Cuban President Meets North Korea’s Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang

Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel arrives Thursday at Moscow's Government Vnukovo airport for an official visit to Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press
Cuba's President Miguel Diaz-Canel arrives Thursday at Moscow's Government Vnukovo airport for an official visit to Russia. Photo: Alexander Zemlianichenko / Associated Press

PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz-Canel – both hoping to get out from under U.S. economic sanctions – have agreed to expand and strengthen their strategic relations, North Korea’s state media reported Monday.

Diaz-Canel, who is in Asia on his first international tour since assuming office in April, arrived in Pyongyang with his wife on Sunday. He was met at the airport by Kim, who joined him on the ride into the city past flower-waving and cheering crowds.

North Korea’s state media reported the two held talks at the Paekhwawon State Guest House and stressed their shared socialist history and vowed continued solidarity. The official media offered few specifics, but said the talks proceeded in a “comradely and friendly atmosphere.”

The meeting with Kim could be seen as a shot across the bow for Washington, which has run into increasing difficulty in its efforts to wrest significant progress from the North on the denuclearization issue.

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Pyongyang, which has also been quietly cozying up to Moscow recently, has been hardening its rhetoric ahead of a meeting in New York later this week between Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the North’s main negotiator, Kim Yong Chol.

Over the weekend, Pyongyang used its official media to criticize the U.S. for its continued support of sanctions – a political tool Washington has also used extensively on Cuba and Russia – and hinted it may resume nuclear development if Washington doesn’t change is tune.

Sanctions-busting has been high on Diaz-Canel’s agenda.

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While in Moscow, Diaz-Canel discussed a nearly USD$50 million arms deal with Russia and won a similar vow of expanded political, economic and military ties from Putin. The two then issued a joint statement denouncing U.S. “interference into domestic affairs of sovereign nations.”

The U.S. economic embargo on Cuba, initially imposed in 1958 and subsequently expanded, has remained in place. Russia faced an array of crippling U.S. and EU sanctions over the annexation of Crimea and its support for separatist rebels in eastern Ukraine.

Diaz-Canel was to leave Pyongyang on Tuesday and visit China, Vietnam and Laos.