Marco Rubio seeks regime change in Cuba

Amid Cuba's economic and fuel crisis, Senator Marco Rubio will lead US negotiations demanding an end to the dictatorship, according to expert analysis. President Miguel Díaz-Canel announced no oil shipments since December, linked to Donald Trump's pressure on Russia and Mexico. While discrepancies exist over bilateral talks, consensus suggests any solution will require deep political reforms.

Cuba's economy is in a catastrophic state, with President Miguel Díaz-Canel announcing no fuel deliveries since December, meaning neither Russia nor Mexico supplied oil in January. This stems from Donald Trump's directives to halt shipments, as Trump stated amid a dispute with Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, who denied discussing Cuba.

On potential US-Cuba negotiations, Trump claims talks are underway, but Cuba's Foreign Ministry (MINREX) refutes this, acknowledging only routine technical discussions. The newspaper ABC reports meetings in Mexico City last week, attended by Alejandro Castro Espín, son of Raúl Castro, and senior US CIA officials, with Mexican oversight. Historically, such contacts have been common since 1959, as chronicled in 'Back Channel to Cuba' by William LeoGrande and Peter Kornbluh. The 2014-2015 thaw involved similar exchanges between Castro Espín and Ben Rhodes in Canada, mediated by Pope Francis.

Analyst Jorge Castañeda argues that, given the crisis's severity, Rubio will reject minor economic reforms as accepted previously. Instead, demands will include freeing all over 1,000 political prisoners, a timeline for elections, press and political party freedoms, and suspending the current Constitution's single-party provision. Castañeda notes Cuba declined Obama's gradual opening proposal, leaving scant alternatives now. For ordinary Cubans facing shortages of food, medicine, and electricity, these terms might seem a viable trade-off despite their stringency.

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Marco Rubio urges political change in Cuba as Caribbean leaders warn of humanitarian crisis and mass migration in this vivid news illustration.
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ルビオ氏、キューバでの変革を促す カリブ諸国指導者らは人道・移民圧力の悪化を警告

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像 事実確認済み

NPRの報道によると、国務長官マルコ・ルビオ氏はキューバでの政治的変革を求めている一方、カリブ諸国指導者らはキューバの深刻化する危機が地域全体の人道的緊張を高め、移民増加を招く可能性があると警告している。

Following Cuba's condemnation of a new US executive order imposing tariffs on oil suppliers, President Donald Trump predicted the island's imminent collapse and a potential deal with Washington to end its crisis, dismissing humanitarian concerns.

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US President Donald Trump escalated sanctions against Cuba on January 31 by threatening tariffs on countries selling oil to the island, mainly targeting Mexico's supply. International leaders and organizations condemned the move as imperialist aggression and called for an end to the blockade. In Cuba, tensions with US diplomats persist amid worsening economic hardships.

Mexico's government, led by President Claudia Sheinbaum, is exploring ways to send fuel to Cuba to ease its energy crisis while avoiding U.S. tariff retaliations announced by Donald Trump. Cuba has faced an acute fuel shortage since December 2025, worsened by the cutoff of Venezuelan supplies and U.S. pressures. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel thanked Mexico for its support but expressed regret over the lack of recent shipments.

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Opposition leader María Corina Machado met US Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the State Department on January 28, 2026, in a charm offensive to shape Venezuela's transformation after Nicolás Maduro's US-captured detention. The visit aligned with Rubio's same-day Senate testimony defending the Trump administration's stabilization strategy.

Following his January 29 executive order declaring a national emergency over the Cuban regime, President Donald Trump threatened on January 30 to impose tariffs on countries supplying oil to Cuba, intensifying U.S. efforts amid the island's dire energy crisis.

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One month after Donald Trump announced new restrictive measures against Cuba's economy, dissident activism on the island has polarized on social media. Influencers and alternative media now split between blaming the Cuban government or Trump's policies alongside Marco Rubio. This division has weakened the cohesion seen in past protests.

 

 

 

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