The decision is sure to ruffle feathers in Havana, which vehemently denies any links to terrorism. Cuba's government contends its inclusion on the list is a political vendetta by a US government that has kept an economic embargo on the Communist-run island for 51 years.
State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said Washington "has no current plans to remove Cuba" from the list, which is included in the department's annual report on terrorism.
Yesterday was a holiday in Cuba and there was no immediate comment from the government.
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Cuban-American Republican from Florida, praised the decision to keep Cuba on the list. It "reaffirms that the Castro regime is, and has always been, a supporter and facilitator of terrorism," she said.
She criticised the administration for not putting North Korea back on the list. The reclusive Asian country was taken off in 2008 amid negotiations over nuclear disarmament that ultimately failed.
Many Cuba watchers had speculated the time might be ripe for Cuba to get off the list, in large part because the Cuban government is now hosting peace talks between Colombian rebels and that country's government, while the Basque militants have announced a permanent cease-fire.
Neither the Colombian nor Spanish governments has criticized Cuba's role in their conflicts in recent years, and both countries routinely vote against US economic sanctions on the island during a yearly vote at the United Nations.
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