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The Trump administration will order nearly two-thirds of Cuba's diplomatic personnel to leave the United States after months of mysterious "attacks" that have damaged the health of American embassy staff in Havana, according to a congressional source and a person familiar with the plan.
The US State Department is expected to announce the expulsion on Tuesday, the sources said on Monday.
The decision follows an announcement on Friday that the United States was cutting its diplomatic presence in Cuba by more than half as it warned US citizens not to visit because of ‘unexplained incidents’ that have caused hearing loss, dizziness and fatigue in US embassy personnel.
The latest plan was first reported by the Miami Herald, which cited a source as saying the expulsion of Cuban personnel was in "reciprocity" for the US drawdown from Havana.
The State Department declined to comment on an expulsion plan, except to say that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson “continues to evaluate steps that the Department can take to ensure the Cuban government is accountable to its responsibility to protect diplomats.”
Several Cuban-American Republican lawmakers, including US Senator Marco Rubio and Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, had urged that Cuban diplomats be expelled in retaliation for the Cuban government’s failure to get to the bottom of the attacks.
Trump administration officials planned to brief lawmakers on their Cuba policy on Tuesday, another congressional aide said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The State Department announced on Friday that in addition to drawing down staff in Havana to essential personnel, the embassy was halting regular visa operations for Cubans seeking to visit the United States and would offer only emergency services to US citizens.
Cuba's Foreign Ministry Chief for US Affairs Josefina Vidal said last week that the US decision to reduce staff at its Havana embassy was hasty and will affect bilateral relations,
Cuba, the United States and Canada have investigated the attacks, but the probe has not yielded any answers about how they were carried out or who was responsible for them.
Cuba has denied involvement in the attacks. The State Department has not directly blamed Havana for them but asked two Cuban diplomats to leave Washington in May.
The US measures will stop short of breaking off relations or closing the two countries’ embassies, which reopened in 2015 following more than five decades of hostility.
But the bizarre case has brought simmering US-Cuba tensions, since Trump took office, to a boil.
Trump, who in June vowed to partially roll back the detente with Cuba agreed by his Democratic predecessor Obama, called the Cuban government "corrupt and destabilizing" in his address to the United Nations General Assembly, last month.
He said he would not lift the US trade embargo on the Caribbean island until it made "fundamental reforms”. Cuba described his comments as "unacceptable and meddling”.
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