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alucard13mm
07-18-2014, 12:47 AM
Russian president Vladimir Putin is dismissing reports a Soviet-era spy post near Havana will be reopened amid worsening relations between Russia and the US. Photograph: Mikhail Metzel/Itar-Tass Photo/Corbis
Russian president Vladimir Putin (http://www.theguardian.com/world/vladimir-putin) has denied reports that Russia plans to reopen a Soviet-era base in Cuba (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/16/russia-reopening-spy-base-cuba-us-relations-sour) from which it once spied on the United States (http://www.theguardian.com/world/usa).


A Russian security source said on Wednesday that Russia (http://www.theguardian.com/world/russia) had reached a provisional agreement with Cuba (http://www.theguardian.com/world/cuba) to reopen the Lourdes listening post, which Putin closed in 2001. The source repeated the contents of a report that first appeared in the Russian daily Kommersant.


But speaking from Brasilia on Thursday, the latest stop on a Latin American tour and site of a summit of Brics emerging market leaders, Putin denied the report and said Russia had no plans to resume the Lourdes signals intelligence facility.


"Russia is capable of fulfilling the defence capacity tasks without this component (Lourdes)," he said in comments carried by Russia's Itar-Tass news agency.


The report came five days after Putin visited Havana and as US-Russian relations have reached a post-cold war (http://www.theguardian.com/world/cold-war) low due to the crisis in Ukraine.
While visiting Cuba, the Russian leader pledged to help revive its former cold war-era ally's offshore oil exploration.


Since the Ukraine crisis worsened in February, the United States and the European Union have imposed sanctions on Russia and Moscow has tried to bolster ties with other countries, including in Asia and Latin America, to ensure Russia is not isolated.


Cuba has remained silent on the report about the spy post. Such a provocation would run counter to an effort by Cuban president Raul Castro to reduce tensions with the United States and build a more pragmatic relationship.


In Washington, the state department declined comment on Wednesday, noting there had been no formal announcement from Moscow. Other US officials were skeptical, questioning whether Russia would go through with what would be an expensive initiative with possible limited returns.
The base at Lourdes, about 250km from the US coast, was created in 1964 after the Cuban missile crisis. It monitored satellite communications and signals from and to submarines and ships.


When they closed the base, the Russians said it was a "goodwill gesture" toward Washington, although many US officials at the time believed Moscow was really concerned about costs. One official, who asked not to be named, called Russian statements and news reports about the project "propaganda."


At the height of the cold war, the base at Lourdes, just south of the Cuban capital, Havana, had up to 3,000 personnel and was the Soviets' biggest center operated abroad for gathering intelligence from radio signals.


The Cuban missile crisis in 1962 began after Moscow began placing Soviet nuclear weapons on the island, and is widely regarded as the moment in the cold war when the United States and the Soviet Union came closest to a nuclear confrontation.




http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jul/17/vladimir-putin-denies-soviet-cuba-spybase-reopening

FindLiberty
07-18-2014, 07:54 AM
They're thinking about moving them offshore 'cause it's getting too expensive to stay in the usa any longer. Some areas are not safe for typical families with spy kids.

Zippyjuan
07-18-2014, 11:32 AM
Russia has been rebuilding their ties with Cuba. They recently wrote off almost all the remaining debt they claimed Cuba owed Russia after the last time they left the island nation.

http://rt.com/business/172020-russia-cuba-debt-writeoff/


Russia writes off 90% of Cuba's debt ahead of Putin's 'big tour' to L. America

Russia has written down $32 billion of Cuba’s Soviet era debt. Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the law ahead of his official visit to Latin America, with Havana as his first stop.

The agreement was first signed in October 2013 and draws a line under a twenty-year dispute.

Cuba is now required to pay back $3.2 billion over the next 10 years.

The first payment from Cuba is expected in October, and the money will be transferred to an account of the Russian lender Vnesheconombank opened at the National Bank of Cuba.

The agreement was signed into a law on Friday ahead of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s official visit to Latin America, where Cuba comes the first.

Cash-strapped Cuba has been feverishly trying to restructure its debt to jump start its economy and attract investment. Three years ago it restructured $6 billion it owes to China, and in 2012 Japan forgave about $1.4 billion.

Mexico recently forgave $478 million of Cuban debt, and Havana agreed to pay back $146 million over 10 years.

Cuba’s total debt was officially estimated at $13.6 billion in 2012 which is described as “active”. Other debt collected prior to its default in 1980s is referred to as “passive”.

Cuba remains a strong ally of Russia, with trade between the two countries at about $200 million last year.

After the Soviet Union broke up Russia became the legal successor to Cuba’s loans. Cuba in turn rejected this, saying that the debt was in a currency that no longer existed, and was to a country that had vanished.