U.S., Cuban officials meet in Havana amid new diplomatic push

Senior U.S. diplomat holds rare meeting with Raúl Castro's grandson in Havana, signaling a potential thaw in long-frozen relations.

Senior U.S. diplomat holds rare meeting with Raúl Castro's grandson in Havana, signaling a potential thaw in long-frozen relations. | Contesto: cronaca

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  • U.S., Cuban officials meet in Havana amid new diplomatic push

Contesto

In a significant diplomatic encounter, a senior official from the U.S. State Department met with the grandson of retired Cuban leader Raúl Castro during a visit to Havana last week. The meeting, confirmed by sources familiar with the trip, represents one of the highest-level contacts between the two nations in recent years and occurs against a backdrop of renewed, albeit cautious, efforts to re-engage after a period of deep estrangement. The identity of the Cuban participant, a direct descendant of a figure who has dominated the island's political and military life for over six decades, imbues the talks with considerable symbolic weight. Raúl Castro, who succeeded his brother Fidel, formally retired from the presidency in 2021 but remains the head of the Communist Party and is widely understood to wield substantial influence behind the scenes. A dialogue with a member of his immediate family suggests the Biden administration is seeking channels to the most entrenched centers of power in Cuba, bypassing the formal government structure to gauge openness for a broader reset. This overture follows a complex history of U.S.-Cuba relations, which experienced a historic but short-lived détente under the Obama administration before rapidly reverting to a policy of maximum pressure and sanctions under President Trump. The Biden administration, while critical of Cuba's human rights record, has incrementally rolled back some Trump-era restrictions, restarting certain visa services and authorizing increased commercial flights. However, it has stopped well short of a full return to the Obama-era opening, maintaining that further liberalization is contingent on political reforms in Havana. The meeting's timing is critical, as both governments face mounting internal pressures that could make diplomatic progress mutually beneficial. Cuba is enduring its worst economic crisis in decades, marked by severe shortages, inflation, and sporadic protests. The Cuban government has repeatedly blamed the decades-long U.S. embargo for its woes but has also signaled a desire for pragmatic solutions to alleviate the suffering. For the United States, managing migration from Cuba remains a...

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Categoria: cronaca