Barack Obama, Raul Castro to hold historic talks: US

Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro prepared to hold historic talks Saturday, a US official said, setting up the first substantive meeting between an American and Cuban leader since the 1950s.

Barack Obama, Raul Castro to hold historic talks: US

Panama City: Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro prepared to hold historic talks Saturday, a US official said, setting up the first substantive meeting between an American and Cuban leader since the 1950s.

Obama and Castro were in Panama on Friday for the two-day Summit of the Americas, Cuba`s first, marking a landmark follow-up to their historic announcement on December 17 that their countries would restore ties severed since 1961.

"We certainly do anticipate that they will have the opportunity to see each other at the summit tomorrow, to have a discussion," senior Obama advisor Ben Rhodes told reporters Friday.

He said the extent of the meeting had yet to be decided, but that the two leaders will "take stock" of the negotiations to normalize relations and reopen embassies, as well as discuss lingering "differences."

The meeting will be the first since Obama and Castro briefly shook hands at Nelson Mandela`s funeral in December 2013.

An actual discussion would be the first substantive talks between US and Cuban leaders since 1956, when President Dwight Eisenhower met dictator Fulgencio Batista, who was toppled by Fidel Castro three years later.

That meeting also happened in Panama.

Rhodes said Obama and Castro had already discussed the ongoing negotiations and the upcoming summit by telephone Wednesday -- their first phone call since December, just before they announced the game-changing diplomatic thaw.

But he said there was no decision yet on one of the key obstacles in the negotiations, Cuba`s presence on the US blacklist of state sponsors of terror.

"I`m not ruling out any announcement but... we are not there yet in terms of a final recommendation being made to the president, and the president making a determination," Rhodes said.

Cuba`s presence on the blacklist -- which also includes Iran, Sudan and Syria -- has been a major sticking point in negotiations to reopen embassies.

Cuba was first to be placed on the list in 1982 for harboring Basque separatist militants and Colombian FARC rebels, restricting the country`s access to global bank credit.

If and when Obama decides Cuba should be removed from the list, Congress will have 45 days to decide whether to override his recommendation.

US lawmakers who have been critical of the diplomatic detente could seize on the review of the list to further attack Obama`s Cuba policy.Some 30 leaders will gather from Friday evening at the summit, posing for pictures and sitting down for a seaside dinner in a complex of ruins from the era of the Spanish conquistadors.

Obama began his day with a visit to the Panama Canal, where, jacket slung over his shoulder in the tropical heat, he toured a command center and walked across the Miraflores locks, at the Pacific entrance to the interoceanic waterway.

The US and Cuban chief diplomats, Secretary of State John Kerry and Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez, made history themselves Thursday evening when they held talks -- the first such meeting since 1958, a year before Fidel Castro`s revolutionary guerrillas seized power.

Both sides said the nearly three-hour talks were "constructive" and would be followed by further conversations to resolve outstanding issues.

Cuba has other major demands, most importantly that the US Congress lift an embargo that the communist regime blames for the island`s economic troubles.

Washington wants Cuba to end restrictions on the movement of its diplomats on the island, giving them unfettered access to ordinary Cubans.Opinion polls show the reconciliation is backed by majorities of Americans and Cubans.

But Cuban government supporters confronted dissidents on the sidelines of the summit, heckling them as they attended a civil society forum.

And even as Obama moves to remove an old source of tension in US relations with Latin America, a new headache has emerged since he imposed sanctions against Venezuelan officials accused of human rights abuses in an opposition crackdown.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Havana`s main ally in the region, said Thursday he had gathered 13.4 million signatures in a petition urging Obama to lift his executive order.

Maduro received a hero`s welcome as he arrived at a rally with a throng of supporters in Panama City.

Seeking to ease tensions, Rhodes said: "Our principal way of communicating with Venezuela will be direct dialogue, even as we know that there will be differences between our two governments on a variety of issues."

 

 

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