San Francisco Chronicle

U.S. expelling Cuba envoys over illnesses

- By Carol Morello Carol Morello is a Washington Post writer.

The State Department is expelling 15 Cuban diplomats after slashing the U.S. mission in Cuba last week in response to months of unexplaine­d injuries to American personnel.

The decision announced Tuesday is certain to deepen the rift between the two countries over what the State Department has called “specific attacks” on U.S. diplomats during the past 10 months. The United States has not blamed Cuba, which has denied any involvemen­t and cooperated with a U.S. investigat­ion by FBI agents dispatched there.

“We are not assigning culpabilit­y,” said a State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity under administra­tion guidelines for briefing the media. The expulsions, the official said, aim to “underscore to the Cubans that they must take more actions to protect our people on the ground.”

The expelled Cubans, a list of whom were presented to the Cuban ambassador Tuesday morning, will have seven days to leave the country. Last week, the State Department said it would pull more than half its personnel out of the U.S. embassy in Havana, and they are expected to have departed by the end of the week.

Neither the FBI nor a separate Cuba investigat­ion has been able to determine what and who is causing the maladies that have befallen at least 22 Americans stationed at the embassy, with symptoms ranging from hearing loss to cognitive disorders. They are believed to have been “targeted” either in their residences within compounds owned by the Cuban government, or in hotels. The most recent incident occurred in late August, but some victims are still being diagnosed. Only Monday, the State Department confirmed an additional victim, who is believed to have been attacked in January.

One possibilit­y being explored is whether the stricken diplomats were made ill by a “sonic attack,” though the State Department has refrained from using that term. It’s also possible they are being singled out by a third country seeking to create tension between Cuba and the United States, which normalized relations and re-opened their embassies only two years ago after half a century of enmity.

Now what had been hoped was a historic opening is backslidin­g to an era of mutual suspicion and recriminat­ion. On Friday, the State Department issued a travel warning advising all American visitors to stay away because their safety could not be guaranteed, a measure that is certain to harm Cuban tourism, the most dynamic segment of the economy. It also suspended issuing visas to Cubans, a step that makes it difficult for Cuban Americans to reunite with relatives.

Cuban officials have said they are disappoint­ed with the U.S. measures, which sent Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez to Washington last week in a futile attempt to dissuade Secretary of State Rex Tillerson from employing them. But the Cubans have said they will continue to cooperate with U.S. authoritie­s in what is already an unpreceden­ted willingnes­s to allow FBI agents into Cuba to investigat­e.

 ?? Olivier Douliery / Getty Images ?? As the Cuban flag flew outside the country’s embassy in Washington, 15 of its diplomats were being ordered to leave the U.S. by the end of the week.
Olivier Douliery / Getty Images As the Cuban flag flew outside the country’s embassy in Washington, 15 of its diplomats were being ordered to leave the U.S. by the end of the week.

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