Trump has maintained several of the measures passed by Obama, but has conditioned their implementation
Donald Trump has not Closed the embassy opened by Barack Obama in Havana and has kept to the letter of the rules allowing only certain travel by Americans to the island. However, his imposition of not establishing commercial or financial relations with companies controlled by the Cuban military-police apparatus has affected the trade Issue . But it has been above all his anti-Castro rhetoric that has returned the relationship almost to the Cold War.
![Barack Obama and Raúl Castro, at the baseball game they attended during the U.S. president's 2016 visit to Cuba [Pete Souza/White House]. Barack Obama and Raúl Castro, at the baseball game they attended during the U.S. president's 2016 visit to Cuba [Pete Souza/White House].](/documents/10174/16849987/eeuu-cuba-blog.jpg)
▲Barack Obama and Raúl Castro, at the baseball game they attended during the U.S. president's 2016 visit to Cuba [Pete Souza/White House].
article / Valeria Vásquez
For more than half a century, relations between the United States and Cuba were marked by political tensions. The last years of Barack Obama's presidency marked a significant change with the historic reestablishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries and the approval of certain measures of U.S. openness toward Cuba. The White House then hoped that the climate of growing cooperation would boost the modest economic reforms that Havana had begun to implement earlier and that all this would eventually bring political transformations to the island.
The Cuban government's lack of concessions in subject of freedoms and human rights, however, was used by Donald Trump to reverse, upon his arrival to power, several of the measures approved by his predecessor, although it has been above all his anti-Castro rhetoric that has created a new hostile environment between Washington and Havana.
Obama era: détente
In his second term, Barack Obama began secret negotiations with Cuba that culminated in the advertisement in December 2014 of an agreement for the reestablishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries. The respective embassies were reopened in July 2015, thus overcoming an anomaly dating back to 1961, when the Eisenhower Administration decided to break relations with the Antillean neighbor in view of the communist orientation of the Cuban Revolution. In March 2016, Obama became the first U.S. president to visit Cuba in 88 years.
Beyond the diplomatic sphere, Obama also sought an economic opening towards the island. Since lifting the decades-old US embargo required the approval of congress, where he faced a Republican majority, Obama introduced certain liberalizing measures by means of presidential decrees. Thus, he eased travel restrictions (he hardly changed the letter of the law, but did relax his internship) and authorized raising the Issue of purchases that Americans could make in Cuba.
For Obama, the economic embargo was a failed policy, as it had not achieved its purpose of ending the Cuban dictatorship and, consequently, had prolonged it. For this reason, he was in favor of a change of strategy, in the hope that the normalization of relations - diplomatic and, progressively, economic - would help to improve Cuba's social status and contribute, in the medium or long term, to the change that the economic embargo had failed to bring about. According to Obama, the embargo had had a negative impact, as issues such as the limitation of tourism or the lack of foreign direct investment had affected the Cuban people more than the Castro nomenklatura.
A new economic relationship
Faced with the impossibility of lifting the economic embargo on Cuba, Obama opted for presidential decrees that opened up trade relations between the two countries. Several measures were aimed at facilitating better access to the Internet for Cubans, which should help to promote democratizing demands in the country. Thus, Washington authorized U.S. telecommunications companies to establish business in Cuba.
In the financial field, the United States allowed its banks to open accounts in Cuba, which facilitated transactions. In addition, Cuban citizens residing on the island could receive payments in the U.S. and send them back to their country.
Another of the measures adopted was the lifting of some of the travel restrictions. As required by U.S. legislation, Obama maintained the restriction that Americans can only travel to Cuba under various circumstances, all linked to certain missions: academic, humanitarian, religious support trips... Although purely tourist trips were still excluded, the lack of control that the U.S. authorities deliberately stopped applying meant a considerable opening of the hand.
In addition to authorizing banking transactions related to such travel, to cater to the anticipated increase in tourists it was announced that several U.S. carriers such as JetBlue and American Airlines had received approval to fly to Cuba. For the first time in 50 years, in late November 2016 a U.S. commercial aircraft landed in Havana.
The U.S. president also eliminated the expense limit for U.S. visitors in the purchase of staff products (particularly cigars and rum). He also promoted partnership in medical research and approved the importation of medicines produced in Cuba.
In addition, Obama repealed the "wet foot, dry foot" policy, whereby Cubans arriving on U.S. soil were automatically granted political asylum, while only those intercepted by Cuba at sea were returned to the island.
Trump's review
Since his election campaign, Donald Trump showed clear signals about the direction his relations with Cuba would take if he became president. Trump announced that he would reverse the opening towards Cuba carried out by Obama, and as soon as he arrived at the White House he began to strengthen Washington's anti-Castro speech . The new president said he was willing to negotiate a "better agreement" with the island, but on the condition that the Cuban government showed concrete progress towards the democratization of the country and respect for human rights. Trump raised the prospect of free elections and the release of political prisoners, knowing that the Cuban regime would not accede to these requests. In the absence of a response from Havana, Trump insisted on his previous proposals: maintenance of the embargo (which in any case the Republican majority in congress is not willing to lift) and reversal of some of Obama' s decisions.
In reality, Trump has formally maintained several of his predecessor' s measures, although the ban on doing business with companies controlled by the Revolutionary Armed Forces (FAR), which dominate a good part of Cuban economic life, and the respect for the letter in travel restrictions have reduced the contact between the US and Cuba that had begun to occur at the end of the Obama era.
Trump has ratified the repeal of the "wet foot, dry foot" policy decided by Obama and has maintained the diplomatic relations reestablished by Obama (although he has paralyzed the appointment of an ambassador). It has also respected the timid commercial and financial opening operated by the Democratic president, but as long as the economic transactions do not take place with companies linked to the Cuban army, intelligence and security services. In this regard, on November 8, 2017, the Treasurydepartment published a list of companies in these sectors with which no U.S. contact subject is allowed.
In terms of travel, the restricted assumptions for American travel to the island are maintained, but in contrast to the blind eye adopted by the Obama Administration, the Trump Administration requires that Americans who want to go to Cuba must do so on tours conducted by American companies, accompanied by a representative of the group sponsor and with the obligation to communicate the details of their activities. Treasury rules and regulations require that stays be in private hostels (casas particulares), meals in restaurants run by individuals (paladares) and shopping in stores run by citizens (cuentapropistas), with the purpose of "channeling funds" away from the Cuban army and weakening communist policy.
Reduced tourist expectations led already at the end of 2017 to several US airlines having cancelled all their flights to the Caribbean island. Cuban Economics had counted on a large increase in U.S. tourists and yet now had to face, without higher revenues, the serious problem of falling shipments of cheap oil from Venezuela.
Future of diplomatic relations
The greatest tension between Washington and Havana, however, has not been in the commercial or economic sphere, but in the diplomatic sphere. Following a series of apparent "sonic attacks" on U.S. diplomats in Cuba, the United States withdrew a large part of its staff in Cuba and expelled 15 diplomats from the Cuban embassy in Washington. In addition, the State department issued a travel advisory against travel to the island. Although the origin of these alleged attacks, which the Cuban authorities deny having carried out, has not been clarified, it could be the accidental side effect of an espionage attempt, which would have eventually caused brain damage to the persons being monitored.
The future of relations between the two countries will depend on the direction taken by Trump's policies and the pace of reforms that the new Cuban president may establish. Given that not many changes are foreseen in Miguel Díaz-Canel's management , at least as long as Raúl Castro lives, Havana's immobility in the political and economic fields will probably continue to run up against Trump's anti-revolutionary rhetoric.