VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis praised the "small steps" of diplomacy and peacemaking that brought about the rapprochement between the U.S. and Cuba, expressing joy over the outcome that he helped bring about.
"Today we're all happy, because we saw how two people who had been so far apart for so many years took a step closer yesterday," Francis said Thursday in his first public comments about the breakthrough.
In remarks to a group of new ambassadors to the Holy See, Francis said diplomacy was a "noble job ... a work of small steps, of little things that always end up making peace, to bring people's hearts together and spread fraternity among peoples."
Francis played a crucial role in bringing the U.S. and Cuba together, writing letters to Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro this past summer inviting them to find humanitarian solutions to their differences.
He offered the Vatican as a facilitator and an agreement was hammered out at the Vatican in October. Francis' seasoned top diplomat, Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin, helped seal the deal.
Parolin told Vatican Radio on Thursday that the Holy See's efforts to end the standoff had been going on for years, but that Francis' involvement was "decisive."
"The pope has said it many times and I like to repeat it: When there are problems, you need to have dialogue. And the greater the problems, the greater the need to have dialogue."
Aside from Parolin -- who was Vatican ambassador to Cuba's top ally, Venezuela, from 2009-2013 -- another high-ranking prelate is said to have played a key role: Cuban Cardinal Jaime Ortega.
Ortega was decisive in improving ties between the Catholic Church and the officially atheist state since he became Havana archbishop in 1981. He oversaw the visits of two popes, St. John Paul II and Benedict XVI, and is close to Francis.