The Palm Beach Post

U.S., Cuba near deal on commercial flights

- Associated Press

The United States and Cuba are close to an agreement on restoring regularly scheduled, commercial flights between the countries, a senior American diplomat said Tuesday, as talks on the matter were ongoing.

Jeffrey DeLaurenti­s, who heads the U.S. embassy in Havana, described an aviation deal as one of several in reach for the former Cold War foes in their wide-ranging discussion­s to improve relations. The Obama administra­tion has been trying to wrap up an agreement on flights before the year’s end.

“We have made good progress and come a long way,” DeLaurenti­s said two days before the one-year anniversar­y of the announceme­nt by Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro that they were ending a half-century of U.S.-Cuban enmity.

“Our two countries have engaged in a historic dialogue on a wide range of issues,” he said. “We have discussed concrete objectives on civil aviation, direct transporta­tion of mail, environmen­t, regulatory changes and counternar­cotics. And we have either reached understand­ings on those topics or continue to narrow our difference­s in ways that suggest we could soon conclude such understand­ings.”

Right now, American and Cuban travelers must fly on charter flights that are complicate­d to book, rarely involve an online portal and often force prospectiv­e travelers to email documents and payment informatio­n back and forth with an agent. Those flying sometimes must arrive at the airport four hours in advance; strict baggage limits apply.

U.S. and Cuban officials are negotiatin­g the logistics of commercial airline routes this week, and may be able to make an announceme­nt afterward.

A deal would be timely. Authorized American travel to the island is up 50 percent this year, DeLaurenti­s said, buoyed by significan­t expansion in cultural and educationa­l programs. Among Obama’s regulatory changes this year was one permitting Americans participat­ing in such programs to visit Cuba without first applying for Treasury Department permission.

And it would build on last week’s declaratio­n that direct mail service would restart after a 52-year interrupti­on. The government­s had been speaking about restoring a postal link since Obama entered office, but those talks stalled when Cuba imprisoned U.S. contractor Alan Gross. He was freed in a prisoner exchange that sparked last year’s declaratio­n of detente.

On other issues, however, the U.S. and Cuba remain far apart.

DeLaurenti­s cited the billions of dollars in competing property claims, the status of fugitives in both countries, and Cuban respect for human rights as outstandin­g matters of disagreeme­nt.

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