The highest-level U.S. delegation to Cuba in decades kicked off two days of negotiations Wednesday after grand promises by President Barack Obama about change on the island and a somber warning from Cuba to abandon hopes of reforming the communist government.
U.S. moves to restore diplomatic relations with Cuba and loosen the five-decade trade embargo have "the potential to end a legacy of mistrust in our hemisphere" and have "added up to new hope for the future in Cuba," Obama said in his State of the Union address Tuesday night in Washington.
A senior Cuban official cautioned, however, that restoring diplomatic ties with the U.S. would not immediately lead to a full relationship between the Cold War foes after a half-century of enmity.
The message appeared designed to lower expectations, coming just before Obama spoke to a U.S. Capitol audience that included American Alan Gross, whose release from Cuba in a prisoner exchange last month cleared the way for a new relationship.
Wednesday's conversations in Havana started with a continuation of efforts by the two sides in recent years to promote what the State Department calls "safe, legal and orderly migration." That ranges from the security of charter flights that travel regularly between Miami and Havana to rooting out fraudulent passports and working jointly on potential search-and-rescue missions.
Thursday's talks are trickier. They are scheduled to deal with the mechanics of re-establishing a U.S. Embassy in Havana headed by an ambassador, and a Cuban Embassy in Washington.
Last month's announcement of detente has spawned high optimism on both sides of the Florida Straits, but the high-ranking Cuban diplomat said his country "isn't normalizing relations with the United States." He said Cuba was re-establishing diplomatic ties, but the process of normalization is "much longer and deeper." Reporters were briefed on condition that the official not be quoted by name.
Republican leaders in the U.S. Congress are opposed to rapidly rebuilding the relationship as long as President Raul Castro remains firmly in control of Cuba. Other obstacles include billions of dollars in economic claims against Cuba's government, American fugitives living freely in Cuba and the opposition of many Cuban-Americans.
Still, the biggest potential challenge is the Castro government. It needs cash for its stagnant economy but fears Obama's new policy merely repackages the long-standing U.S. goal to push him from power.
The Cuban diplomat expressed optimism about the long-term prospects for U.S.-Cuban relations as long as Washington does not try to change Cuba's single-party government and centrally planned economy. Those are tenets of Cuba's system that the U.S. long has opposed.
American officials have said they hope their new path of engagement will empower Cubans and soften the government's control over the country.
Leading the U.S. delegation to Havana is Roberta Jacobson, the most senior American official to visit Cuba in 35 years. The assistant U.S. secretary of state for Western Hemisphere Affairs was to arrive later Wednesday.
The rosters on both sides include officials well-known to one another from years of cautious efforts to improve cooperation.
Immediate U.S. objectives include the lifting of restrictions on American diplomats' staffing numbers and travel inside Cuba, easier shipments to the current U.S. Interests Section and unfettered access for Cubans to the building. The Americans say restoration of full diplomatic ties depends on how quickly the Cubans meet the U.S. requests.
Jacobson also planned to meet Cuban activists and civil society representatives.
The Cuban diplomat said his country's delegation would object to the U.S. granting virtually automatic legal residency to Cuban immigrants.
Cuba's government blames U.S. policies for drawing thousands of Cubans a year into making dangerous journeys in hopes of touching land and winning the right to live in the United States. Cuba also will push hard to be removed from the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism, the diplomat said.
The U.S. and Cuba haven't had diplomatic relations since 1961, soon after Fidel Castro seized power. Interests sections were established in the late 1970s as a means of opening a channel between the two countries, but any diplomatic goodwill they generated quickly evaporated.
Some changes have come in the last month. The Cubans last week released 53 political prisoners. Three days later, the Obama administration significantly eased travel and trade rules with Cuba.
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