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Canada–Cuba relations

The Canada–Cuba relations are the bilateral relations between Canada and Cuba. Informal trade relations between the colonies of Atlantic Canada and the Captaincy General of Cuba have existed since the 18th century. The informal trading relationship between Canada and Cuba continued into the 20th century, with diplomatic relations formally established between the two countries in 1945.

Canada–Cuba relations

Canada

Cuba
Diplomatic mission
Canadian Embassy, HavanaCuban Embassy, Ottawa
Envoy
Ambassador Perry Calderwood[1]Ambassador Josefina Vidal

Diplomatic relations between the two countries remain uninterrupted since their establishment in 1945, with Canada being one of only two countries in the Americas that did not sever relations with Cuba (other than Mexico) after the Cuban Revolution in 1959. Relations between Canada and Cuba have occasionally been a source of contention for Canada-United States relations.

Both countries maintain embassies in the other's capital city, in addition to consulates in other cities. The two countries also share a significant trading relationship with Cuba serving as Canada's second-largest export partner in the Caribbean/Central American region, and Canada serving as Cuba's third largest export market.

History edit

Trade relations between Canada and Cuba date back to the 18th century, with vessels from Atlantic Canada trading cod and beer for rum and sugar in Cuba.[2]

After the United States terminated the Canadian–American Reciprocity Treaty in 1866, the governments of British North America sent trade missions throughout Latin America, including Cuba. The trade mission arrived in Cuba on 17 March 1866.[3] Other attempts to open Cuba's markets to Canadian exports were made in 1876, although Spanish, British, and later U.S. economic interests prevented Canada from fulfilling that objective.[4]

After the Spanish–American War and the handover of Cuba from Spain to the U.S., the United States Military Government in Cuba passed a series of decrees that permitted the chartering of foreign banks there. Canadian chartered banks, like the Royal Bank of Canada and the Scotiabank, acted on these changes quickly and established a presence in Cuba.[4]

20th century edit

The Republic of Cuba opened its first diplomatic offices in Canada in 1903, in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia; to promote salt cod and rum trade between the two countries. In 1909, the Canadian government opened a commercial office in Havana.[5] In 1931, the Cuban government established a consulate in Montreal.[5]

Canadian financial institutions saw significant growth in their investments during the early 20th century, with the Royal Bank of Canada owning 16 sugar mills and 120 hectares (300 acres) of fertile growing land for sugar cane in 1923. By 1958, more than 70 per cent of all life insurance policies held by Cuban nationals were underwritten by Canadian financial institutions, including Confederation Life and Sun Life Financial.[5]

In 1942, Cuban president Fulgencio Batista announced his intentions to formally establish diplomatic relations with Canada and the Soviet Union.[5] Diplomatic relations were formally established between the two countries in 1945. Cuba was the first country in the Caribbean selected by Canada for a diplomatic mission.[2]

Post-Cuban Revolution edit

Canada formally announced its recognition of the new Cuban government on 8 January 1959, the day the rebel army entered Havana. Although some Canadian officials expressed concern about the revolutionary tribunals taking place, the Canadian government maintained a policy of non-interference with Cuba.[6] Diplomatic relations between Canada and Cuba remained uninterrupted in the aftermath of the Cuban Revolution, and is one of only two countries in the Americas, alongside Mexico, that maintained uninterrupted relations with Cuba after the revolution.[2][7] John Diefenbaker, the Prime Minister of Canada, was a staunch anti-communist, however, he maintained that relations could be continued "despite the philosophical differences between [Cuba's] communist regime and the West..., and that Canada should hardly be required to tighten its trade restrictions above and beyond those of other Latin American nations."[8] Although Canada maintained relations with the new Cuban government, the Canadian government's reaction to early Cuban attempts to improve relations were cold and cautious.[6]

 
CBC/Radio-Canada's journalist and future Premier of Quebec, René Lévesque, interviews Fidel Castro during his trip to Montreal in late April 1959.

In February 1959, the Cuban government requested ten Royal Canadian Mounted Police members to assist them in training Cuba's police and internal security services.[6] On 26 April 1959, the Prime Minister of Cuba, Fidel Castro,[note 1] visited Montreal to participate in a toy drive for Cuban children.[9] Representatives from the Royal Bank of Canada and Sun Line Financial also met with Castro during the event.[6] In addition to inviting Castro, the event's organizers, the Junior Chamber of Commerce of Montreal, also invited several members of the Canadian government to greet Castro, although those contacted refused to do so.[9]

After the U.S. instituted economic sanctions against Cuba, the Cuban government looked at Canada as an alternate trading partner for raw materials, machinery, parts and other supplies traditionally sourced from the United States.[10] As a result, Canadian businesses fared much better than other foreign entities with regard to nationalization in Cuba. In banking, 23 branches of the Royal Bank of Canada and eight branches of Scotiabank were the only banking establishments exempted from the Cuban government's nationalization efforts in October 1960.[11] A Cuban commercial mission was formally dispatched to Canada in December 1960.[12]

Continued trade with Cuba also fell in line with policies pursued by the Diefenbaker government; expanding Canada's trade relations to include members of the Soviet Bloc and mainland China; as well as promoting the idea that Canada's foreign policy was not mirroring the foreign policy of the United States.[13][8] In light of the U.S. embargo, the Canadian government also believed "it was up to countries like Canada and the United Kingdom to do what they could to maintain the links with Havana," and prevent the U.S. from driving Cuba completely into the Soviet camp.[14] On 23 December 1960, Diefenbaker outlined the Canadian government's policy of trade with Cuba. The policy made clear that Canada would limit the trade of arms and other related equipment of strategic significance, although they would not limit trading non-strategic goods.[14][15]

 
John Diefenbaker, Prime Minister of Canada, decided to maintain relations and continue trade with Cuba after the Cuban Revolution.

The choice to maintain relations with the revolutionary Cuban government served as a point of contention for Canada-U.S. relations in the decades following the Cuban Revolution. Canada saw significant pressure to end cordial relations with the Cuban government, especially after the Cuban commercial mission was warmly received in December 1960. To safeguard Canada-Cuba relations, the Cuban ambassador to Canada, Americo Cruz, informed the Cuban government to not "show off our good relations," to help alleviate U.S. diplomatic pressure against Canada.[16] From January 1962, the Kennedy administration began to re-open the issue of isolating Cuba and internationalizing the embargo with Canadian officials and other NATO allies.[17] The Canadian government looked to other NATO and American allies for support over its Cuban policy, in relation to the United States.[14]

Although the Canadian government supported continued trade with Cuba, it did not provide the Cuban government with much political support. The Canadian government's response was muted after the Bay of Pigs Invasion. Although it acknowledged the invasion was financed by the United States, the Canadian government refused to condemn the U.S. for its role in the invasion; having instead informed the Cuban ambassador it had "not done enough to improve its relations with the United States," and that it believed they needed to "reach an agreement with the United States to save the Revolution."[16] Cruz had found the Canadian government's reaction to the invasion and its subsequent denial of humanitarian aid eyeopening, as it revealed to him that the Cuban government could not expect much political support from Canada.[18]

Cuban Missile Crisis edit

Canada played a minor role in the Cuban Missile Crisis, with the Royal Canadian Navy assisting the United States, and other NATO allies in searching the North Atlantic Ocean for Soviet vessels from 24 October to the end of the crisis.[19] The Canadian government also provided the United States intelligence on Cuba, with Canadian diplomats having collected intelligence on military installations and other strategic elements. Canadian diplomats were dispatched to confirm the installation of missiles in Cuba in October 1962.[20]

However, Diefenbaker's desire to maintain an independent foreign policy from the United States during the Cuban Missile Crisis contributed towards his defeat in the 1963 Canadian federal election. Prior to making a public televised announcement regarding the Cuban quarantine on 22 October 1962, Kennedy had called Diefenbaker to inform him about the plan, and to request Canadian Forces be placed on DEFCON-3.[19] Diefenbaker in turn was angered that his government was not consulted earlier and questioned Kennedy for further proof, and to first send a United Nations team to confirm it.[19] The issue led to a two-day debate in Diefenbaker's cabinet, with Minister of National Defence Douglas Harkness advocating that Canada follow the United States in raising its military readiness, given their "obligations" as members of NATO, and NORAD.[19]

Harkness's position eventually gained the support from Diefenbaker's cabinet as Soviet ships approached the American quarantine zone, and other NATO members began to voice their support for the United States.[19] DEFCON-3 was formally authorized by Diefenbaker on 24 October.[19]

Diefenbaker's public perception in Canada suffered from the crisis, with the Canadian public viewing Diefenbaker as indecisive.[19] The perception as an indecisive leader, and his refusal to accept nuclear-armed CIM-10 Bomarc missiles, led to his eventual defeat to Lester B. Pearson's Liberal Party of Canada in the 1963 election.[19]

Post-Cuban Missile Crisis edit

Although Diefenbaker was defeated in the 1963 election, his policy with Cuba was continued by the Liberal Party most notably during Pierre Trudeau tenure as prime minister, who long held the opinion that Canada needed to establish a foreign policy, "independent of American influence".[7] The Canadian government was critical of the United States embargo against Cuba during the 1960s and 1970s, objecting to American attempts to block trade to Cuba by Canadian-based American subsidiaries.[21]

However, Canadian diplomats also conducted intelligence-gathering missions in Cuba on behalf of the United States. The intelligence-sharing arrangement was formalized after Kennedy met Pearson at a summit in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, and asked whether the Canadian government would abet U.S. intelligence-gathering efforts in Cuba. These activities included monitoring Soviet compliance to withdraw its missiles, and surveilling the Soviet's continued informal presence in Cuba. This intelligence-gathering arrangement continued for several years into Trudeau's tenure as Canada's prime minister.[22]

In 1975, the United States passed legislation that loosened the restrictions of its embargo, permitting Canadian and other foreign subsidiaries of American-based companies to conduct trade with Cuba.[21]

In 1976, Trudeau spent three days in Cuba and sparked a personal friendship with Castro.[7][23] The visit was also the first by a Western nation to Cuba since 1960.[23] Trudeau's trip to Cuba was criticized by Diefenbaker, given Cuba's involvement in the Angolan Civil War. Remarks made by Trudeau in Cuba, notably "Viva Cuba! Viva Fidel Castro," was also criticized by Diefenbaker, and Thomas Cossitt, a Canadian Member of Parliament.[7] In his memoirs, Trudeau noted that Castro downplayed Cuba's involvement in Angola during his visit, and he had only realized the extent of Cuba's involvement after returning to Ottawa. Shortly after his visit to Cuba, Trudeau cut foreign aid to Cuba.[7]

In January 1977, Canadian-Cuban relations were strained after details were made public that the Cuban government used a consular mission in Montreal for intelligence-gathering purposes.[21] However, the consulate had been under surveillance by Canadian law enforcement as early as 1972, with Canadian authorities already aware of the Cuban mission's ulterior uses for the building.[21] Although Canadian authorities monitored the Cuban consulate, authorities did not take any action against consulate officials until 1977, when details of Cuban espionage were disclosed to the public, forcing authorities to act and expel them from the country.[21] Five Cuban nationals were expelled from Canada, including three diplomats.[21] In a statement of admission, the Cuban government stated it used the consulate in Montreal for intelligence gathering, although noted its activities were directed against Cuba's "enemies," including the United States government and the CIA.[21]

In 1984, the Canadian government passed the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act, a law designed to dissuade Canadian-based American subsidiaries from taking part in the American economic embargo of Cuba.[24]

1990s edit

In 1994, a joint venture was formed between the Cuban Nickel Union and the Canadian firm Sherritt International, which operates a mining and processing plant on the island in Moa.[25] A second enterprise, Cobalt Refinery Co. Inc., was created in Alberta for nickel refining.

Canada, in addition to the European Union, objected to the passage of the Helms-Burton Act in the U.S. Congress in 1996, specifically Title III, a provision that permitted Americans whose properties were nationalized by the Cuban government, to sue individuals that are presently using it.[24] The Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Lloyd Axworthy stated "Canada shares the U.S. objectives of improving human rights standards and moving to more representative government in Cuba. But we are concerned that the Helms-Burton Act takes the wrong approach. That is why we have been working with other countries to uphold the principles of international law".[26][27]

In response to the Helms-Burton Act, the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act was amended to permit Canadians sued under the Helms-Burton Act, to counter-sue in Canadian courts. The resulting amendment also found those that paid damages under the Helms-Burton Act to be liable to fines and imprisonment in Canada.[24] In a satirical response to the Helms-Burton Act, a private member's bill known as the Godfrey-Milliken Bill was introduced in the House of Commons of Canada in response to the extraterritoriality of the Helms-Burton Act.[28][29] The proposed bill would have allowed descendants of United Empire Loyalists who fled the American Revolution to be able to reclaim land and property that was confiscated by the American government in the 1700s. Although the Helms-Burton Act went into effect in 1996, enactment of Title III was postponed until April 2019.[24][30][31]

During the mid-1990s, Canada and Cuba reached an agreement that saw the Cuban government compensate Canadians whose properties were expropriated after the Cuban Revolution.[24] Emergency economic reforms made during the Special Period in Cuba, allowed for a significant number of Canadian businesses to invest in Cuba. Increased economic activity between the two countries prompted a 41-hour official visit to Havana by Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien in November 1998.[32] In the months prior to his arrival to Cuba, U.S. President Bill Clinton urged Chrétien to raise concerns about human rights to Castro for his planned visit to Cuba at the 24th G8 summit.[33] Chrétien faced some criticism from the Canadian public for not publicly voicing his concerns over human rights in Cuba, although he privately discussed the issue with Castro, as well as demanded the release of four specific political dissidents.[33] However, the resulting discussion resulted in a "chill" in relations between the two leaders, with Cuban officials rebuffing Chrétien's efforts to free the political dissidents.[34]

Castro travelled to Montreal in 2000 to serve as one of Trudeau's pallbearers at his funeral.[35]

21st century edit

In 2001, the Canadian government protested American preclearance customs agents in Canadian airports who tried to catch American citizens travelling to Cuba in defiance of U.S. law.[36] In April 2009, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper expressed support for the U.S. government's decision to lift Cuban-American travel and remittance to Cuba.[37]

During the 2010 United Nations Security Council election, Cuban diplomats to the United Nations lobbied Latin American ambassadors to the United Nations General Assembly to vote for Canada.[38] In 2013, the Canadian government hosted bilateral talks between the governments of Cuba and the United States. Seven negotiation sessions were held between the American and Cuban governments in Ottawa and Toronto.[38] The following negotiations resulted in the Cuban thaw.[39]

In November 2016, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, made a 30-hour official visit to Cuba.[32]

Economic relations edit

As of May 2018, Cuba is presently Canada's second largest export market in the Caribbean/Central American region;[40] with bilateral trade between the two countries averaging approximately C$1 billion annually.[40][41] In 2000, Canada was Cuba's second-largest merchandise trading partner after Spain.[42] However, by 2009, Canada had become Cuba's fourth largest merchandise trading partner after Venezuela, China, and Spain.[42] Canada remained Cuba's third largest export market after Venezuela and China, and the eighth largest source of imported goods to Cuba in 2009; with declining Canadian imports in the late-2000s attributed to Cuba's loss of purchasing power after the Cuban government implemented austerity measures.[34] Canada primarily supplies Cuba with agricultural goods; and equipment for energy generation, mining, telecommunications, and transportation.[37] Nickel accounts for the majority of Cuban imports to Canada, although cigars, frozen lobsters, and rum are also imported from Cuba.[37]

The size of the trade market between Canada and Cuba has attracted major Canadian investments to Cuba.[43] Canada is one of Cuba's largest foreign direct investors, with Canadian businesses forming 26 joint-venture economic associations within Cuba in 2008.[42] In 2010, there were 15 joint ventures in Cuba involving Canadian businesses; with Canadian businesses holding the second largest number of joint-venture agreements in Cuba after companies based in Spain.[44] Canadian businesses in Cuba are largely invested in mining, power, oil and gas, agri-food, and the tourism industry.[40] Sherritt International, a Canadian natural resource company is the largest investor in Cuba, with a diversified portfolio in agriculture, energy, mining, and oil production.[34] Canadian businesses have arguably been able to benefit from the US-embargo of Cuba, with Canadian companies that operate in Cuba facing no direct competition from their US counterparts.[45] However, the US-embargo has limited the number of Canadian companies operating in Cuba, with Canadian businesses that have a large presence in the US being unable to operate in Cuba without risk of conflicting with the Helms-Burton Act.[43]

Economic aid edit

Canada funds international development programs to strengthen Cuba's agricultural sector, and improve food security in the country.[46] In addition to the agricultural sector, the Canadian assistance program includes funding for technical training and certification for workers in oil and gas, petrochemical exploration, power engineering, pipefitting, and renewable energy industries.[46] Funding was also provided for the training of auditors to solidify "greater transparency and accountability," in Cuban government agencies and state-run enterprises.[46]

Between 1994 and 2010, the Canadian government has invested C$136 million of foreign aid into development projects and initiatives in Cuba.[44]

Tourism edit

Approximately 1.2 million Canadians visit Cuba annually.[41] Canadian tourists account for 30 per cent of all tourists who visit Cuba per year, making the country the largest source of tourists for Cuba.[2] Cuba is the fifth most-popular overseas destination for Canadian tourists;[40] with Canadian tourists spending approximately C$780 million in Cuba annually.[47] A number of cultural and university exchange programs also exists between the two countries, with Canadian universities holding the largest number of non-Spanish-speaking university exchange programs in Cuba.[34]

Diplomatic representation edit

 
The Cuban embassy in Ottawa.

Canada has had an embassy in Havana since 1945. The current building was built in 1929 and used by Canada since 1961. It also provides consular assistance to Australian and Israeli nationals.[48] The embassy is located in the upscale district of Miramar in municipal area of Playa in Havana. Canadian consulates are also found in Varadero and Holguin.[49] due to these two locations being key destinations for Canadian tourists. Although Canada maintains diplomatic representation in Cuba, its embassy does not directly fund or facilitate any cultural or interpersonal exchange programs between the two countries.[2]

Cuba has an embassy in Ottawa and consulates in Montreal and Toronto.[50][51]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Castro governed Cuba as the Prime Minister of the country from 1959 to 1976. He governed the country as the President of the Council of State from 1976 to 2008.

References edit

  1. ^ "Diplomatic appointments - Perry Calderwood and Patrick Parisot". Global Affairs Canada. Government of Canada. 9 May 2019. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Canada - Cuba Relations". canadainternational.gc.ca. Embassy of Canada to Cuba. 25 March 2020. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  3. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 64.
  4. ^ a b Rodríguez 2010, p. 65.
  5. ^ a b c d Rodríguez 2010, p. 66.
  6. ^ a b c d Rodríguez 2010, p. 67.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Viva Cuba: Trudeau goes abroad". CBC Archives. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  8. ^ a b Molinaro, Dennis (2009). "Calculated Diplomacy': John Diefenbaker and the Origins of Canada's Cuba Policy". Our Place in the Sun: Canada and Cuba in the Castro Era. University of Toronto Press. pp. 75–95. ISBN 978-0-8020-9666-1.
  9. ^ a b Neill, Brennan (28 November 2016). "How 1 man brought Fidel Castro to Montreal in April 1959". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  10. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 63.
  11. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 68.
  12. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 72.
  13. ^ McKercher 2012, p. 70.
  14. ^ a b c Rodríguez 2010, p. 71.
  15. ^ McKercher 2012, p. 71.
  16. ^ a b Rodríguez 2010, p. 73.
  17. ^ McKercher 2012, p. 72.
  18. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 74.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Stairs, Denis (9 September 2019). "Canada and the Cuban Missile Crisis". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  20. ^ Rodríguez 2010, p. 75.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Lavnie, Michael (16 January 1977). "Spy Scandal Is Souring Canadian-Cuban Relations". The Washington Post. Nash Holdings.
  22. ^ Posner, Michael (15 October 2012). "Canadian diplomats spied on Cuba for CIA in aftermath of missile crisis: envoy". www.theglobeandmail.com. The Globe and Mail.
  23. ^ a b Wright, Robert (2010). Three Nights in Havana: Pierre Trudeau, Fidel Castro and the Cold War World. HarperCollins Canada. ISBN 978-1-5546-8931-6.
  24. ^ a b c d e Walkom, Thomas (18 April 2019). "How Venezuela is impacting Canada's relations with Cuba". The Toronto Star. Torstar Corporation. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  25. ^ . Sherritt International Corporation. 2012. Archived from the original on 7 May 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  26. ^ . Online NewsHour. Public Broadcasting Service. 23 January 1997. Archived from the original on 26 October 2013. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  27. ^ Dmytryshyn, Ned (18 March 1996). "Ottawa Objects To Helms-Burton". The Militant. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-06-18. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  29. ^ "Private Member's Bill C-339". LEGISinfo. Parliament of Canada. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  30. ^ Wilson-Smith, Anthony (29 July 1996). "Clinton's concession". Maclean's. Rogers Digital Media. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  31. ^ "Update on the Helms-Burton Act and Canadians doing business in Cuba". Embassy of Canada to Cuba. Government of Canada. 18 April 2019. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  32. ^ a b Robert, Wright (26 November 2016). "Castro and Trudeau: a famous, but also fraught friendship". The Globe and Mail. The Woodbridge Company. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  33. ^ a b "Chrétien visits Cuba". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. 15 December 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
  34. ^ a b c d Spadoni & Sagebien 2013, p. 82.
  35. ^ . CNN.com. Cable News Network. 3 October 2000. Archived from the original on 28 September 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  36. ^ McGregor, Glen; Trickey, Mike (1 September 2001). "Canada opposes U.S. crackdown on Cuba visitors". International Bicycle Fund. Retrieved 10 June 2010.
  37. ^ a b c Spadoni & Sagebien 2013, p. 83.
  38. ^ a b Geddes, John (18 December 2014). "Canada's Cuban ties and the Washington-Havana thaw". Maclean's. Rogers Digital Media. Retrieved 17 August 2019.
  39. ^ Clark, Campbell (17 December 2014). "Facilitiating Dialogue: Canada plays host to secret U.S., Cuban meetings". The Globe and Mail. The Woodbridge Company. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  40. ^ a b c d "Bilateral relations: Canada - Cuba". canadainternational.gc.ca. Embassy of Canada to Cuba. May 2018. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  41. ^ a b Kwong, Mark (18 April 2018). "Cuba's next president won't be a Castro. Here's what that means for Canada". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  42. ^ a b c Spadoni & Sagebien 2013, p. 81.
  43. ^ a b Spadoni & Sagebien 2013, p. 87.
  44. ^ a b Wylie, Lana (October 2010). "Reassessing Canada's Relationship With Cuba in an Era of Change" (PDF). www.cigionline.org. Centre for International Governance Innovation. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  45. ^ Spadoni & Sagebien 2013, p. 88.
  46. ^ a b c "Canadian international assistance in Cuba". www.international.gc.ca. Government of Canada. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  47. ^ "Travel by Canadians to foreign countries, top 15 countries visited". www150.statcan.gc.ca. Statistics Canada. 8 April 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  48. ^ "Canada's embassy in Cuba decrepit, says audit". CTV News. BellMedia. 1 November 2009. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  49. ^ "Embassies and consulates: Cuba". Government of Canada. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  50. ^ . Embassy of Cuba in Canada. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba. Archived from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  51. ^ . Embassy of Cuba in Canada. Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba. Archived from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2012.

Further reading edit

  • McKercher, Asa (February 2012). "'The most serious problem'? Canada–US relations and Cuba, 1962". Cold War History. 12 (1): 69–88. doi:10.1080/14682745.2011.562202. S2CID 154301366.
  • Spadoni, Paolo; Sagebien, Julia (February 2013). "Will They Still Love Us Tomorrow? Canada-Cuba Business Relations and the End of the US Embargo". Thunderbird International Business Review. 55 (1): 77–93. doi:10.1002/tie.21524.
  • Rodríguez, Raúl Rodríguez (March 2010). "Canada and the Cuban revolution: Defining the rules of engagement 1959–1962". Canadian Foreign Policy Journal. 16 (1): 63–80. doi:10.1080/11926422.2010.9687295. S2CID 154931791.

External links edit

  • Embassy of Canada in Havana

canada, cuba, relations, bilateral, relations, between, canada, cuba, informal, trade, relations, between, colonies, atlantic, canada, captaincy, general, cuba, have, existed, since, 18th, century, informal, trading, relationship, between, canada, cuba, contin. The Canada Cuba relations are the bilateral relations between Canada and Cuba Informal trade relations between the colonies of Atlantic Canada and the Captaincy General of Cuba have existed since the 18th century The informal trading relationship between Canada and Cuba continued into the 20th century with diplomatic relations formally established between the two countries in 1945 Canada Cuba relationsCanada CubaDiplomatic missionCanadian Embassy HavanaCuban Embassy OttawaEnvoyAmbassador Perry Calderwood 1 Ambassador Josefina VidalDiplomatic relations between the two countries remain uninterrupted since their establishment in 1945 with Canada being one of only two countries in the Americas that did not sever relations with Cuba other than Mexico after the Cuban Revolution in 1959 Relations between Canada and Cuba have occasionally been a source of contention for Canada United States relations Both countries maintain embassies in the other s capital city in addition to consulates in other cities The two countries also share a significant trading relationship with Cuba serving as Canada s second largest export partner in the Caribbean Central American region and Canada serving as Cuba s third largest export market Contents 1 History 1 1 20th century 1 1 1 Post Cuban Revolution 1 1 2 Cuban Missile Crisis 1 1 3 Post Cuban Missile Crisis 1 1 4 1990s 1 2 21st century 2 Economic relations 2 1 Economic aid 2 2 Tourism 3 Diplomatic representation 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editTrade relations between Canada and Cuba date back to the 18th century with vessels from Atlantic Canada trading cod and beer for rum and sugar in Cuba 2 After the United States terminated the Canadian American Reciprocity Treaty in 1866 the governments of British North America sent trade missions throughout Latin America including Cuba The trade mission arrived in Cuba on 17 March 1866 3 Other attempts to open Cuba s markets to Canadian exports were made in 1876 although Spanish British and later U S economic interests prevented Canada from fulfilling that objective 4 After the Spanish American War and the handover of Cuba from Spain to the U S the United States Military Government in Cuba passed a series of decrees that permitted the chartering of foreign banks there Canadian chartered banks like the Royal Bank of Canada and the Scotiabank acted on these changes quickly and established a presence in Cuba 4 20th century edit The Republic of Cuba opened its first diplomatic offices in Canada in 1903 in Yarmouth Nova Scotia to promote salt cod and rum trade between the two countries In 1909 the Canadian government opened a commercial office in Havana 5 In 1931 the Cuban government established a consulate in Montreal 5 Canadian financial institutions saw significant growth in their investments during the early 20th century with the Royal Bank of Canada owning 16 sugar mills and 120 hectares 300 acres of fertile growing land for sugar cane in 1923 By 1958 more than 70 per cent of all life insurance policies held by Cuban nationals were underwritten by Canadian financial institutions including Confederation Life and Sun Life Financial 5 In 1942 Cuban president Fulgencio Batista announced his intentions to formally establish diplomatic relations with Canada and the Soviet Union 5 Diplomatic relations were formally established between the two countries in 1945 Cuba was the first country in the Caribbean selected by Canada for a diplomatic mission 2 Post Cuban Revolution edit Canada formally announced its recognition of the new Cuban government on 8 January 1959 the day the rebel army entered Havana Although some Canadian officials expressed concern about the revolutionary tribunals taking place the Canadian government maintained a policy of non interference with Cuba 6 Diplomatic relations between Canada and Cuba remained uninterrupted in the aftermath of the Cuban Revolution and is one of only two countries in the Americas alongside Mexico that maintained uninterrupted relations with Cuba after the revolution 2 7 John Diefenbaker the Prime Minister of Canada was a staunch anti communist however he maintained that relations could be continued despite the philosophical differences between Cuba s communist regime and the West and that Canada should hardly be required to tighten its trade restrictions above and beyond those of other Latin American nations 8 Although Canada maintained relations with the new Cuban government the Canadian government s reaction to early Cuban attempts to improve relations were cold and cautious 6 nbsp CBC Radio Canada s journalist and future Premier of Quebec Rene Levesque interviews Fidel Castro during his trip to Montreal in late April 1959 In February 1959 the Cuban government requested ten Royal Canadian Mounted Police members to assist them in training Cuba s police and internal security services 6 On 26 April 1959 the Prime Minister of Cuba Fidel Castro note 1 visited Montreal to participate in a toy drive for Cuban children 9 Representatives from the Royal Bank of Canada and Sun Line Financial also met with Castro during the event 6 In addition to inviting Castro the event s organizers the Junior Chamber of Commerce of Montreal also invited several members of the Canadian government to greet Castro although those contacted refused to do so 9 After the U S instituted economic sanctions against Cuba the Cuban government looked at Canada as an alternate trading partner for raw materials machinery parts and other supplies traditionally sourced from the United States 10 As a result Canadian businesses fared much better than other foreign entities with regard to nationalization in Cuba In banking 23 branches of the Royal Bank of Canada and eight branches of Scotiabank were the only banking establishments exempted from the Cuban government s nationalization efforts in October 1960 11 A Cuban commercial mission was formally dispatched to Canada in December 1960 12 Continued trade with Cuba also fell in line with policies pursued by the Diefenbaker government expanding Canada s trade relations to include members of the Soviet Bloc and mainland China as well as promoting the idea that Canada s foreign policy was not mirroring the foreign policy of the United States 13 8 In light of the U S embargo the Canadian government also believed it was up to countries like Canada and the United Kingdom to do what they could to maintain the links with Havana and prevent the U S from driving Cuba completely into the Soviet camp 14 On 23 December 1960 Diefenbaker outlined the Canadian government s policy of trade with Cuba The policy made clear that Canada would limit the trade of arms and other related equipment of strategic significance although they would not limit trading non strategic goods 14 15 nbsp John Diefenbaker Prime Minister of Canada decided to maintain relations and continue trade with Cuba after the Cuban Revolution The choice to maintain relations with the revolutionary Cuban government served as a point of contention for Canada U S relations in the decades following the Cuban Revolution Canada saw significant pressure to end cordial relations with the Cuban government especially after the Cuban commercial mission was warmly received in December 1960 To safeguard Canada Cuba relations the Cuban ambassador to Canada Americo Cruz informed the Cuban government to not show off our good relations to help alleviate U S diplomatic pressure against Canada 16 From January 1962 the Kennedy administration began to re open the issue of isolating Cuba and internationalizing the embargo with Canadian officials and other NATO allies 17 The Canadian government looked to other NATO and American allies for support over its Cuban policy in relation to the United States 14 Although the Canadian government supported continued trade with Cuba it did not provide the Cuban government with much political support The Canadian government s response was muted after the Bay of Pigs Invasion Although it acknowledged the invasion was financed by the United States the Canadian government refused to condemn the U S for its role in the invasion having instead informed the Cuban ambassador it had not done enough to improve its relations with the United States and that it believed they needed to reach an agreement with the United States to save the Revolution 16 Cruz had found the Canadian government s reaction to the invasion and its subsequent denial of humanitarian aid eyeopening as it revealed to him that the Cuban government could not expect much political support from Canada 18 Cuban Missile Crisis edit Canada played a minor role in the Cuban Missile Crisis with the Royal Canadian Navy assisting the United States and other NATO allies in searching the North Atlantic Ocean for Soviet vessels from 24 October to the end of the crisis 19 The Canadian government also provided the United States intelligence on Cuba with Canadian diplomats having collected intelligence on military installations and other strategic elements Canadian diplomats were dispatched to confirm the installation of missiles in Cuba in October 1962 20 However Diefenbaker s desire to maintain an independent foreign policy from the United States during the Cuban Missile Crisis contributed towards his defeat in the 1963 Canadian federal election Prior to making a public televised announcement regarding the Cuban quarantine on 22 October 1962 Kennedy had called Diefenbaker to inform him about the plan and to request Canadian Forces be placed on DEFCON 3 19 Diefenbaker in turn was angered that his government was not consulted earlier and questioned Kennedy for further proof and to first send a United Nations team to confirm it 19 The issue led to a two day debate in Diefenbaker s cabinet with Minister of National Defence Douglas Harkness advocating that Canada follow the United States in raising its military readiness given their obligations as members of NATO and NORAD 19 Harkness s position eventually gained the support from Diefenbaker s cabinet as Soviet ships approached the American quarantine zone and other NATO members began to voice their support for the United States 19 DEFCON 3 was formally authorized by Diefenbaker on 24 October 19 Diefenbaker s public perception in Canada suffered from the crisis with the Canadian public viewing Diefenbaker as indecisive 19 The perception as an indecisive leader and his refusal to accept nuclear armed CIM 10 Bomarc missiles led to his eventual defeat to Lester B Pearson s Liberal Party of Canada in the 1963 election 19 Post Cuban Missile Crisis edit Although Diefenbaker was defeated in the 1963 election his policy with Cuba was continued by the Liberal Party most notably during Pierre Trudeau tenure as prime minister who long held the opinion that Canada needed to establish a foreign policy independent of American influence 7 The Canadian government was critical of the United States embargo against Cuba during the 1960s and 1970s objecting to American attempts to block trade to Cuba by Canadian based American subsidiaries 21 However Canadian diplomats also conducted intelligence gathering missions in Cuba on behalf of the United States The intelligence sharing arrangement was formalized after Kennedy met Pearson at a summit in Hyannis Port Massachusetts and asked whether the Canadian government would abet U S intelligence gathering efforts in Cuba These activities included monitoring Soviet compliance to withdraw its missiles and surveilling the Soviet s continued informal presence in Cuba This intelligence gathering arrangement continued for several years into Trudeau s tenure as Canada s prime minister 22 In 1975 the United States passed legislation that loosened the restrictions of its embargo permitting Canadian and other foreign subsidiaries of American based companies to conduct trade with Cuba 21 In 1976 Trudeau spent three days in Cuba and sparked a personal friendship with Castro 7 23 The visit was also the first by a Western nation to Cuba since 1960 23 Trudeau s trip to Cuba was criticized by Diefenbaker given Cuba s involvement in the Angolan Civil War Remarks made by Trudeau in Cuba notably Viva Cuba Viva Fidel Castro was also criticized by Diefenbaker and Thomas Cossitt a Canadian Member of Parliament 7 In his memoirs Trudeau noted that Castro downplayed Cuba s involvement in Angola during his visit and he had only realized the extent of Cuba s involvement after returning to Ottawa Shortly after his visit to Cuba Trudeau cut foreign aid to Cuba 7 In January 1977 Canadian Cuban relations were strained after details were made public that the Cuban government used a consular mission in Montreal for intelligence gathering purposes 21 However the consulate had been under surveillance by Canadian law enforcement as early as 1972 with Canadian authorities already aware of the Cuban mission s ulterior uses for the building 21 Although Canadian authorities monitored the Cuban consulate authorities did not take any action against consulate officials until 1977 when details of Cuban espionage were disclosed to the public forcing authorities to act and expel them from the country 21 Five Cuban nationals were expelled from Canada including three diplomats 21 In a statement of admission the Cuban government stated it used the consulate in Montreal for intelligence gathering although noted its activities were directed against Cuba s enemies including the United States government and the CIA 21 In 1984 the Canadian government passed the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act a law designed to dissuade Canadian based American subsidiaries from taking part in the American economic embargo of Cuba 24 1990s edit In 1994 a joint venture was formed between the Cuban Nickel Union and the Canadian firm Sherritt International which operates a mining and processing plant on the island in Moa 25 A second enterprise Cobalt Refinery Co Inc was created in Alberta for nickel refining Canada in addition to the European Union objected to the passage of the Helms Burton Act in the U S Congress in 1996 specifically Title III a provision that permitted Americans whose properties were nationalized by the Cuban government to sue individuals that are presently using it 24 The Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Lloyd Axworthy stated Canada shares the U S objectives of improving human rights standards and moving to more representative government in Cuba But we are concerned that the Helms Burton Act takes the wrong approach That is why we have been working with other countries to uphold the principles of international law 26 27 In response to the Helms Burton Act the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act was amended to permit Canadians sued under the Helms Burton Act to counter sue in Canadian courts The resulting amendment also found those that paid damages under the Helms Burton Act to be liable to fines and imprisonment in Canada 24 In a satirical response to the Helms Burton Act a private member s bill known as the Godfrey Milliken Bill was introduced in the House of Commons of Canada in response to the extraterritoriality of the Helms Burton Act 28 29 The proposed bill would have allowed descendants of United Empire Loyalists who fled the American Revolution to be able to reclaim land and property that was confiscated by the American government in the 1700s Although the Helms Burton Act went into effect in 1996 enactment of Title III was postponed until April 2019 24 30 31 During the mid 1990s Canada and Cuba reached an agreement that saw the Cuban government compensate Canadians whose properties were expropriated after the Cuban Revolution 24 Emergency economic reforms made during the Special Period in Cuba allowed for a significant number of Canadian businesses to invest in Cuba Increased economic activity between the two countries prompted a 41 hour official visit to Havana by Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien in November 1998 32 In the months prior to his arrival to Cuba U S President Bill Clinton urged Chretien to raise concerns about human rights to Castro for his planned visit to Cuba at the 24th G8 summit 33 Chretien faced some criticism from the Canadian public for not publicly voicing his concerns over human rights in Cuba although he privately discussed the issue with Castro as well as demanded the release of four specific political dissidents 33 However the resulting discussion resulted in a chill in relations between the two leaders with Cuban officials rebuffing Chretien s efforts to free the political dissidents 34 Castro travelled to Montreal in 2000 to serve as one of Trudeau s pallbearers at his funeral 35 21st century edit In 2001 the Canadian government protested American preclearance customs agents in Canadian airports who tried to catch American citizens travelling to Cuba in defiance of U S law 36 In April 2009 Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper expressed support for the U S government s decision to lift Cuban American travel and remittance to Cuba 37 During the 2010 United Nations Security Council election Cuban diplomats to the United Nations lobbied Latin American ambassadors to the United Nations General Assembly to vote for Canada 38 In 2013 the Canadian government hosted bilateral talks between the governments of Cuba and the United States Seven negotiation sessions were held between the American and Cuban governments in Ottawa and Toronto 38 The following negotiations resulted in the Cuban thaw 39 In November 2016 Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made a 30 hour official visit to Cuba 32 Economic relations editAs of May 2018 Cuba is presently Canada s second largest export market in the Caribbean Central American region 40 with bilateral trade between the two countries averaging approximately C 1 billion annually 40 41 In 2000 Canada was Cuba s second largest merchandise trading partner after Spain 42 However by 2009 Canada had become Cuba s fourth largest merchandise trading partner after Venezuela China and Spain 42 Canada remained Cuba s third largest export market after Venezuela and China and the eighth largest source of imported goods to Cuba in 2009 with declining Canadian imports in the late 2000s attributed to Cuba s loss of purchasing power after the Cuban government implemented austerity measures 34 Canada primarily supplies Cuba with agricultural goods and equipment for energy generation mining telecommunications and transportation 37 Nickel accounts for the majority of Cuban imports to Canada although cigars frozen lobsters and rum are also imported from Cuba 37 The size of the trade market between Canada and Cuba has attracted major Canadian investments to Cuba 43 Canada is one of Cuba s largest foreign direct investors with Canadian businesses forming 26 joint venture economic associations within Cuba in 2008 42 In 2010 there were 15 joint ventures in Cuba involving Canadian businesses with Canadian businesses holding the second largest number of joint venture agreements in Cuba after companies based in Spain 44 Canadian businesses in Cuba are largely invested in mining power oil and gas agri food and the tourism industry 40 Sherritt International a Canadian natural resource company is the largest investor in Cuba with a diversified portfolio in agriculture energy mining and oil production 34 Canadian businesses have arguably been able to benefit from the US embargo of Cuba with Canadian companies that operate in Cuba facing no direct competition from their US counterparts 45 However the US embargo has limited the number of Canadian companies operating in Cuba with Canadian businesses that have a large presence in the US being unable to operate in Cuba without risk of conflicting with the Helms Burton Act 43 Economic aid edit Canada funds international development programs to strengthen Cuba s agricultural sector and improve food security in the country 46 In addition to the agricultural sector the Canadian assistance program includes funding for technical training and certification for workers in oil and gas petrochemical exploration power engineering pipefitting and renewable energy industries 46 Funding was also provided for the training of auditors to solidify greater transparency and accountability in Cuban government agencies and state run enterprises 46 Between 1994 and 2010 the Canadian government has invested C 136 million of foreign aid into development projects and initiatives in Cuba 44 Tourism edit Approximately 1 2 million Canadians visit Cuba annually 41 Canadian tourists account for 30 per cent of all tourists who visit Cuba per year making the country the largest source of tourists for Cuba 2 Cuba is the fifth most popular overseas destination for Canadian tourists 40 with Canadian tourists spending approximately C 780 million in Cuba annually 47 A number of cultural and university exchange programs also exists between the two countries with Canadian universities holding the largest number of non Spanish speaking university exchange programs in Cuba 34 Diplomatic representation edit nbsp The Cuban embassy in Ottawa Canada has had an embassy in Havana since 1945 The current building was built in 1929 and used by Canada since 1961 It also provides consular assistance to Australian and Israeli nationals 48 The embassy is located in the upscale district of Miramar in municipal area of Playa in Havana Canadian consulates are also found in Varadero and Holguin 49 due to these two locations being key destinations for Canadian tourists Although Canada maintains diplomatic representation in Cuba its embassy does not directly fund or facilitate any cultural or interpersonal exchange programs between the two countries 2 Cuba has an embassy in Ottawa and consulates in Montreal and Toronto 50 51 See also editCanada Caribbean relations Canada Latin America relations Cuban Canadian Foreign relations of Canada Foreign relations of CubaNotes edit Castro governed Cuba as the Prime Minister of the country from 1959 to 1976 He governed the country as the President of the Council of State from 1976 to 2008 References edit Diplomatic appointments Perry Calderwood and Patrick Parisot Global Affairs Canada Government of Canada 9 May 2019 Retrieved 28 July 2019 a b c d e Canada Cuba Relations canadainternational gc ca Embassy of Canada to Cuba 25 March 2020 Retrieved 17 September 2020 Rodriguez 2010 p 64 a b Rodriguez 2010 p 65 a b c d Rodriguez 2010 p 66 a b c d Rodriguez 2010 p 67 a b c d e Viva Cuba Trudeau goes abroad CBC Archives Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 2018 Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b Molinaro Dennis 2009 Calculated Diplomacy John Diefenbaker and the Origins of Canada s Cuba Policy Our Place in the Sun Canada and Cuba in the Castro Era University of Toronto Press pp 75 95 ISBN 978 0 8020 9666 1 a b Neill Brennan 28 November 2016 How 1 man brought Fidel Castro to Montreal in April 1959 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 29 July 2019 Rodriguez 2010 p 63 Rodriguez 2010 p 68 Rodriguez 2010 p 72 McKercher 2012 p 70 a b c Rodriguez 2010 p 71 McKercher 2012 p 71 a b Rodriguez 2010 p 73 McKercher 2012 p 72 Rodriguez 2010 p 74 a b c d e f g h Stairs Denis 9 September 2019 Canada and the Cuban Missile Crisis The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved 10 December 2019 Rodriguez 2010 p 75 a b c d e f g Lavnie Michael 16 January 1977 Spy Scandal Is Souring Canadian Cuban Relations The Washington Post Nash Holdings Posner Michael 15 October 2012 Canadian diplomats spied on Cuba for CIA in aftermath of missile crisis envoy www theglobeandmail com The Globe and Mail a b Wright Robert 2010 Three Nights in Havana Pierre Trudeau Fidel Castro and the Cold War World HarperCollins Canada ISBN 978 1 5546 8931 6 a b c d e Walkom Thomas 18 April 2019 How Venezuela is impacting Canada s relations with Cuba The Toronto Star Torstar Corporation Retrieved 25 July 2019 History of Sherritt Sherritt International Corporation 2012 Archived from the original on 7 May 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Online NewsHour Lloyd Axworthy Online NewsHour Public Broadcasting Service 23 January 1997 Archived from the original on 26 October 2013 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Dmytryshyn Ned 18 March 1996 Ottawa Objects To Helms Burton The Militant Retrieved 10 June 2010 Bill C 339 The Godfrey Milliken Bill Archived from the original on 2013 06 18 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Private Member s Bill C 339 LEGISinfo Parliament of Canada Retrieved 16 May 2012 Wilson Smith Anthony 29 July 1996 Clinton s concession Maclean s Rogers Digital Media Retrieved 25 July 2019 Update on the Helms Burton Act and Canadians doing business in Cuba Embassy of Canada to Cuba Government of Canada 18 April 2019 Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b Robert Wright 26 November 2016 Castro and Trudeau a famous but also fraught friendship The Globe and Mail The Woodbridge Company Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b Chretien visits Cuba The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada 15 December 2013 Retrieved 10 December 2019 a b c d Spadoni amp Sagebien 2013 p 82 Castro mourns for Trudeau who stood up for him CNN com Cable News Network 3 October 2000 Archived from the original on 28 September 2012 Retrieved 10 June 2010 McGregor Glen Trickey Mike 1 September 2001 Canada opposes U S crackdown on Cuba visitors International Bicycle Fund Retrieved 10 June 2010 a b c Spadoni amp Sagebien 2013 p 83 a b Geddes John 18 December 2014 Canada s Cuban ties and the Washington Havana thaw Maclean s Rogers Digital Media Retrieved 17 August 2019 Clark Campbell 17 December 2014 Facilitiating Dialogue Canada plays host to secret U S Cuban meetings The Globe and Mail The Woodbridge Company Retrieved 25 July 2019 a b c d Bilateral relations Canada Cuba canadainternational gc ca Embassy of Canada to Cuba May 2018 Retrieved 17 September 2020 a b Kwong Mark 18 April 2018 Cuba s next president won t be a Castro Here s what that means for Canada CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 25 April 2019 a b c Spadoni amp Sagebien 2013 p 81 a b Spadoni amp Sagebien 2013 p 87 a b Wylie Lana October 2010 Reassessing Canada s Relationship With Cuba in an Era of Change PDF www cigionline org Centre for International Governance Innovation Retrieved 17 January 2021 Spadoni amp Sagebien 2013 p 88 a b c Canadian international assistance in Cuba www international gc ca Government of Canada 11 August 2017 Retrieved 17 September 2020 Travel by Canadians to foreign countries top 15 countries visited www150 statcan gc ca Statistics Canada 8 April 2021 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Canada s embassy in Cuba decrepit says audit CTV News BellMedia 1 November 2009 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Embassies and consulates Cuba Government of Canada Retrieved 25 July 2019 Consulate General of Cuba in Montreal Embassy of Cuba in Canada Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba Archived from the original on 14 April 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Consulate General of Cuba in Toronto Embassy of Cuba in Canada Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cuba Archived from the original on 14 April 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2012 Further reading editMcKercher Asa February 2012 The most serious problem Canada US relations and Cuba 1962 Cold War History 12 1 69 88 doi 10 1080 14682745 2011 562202 S2CID 154301366 Spadoni Paolo Sagebien Julia February 2013 Will They Still Love Us Tomorrow Canada Cuba Business Relations and the End of the US Embargo Thunderbird International Business Review 55 1 77 93 doi 10 1002 tie 21524 Rodriguez Raul Rodriguez March 2010 Canada and the Cuban revolution Defining the rules of engagement 1959 1962 Canadian Foreign Policy Journal 16 1 63 80 doi 10 1080 11926422 2010 9687295 S2CID 154931791 External links editEmbassy of Canada in Havana Embassy of Cuba in Canada Portals nbsp Canada nbsp Cuba nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canada Cuba relations amp oldid 1184691337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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