By CAROL ROSENBERG
Herald Staff Writer
WASHINGTON -- The Clinton administration on Thursday banned a business
consultant from taking American executives on an overnight visit to Havana
to
examine future business opportunities in Cuba.
In response, Kirby Jones of the Washington-based Alamar Associates wrote
participants that he will hold the U.S.-Cuba Business Summit in Cancun,
Mexico,
Sept. 9-12 as planned -- and bring Cuban officials to Mexico to meet with
U.S.
businessmen.
``If business executives can't go to Havana, then Alamar Associates will
bring
Havana to them,'' Jones said in the memo obtained by The Herald.
Cuban speakers who will go to Cancun include National Assembly President
Ricardo Alarcon, Economy Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez and Vice President
Carlos
Lage, he said.
A Treasury Department official said the Office of Foreign Assets Control,
which
licenses U.S. ties with Cuba under the three-decade-old U.S. embargo, wrote
Jones
Thursday that it would not license the Havana stopover. Jones had argued
that the
Havana portion was ``fully funded'' by the Cuban government.
But Michael Rannenberger, chief of the State Department's Office of Cuban
Affairs, said the issue was not whether the participants were violating
the embargo
by spending money in Cuba.
The Treasury and State departments judged that Alamar was trying to help
executives scout out business relations with Cuba in advance of a peaceful,
democratic transition, an interpretation that put the whole trip under
scrutiny,
Rannenberger said.