
Bloomberg
Cuba is willing to help negotiate a peaceful end to Venezuela’s political crisis if President Nicolas Maduro requests it, one of Havana’s top diplomats said.
The so-called Lima Group of nations sought to enlist the communist-run Caribbean island in brokering a solution to the standoff last week after
opposition leader Juan Guaido’s attempt to overthrow the embattled president failed.
Any role Cuba plays will be scrutinised by Maduro’s foes due to the country’s close ties with Chavismo over the past two decades.
“We are ready to help,†Carlos Fernandez de Cossio, head of the US section at Cuba’s Foreign Ministry, said during an interview at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York.
Maduro, however, would have to be at the table. “It’s not Cuba, as it’s not the Lima Group, who should say who’s the leader
of Venezuela.â€
The diplomat’s comments come two days after Canadian PM Justin Trudeau reached out to Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, and as the administration of President Donald Trump tightens sanctions on Havana while refusing to rule out military options in Venezuela.
De Cossio said his government is feeling pinched by the White House moves, warning that Cuba-US relations have soured sharply since Washington began blaming it for keeping Maduro in power.
‘Open Hostility’
While Trump has been slowly rolling back the opening to Cuba made during President Barack Obama’s final years in office, de Cossio said Havana is now being used as a scapegoat for the failure to unseat Maduro.
“Just a few months ago we would describe the relationship as in regression,†he said. “Today, if we follow above all the statements by the National Security Council of the United States, we can speak of open hostility towards Cuba — an open attempt of regime change.â€
The White House accuses Havana of controlling Maduro’s security apparatus.
Cuba denies this, saying all 20,000 Cubans in Venezuela are doctors and nurses and believes the crisis is being used as a pretext to crack down on the communist government and divert attention from Guaido’s failure to oust Maduro.
US Lawsuits
Trump riled allies by activating Title III of the Helms-Burton Act, a controversial section of the US embargo on Cuba allowing lawsuits over property confiscated in the 1959 revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power. The move, along with other policies, is meant to curb foreign investment on the island.
“We have seen a slowdown,†de Cossio said, adding he doesn’t expect Cuba to face the same kind of hardship it endured in the 1990’s after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
“What we will never be able to measure is how many companies, how many people, did not go to Cuba because of this.â€
While Maduro’s ouster would likely bring an end to much-needed shipments of Venezuelan oil, Cuba has diversified its economy enough to survive the blow, de Cossio said.
Despite ideological differences, it maintains ties with regional heavyweights like Brazil and Argentina, as well as global players like Russia and China.
Working groups on immigration and law-enforcement struck during the Obama years are now essentially frozen, and de Cossio didn’t meet with any White House officials during his visit to Washington. He did, however, hold talks with business groups and members of Congress including Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont.
“We will continue to engage as much as possible with US business,†the diplomat said.