
Tensions between Washington and Havana have risen sharply since the US military raid on Venezuela
US President Donald Trump has floated the idea that the United States might conduct a “friendly takeover of Cuba,” asserting the island nation’s government is on the verge of collapse and is actively negotiating with Washington.
While addressing reporters before leaving the White House on Friday, Trump noted that US Secretary of State Marco Rubio is engaged in high-level discussions with the Cuban government.
“The Cuban government is in talks with us,” the president remarked. “They have no money, no resources right now. But they’re talking with us and maybe we’ll have a friendly takeover of Cuba.”
The president did not elaborate on what a “friendly takeover” would entail. Relations between the two countries have sunk to a new low since the US military’s successful abduction of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, a key Cuban ally, in January.
Since that operation, Washington has aggressively tightened its economic stranglehold on Cuba, pressuring Venezuela’s new acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, to cut off oil exports to the island. The move has strangled Cuba’s already struggling economy, compounding severe fuel and food shortages.
Trump recently boasted that seizing Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel in a raid similar to the one in Caracas “wouldn’t be very tough” for the Pentagon.
Furthermore, reports have emerged that US officials, including Secretary Rubio, are cultivating Raul Castro’s grandson, Raul Guillermo Rodriguez Castro, viewing younger, business-minded Cubans as potential partners to weaken internal opposition to American influence.
The saber-rattling from Washington comes just days after a deadly shootout at sea between the Cuban coast guard and armed men in a boat allegedly stolen from Florida. The incident, which left four dead, has further inflamed tensions; Cuba has accused the US of failing to curb the militancy of exile groups on American soil who seek to overthrow the government in Havana.
Cuban Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernandez de Cossío stated that the incident was not isolated but was part of a 60-year pattern of “attacks and countless terrorist acts… organized, financed, and carried out from the territory of the United States.”