By WILL WEISSERT, Related Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump mentioned Friday that the U.S. is in talks with Havana and raised the opportunity of a “pleasant takeover of Cuba” with out providing any particulars on what he meant.
Chatting with reporters exterior the White Home as he left for a visit to Texas, Trump mentioned Secretary of State Marco Rubio was in discussions with Cuban leaders “at a really excessive degree.”
“The Cuban authorities is speaking with us,” the president mentioned. “They don’t have any cash. They don’t have any something proper now. However they’re speaking to us, and perhaps we’ll have a pleasant takeover of Cuba.”
He added: “We might very nicely find yourself having a pleasant takeover of Cuba.”
Trump didn’t make clear his feedback however appeared to point that the state of affairs with Cuba, a communist-run island that has been amongst Washington’s bitterest adversaries for many years, was coming to a essential level. The White Home didn’t reply to requests for extra data Friday.
The president additionally mentioned that Cuba “is, to place it mildly, a failed nation” and “they need our assist.”
His remarks got here two days after the Cuban authorities reported {that a} Florida-registered speedboat carrying 10 armed Cubans from the U.S. opened hearth on troopers off the island’s north coast. 4 of the armed Cubans had been killed, and 6 had been injured in responding gunfire, in line with Cuba’s authorities. One Cuban official additionally was injured.
Cuba has been on Trump’s thoughts since at the very least early January, after U.S. forces ousted considered one of Havana’s closest allies, Venezuela’s socialist President Nicolás Maduro. Trump urged within the aftermath of that raid that navy motion in Cuba won’t be crucial as a result of the island’s economic system was weak sufficient — notably within the absence of oil shipments from Venezuela that stopped after Maduro was taken into custody — to quickly collapse by itself.
“We’ve had loads of years of coping with Cuba. I’ve been listening to about Cuba since I’m a little bit boy. However they’re in massive bother,” he mentioned Friday.
Then, noting the exile neighborhood from the island dwelling within the U.S., Trump mentioned there may very well be one thing coming that “I believe (is) very constructive for the folks that had been expelled, or worse, from Cuba and dwell right here.” He didn’t elaborate.
The U.S. has maintained a strict commerce embargo on Cuba since 1962, the yr after a failed, CIA-sponsored invasion of the island on the Bay of Pigs. Trump nonetheless indicated earlier this month that talks with Cuban officers had been underway.
Cuba’s authorities confirmed earlier this week that it was speaking with U.S. officers following the taking pictures of the American boat. Rubio has mentioned the U.S. Division of Homeland Safety and Coast Guard are investigating what occurred.
An government order that Trump signed in late January pledged to impose tariffs on nations offering oil to Cuba, threatening to additional cripple a rustic already suffering from a deepening power disaster, although U.S. authorities have since indicated that oil from Venezuela may be offered to Cuban pursuits in some instances.
Carlos Fernández de Cossío, Cuba’s deputy international minister, posted on social media Friday that “the US maintains its gasoline embargo towards Cuba in full drive, and its affect as a type of collective punishment is unwavering.”
“Nothing introduced in current days adjustments this actuality,” he wrote on X. “The potential for conditional gross sales to the non-public sector already existed and doesn’t alleviate the affect on the Cuban inhabitants.”
In the meantime, 40-plus U.S. civil society organizations despatched a letter to Congress on Friday asking that it “press the Trump administration to reverse its aggressive coverage in the direction of Cuba” and saying that efforts to chop oil shipments to the Caribbean island would spark a humanitarian collapse.
Signees included the Alliance of Baptists, ActionAid USA and the Presbyterian Church.
“Insurance policies that intentionally impose starvation and mass hardship on hundreds of thousands of civilians represent a type of collective punishment, and as such are a grave violation of worldwide humanitarian regulation,” the letter reads.
Related Press author Dánica Coto contributed from San José, Costa Rica.

