Havana to let US use Cuban air space for Haiti victims

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – The Cuban government has  agreed to let the U.S. military use restricted Cuban air space  for medical evacuation flights carrying Haitian earthquake  victims, sharply reducing the flight time to Miami, a U.S.  official said today.
White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said a deal had been  reached allowing evacuation flights from the U.S. Naval Station  in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to pass over the communist-ruled  island on the way to Florida. The deal would shorten the flight  time by 90 minutes on trips that normally are routed around  Cuba.
U.S. military disaster relief teams in Haiti have been  taking injured quake survivors to Guantanamo for treatment.  Some victims are being sent from Guantanamo to south Florida  for further treatment.
U.S. President Barack Obama since taking office in January  has sought to soften the hard-line approach his predecessor,  George W. Bush, took toward Cuba. The Obama administration last  year eased restrictions on Cuban-Americans visiting and sending  cash to relatives in Cuba.
Obama has made clear the long-standing U.S. economic  embargo on Cuba will remain until the Cuban government  implements Democratic reforms.