The U.S. has become the destination for Cuban travelers.
Travel agencies are busy competing for the attention of the Cubans and, in doing so, have found new and lucrative ways to advertise.
The most recent example is Travel America, which launched in June 2017.
In the first year, the company generated $4.8 million in revenue, a 29% increase from 2016, according to its 2016 annual report.
But the number of American tourists who visit Cuba has dropped by about a third, from about 1.4 million in 2015 to less than 750,000 in 2017, according a recent study from the University of Michigan.
The decline has been particularly noticeable in the tourism industry, which relies on American dollars to generate revenue for the U. S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the agency that administers the island nation’s aid programs.
“We’re seeing the effects of an economy that’s been driven by U., S. dollars and foreign tourism,” said Alex Wray, USAID’s Cuba programs director.
The agency does not directly handle Cuban visas or allow Cuban visitors to enter the U., but its offices are in Havana, and it maintains a network of offices and consulates around the country.
In 2017, USAid’s Havana office hosted more than 1,100 Cuban diplomats and experts, according an estimate by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
The majority of those in attendance were from Latin America and the Caribbean.
The U!
S.
is the country’s largest source of Cuban visas, and the agency has helped to bring Cubans from the island to the U and Europe.
Travelers to Cuba are often drawn by the ease of travel, the high cost of living and the quality of life.
The Cuban government is known for its strict laws, and even for its limited freedom of speech.
It has no newspapers, no radio, no internet, and no television.
But it also has its own entertainment and cultural scene, and is home to some of the world’s top musicians, writers and filmmakers.
In 2018, the number one ticketed Cuban vacation in the U: to Las Vegas, where the average price for a hotel room was $2,800.
(The average rate in Cuba is $7,000.)
The average Cuban vacationer also spends about $2.5 million a year on flights to and from the U, according with the International Travel Association, which represents travelers.
The average number of nights in a Cuban hotel is roughly 2.7.
While this may sound like a lot, in many ways, it is comparable to the average cost of renting a home in the United States.
For one thing, a Cuban vacation would have to include a significant amount of discretionary spending.
For another, the average Cuban would have no income tax liability.
“There’s a lot of expenses associated with Cuban travel, but there’s no obligation for them to make a financial contribution to the United State,” said Mark Latham, director of the Cuba program at the Center for International Policy, a Washington, DC-based think tank.
“So they’re not contributing to our social safety net, but they’re still able to go out and enjoy it.”
The U?s Cuban embassy in Washington, which was opened in 1976, has been the most visible of all U.?s embassies in Havana since the revolution.
In addition to hosting more than a hundred American diplomats, the U?ss has a staff of about 70 staff members and an annual budget of more than $200 million.
“It’s not that Americans have not had experiences with the U,” said Chris Wysong, the Cuban ambassador to the US.
“They’ve been very open and honest about it.
They’re trying to help us to develop our relations.”
The Cuban embassy is in a building on the grounds of the UCC building in Havana.
It is also one of several buildings that have become the scene of some of Havana’s most infamous events.
The city’s political and business elite are often seen on balconies overlooking the U ?s embassy.
Some of the most prominent of those include Fidel Castro?s son, Raúl Castro, and former president Raúlf Castro, who is serving a life sentence in a Florida prison for his role in the killing of former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
In December 2016, the Miami Herald reported that the embassy?s security guards were using a stun gun to break up an argument between two Cuban diplomats.
In February 2017, a member of the Cuban parliament said he had witnessed Cuban officers use a stun rifle on a security guard who tried to stop them from arresting Cuban dissidents.
Cuba?s government has also cracked down on independent media and political organizations, including Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, and Radio Uno.
But for the Cuban government, there is a sense of humor.
In 2016, Cuba invited its first ever international TV program to the