Yahoo – AFP,
Jo Biddle, 27 Feb 2015
Washington
(AFP) - The United States rebuffed a Cuban demand to be taken off the US list
of state sponsors of terror Friday as they opened a second round of historic
talks to restore long severed diplomatic ties.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry said the terror designation, in place since 1982,
would be reviewed separately but was not a matter for negotiation.
"The
state sponsored terrorism designation is a separate process, it is not a
negotiation," he said.
![]() |
Jeffrey
DeLaurentis (2L), Roberta Jacobson
(3L), Alex Lee (4L) and others meet with
Cuban officials at the US State Department
February 27, 2015 in Washington, DC
(AFP Photo/Brendan Smialowski)
|
A top Cuban
foreign ministry official, Gustavo Machin, had argued before the start of the
latest round of talks that the terror designation was in
"contradiction" with full diplomatic relations.
The issue
has practical as well as symbolic importance to the Cubans because the
designation complicates its access to the global banking system.
Friday's
talks at the State Department are only the second since President Barack Obama
and Cuba's President Fidel Castro surprised the world in December with their
decision to restore ties after more than a half century of Cold War enmity.
The hope is
that within the coming months, both nations will agree to reopen embassies in
each other's capitals and appoint full-fledged ambassadors. Currently they operate
through so-called interests sections in Havana and Washington.
US
President Barack Obama is due to attend the Summit of the Americas in Panama on
April 10-11, which Cuba will also attend for the first time.
Differences to overcome
Observers
say that both nations, long mired in tension stemming from the Cold War, are
keen to relaunch full diplomatic relations around that date.
But as the
contretemps over the terror list shows, a common history of distrust and
antagonism has left the path strewn with obstacles.
An initial
round of talks in Havana last month -- the highest level since US-Cuban
relations were severed in 1961 -- broke the ice but ended with little sign of a
breakthrough.
![]() |
The band
'California Repercussions' from
San Francisco in the United States, perform
at
a park in old Havana, on February 16,
2014 (AFP Photo/Adalberto Roque)
|
Washington
has insisted that its diplomats and embassy be granted full powers under the
Vienna Convention to operate freely, including meeting with Cuban dissidents.
The
negotiating teams met at the State Department just before 9:00 am (1400 GMT).
Roberta
Jacobson, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, faced
Josefina Vidal, the Cuban foreign ministry's director for US affairs, across a
long table flanked by their respective delegations.
Neither
said anything during the few minutes journalists were allowed into the room to
record the encounter. Press conferences were scheduled for later in the day.
'Rolling
up sleeves'
"I
certainly think that our presidents and my secretary would be delighted if we
could have everything worked out in time for the Summit of the Americas,"
a senior State Department official told reporters ahead of the talks.
"But
that depends a lot on how our counterparts come to the table prepared to get
things done and whether they are comfortable with the things we need in order
to run an embassy the way we do in other places around the world."
The talks
may be a "little bit disappointingly workman-like in their nature this
time. But this is where we roll up our sleeves as diplomats and sit down at the
table and make sure that we hammer out all of the details out to get embassies
up and running."
Restoring
diplomatic ties "doesn't take very long if we get agreement on
things," the official added.
Obama has
called on the US Congress to lift the decades-old biting economic embargo of
Cuba.
But some
lawmakers -- as well as parts of the Cuban dissident community -- remain wary
of the diplomatic demarche, arguing Obama has failed to secure guarantees about
progress on human rights.
One of the
aims of the meeting is to set a date for the first ever US-Cuba discussion on
human rights.
"It
will be the first time that we would be able to sit down with the government
directly and have an in-depth conversation about our differing
perspectives," the State Department official said.




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