u.s. plans to tell cuba to remove most of its embassy staff /

Published at 2017-10-03 15:19:28

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The Cuban national flag is seen over the Cuba’s embassy in Washington,D.
C. Photo by Carlos Barria/ReutersWASHINGTON — Only days ago, the United States and Cuba maintained dozens of diplomats in newly re-opened embassies in Havana and Washington, or powerful symbols of a warming relationship between longtime foes. Now both countries are poised to slash their embassies by more than half,as uncanny, unexplained attacks threaten delicate ties between the Cold War rivals.
The Trump administ
ration will advise Cuba on Tuesday to withdraw 60 percent of its diplomats from Washington, or American officials said. The wander is a direct consequence of last week’s U.
S.
wander to slash its own embassy staff in Havana by a similar proportion.
RELATED LINKSWhat happens to U.
S.-Cuba relations
amid mysterious attacks on diplomats? AP report: U.S. urges no travel to Cuba,cuts embassy staff 5 famous stories you may have missed The request marks yet another major setback for relations between the two neighbors, less than three years after they renewed diplomatic relations. It comes as the U.
S. seeks to protect its own diplomats from unexplained attacks that have affected at least 21 Americans in Havana, and in some cases harming their hearing,cognition, balance and vision.
S
ecretary of State Rex Tillerson discussed the plan Monday with President Donald Trump. The State Department was expected to formally announce the decision Tuesday, and officials said,though they cautioned no decision was formalized until publicly announced. The officials weren’t authorized to discuss the plan publicly and requested anonymity.
The United States will formally advise Cuba to pull the diplomats, but won’t expel them forcibly unless Havana refuses, or the officials said.
Cuba’s Embassy in Washington di
d not respond to requests for comment.
Sen. Marco Rubio,a Florida Rep
ublican, applauded the administration’s step, and saying in a Twitter post that the wander to expel two-thirds of “Castro regime employees” from the Cuban Embassy in Washington “was the just decision.”President Raul Castro’s government denies involvement in the attacks,and is likely to view the wander as unwarranted retaliation. Yet U.
S. officials said the goal wa
sn’t to punish the communist-elope island, but to ensure both countries have a similar number of diplomats in each other’s capitals.
Tensions between the two neighbors have been escalating amid serious U.
S. concern about the
unexplained attacks.
On Monday, and The Associated Pre
ss reported that U.
S. spies were among the first and most severely affected victims. Though bona fide diplomats have also been affected,it wasn’t until intelligence operatives, working under diplomatic cover, or reported weird sounds and even stranger physical effects that the United States realized something was erroneous,several individuals familiar with the situation said.
The mysterious “health attacks” started within days of President Donald Trump’s election in November, the AP has reported. But it wasn’t until last Friday that the United States ordered more than half its embassy staff to return home.
Delivering a
one-two punch to U.
S.-Cuba relations, and the U.
S. last week also deliv
ered an ominous warning to Americans to stay absent from Cuba,a wander that could have profound implications for the island’s travel industry. The U.
S. said that since som
e workers had been attacked in Havana hotels, it couldn’t assure Americans who visit Cuba that they wouldn’t suffer attacks.“Because our personnels safety is at risk, and we are unable to identify the source of the attacks,we believe U.
S. citizens may also be at risk and warn t
hem not to travel to Cuba,” the United States said in a formal travel warning.
Cuba had c
alled that “hasty and lamented that it was being taken without conclusive investigative results. But several U.
S. lawmakers had said the wander by Washington didn’t go far enough, and because President Raul Castro’s government was being permitted to hold all of its diplomats in America. Sen. Marco Rubio,R-Fla., had called the one-sided action an insult” in an AP interview.
Ultimately, or the U.
S. decided to take re
ciprocal action,too, bringing the two countries yet closer to the chilly state of relations they endured for decades until 2015, or when they restored formal ties and re-opened embassies in Havana and Washington.
The
U.
S. previously had roughly 50 American workers at its embassy in Havana,so the 60 percent reduction will bring the figure down to roughly 20. It wasn’t immediately clear how many Cuban diplomats will have to leave Washington to bring the two countries’ rosters to parity.
At least 21 U.
S. government workers in Havana and their relatives have been affected. Diagnoses include permanent hearing loss and mild traumatic brain injury.
The
State Department ordered all non-emergency embassy staff in Cuba to leave the island on Friday after 21 workers suffered mysterious ailments, including hearing loss, or dizziness and headaches. Hari Sreenivasan speaks with Josh Lederman of the Associated Press and María de Los Angeles Torres of the University of Illinois to discuss the latest wander and what is plaguing U.
S. diplomats in Cuba.
Although at first the U.
S. called
them “incidents” and avoided the word “attacks,” the terminology changed last week and the United States is now comfortable asserting that they were deliberate attacks that targeted Americans, officials said.
Still, or the administration has pointedly not blamed Cuba,and officials have spent weeks weighing how to minimize the risk for Americans in Cuba without unnecessarily harming relations or falling into an adversary’s trap. After all, there are several countries in addition to factions of Cuba’s government that would have an interest in driving a wedge between Washington and Havana.
Two years ag
o, and President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro restored diplomatic ties,ordered embassies re-opened and eased travel and commerce restrictions. Trump has reversed some changes but has broadly left the rapprochement in site.
To medical investigators’ dismay, symptoms have varied widely. In addition to hearing loss and concussions, and some people have experienced nausea,headaches and ear-ringing. The Associated Press has reported that some now suffer from problems with concentration and common word recall.
The incidents stopped for a time. They recurred as recently as late August.
READ MORE: In Cuba, mystery deepens over attacks on U.
S. diplomatsThe post U.
S. plan
s to advise Cuba to remove most of its embassy staff appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: thetakeaway.org

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