US President Barack Obama will attend a Summit of the Americas in Panama this week, a gathering that could see the first substantive meeting between US and Cuban leaders in half a century.
The US president, fresh from reaching a tentative nuclear accord with archfoe Iran, is scheduled to jet to Jamaica then on to Panama City on Thursday for a regular meeting of continental leaders.
Cuban President Raul Castro — who took control of the 11-million-strong still nominally communist island from his brother, former Cuban president Fidel Castro, seven years ago — has confirmed he will be the first Cuban leader to attend.
However, with days to go, diplomats are still discussing what form a Castro-Obama meeting might take.
Options range from a simple “grip-and-grin” photo, to a historic head-to-head sit down.
“The leaders are together a lot of the time” at the summit, US Department of State senior official Roberta Jacobson said. “And so there will be an interaction with Raul Castro.”
In December 2013, amid an upwelling of amity that followed former South African president Nelson Mandela’s death, the pair shook hands briefly at a memorial service in Johannesburg.
This time around, officials are looking for something a bit more substantive.
“It’s useful, obviously, to be able to have that contact and move things along so that we can get things done and open embassies and move ahead with this relationship,” Jacobson said.
In December last year, Obama declared he would “end an outdated approach” to Cuba that was seeped in Cold War animosity and marked by crises that defined a generation — the Bay of Pigs and the 1962 Missile Crisis.
Obama said diplomatic relations would be restored and the US would move toward ending a crippling embargo that Cuba says has cost it more than US$1 trillion over five decades. Since the pronouncement, both sides have taken baby steps toward ending the US policy of isolation.
Phone lines were reconnected, replacing crisis hotlines. Lodging Web site Airbnb even launched listings for US visitors.
A recent poll of Cuban Americans by Bendixen and Amandi showed 51 percent thought Obama’s policy of normalizing ties was the way to go.
That could have deep repercussions for the fate of the embargo, which only US Congress — long swayed by influential emigre groups — can end.
However, US-Cuba relations remain fraught, and a decision on a head-to-head presidential meeting might come down to the wire.
Cuban non-governmental groups critical of the regime, including Las Damas de Blanco, have been invited to attend a civil society meeting that is to run parallel to the Panama leaders’ summit.
Obama is expected to address that gathering, although, in an apparent concession, is scheduled to hold a question-and-answer session in private, away from the press.
If the non-governmental groups are barred from leaving Cuba, or Obama looks like he will be harshly critical of the regime in his remarks, all bets might be off.
The Panama summit is also to mark the first time in a generation that a US president meets continental leaders and is not harangued about US sanctions on Cuba. Washington’s isolation policy has been deeply unpopular in Latin America, although US officials have frequently accused Cuba’s allies of hiding behind the dispute to avoid dealing with tough questions about their own countries.
However, there is a risk that this time around it is US sanctions against Venezuela that might be the cause of Latin American unease.
With the stage set for a constructive meeting, Obama shocked Latin American allies by introducing sanctions against members of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s regime.
Obama ordered the freezing of the US property and bank accounts of seven officials, including former Venezuelan National Guard chief Antonio Benavides; Venezuelan Minister of Popular Power for the Interior, Justice and Peace Gustavo Gonzales; and Venezuelan National Police Chief Commissioner Manuel Perez.
Venezuela’s leftist regional allies, many of whom receive critical economic aid from Caracas, jumped to Maduro’s defense. The 11-nation “Bolivarian Alliance,” which includes Raul Castro, Bolivian President Evo Morales and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, gathered for a summit to condemn the move.
Organizers still hope the Panama summit can end with a pledge to take concrete measures in areas where there is general agreement: security and the environment among them.
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