"With respect to Cuba, we're not at a stage here where me visiting Cuba or President (Raul) Castro coming to the United States is on the cards. I don't know how this relationship will develop over the next several years," Obama told reporters during his year-end news conference.
"I'm a fairly young man, so I imagine that at some point in my life, I will have the opportunity to visit Cuba and enjoy interacting with the Cuban people. But there's nothing specific where we're trying to target some sort of visit on my part," he said when asked if he plans to visit Cuba.
"But change is going to come to Cuba. It has to. They've got an economy that doesn't work. They've been reliant for years first on subsidies from the Soviet Union, then on subsidies from Venezuela. Those can't be sustained," he said.
"The more the Cuban people see what's possible, the more interested they are going to be in change. But how societies change is country-specific. It's culturally specific. It could happen fast. It could happen slower than I'd like. But it's gonna happen, and I think this policy is gonna advance that," he added.
"So there hasn't been anything like this in the past. That doesn't mean that over the next two years we can't anticipate them taking certain actions that we may end up finding deeply troubling, either inside of Cuba or with respect to their foreign policy. And that could put significant strains on the relationship," he said.
"I wouldn't be surprised if they take, at any given time, actions that we think are a problem. We will be in a position to respond to whatever actions they take, the same way we do with a whole range of countries around the world, when they do things we think are wrong," he said.
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