

 ?? ANA RODRIGUEZ/GETTY-AFP ?? People wait in a post office in Havana, where existing U.S.Cuba mail has to be routed through a third-party country.
ANA RODRIGUEZ/GETTY-AFP People wait in a post office in Havana, where existing U.S.Cuba mail has to be routed through a third-party country.

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