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The United States has accused Cuba of not cooperating fully in the fight against terrorism

The Biden administration has re-included Cuba in its list of countries that the United States says it is “not fully cooperating” with in the fight against terrorism, sparking further tensions in relations between the two countries.

Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, in a final assessment published today in the US government newspaper, included Cuba among the five countries – along with Iran, North Korea, Venezuela and Syria – that the United States claims do not live up to expectations. their.

The State Department is required by law to provide this list annually to the US Congress.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodrεςguez predicted the move on Thursday, referring to Blinken’s draft on May 11 as “another lie” from Washington.

“The United States has again resorted to slander, arguing that Cuba is not cooperating sufficiently in the fight against terrorism,” Rodrεςguez wrote in a Twitter post, stressing that “this is a pretext for continuing an internationally-denounced economic war.” .

The US assessment is almost identical to that issued by the Biden administration a year ago. A State Department spokesman told Reuters that Cuba’s assessment was the result of a review of “the country’s counterterrorism targets and a realistic assessment of its capabilities.”

The assessment follows Biden’s decision to lift some of Trump’s remittance and travel restrictions on Cuba, which Havana has described as inadequate and politically motivated.

Tensions between the two sides have risen over indications that Cuba – along with Nicaragua and the Maduro government in Venezuela – will be excluded from next month’s US summit in the United States. A possible boycott by many leaders, including Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, has embarrassed US President Joe Biden.

Former United States President Donald Trump described Cuba as a “sponsor of terrorism” shortly before he left the White House, which differs from the assessment of “insufficient cooperation” in the fight against terrorism.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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