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In rare visit with Castro, Jimmy Carter attempts to restart US-Cuba relations

During his three-day trip to Cuba, former President Jimmy Carter also met with detained American Alan Gross, who was sentenced this month to 15 years prison for espionage.

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Javier Galeano/AP/Pool
Cuba's President Raul Castro (l.) greets former President Jimmy Carter at Revolution Palace in Havana, Cuba, on March 29.

Former US President Jimmy Carter aimed to hit all the right points on a three-day trip to Cuba. He sat with revolutionary icon Fidel Castro and his brother Ra煤l, and met today with leading Cuban dissidents, calling attention to the human rights and political issues that have long been at the center of stalled US-Cuba relations.

But Mr. Carter was unable to resolve a key sticking point between the Castro regime and Obama administration: the release of jailed US contractor Alan P. Gross.

While that, in itself, was enough to cast Carter's trip as a disappointment, analysts say Mr. Gross's release would not likely have provided the impetus for a major turning point in relations that were severed 50 years ago.

IN PHOTOS: Cuba's underground economy

鈥淓ven if Carter had returned with Alan Gross, I don鈥檛 think it would have caused a fundamental shift in relations between the countries,鈥 says Jana Lipman, a professor at Tulane University who has studied relations between the countries. 鈥淭he status quo has been a strong barrier to the improvement of relations between the US and Cuba for a long time."

Arrested in December 2009 while working on a US government project, Gross received a 15-year prison sentence earlier this month for bringing satellite communications equipment to Jewish groups in Cuba, which the government called espionage.

US-Cuba ties hits snag

Carter met with Gross before leaving the Caribbean island on Wednesday, yet even ahead of the meeting he sought to dampen expectations for his release. "I am not here to take him out of the country," Carter told reporters Tuesday, amid speculation that he might repeat his successful negotiation in North Korea for the release of American teacher Aijalon Gomes.

The Obama administration has stated that Gross鈥檚 release is necessary before the countries can work on improving relations.

鈥淚t鈥檚 clear that the Obama administration wants to engage with Cuba. It鈥檚 their preferred course of action,鈥 says Jose Azel, a Cuban exile and senior scholar at the University of Miami鈥檚 Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies.

In 2009, President Obama lifted some restrictions on travel and the sending of remittances to Cuba, in what his press secretary called measures intended 鈥渢o reach out to the Cuban people.鈥

Gross鈥檚 arrest and subsequent conviction 鈥渉alted鈥 any further negotiations, Professor Azel says. 鈥淲hat Cuba wants and needs is US tourists and their money,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd the only thing Castro has to offer the US in exchange at this point is the release of Gross.鈥

Still, Carter鈥檚 visit could open the door for negotiations that lead to Gross鈥 release. The Cuban state-controlled media reported Wednesday that President Ra煤l Castro remained open to discussing any topic with the US government.

Carter meets bloggers, rights advocates

Ra煤l, who assumed the presidency from his ailing older brother in 2008, invited Castro to the island to learn about some of the country鈥檚 new economic policies and to discuss ways to improve relations between the two countries.

Carter met with Havana鈥檚 Catholic archbishop, dissident bloggers, human rights advocates, members of leading opposition group Ladies in White, and some of the recently released Group of 75 political prisoners, who were jailed in 2003 during the 鈥淏lack Spring鈥 crackdown.

Carter told them he 鈥渨anted to express his solidarity and his recognition of the movement for civil rights and also the emerging civil society,鈥 said human rights leader Elizardo Sanchez, .

It was his second visit to the island and he remains the only US president, current or former, to visit Cuba since Fidel Castro鈥檚 1959 revolution. 鈥淚 hope we can contribute to better relations between the two countries,鈥 Carter said today during a press conference, calling for the US to end its trade embargo and for Cuba to allow more freedoms to its people.

For Cuban dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez, Carter鈥檚 visit provided a bit of hope for the future.

Ms. Sanchez 鈥 who last year won a prestigious journalism award from Columbia University but was barred by the Cuban government from attending the awards ceremony 鈥 met with Carter this morning.

She said she could not discuss the content of the meeting, but she later tweeted, 鈥淟ife goes on; Today is not the end of anything but I wish it was the beginning.鈥

IN PHOTOS: Cuba's underground economy

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