The United States and
Cuba are close to an agreement on restoring regularly scheduled, commercial
flights between the countries, a senior American diplomat said Tuesday, as
talks on the matter were ongoing.
Jeffrey DeLaurentis,
who heads the U.S. embassy in Havana, described an aviation deal as one of
several in reach for the former Cold War foes in their wide-ranging discussions
to improve relations. The Obama administration has been trying to wrap up an
agreement on flights before the year’s end.
"We have made good
progress and come a long way," DeLaurentis told reporters on a conference
call two days before the one-year anniversary of the announcement by Presidents
Barack Obama and Raul Castro that they were ending a half-century of U.S.-Cuban
enmity.
Right now, American and
Cuban travelers must fly on charter flights that are complicated to book,
rarely involve an online portal and often force prospective travelers to email
documents and payment information back and forth with an agent. Those flying sometimes
must arrive at the airport four hours in advance; strict baggage limits apply.
U.S. and Cuban
officials are negotiating the logistics of commercial airline routes this week,
and may be able to make an announcement afterward.
A deal would be timely.
Authorized American travel to the island is up 50 percent this year,
DeLaurentis said, buoyed by significant expansion in cultural and educational
programs. Among Obama's regulatory changes this year was one permitting
Americans participating in such programs to visit Cuba without first applying
for Treasury Department permission.
And it would build on
last week’s declaration that direct mail service would restart after a 52-year
interruption. The governments had been speaking about restoring a postal link since
Obama entered office, but those talks stalled when Cuba imprisoned U.S.
contractor Alan Gross. He was freed in a prisoner exchange that sparked last
year’s declaration of detente.
On other issues,
however, the U.S. and Cuba remain far apart.
DeLaurentis cited the
billions of dollars in competing property claims, the status of fugitives in
both countries, and Cuban respect for human rights as outstanding matters of
disagreement. On these, he could only say that Washington and Havana “have
started the process of exchanging views.”
The administration also
has been trying to get Cuba to make it easier for Cuban citizens to start
private companies, access information online and benefit from eased American
rules for commerce, even if the U.S. economic embargo on the island remains in
effect. Only Congress can eliminate the embargo.
"More could be
done on the Cuban side to take advantage of new openings," DeLaurentis
said.
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