US, Cuba to launch regular commercial flights

Deutsche Welle
7 Min Read

After a gap of over 50 years, regular air services between the US and Cuba are resuming, underscoring the mending of ties between the two erstwhile Cold War foes. There are many unresolved issues, though.
The year 1961 witnessed a number of historical events, including the start of the construction of the Berlin Wall and Yuri Gagarin’s first human space flight. But it was also the last time there was a direct scheduled flight between the US and Cuba.

And more than half a century later, regular air services between the two former Cold War rivals are scheduled to resume at 1345 GMTon Wednesday, with an An Airbus A-320 belonging to the US carrier JetBlue Airways making the inaugural flight between Fort Lauderdale, Florida and the central Cuban city of Santa Clara.

Coinciding with this event is the Cuban trip of US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx, who will be in Havana this week to hold talks with his counterpart Adel Yzquierdo and Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez. Foxx is expected to be on the flight, according to a Twitter post from his office.

“The revival of regular direct flights is a positive step and a contribution to the process of improving relations between the two countries,” Rodriguez said.

Both sides have made efforts to deepen the bilateral partnership since December 2014, when US President Barack Obama announced that America was resuming diplomatic ties with Cuba after more than 50 years of deep-freeze. Diplomatic relations were restored in July 2015.

A ‘proud’ airline

Giselle Cortes, JetBlue’s director of international airports, said her company was “proud” of the fact that it’s the airline to operate the first direct flight. Cortes thanked the Cuban authorities for their “excellent” cooperation, particularly the staff of the airport in Santa Clara.

She also expressed satisfaction with regard to the security arrangements at Cuban airports. “All international standards are met,” she noted, pointing out this was also confirmed by the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

JetBlue aims to become the “preferred US airline for travel to Cuba,” Cortes said.

The price of a one-way flight between Fort Lauderdale and Santa Clara amounted to $99 (89 euros), she said, adding that a round trip would cost about $210, including taxes and insurance. The rates are a lot cheaper than those of the charter flights, which are estimated to charge over $400 for a round trip.

In 1979, both Washington and Havana authorized charter flights, largely humanitarian in nature, to transport Cubans residing in the United States and limited categories of American travelers. Barring a brief period in the 1980s, the charter flights have continued to operate. According to official figures, there were 4,783 charter flights in 2015 and 3,452 in the first six months of this year.

Restrictions remain

Since the US government eased travel restrictions to the Caribbean island nation, the number of Americans visiting the country has seen a jump. Washington, however, continues to bar US citizens from traveling to Cuba for tourist activities. Travel is allowed only when it falls under one of the 12 categories approved by the US government.

These lingering restrictions also pose significant challenges to the US airlines operating flights to Cuba. And the purchase of the flight tickets is handled by the Florida-based Stonegate Bank, which is currently the only bank to conduct financial transactions between the US and Cuba.

Meanwhile, JetBlue says it’s working with the Cuban authorities on a mechanism that will facilitate the purchase of tickets in Cuba. The tickets can so far be bought only at the airport in Santa Clara.

In total, the restored scheduled air service will comprise of 110 daily round trips, with 90 already authorized by both governments to nine Cuban airports, many of them in or near tourism hotspots.

In addition to JetBlue, five other US airlines – American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Silver Airways, Southwest Airlines and Sun Country Airlines – have been licensed to operate flights to various Cuban cities like Camaguey, Cayo Coco Santa Clara and Santiago de Cuba.

They will be permitted to operate flights from airports in Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Chicago, Minneapolis-St. Paul and Philadelphia.

The capital’s left out

There will not be any flights to Havana, however, even though a dozen US airlines applied for the chance to operate scheduled passenger and cargo service to Havana. Collectively, the airlines applied for nearly 60 flights per day to Havana, exceeding the 20 daily flights made available by arrangement between the two governments, according to US officials.

But JetBlue executive Cortes hopes the airline will be able to start a service to the Cuban capital city by the end of the year. Transport Secretary Foxx could also announce something new in this regard on Wednesday.

Concerns abound about the quality and capacity of Havana’s airport, which is already bursting at the seams. Earlier this month, the Cuban government announced its privatization. It roped in the French corporations Bouygues Batiment International and Aéroports de Paris to renovate and manage the capital’s José Martí International Airport.

Another open question relates to whether or not the Cuban national airline, Cubana, will be able to service US cities, against the backdrop of demands and court rulings in the US regarding damage payments for the losses incurred on account of Cuba’s nationalization program following its revolution in the 1950s.

That’s why there are legitimate fears that Cuban aircraft could be confiscated should they fly to US airports. “We do not anticipate Cuban-owned aircraft will fly to the US in the near future,” said a US transport ministry spokesperson in February. And little has changed on this front since then. In this context, a completely normalized commercial flight service between the two countries is still a long way off. The Fort Lauderdale-Santa Clara flight is just the beginning.

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