U.S.-Cuban aviation deal possible this year, official says
By Daniel Trotta
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba and the United States advanced toward restoring
scheduled airline service during two days of talks that concluded in
Havana on Tuesday, with the potential to reach a deal this year, a U.S.
official said.
"One more meeting might be enough to finalize an arrangement. I can't be
sure," said the U.S. official, who was familiar with the talks and spoke
on the condition of anonymity.
The two sides planned to meet again, possibly before the end of this
year and most likely in Washington, the official told Reuters.
Scheduled commercial airline service has been suspended for decades as a
result of Cold War animosity, but both sides quickly made resumption a
priority upon detente last December.
Charter flights have long connected the United States and Cuba. Then
Washington initiated new rules in January that more easily permit U.S.
airlines to fly to Cuba.
However, U.S. and Cuban officials first need to negotiate a new
arrangement before restarting scheduled service in which customers could
book travel directly with airlines.
After that informal deal is reached, the two sides have agreed to work
on updating a 1953 civil aviation agreement that is still valid but
obsolete.
Officials from six U.S. government agencies met with counterparts from
the Cuban Foreign Ministry and the Cuban Institute of Civil Aviation on
Monday and Tuesday, the official said.
Safety and security cooperation was well advanced, largely because
existing charter flights already meet U.S. Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) and Transportation Safety Administration (TSA)
standards, the official said.
General U.S. tourism to Cuba is banned by the U.S. trade embargo of Cuba
but certain Americans are allowed to go on specially sanctioned travel.
U.S. President Barack Obama has relaxed those restrictions, leading to a
boom in U.S. citizen travel to Cuba, which is up more than 60 percent
this year with 106,607 Americans arriving as of Sept. 20.
The market would grow further if the U.S. Congress were to lift either
the tourism ban or the embargo.
"We don't have a deadline. We're eager. Our carriers are eager," the
U.S. official said about reaching a deal. "Both sides see it as positive
in and of itself but positive also as a signal of progress in the
broader relationship."Major U.S. airlines including JetBlue Airways
Corp, American Airlines Group Inc, Delta Air Lines Inc and United Air
Lines have all expressed interest in scheduled service to Cuba.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
Source: U.S.-Cuban aviation deal possible this year, official says -
Yahoo News -
http://news.yahoo.com/u-cuban-aviation-deal-possible-official-says-015955363--finance.html
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