Cuba and US no longer ‘prisoners of history’

John Kerry witnesses US flag being raised at embassy in Havana after 54 years

The US and Cuba have stopped "being the prisoners of history", John Kerry said yesterday, as he watched his country's flag being raised at its embassy in Havana for the first time in more than five decades.

In a ceremony that laid to rest one of the last remnants of the cold war, Mr Kerry, who became the first US secretary of state to visit Cuba since 1945, called on the neighbouring countries to “push aside old barriers and pursue new possibilities”.

Striking a careful balance between openness to the country’s authoritarian regime and support for dissidents, Mr Kerry urged Cuba to pursue “genuine democracy” but said that “Cuba’s future is for Cubans to shape”.

The rich symbolism of yesterday’s ceremony at the embassy was the culmination of the decision taken in late December to normalise relations between two countries separated by only 90 miles of sea.

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Suspended

“US-Cuban relations have been suspended in the amber of cold war politics,” Mr Kerry said, arguing that the 54-year freeze had become an anomaly that somehow survived sweeping changes in the rest of the world.

"The United States has had 10 new presidents, and in a united Germany the Berlin Wall is a fading memory, freed from Soviet shackles," he said.

Only last week, Mr Kerry had been in Hanoi to celebrate two decades of normalisation of relations between the US and Vietnam, despite a bitter war he himself fought in that had "inflicted indelible scars on body and mind".

In a minutely choreographed event, the flag was delivered by the three US marines, now in their 70s, who had taken it down in 1961 when president Dwight Eisenhower announced he was breaking relations with Fidel Castro's regime.

"We knew we were closing it up, but we had no idea as to all the particulars behind it," Francis East, then a gunnery sergeant, told CNN about the day the flag came down.

“I really did not think this day was ever going to happen.”

Shared horizon

Mr Kerry, who spoke from a stage overlooking the Malecon seafront in Havana, was preceded by

Richard Blanco

, the poet laureate, who was born to Cuban exiles and who celebrated with a specially-written verse “the lucid blues of our shared horizon”.

Opponents of the US opening to Cuba criticised the absence of dissidents in the audience.

"Their exclusion from this event has ensured it will be little more than a propaganda rally for the Castro regime," said Marco Rubio, the Cuban-American senator running for the Republican presidential nomination.

Given the fierce passions that long surrounded Cuba in US politics, perhaps the most surprising aspect of the rapprochement has been how politically painless it has been.

An opinion poll last month by Pew said that the majority in favour of re-establishing diplomatic ties with Cuba had grown in the months since the policy was first announced. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2015