Obama plans historic trip to Cuba to further ties
WASHINGTON >> President Barack Obama will pay a historic visit to Cuba in the coming weeks, senior Obama administration officials said, becoming the first president to set foot on the island in nearly seven decades.
The brief visit in mid-March will mark a watershed moment for relations between the U.S. and Cuba, a communist nation estranged from the U.S. for over half a century until Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro moved toward rapprochement more than a year ago. Since then, the nations have reopened embassies in Washington and Havana and have moved to restore commercial air travel, with a presidential visit seen as a key next step toward bridging the divide.
Obama’s stop in Cuba will be part of a broader trip to Latin America that the president will take next month, said the officials, who requested anonymity because the trip hasn’t been officially announced. The White House planned to unveil Obama’s travel plans later Thursday.
Though Obama had long been expected to visit Cuba in his final year, word of his travel plans drew immediate resistance from opponents of warmer ties with Cuba — including Republican presidential candidates.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, whose father fled to the U.S. from Cuba in the 1950s, said Obama shouldn’t visit while the Castro family remains in power. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, another child of Cuban immigrants, lambasted the president for visiting what he called an “anti-American communist dictatorship.”
“Today, a year and two months after the opening of Cuba, the Cuban government remains as oppressive as ever,” Rubio said on CNN. Told of Obama’s intention to visit, he added, “Probably not going to invite me.”
Don't miss out on what's happening!
Stay in touch with top news, as it happens, conveniently in your email inbox. It's FREE!
With less than a year left in office, Obama has been eager to make rapid progress on restoring economic and diplomatic ties to cement warming relations with Cuba that his administration started. Following secret negotiations between their governments, Obama and Castro announced in late 2014 that they would begin normalizing ties, and months later held the first face-to-face meeting between an American and Cuban president since 1958.
But Obama, facing steadfast opposition to normalized relations from Republicans and some Democrats, has been unable to deliver on the former Cold War foe’s biggest request: the lifting of the U.S. economic embargo. Opponents argue that repealing those sanctions would reward a government still engaging in human rights abuses and stifling democratic aspirations.
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Florida Republican born in Cuba, called the visit “absolutely shameful.”
“For more than 50 years, Cubans have been fleeing the Castro regime,” said Lehtinen, the longest-serving Cuban-American in Congress. “Yet the country which grants them refuge — the United States — has now decided to quite literally embrace their oppressors.”
Obama and supporters of the detente argue the decades-old embargo has failed to bring about desired change on the island 90 miles south of Florida. Still, while Obama has long expressed an interest in visiting Cuba, White House officials had said the visit wouldn’t occur unless and until the conditions were right.
“If I go on a visit, then part of the deal is that I get to talk to everybody” — including political dissidents, Obama told Yahoo News in December. “I’ve made very clear in my conversations directly with President Castro that we would continue to reach out to those who want to broaden the scope for, you know, free expression inside of Cuba.”
Officials didn’t immediately specify what had changed in the last few weeks to clear the way for the trip, first reported by ABC News. But on Tuesday, the two nations signed a deal restoring commercial air traffic as early as later this year, eliminating a key barrier to unfettered travel that isolated Cuban-Americans from their families for generations.
Hundreds of thousands more Americans are expected to visit Cuba per year under the deal, which cleared the way for the U.S. Department of Transportation to open bidding by American air carriers on as many as 110 flights a day. Currently, there are about one-fifth as many flights operating between the two countries — all charters.
For Obama, the diplomatic opening with Cuba reflects one of the crowning achievements of a foreign policy rooted in a belief that the U.S. should test opportunities to ease hostilities with its historical enemies. Last month, the Obama administration lifted economic sanctions against Iran’s nuclear program, following a diplomatic deal that has raised hopes about warmer ties between the U.S. and Tehran. Yet those achievements have been offset by deepening security challenges in Iraq, Syria, Libya and elsewhere as Obama nears the end of his term.
According to the State Department historian’s office, President Harry Truman visited the U.S.-controlled Guantanamo Bay and its naval base on the southeast end of the island in 1948 and former President Jimmy Carter has paid multiple visits to the island since leaving office in January 1981. Not since President Calvin Coolidge went to Havana in January 1928 has a sitting U.S. president been to that city.
23 responses to “Obama plans historic trip to Cuba to further ties”
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
He’s going to spend millions on his world farewell tour 2016. Suckers.
So, Presidents shouldn’t travel for diplomacy? Bush did, so did every other president.
Count to 10.
So, lame. Like Klastri said, typical response.
He’ll retire in Lanikai nest year causing more havoc.
A historic trip. This officially ends the Cold War. Rubio, Cruz and other Hispanics who eypose this, are living in the Past.
Shameful, in order to show what he thinks is a diplomatic victory, in reality is a disgraceful endorsement of a brutal, communist dictator. These are the final steps of a failed president, unfortunately America, there is a price for voting the wrong way.
Ok, so your plan is to completely cut off ties, right? So, we shouldn’t have any diplomatic relationships with China? So, we should stop talking with North Korea? Hide behind the oceans, right?
If I remember correctly, Bush went to Rwanda…can’t remember its president’s name at the time, but he was certainly accused of brutal crimes.
You have a fetish with GW?
Methinks you are the one with the fetish. Since you comment on everything the president does.
Bush also did way more for Africa and it’s AIDS problem than zero ever did.
Trying to defend the indefensible…is that why you’re so angry?
His LEGACY sheet is …empty. Worst POTUS in American history.
He’s responsible for the economic downfall of America.
What economic downfall are you talking about?
All the American companies that left the US to go to China. That’s billions of dollars.
Can you please tell us which specific companies you are talking about, so that we can really analyze?
GE for one. Run by zero’s 1% friend Jeff Immelt.
A strong indication that Guantanimo will be closed and even returned to Cuba, thus negating the possibility of ever being reactivated.
A meaningless gesture by a little man. What effort did he make to improve the lot of the Cuban people who continue to live under the Castro dictatorship? What effort did he make to assure that Cuba would not restart a relationship with the Russian military? What about US citizens property ceased during the Communist take over? What about political prisoners rotting in Cuban jails?
Answer: He. Did. Nothing, giving the Castros a free ride, access to money from US tourism and business. What did we get in the transaction? NOTHING.
Counting the days until this embarrassing fool is gone.
Wouldn’t funds from US tourists improve the lots of the industry workers? And how would you propose some “assure” Cuba not continue a relationship with Russia? Wouldn’t a part of that package include allowing access to US money and opening diplomatic relations?
Has other country’s tourism and tourism money helped anyone in the industry? No.