No bloom yet in US-Cuba ties after April overtures

HAVANA, (Reuters) – The United States and Cuba  offered a glimmer of hope last month that they might be ready  to end years of hostility, but neither side has moved much  since then to widen that window of opportunity.

In mid-April, President Barack Obama pledged a “new  beginning” with Cuba after slightly easing the 47-year-old U.S.  trade embargo against the communist-ruled Caribbean island that  reflects decades of Cold War enmity.

But Obama quickly made clear that further moves toward  normalization hinged on Cuba freeing political prisoners and  showing progress on human rights.

From his side, Cuban President Raul Castro made what some  called a groundbreaking public offer to hold talks with  Washington about everything, including political prisoners.

But Havana swiftly clarified this by insisting it had no  intention of making concessions to satisfy the Americans.

Despite news from the U.S. State Department that informal  talks were subsequently held with the Cuban Interests Section  in Washington, many observers fear the good vibes of April may  be fading as both sides fall back on old positions.

“There is no process, nothing under way. The story now is  of deflated expectations,” said Washington attorney Robert  Muse, who specializes in Cuba issues.

Obama has said he wants to “recast” U.S.-Cuba ties. On  April 13, he ended Bush era restrictions on Cuban Americans’  right to travel and send remittances to their homeland. He also  removed curbs on U.S. telecommunications firms who want to  operate on the island 90 miles (145 km) from Florida.

But while Obama has moved away from the aggressive hard  line of President George W. Bush, who openly urged the  overthrow of Cuba’s government, the insistence that further  steps depend on Cuban concessions has disappointed groups  pushing for normalization of relations.

Critics say this same conditionality was pursued  unsuccessfully by most of the preceding 10 U.S. presidents who  served since Fidel Castro took power in a 1959 revolution.

“I don’t see that the Obama administration has really done  anything to change the policy, the atmosphere,” said Wayne  Smith, former head of the U.S. Interests Section in Havana who  is now with the Center for International Policy in Washington.

“We need to make it clear that our policy is no longer as  it was under Bush — to bring down the Cuban government. Our  policy is to have dialogue and begin to resolve problems and  disagreements between us,” he said in a recent trip to Cuba.

While anti-embargo groups voice frustration with Obama,  they generally assume his current position is not fixed in  stone and is more likely a product of political bargaining or  perhaps inexperience, than a reflection of his true beliefs.

Some say he may be trying to aid the passage of bills  pending in the U.S. Congress that would lift the ban on travel  to Cuba for all Americans.

“I suspect it has to do with bills in Congress he wants to  get through and he’s receiving signals that if he goes too far,  they (opponents) will try to block the measures,” said Smith.

Cuba, which presents itself as the aggrieved victim in  U.S.-Cuba relations, has done little to encourage Obama.

Fidel Castro, now 82, who was replaced as Cuba’s president  by his younger brother, Raul, last year, said Raul’s offer of  talks was misinterpreted by the Obama administration.

Since then, Cuban leaders have struck a consistently  negative tone by deriding Obama’s embargo-easing steps as  minimal, maintaining their harsh rhetoric against the U.S. and  offering nothing concrete to get negotiations started.

“We have to do absolutely nothing, except take note of and  recognize the corrective steps when they take them,” Ricardo  Alarcon, president of Cuba’s parliament, told CNN last week.

Raul Castro had already said in a January television  interview: “We are not in any hurry. We are not desperate.”

On the key U.S. issues of political prisoners and human  rights, Cuba has said these are sovereign domestic matters.

The European Union, which has restarted talks with Cuba  after years of strained relations, got a taste of what may lie  ahead for the United States at a meeting last week in Brussels  with Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez.

He described EU concerns about human rights in Cuba as  “obsolete” and “an obstacle to the process of normalization”.

The Cuban side argued there were “no political prisoners”  in Cuba, said Czech Foreign Minister Jan Kohout.

Human rights groups estimate Cuba has 200 political  prisoners. Raul Castro has offered to send some to the United  States in exchange for five Cuban agents imprisoned there.

Supporters of a changed U.S. Cuba policy say they hope  Obama will move ahead without concessions from Havana because  the wait for compromise could be a long one, especially since  there is broad world support for an end to the U.S. embargo.