Analysis: If attacks aim to divide US-Cuba, they’re working
WASHINGTON — When Americans started falling ill last year in Havana, the victims of eerie, invisible attacks, investigators seized on a key question: Who had the motive to drive the United States and Cuba apart?
Nearly a year later, the U.S. hasn’t unraveled the riddle. But whoever is to blame, the plot appears to be working.
Less than three years have passed since the longtime enemies began an ambitious diplomatic experiment, restoring formal ties despite lingering resentments and potent political opposition on both sides of the Florida Straits. Despite all that, a delicate detente took hold in 2015 and has slowly but steadily progressed.
Now the experiment has been abruptly upended.