By Bradley Klapper, The Boston Globe, February 6, 2015
WASHINGTON— A series of trips to Cuba by US lawmakers is in doubt amid questions about the Communist government’s eagerness or ability to accommodate a surge of new interest and possible investment from the United States.
American officials said the Cuban government has pushed off all congressional visits, including one by House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, until at least mid-April. The Cuban Interests Section in Washington said some will go forward in the coming days, but others were postponed.
Several members of Congress had planned to go to the island country this month. They included Pelosi, a California Democrat, and Senator Jeff Flake, an Arizona Republican, who has proposed ending the US travel embargo of Cuba.
President Raul Castro’s government has been scrambling to adjust to the possibility of new US travel and investment since he and President Obama revealed in December that the two countries would repair ties after a half-century of enmity.
Obama administration officials said they were informed by their Cuban counterparts earlier this week that no congressional visits would be allowed to travel to Cuba until April 15. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record.
The Cuban Interests Section, however, rejected that account, saying some delegations would be arriving in the next days.
A spokesman, who demanded anonymity because he was not authorized to talk publicly, said Cuba is receiving a large number of requests for visits. As a result, he said, the government is ‘‘arranging for the best possible dates for their visits so they get the attention they deserve in the middle of the many tasks we are facing at this moment in Cuba.’’
However, Senators Jerry Moran, a Kansas Republican, and Flake confirmed they wanted to visit at the end of the month but the Cubans denied the request.
Moran said the delegation was made up of GOP senators who are ‘‘open-minded about changing the relationship with Cuba’’ and wanted to get a better understanding of issues on the island.
‘‘At this point the indication is that they’re not ready for our visit,’’ said Moran, who still hoped to reschedule the trip. ‘‘We don’t know the reason. My staff has been told that the Cubans are not able to put together the necessary meetings that they would want to have for us. It could be just scheduling, but I don’t know.’’
Many of the trips aim to explore new business opportunities as part of the thaw in US-Cuban tensions. The administration last month significantly eased the 54-year economic embargo of Cuba, allowing US telecommunications exports for the first time and ending a restriction on US credit and debit card transactions on the island.
Cubans are still trying to gauge the potential effects of the changes. US companies also are still trying to make sense of the new regulations and much remains unclear.
Only Congress has the power to fully lift the embargo, a step Obama is calling for but GOP leaders in the House and Senate oppose.
The most immediate objective of US-Cuban diplomacy right now is reestablishing embassies.
The United States had been seeking to clinch an agreement before the Summit of the Americas in Panama. The meeting of Western Hemisphere nations takes place April 10-11 and could bring Obama and Castro together for a face-to-face meeting.
But the United States says Cuba must first end limits on US diplomats and on shipments to the current US Interests Section in Havana.
Cuba’s most pressing demand is an end to banking restrictions, many of which are linked to its US designation as a ‘‘state sponsor of terrorism.’’
The Obama administration probably will lift Cuba from that list in the next months.
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