On Sept. 29, U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson announced the decision to significantly downscale the diplomatic staff of the U.S. Embassy in Havana and withdraw all their relatives, claiming that there had been “attacks” perpetrated against U.S. government officials in Cuba which have harmed their health.
On Oct. 3, the U.S. government, in an unwarranted act, decided that 15 officials of the Cuban Embassy in Washington should depart from the United States, claiming that the U.S. had reduced their diplomatic staffing levels in Havana and that the Cuban government had failed to take all appropriate steps to prevent “attacks” against them.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs strongly protests and condemns this unfounded and unacceptable decision as well as the pretext used to justify it, that the Cuban government did not take the appropriate measures to prevent the occurrence of the alleged incidents.
In a meeting that, at the proposal of the Cuban side, was held with Secretary of State Tillerson, the minister of foreign affairs of the Republic of Cuba, Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, warned him against the adoption of hasty decisions that were not supported by evidence, urged him not to politicize a matter of this nature, and once again required the effective cooperation from the U.S. authorities to clarify facts and conclude the investigation.
It is the second time, after May 23, that the State Department has ordered two Cuban diplomats in Washington to abandon the country. The U.S. government reacts in a hasty, inappropriate and unthinking way, without having evidence of the occurrence of the adduced facts, for which Cuba has no responsibility whatsoever, and before the conclusion of the investigation that is still in progress.
As was expressed by the Cuban foreign minister to Secretary of State Tillerson on Sept. 26, Cuba — whose diplomatic staff members have been victims in the past of attempts perpetrated against their lives; who have been murdered, disappeared, kidnapped or attacked during the performance of their duty — has seriously and strictly observed its obligations under the Geneva Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961, referring to the protection and integrity of diplomatic agents accredited in the country, of which it has an impeccable record.
As was informed by the Ministry on Aug. 9, [after] Feb. 17, when the U.S. Embassy and State Department notified us of the alleged occurrence of incidents since November 2016 against some officials of that diplomatic mission and their relatives, arguing that these had caused them injuries and other disorders, the Cuban authorities have acted with utmost seriousness, professionalism and immediacy to clarify this situation and opened an exhaustive and priority investigation following instructions from the top level of the government. The measures adopted to protect the U.S. diplomatic staff, their relatives and residences, were reinforced; new expeditious communication channels were established between the U.S. Embassy and the Diplomatic Security Department; and a committee of experts was created to make a comprehensive analysis of facts, which was made up of law enforcement officials, physicians and scientists.
In the face of the belated, fragmented and insufficient information supplied by the U.S., the Cuban authorities requested further information and clarifications from the U.S. Embassy in order to carry out a serious and profound investigation….
Only after repeated requests were conveyed to the U.S. government, some representatives of specialized agencies of that country finally traveled to Havana on June last, met with their Cuban counterparts and expressed their intention to cooperate in a more substantive way in the investigation of the alleged incidents. They again visited Cuba in August and September, and for the first time in more than 50 years they were allowed to work on the ground, for which they were granted all facilities, including the possibility of importing equipment, as a gesture of goodwill that evidenced the great interest of the Cuban government in concluding the investigation.
The Cuban authorities carefully assessed the three visits made by the U.S. specialized agencies, which have recognized the high professional level of the investigation started by Cuba and its high technical and scientific component, and which, as a preliminary result, concluded that, so far, according to the information available and the data supplied by the United States, there was no evidence of the occurrence of the alleged incidents or the causes and the origin of the health disorders reported by the U.S. diplomats and their relatives.
Neither has it been possible to identify potential perpetrators or persons with motivations, intentions or means to perpetrate this type of actions; nor was it possible to establish the presence of suspicious persons or means at the locations where such facts have been reported or in their vicinity. The Cuban authorities are not familiar with the equipment or the technology that could be used for that purpose; nor do they have information indicating their presence in the country.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs categorically rejects any responsibility of the Cuban government in the alleged incidents and reiterates once again that Cuba has never perpetrated, nor will it ever perpetrate attacks of any sort against diplomatic officials or their relatives, without any exception. Neither has it ever allowed nor will it ever allow its territory to be used by third parties for that purpose.
The Ministry emphasizes that the U.S. government’s announced decision to reduce Cuba’s diplomatic staff in Washington, without the conclusive results from the investigation and without evidence of the incidents that would be affecting their officials in Cuba, has an eminently political character.
The Ministry urges the competent authorities of the U.S. government not to continue politicizing this matter, which can provoke an undesirable escalation and would rarify and reverse even more bilateral relations, which were already affected by the announcement of a new policy made in June by President Donald Trump.
The Ministry reiterates Cuba’s disposition to continue fostering a serious and objective cooperation between the authorities of both countries with the purpose of clarifying these facts and conclude the investigation, for which it will be essential to count on the most effective cooperation of the U.S. competent agencies.
Havana, October 3, 2017
@Cubaminrex
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