📷 Key players Meteor shower up next 📷 Leaders at the dais 20 years till the next one
WASHINGTON
Fidel Castro

First Take: U.S.-Cuba relations move into 21st century

Alan Gomez
USA TODAY
Cuban President Fidel Castro gives a speech during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Castro has since handed power to his brother Raul.

MIAMI — Any American knows the key moments in the long, antagonistic history of U.S.-Cuba relations.

Fidel Castro's revolution and turn to communism. The Bay of Pigs. The Cuban Missile Crisis.

But those moments illustrate just how long it's been since there was any significant change in the relationship between the two countries. It's stunning to consider that the last moments of major change were recorded in black and white. They've moved from high school political science classes to history lectures.

What we've seen over the 50 years that have passed since those days have been only small, incremental changes, the kinds that barely registered outside this Cuban-dominated city. President Carter opening an "interests section" in Havana in 1977. President George W. Bush restricting the already-limited travel opportunities for Americans to the island. President Obama reopening those travel channels after he took office. Even the 2008 transfer of power from Castro to his brother Raúl appeared to have little impact on the standoff.

That's why Obama's announcement Wednesday is so historic.

Prep for the polls: See who is running for president and compare where they stand on key issues in our Voter Guide

The swap of American contractor Alan Gross and a U.S. intelligence operative for three Cubans jailed in the USA was big enough. But the president threw on top of that the re-establishment of formal diplomatic relations, a plan to open a full embassy in Havana and expanded opportunities for Americans to do business with, and in, Cuba.

As legend has it, President Kennedy was the last American to legally purchase Cuban cigars and smoke them on U.S. soil. Now you can bring some cigars and Cuban rum back with you on your direct flight from Havana to New York City.

In this Jan. 8, 1959 file photo, Cuba's Fidel Castro speaks to supporters at the Batista military base "Columbia," now known as Ciudad Libertad, in Cuba.

The wisdom, and legality, of the president's moves will be hotly debated in the years to come. But people on both sides of the debate recognize that we've entered a new world.

There are the hard-liners, who insist that maintaining the embargo on Cuba — which remains intact because it's anchored in an act of Congress — is the only way to destroy the repressive regime.

"It is the biggest set of concessions that the United States has ever given to the Castro regime," says Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla.

And there are the younger generations of Cuban Americans who feel that providing more resources and support to the Cuban people is the only way to topple the regime.

"This is the biggest change in 50 years," says Ric Herrero, executive director of #CubaNow, a group that has pushed for more engagement with the Cuban people. "These are not concessions. They are expanding the flow of contacts and resources between American civil society and the Cuban people, which empowers them and puts them in a much stronger position to demand bigger changes on the island."

However you view Obama's move, whether you think it's right or wrong, that it'll strengthen the Castro brothers' grip on the island or lead to their downfall, one thing is clear: it has finally moved U.S.-Cuba relations into the 21st century.

Featured Weekly Ad