| 
		 
		
		
		 State 
		Department recommends removing Cuba from terrorism list: Senate source 
		
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		[April 10, 2015] 
		By Patricia Zengerle and Matt Spetalnick 
		  
		 WASHINGTON/KINGSTON, Jamaica (Reuters) - 
		The U.S. State Department has recommended that President Barack Obama 
		remove Cuba from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism, a U.S. 
		Senate Foreign Relations Committee aide said on Thursday. 
             | 
        	
			
            | 
            
			 Obama, speaking while on a short visit to Jamaica, said only that 
			the State Department had completed its review but that he was 
			waiting for a recommendation from his advisers and would not 
			announce a decision on Thursday. 
			 
			"State has recommended they be removed from the list," said the 
			Senate aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity. 
			 
			Removing Cuba from the list would clear a major obstacle in the 
			effort to restore diplomatic relations between Washington and 
			Havana, paving the way for the reopening of embassies that have been 
			shut for 54 years, and signal momentum in ending America's isolation 
			from the Communist island nation. 
			 
			"That review has been completed at the State Department. It is now 
			forwarded to the White House. Our inter-agency team will go through 
			the entire thing and then present it to me with a recommendation. 
			That hasn't happened yet," Obama said. 
			
			  He ordered the review after announcing a diplomatic breakthrough 
			with Havana on Dec. 17 and has vowed to act quickly once he receives 
			the recommendation. 
			 
			Obama did not signal how he was leaning, but his previous statements 
			have suggested that he would approve taking Cuba off the list. 
			 
			Cuba was added to the list of terrorism sponsors in 1982, when it 
			was aiding Marxist insurgencies in Colombia and elsewhere. Other 
			countries on the list include Iran, Sudan and Syria. 
			 
			
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
              
			After Jamaica, Obama traveled to Panama for a summit with Latin 
			American leaders where he will meet Cuban President Raul Castro for 
			the first since the December announcement. 
			 
			Obama said he expected the two countries would be in a position to 
			move forward on opening embassies, though he did not lay out a time 
			frame. 
			 
			"I never foresaw that immediately overnight everything would 
			transform itself, that suddenly Cuba became a partner diplomatically 
			with us the way Jamaica is, for example," he said. 
			 
			"We’re confident that this process of engagement will ultimately 
			lead to not just improved relations between the United States and 
			Cuba, but will also end up being beneficial for the Cuban people and 
			give them the kinds of opportunities that they might not have in the 
			past." 
			 
			(Writing by Jeff Mason and Eric Beech; Editing by Jason Szep, 
			Christian Plumb and Ted Botha) 
			
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
			Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			   |