At precisely 10 this morning, the Cuban flag will flutter for the first time in more than half a century over its stately old mission on Sixteenth Street — marking the opening of Washington’s newest embassy in years.
The White House’s announcement Wednesday of charting a “new course” in its relations with Cuba drew immediate response from decision- and opinion-makers in Puerto Rico, which agreed for the most part that pulling the neighboring island country out of its isolated state will present challenges and opportunities in years to come.
When Miguel Coyula discusses Cuba’s struggling economy, he sounds more like a Miami-based critic of the Castro regime than a retired Cuban official visiting the United States on a lecture tour, then going back home to Havana.
WASHINGTON — Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) is as liberal on the political spectrum as his Republican colleague from Arizona, Sen. Jeff Flake, is conservative. But there’s one issue both lawmakers readily agree on: it’s time to relax U.S. policy on Cuba.
“En 2025, Puerto Rico alcanzó nuevas cotas, reafirmando el lugar de la isla como uno de los principales destinos turísticos mundiales. destino. Más allá de los hitos y los momentos destacados, el poder de Puerto Rico reside en su ritmo: la fusión de la historia, la brillantez culinaria y la energía cultural.”
— Storm Tussey, director de mercadotecnia, Discover Puerto Rico

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