Peter Orsi and Matthew Lee have an The Associated Press article in Time about Cuban/American relations:
Cuba’s blue, red and white-starred flag was hoisted at the country’s new embassy in Washington in a symbolic move signaling the start of a new post-Cold War era in US-Cuba relations.Rico says he still wants to visit the place, even though he missed the Sesquicentennial event...
Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez presided over the flag-raising ceremony hours after full diplomatic relations with the United States were restored at the stroke of midnight, when an agreement to resume normal ties on 20 July 2015 took effect. Earlier, without ceremony, the Cuban flag was hung in the lobby of the State Department alongside those of other countries with which the US has diplomatic ties. US and Cuban diplomats in Washington and Havana had also noted the upgrade in social media posts.
The United States and Cuba severed diplomatic relations in 1961 and, since the 1970s, had been represented in each other’s capitals by limited service interests sections. Their conversion to embassies tolled a knell for policy approaches spawned and hardened over the five decades since President John F. Kennedy first tangled with youthful revolutionary Fidel Castro over Soviet expansion in the Americas.
Rodriguez is to meet later with Secretary of State John Kerry and address reporters at a joint news conference. Kerry will travel to Havana on 14 August 2015 to preside over a flag-raising ceremony at the US Embassy there.
Shortly after midnight, the Cuban Interests Section in Washington switched its Twitter account to say “embassy”. In Havana, the US Interests Section uploaded a new profile pictures to its Facebook and Twitter accounts that says US EMBASSY CUBA. And, Conrad Tribble, the deputy chief of mission for the United States in Havana, tweeted: “Just made first phone call to State Dept. Ops Center from United States Embassy Havana ever. It didn’t exist in January of 1961.”
Though normalization has taken center stage in the US-Cuba relationship, there remains a deep ideological gulf between the nations and many issues still to resolve. Among them: thorny disputes such as over mutual claims for economic reparations, Havana’s insistence on the end of the fifty-three-year-old trade embargo and US calls for Cuba to improve on human rights and democracy. Some US lawmakers, including several prominent Republican presidential candidates, have vowed not to repeal the embargo and pledged to roll back President Obama’s moves on Cuba.
Still, the events cap a remarkable change of course in US policy toward the communist island under President Barack Obama, who had sought rapprochement with Cuba since he first took office, and has progressively loosened restrictions on travel and remittances to the island.
President Obama’s efforts at engagement were frustrated for years by Cuba’s imprisonment of USAID contractor Alan Gross on espionage charges. But months of secret negotiations led in December of 2014 to Gross’ release, along with a number of political prisoners in Cuba and the remaining members of a Cuban spy ring jailed in the United States. On 17 December 2014, President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro announced they would resume full diplomatic relations.
Declaring the longstanding policy a failure that had not achieved any of its intended results, Obama declared that the US could not keep doing the same thing and expect a change. Thus, he said work would begin apace on normalization.
That process dragged on until the US finally removed Cuba from its list of state sponsors of terrorism in late May of 2015, and then bogged down over issues of US diplomats’ access to ordinary Cubans.
On 1 July 2015, however, the issues were resolved and the US and Cuba exchanged diplomatic notes agreeing that the date for the restoration of full relations would be 20 July 2015.
Some five hundred guests, including a thirty-member delegation of diplomatic, cultural, and other leaders from the Caribbean nation, attended the Cuban ceremony at the stately 16th Street mansion in Washington that has been operating as an interests section under the auspices of the Swiss embassy. The US was represented at the event by Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Roberta Jacobson, who led US negotiators in six months of talks leading to the 1 July 2015 announcement, and Jeffrey DeLaurentis, the chief of the US Interests Section in Havana, who will now become the charge d’affaires.
Although the Interests Section in Havana won’t see the pomp and circumstance of a flag-raising, workers there have already drilled holes on the exterior to hang signage flown in from the US, and arranged to print new business cards and letterhead that say “Embassy” instead of “Interests Section”. What for years was a lonely flagpole outside the glassy six-story edifice on Havana’s seafront Malecon recently got a rehab, complete with a paved walkway. Every day for the last week, employees have been hanging hand-lettered signs on the fence counting down, in Spanish, to Monday: “In six days we will become an embassy!” and so on.
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