In
another symbol of thawing ties, Kerry to raise U.S. flag at restored
Havana embassy
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[August 14, 2015]
By Daniel Trotta
HAVANA (Reuters) - U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry travels to Cuba on Friday to raise the U.S. flag at the
recently restored American embassy in Havana, another symbolic step in
the thawing of relations between the two Cold War-era foes.
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The ceremony, raising the flag over the building for the first
time in 54 years, comes nearly four weeks after the United States
and Cuba formally renewed diplomatic relations and upgraded their
diplomatic missions to embassies.
While the Cubans celebrated with a flag-raising in Washington on
July 20, the Americans waited until Kerry could travel to Havana.
Kerry, the first U.S. secretary of state to visit Cuba in 70 years,
will be accompanied by aides, members of Congress and three U.S.
Marines who last lowered the flag there in January 1961. Washington
severed diplomatic ties with Havana as relations soured soon after
the 1959 Cuban Revolution.
The seven-story seafront building in Havana and Cuba's mansion in
Washington were closed from 1961 until 1977, when they reopened as
interests sections.
Seeking to end the long hostilities, Cuban President Raul Castro and
U.S. President Barack Obama announced last December they would
restore diplomatic ties, reopen embassies and work to normalize
relations.
Obama has also used executive power to relax some U.S. travel and
trade restrictions, but the Republican-controlled Congress has
resisted his call to end America's wider economic embargo.
The Obama administration says Washington's long policy of trying to
force change in Communist-governed Cuba through isolation did not
work. Kerry told Univision television ahead of his trip he hoped to
see a "transformation" begin to take place. "More people will
travel. There will be more exchange. More families will be
reconnected. And hopefully, the government of Cuba will itself make
decisions that will begin to change things."
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Kerry will meet Cuban dissidents at the U.S. embassy residence in
Havana on Friday afternoon. Dissidents were not invited to the
morning flag-raising in deference to the Cuban government, which
sees dissidents as U.S.-sponsored mercenaries.
Restored diplomatic ties mean U.S. diplomats can travel more freely
and increase staff. Cuba has also reduced the number of security
guards who keep on eye on Cubans going in and out.
The task of normalizing overall relations is more complicated.
Cuba wants the United States to end the embargo, return the U.S.
naval base at Guantanamo Bay in eastern Cuba, and halt radio and
television signals beamed into Cuba.
The Americans will press Cuba on human rights, the return of
fugitives granted asylum and the claims of Americans whose property
was nationalized after Fidel Castro came to power.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Frances Kerry)
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