US Senator asks to remove Cuba from terrorist list

Edited by Beatriz Montes de Oca
2023-08-08 09:44:30

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US Senator asks to remove Cuba from terrorist list

 

Havana, Aug 8 (RHC) Democratic Senator Peter Welch affirmed that removing Cuba from the list of sponsors of terrorism today is a measure that the United States can and should take to rebuild its relationship with the island.

Welch, who has been a member of the US Senate from Vermont since this year, filed a statement for the Congressional Record outlining opportunities to advance bilateral ties. In his proposal, the legislator warned that the policies currently in place amount to little more than a continuation of the failed agenda of the previous administration.

He stressed that these policies are contributing, directly and indirectly, to the hardships and scarcity in Cuba, which in his opinion was a triggering factor for the increase in the migratory flow of Cuban citizens to the United States in 2022.

Welch also referred to the effects that, in this scenario, natural disasters have also had; however, he recognized that Cubans "despite everything, have persevered, driven by their extraordinary ingenuity, national pride and innate resistance."

Considered an important figure in Vermont for more than three decades, the senator suggested reversing several US policies that "have stalled the restoration of full diplomatic relations between the two nations."

Along with the removal of Cuba from the arbitrary list of state sponsors of terrorism, he requested the renunciation of extraterritorial sanctions under Title 3 of the Helms-Burton Act, which typify the blockade imposed by the White House on the Antillean nation more than six decades ago.

For Welch, the United States should continue the path of improving diplomatic relations with Cuba, including sending an ambassador to Havana.

Although President Joe Biden promised to change the policies of the Republican Donald Trump (2017-2021) to reach the White House, almost three years after his election, the Democrat adopted some relaxations, but in essence he maintains the same line as his predecessor regarding Cuba and the blockade remains intact. (Source: PL)



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