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    HomeAmericaCuba says it has opened talks with US

    Cuba says it has opened talks with US

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    By Daniel Trotta and Dave ‌Sherwood

    HAVANA, March 13 (Reuters) - Cuban officials have opened talks with the ​U.S. government, President Miguel Diaz-Canel said on Friday, amid a severe economic crisis and as the Communist ⁠government has come under increasing pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump.

    "These talks have been aimed at finding solutions through dialogue to the bilateral differences we have between the ​two nations," Diaz-Canel said in a video aired on state television shortly before he was scheduled to ‌address Cuban media.

    The media address was billed as a continuation of a February 5 event when Diaz-Canel warned that Cuba was approaching a situation that would require "extreme measures" given ⁠the economic crisis, frequent power blackouts and fuel shortages exacerbated by Trump's ⁠imposition of an oil blockade on the Caribbean island.

    Diaz-Canel said he had directed the talks for the Cuban side, together with former Cuban President Raul Castro and other high-level Communist Party and government officials. He did not say who had attended for the ‌United States.

    Trump has said repeatedly that the United States was already in high-level talks ⁠with Cuban representatives. Until now, the Cuban government had denied that ‌any official encounters are underway but had not explicitly ​denied media reports of back-channel discussions with  Raul Guillermo Rodriguez Castro, the grandson of Raul Castro, who is 94 and still wields great influence.

    Rodriguez Castro was seated behind Diaz-Canel ‌and among the Communist Party officials pictured in the video.

    Since ​the U.S. captured Venezuelan President Nicolas ⁠Maduro and removed from power Cuba's most important foreign benefactor in ‌January, Trump has cut off Venezuelan oil shipments ⁠to Cuba and threatened to slap tariffs on any country that sells oil to Cuba.

    Trump in recent weeks had made a series of statements, saying Cuba was on the ​verge of collapse or eager ‌to make a deal with the United States. On Monday he said Cuba may be ⁠subject to a "friendly takeover," then added, "it may ​not be a friendly takeover."

    (Reporting by Daniel Trotta and Dave Sherwood in Havana; ​Editing by Lincoln Feast.and Chizu Nomiyama)

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