Background Briefing on the President's
Cuba Policy
James
S. Brady Press Briefing Room
4:36 P.M. EDT
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us this
afternoon. This is an off-camera, not-for-audio broadcast, background
briefing on President Trump's Cuba policy with senior White House officials
here in the briefing room. Some of you are joining us via conference
call. Just as a reminder, this background briefing information is
embargoed until 9:00 p.m. tonight.
Q A lot of
this stuff is out already. Can you guys move that embargo? Is that
negotiable?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: It's not negotiable right now. It's 9:00 p.m. tonight.
It's embargoed until 9:00 p.m. tonight.
During the campaign last
year, President Trump received an endorsement from the Bay of Pigs Veterans
Association, the first presidential endorsement this group has ever made, at
their museum in Little Havana, Miami. The President has repeatedly said
he was "honored and humbled" to have received that endorsement from
these veterans, recognizing that they were fighting to restore liberty and
justice for the people of Cuba.
The President vowed to
reverse the Obama administration policies toward Cuba that have enriched the
Cuban military regime and increased the repression on the island. It is a
promise that President Trump made, and it's a promise that President Trump is
keeping.
With this is a
readjustment of the United States policy towards Cuba. And you will see
that, going forward, the new policy under the Trump administration, will empower the Cuban people.
To reiterate, the new policy going forward does not target the Cuban
people, but it does target the repressive members of the Cuban military
government.
To discuss this further,
I'm going to introduce [senior administration officials]. We will take a
few questions after their presentations. As background, you know they are
going to be identified as senior White House officials.
Empowering by
depriving of independent self-earned resources.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Thanks. And I'm going to be really quick and pretty bland
here so we can get to your questions. But as my colleague mentioned, the
President made a promise September 16, 2016, when he was speaking in Miami,
about his commitment to overturn the Obama policy of appeasement toward Cuba.
And, in doing so, he promised to restore some of the restrictions on Cuba until they
provide religious and political freedom to their people.
In order to follow through
on the promises the President made, he ordered a full review of U.S. policy
toward Cuba in February, and of his team here internally. The National
Security Council, led by General McMaster, engaged in a thorough interagency
review process, including more than a dozen working-level meetings, multiple
deputies meetings, and principal meetings. This interagency process included,
among others -- there are additional agencies -- but those I think that are
most impacted by the policy included the Treasury Department, the State
Department, Commerce Department, the Department of Agriculture, the Department
of Homeland Security, and the Department of Transportation. So each of
those agencies and secretaries were actively engaged in this policy formation.
Additionally, during this
process, the President met
with members of Congress who are experts on Cuba policy and have been leaders
in formulating Cuba policy, from a legislative perspective, for years.
These members also worked with us hand-in-glove in providing technical
guidance and policy suggestions as we continued to formulate the policy and
went through multiple drafts.
Did he meet with Leahy, Flake, McGovern, etc. or only
Rubio and Diaz Balart?
The President and other
principals also met with
members on both sides of the aisle in this process, and even, additionally,
were sharing thoughts with those who have, I think, been advocates -- in
particular, agricultural trade with Cuba.
The President has tasked his
Cabinet to work together to find ways to improve what we consider President
Obama's bad deal. And we're very excited about the result that the
President will unveil tomorrow. And I think more details of that will be
forthcoming.
I'll turn it over to my
colleagues, and we'll take questions when finished.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Thanks. Breaking habit of a lifetime, I'm going to be
even briefer, because this is really the President's policy to announce.
But I want to reiterate that this is very much a promise that he made,
that he took seriously, that he kept. And the basic policy driver was his
concern that the previous policy was enriching the Cuban military and the
intelligence services that contribute so much to oppression on the island. And
that's the opposite of what he wanted to achieve, which is to have the benefits of any
economic commerce with the United States go to the Cuban people. So that
would be our guiding principle.
Destroyed the best
channel for commerce benefiting the Cuban people, the individual traveler
I did want to note that there will not be a change to
wet foot, dry foot current policy, and that very much the hope of the
administration is that the Cuban regime will see this as an opportunity for them to
implement the reforms that they paid lip service to a couple of years ago, but
that have not in any way been implemented to the benefit of the Cuban people.
Miami hard liners’
alternative universe
So that's pretty much my
part, and so we can open it up to questions.
Q Any details
on the actual -- the action he's going to take tomorrow?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Sorry, I'm the lawyer, so I don’t get the (inaudible) parts, I
just get the nitty-gritty details.
Q What is the
President actually going to implement?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: There's a few components of it. One part is, like my
colleague was talking about, measures designed to restrict the flow of money to the oppressive elements
of the Cuban regime -- the military, intelligence, and security services.
There are also measures to
ensure that the statutory
ban on tourism is strictly enforced, which will include ending the individual
people-to-people travel. There are 12 categories of travel that
are permitted still, but the one of the individual people-to-people travel was one that was at
the highest risk of potential abuse of the statutory ban on tourism.
And then there are several other components of the policy that you'll see
tomorrow that relate to the supporting requirements ensuring that these
regulations are enforced.
One key thing to note
about the policy is that it directs the Secretaries of Treasury and Commerce to
change their regulations on the topic. No changes go into effect until
those regulations are promulgated.
Q So when
will this go into effect?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The policy goes into effect tomorrow, but the policy directs
the creation of new regulations, so the actual impact occurs when those
regulations go into effect.
Q Things on
travel and that sort of stuff doesn't change immediately?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That's right. Not until the regulations go into effect.
Q Can you
explain just -- let's start with the tourism, the ban on tourism which you guys
will now be enforcing. What immediate impact will American travelers see
on visits to Cuba from a tourism perspective? Sort of x, y, and z -- what
really changes for somebody who wants to go to Havana, let's say?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Tourism is banned under the statute, was banned before.
Tourism has never been allowed.
Q Obviously,
commercial flights are still going to be in effect, still allowed, so -- I'm
just trying to get at for like the average person who's trying to understand
what this means for them.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: It means that they'll have to follow the statutory requirements
and the regulations about what kind of travel to Cuba is and is not allowed.
Q Is there still going to be
self-certification?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Yes.
It would still allow the Treasury to issue the general licenses that it
has issued. And individuals obviously still have to keep records of their
financial transactions and their travel, which can be subject to audit by the
Treasury Department, but that does not change.
General licenses for
everything but individuals
Q To clarify,
you're getting rid of the people-to-people category, though? That will no
longer be --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Individual people-to-people. So individuals can still go as parts of groups
--
Q But you now
have to do it as part of a group? You can't self-initiate?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That's right.
Q Quickly,
are you going to issue a replacement directive for the presidential directive
that went into effect at the end of last year?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That's what this is.
Q So we'll
see that tomorrow.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Right.
Q What about
cruise ships?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I don't
think there's anything that specifically touches on cruise ships.
Q No changes
to the commercial flights?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Again, there is a statutory ban on tourism. But if an individual follows the
regulations to travel to Cuba, then they can travel, and -- whether they get
there by air, boat, or any other means.
Q Does the
Trump administration plan to have official diplomatic relations with the Castro
regime?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I don't think that's changed by the policy.
Q Doesn't
eliminating -- or changing the people-to-people requirement -- doesn't that somehow undermine
supporting the private sector in Cuba? I mean, isn't that how a lot of
Cuban people make their money, off the people-to-people exchanges and that sort
of thing?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The other statutorily permitted categories of travel, including
support for the Cuban people, are unchanged by the policy. But the requirement is that individuals who are going to Cuba
actually engage in a full-time schedule of activities designed to enhance their
interaction with the Cuban people and designed to get -- and consistent with
the policy objectives of ensuring that the money goes to the Cuban people and
not to the military intelligence services.
Absurd premise that
participation in structured government shaped and minded trips leads to more
actual engagement.
Q How is this
going to restrict the flow of money to military intelligence and security
services? And if you’re not touching anything to do with airlines and
cruise ships, does that mean that airlines and cruise companies are still
transferring money to military-controlled entities, since they have to pay
docking fees and landing fees?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Well, the way a policy is structured -- and you'll see tomorrow
-- is that it directs Treasury and Commerce too provide the regulations to
prohibit direct financial transactions with the military intelligence and security
services.
There are several
exceptions to that ban on direct financial transactions, one of which is for
air and sea operations. Again, it restricts the flow of money to the
military and intelligence and security services, but it does not completely --
there are several exceptions that you’ll see on the policy for the kinds of
travel that will still be allowed.
Q Say I met
an Ohio electrical company owner who is looking to sell transformers to Cuba.
Their electrical infrastructure is in shambles. Would that person’s
business with Cuba now be curtailed in any way?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Only if
they want to sell to the military, intelligence or security services.
Q Can I
follow up on that -- just a question about business more broadly? What’s
the President’s message to businesses that have hoped to see Cuba as an
expanding potential market? Is there a message here to American business?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Say that again, please.
Q What’s the
President’s message more broadly to American business, particularly those
businesses that had hoped to see an opening of the Cuban market? What do
you tell those folks?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: We tell them that we also very much want to see that kind of
expansion of commercial interaction with Cuba, and that's entirely up to Raul
Castro and his regime. It’s entirely up to Raul Castro to make that
happen.
Q What would
the Cuban regime need to do in order to make that happen?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: We're going to have a series of reforms that would make it
considerably less difficult for whoever Raul’s successor may be to continue to
implement this kind of very repressive police state, which is being fueled by
the companies owned by the military and the intelligence.
Q Are you
going to roll out what those specific reforms you want to see, what boxes the
Cuban regime would have to check in order to roll out more business --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Absolutely.
Q When?
We’ll see that tonight, tomorrow?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Tomorrow.
Q On the
individual travel restrictions, when will those go into effect? Say
somebody has a flight scheduled next week. They were planning to do
individual people-to-people travel. It’s too late to get a group.
Do they cancel their flight? How does that affect those people?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Again, none of the changes will go into effect until the
regulations are issued. One of the things that the Treasury Department
will cover in its regulations is how individuals who have started planning
travel to Cuba but have not actually completed that travel, how they will be
affected. That's something we're going to be working with them on.
But that is something that will be spelled out by the Treasury
Department.
Q Is there a
timeline for making progress?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: It requires within
30 days for them to initiate the process, but then the process takes as
long as it takes.
Q Can you
explain the administration’s thinking on the big picture? Why this is
sort of done in like almost a half-measure? Why not -- if you're so
concerned about the human rights situation there, why not cut off formal
diplomatic relations, revert the embassy back to an interest section, and reinstate
wet foot, dry foot? Why not do that?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Well, I think that's very much what we've been talking about,
that we want this relationship to be one in which we can encourage the Cuban people through economic
interaction, and that that process is -- hopefully has been started.
You can't put the genie back in the bottle 100 percent. And so I
think this is an effort to move what the President has called a very, very bad
deal.
It’s not that he’s opposed
to any deal with Cuba; he’s opposed to a bad deal with Cuba. And to start
the process of making it clear to the regime that there are very specific
benchmarks that they're going to need to meet if they want to continue this
kind of relationship.
Q Thank you.
So just to be clear, the embassy will remain in the place that it is?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: There are not changes to that status.
Q Sorry, one
other --
Q Ambassador?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: We don't have an ambassador.
Q And one
other, will you re-designate Cuba the sponsor of terrorism?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That's not
in this memorandum.
Q Will the
new policy address U.S. fugitives living in Cuba?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The new policy reiterates the importance of extraditing those
fugitives and returning them to justice, and directs the Attorney General to
submit a report on those efforts.
Q What about
political prisoners? Is there anything that affects -- is the President
going to call for that tomorrow, for releasing political prisoners from Cuban
prisons, or anything within this that speaks to that?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: All I’dsay is that absolutely, I think to my colleague’s
comment about -- someone asked the question how does it change. As soon
as there are free and fair elections, and the political prisoners are freed,
then they’ll have direct change to the policy.
And regarding the question earlier on the
private sector and wanting to continue to encourage engagement in the private
sector, by all means, that's what this President’s directive will do.
Our concern is that the
loopholes the Obama administration have left and was not enforcing is that many of the transactions were
benefiting the Cuban military, which is continuing to repress the people.
So the directive that this will enforce will allow business-to-business
engagement, but it will make sure that those profits and flow of money are not
going to benefit the Cuban military.
The military does not
have role of repressing the people.
Miami fantasy.
Q I want to
follow up on that. Because GAESA, the Cuban-military-owned intelligence
company -- what percent -- like, how big are they when it comes to the Cuban
economy? Like how large are they?
Q Is this
restricted to GAESA or it this broader?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The prohibition on direct financial transactions is on Cuban
military, intelligence and security service, and entities that they control,
which, as I understand the situation, does include GAESA.
And in terms of what share
they are of the Cuban economy -- I know they have a monopoly on various sectors
of the economy.
Q So you're
talking about -- you want to engage with the Cuban government if the regime
becomes less repressive, but why is there a particular concern on human rights
abuses in Cuba when this administration has been engaging with Saudi Arabia and lots of
other regimes that don't have great human rights records? Why Cuba, in particular?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I think the President has made clear that he will look toward repressive regimes in this
hemisphere and believes that his comments stand from September 2016 when
he said that the Cuba policy needs to change.
Q So we can
expect this administration to be taking an aggressive stance based on human
rights with other regimes?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I think that this administration will continue to take
aggressive stands. But I’m not commenting here on what his foreign policy
will be toward other countries right now.
Q Just a
final follow-up -- for people who, let's say, have a family member in Cuba --
you need to travel, you've got a family member dying -- what happens to those
people? What kind of penalties go along with going outside of --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Family travel is one of the other categories of travel that is
already authorized under the regulations and will continue to be authorized.
Q How much
help did Marco Rubio provide in shaping this policy? And who else did you
consult in shaping it?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: As I mentioned before, we consulted many members of Congress.
Certainly Senator Rubio has been very helpful to us in this process.
But we've consulted
those who are part of coalitions that, again, support agricultural exports to
Cuba. We've also consulted some on a bipartisan basis. And
I'll kind of leave it to them to offer what their level of assistance has been.
I think you'll being seeing more of that come forward in the next day or
two as those who have been helping us come forward to talk about their
engagement. But Senator Rubio was certainly central to helping us with
this policy.
Q I just had
two questions. The first is if this is all going to impact -- the Obama
administration lifted or enabled people to bring more souvenirs, rum, cigars,
that kind of thing back. Is there's any impact on that policy
specifically? And then secondly, if you could at all lay out some of the
other exemptions in addition to cruise ports and airports because obviously the
military controls huge swaths of the economy.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: There
aren't any changes to the regulations on what items Americans can bring back
from Cuba. The other exemptions -- you'll see the full list
tomorrow, but they include transactions related to the operation of the U.S.
embassy or the naval station at Guantanamo Bay, transactions related to
promotion of Cuban democracy, of expanding access to telecommunications access,
Internet access to the Cuban people. Again, you'll -- I don't have the
full list in front of me, but you'll see that tomorrow.
Q How much
money has flown from Cuban military and intelligence services through the
channels that you're now going to block in recent years?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I think we'd have to refer that to the Department of the
Treasury.
Q Can you
give (inaudible) intelligence cooperation that some say flourished under the
Obama policy? And then on the Defense Ministry owning Old Havana -- are
payments to those banned as well?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I'm not going to comment on intelligence operations in this
context. I think that, again, if the Cuban government would like this
kind of relationship to continue, the means to achieve that is firmly in their
court.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: And on the question about hotels owned by the armed forces of
Cuba -- yes, the
prohibition on direct transactions with the Cuban military would encompass
that. One of the pieces of the policy is that the State Department
would create a list of entities owned by the Cuban military, intelligence and
security services so individuals can adjust their plans accordingly.
Again, the policy intent
is to steer money away
from the Cuban military and towards the Cuban people. So your individual who travels
to Cuba and does not stay in one of those hotels would not be affected.
But the individuals seeking to stay in military hotels -- that would not
be allowed.
How steer money to
Cuban people?
Bar use of hotels;
confusion over individuals who are mostly prohibited, except Cuban Americans
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Some members of Congress pointed out that if Cubans continue to
ship arms to North Korea and continue to fuel chaos in Venezuela, it’s hard to
see what the dividends are of that cooperation.
Q I was
wondering, just to follow up on that, do you envisage any carve-outs for
existing investments in Cuba? Say if I’m the CEO of Starwood, should I be
worried about losing millions that I’ve already invested?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That will be handled in the specifics of the regulations that
the Treasury and the Commerce Department craft pursuant to the policy.
However, one of the administration’s intent has been to not disrupt the existing
business that has occurred or, again, to the question about travelers, who have
already booked their plans.
Q There may
be exceptions?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The specifics will be handled in the regulations that Treasury
and Commerce issue.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: And actually, can I quick add something on that? On
Whitehouse.gov we’ll have sort of a landing page where it will link to all of
the relevant agencies that have their individual reports on how this is going
to affect their operations tomorrow -- because it’s more than you would imagine.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: One last question right here.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: It should be right with the speech.
Q Two quick
questions. (Inaudible) -- what does that look like? And second, can
you give us some examples of the benchmarks you are talking about that you want
the government to meet?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: My colleague laid those out. It’s free elections,
releasing prisoners. You could get into things such as direct pay for Cuban workers.
Q Are they
going to be really specific?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I think they will be more general tomorrow, and then if this is
a dialogue the Cuban Government wants to have, we can get into the specifics of
what it would look like.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I was going to say I think releasing political prisoners and
free and fair elections are pretty specific.
Q Can you
answer the question on enforcement, please?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:
On how it is more strictly adhering to the statutory ban on tourism?
Again, the ending
people-to-people, individual people-to-people travel is one way that is done.
That is a category of travel that is particularly ripe for abuse.
So directing the Treasury to change its regulations to ensure that anyone
who goes to people-to-people travel does so as part of a group, is one way to
ensure that the individuals who travel to Cuba to engage in a schedule of
activities actually do so and aren’t sitting on the beach.
Distrust of American
motives and actions
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Just a reminder. This background briefing is embargoed
until 9:00 p.m. tonight. Thank you all very much for joining us.
END
5:02 P.M. EDT
5:02 P.M. EDT
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