Obama to unveil deal with Cuba to reopen embassies
President Barack Obama announced yesterday that the United States and Cuba will re-establish full diplomatic relations, severed 54 years ago in the angry heat of the Cold War.
The US president and Cuban state television simultaneously announced the landmark agreement, aimed at easing decades of enmity across the narrow Straits of Florida.
Under the deal, embassies in Washington and Havana will be reopened as soon as July 20, in what Obama described as a "historic step forward," and a "new chapter" in US relations with Latin America.
"Later this summer, Secretary John Kerry will travel to Havana formally to proudly raise the American flag over our embassy once more," Obama said in the White House Rose Garden.
Meanwhile, Cuban President Raul Castro expressed his desire to "develop respectful and cooperative relations between our two peoples and governments," in a letter to his US counterpart read by state media.
President Dwight Eisenhower shuttered the US embassy in the Cuban capital on January 3, 1961 after Fidel Castro came to power and quickly forged ties with the Soviet Union.
The closure foreshadowed epoch-making conflagrations at the Bay of Pigs and over Russian nuclear missiles sites in Cuba.
Obama has argued the decades-old policy of isolating the Communist-run island has failed and is a relic of a long-gone era.
He rejected "clinging to a policy that was not working" and called on the Republican-controlled Congress to end a throttling US trade embargo set up in 1962.
"It's long past time for us to realize that this approach doesn't work. It hasn't worked for 50 years. It shuts America out of Cuba's future and it only makes life worse for the Cuban people."
Republican presidential candidates who have ties to Cuba, including Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, have been outspoken in their opposition to the thaw.
Rubio, a senator from Florida, accused Obama of giving concessions as Cuba continued to stifle democracy.
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