After a joint press conference with President Obama in Cuba, Raul Castro shook hands with the United States leader and tried to lift the arm of the president in a triumphant salute. But Obama’s hand and wrist went limp as Castro lifted it up, making for an awkward exchange at the end of their historic press conference. View post on imgur.com At one point during the press conference, Castro interrupted Obama’s answer to a multi-party question, apparently confused about who was expected to answer. “Excuse me,” Obama said, winking to the cameras as he looked over at Castro. Obama winks after Castro interrupts him during press conference pic.twitter.com/qcz8aH3nmS — Charlie Spiering (@charliespiering) March 21, 2016 Castro agreed to answer a question from one reporter, CNN’s Jim Acosta, but Obama urged him to answer a question from MSNBC reporter Andrea Mitchell as well, calling her ‘one of our most esteemed journalists in America.’”
Category: 2016 Election
President Obama: "We've Reached Havana"
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President Obama sent the following message to the White House email list to reflect on his historic visit to Cuba.?If?you didn’t get the President’s message, sign up for email updates here.?
¡Hola desde Cuba! Michelle, the girls, and I are here in Havana on our first full day in Cuba. Cubans have lined the streets to welcome us, and it’s humbling to be the first U.S. president in nearly 90 years to visit a country and a people just 90 miles from our shores.
Like so many Americans, I’ve only known the isolation that has existed between our two governments. I was born in 1961, the year of the Bay of Pigs invasion. A year later, a Cold War confrontation over Cuba pushed the world as close as it’s ever been to nuclear war. As the decades passed, the mistrust between our governments resulted in heartache for our two peoples, including Cuban Americans, many of whom have endured decades of separation from their homeland and relatives.
I’ve come to Havana to extend the hand of friendship to the Cuban people. I’m here to bury the last vestige of the Cold War in the Americas and to forge a new era of understanding to help improve the daily lives of the Cuban people.
There continue to be real and important differences between our governments, including profound differences on the way to promote safety, security, opportunity, and human rights. But there’s so much Americans and Cubans share — our cultures and passions, our hopes for the future, not to mention a love of baseball.
I know one visit, and one president, cannot erase the decades of history that have left so many Cubans in poverty or exile. But sometimes the most important changes begin with the smallest step. I believe in the Cuban people and their desire to build a future of their own choosing. And I believe that changing the way we do things between our countries will, over time, help make that possible.
So I’m looking forward to meeting and hearing directly from Cubans from all walks of life. And I’m confident that, working together with the Cuban people, our two countries can begin a new journey together that delivers progress for both our peoples.
Thank you,
President Barack Obama
Read more:
On Medium: “Day One in Photos: The First U.S. President in Cuba in 88 Years”
On Medium: “Engaging the Cuban People: Here’s What President Obama Will Be Doing in Cuba”
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Tanya Somanader
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