So here’s the latest: Donald Trump didn’t wander out onto a golf green and mumble into the bushes — he pointedly told Cuba to “make a deal” with the U.S. before it’s too late after Washington effectively pulled the fuel lifeline Havana has been clinging to for decades. ABC
Trump’s message was simple and straight-up:
“THERE WILL BE NO MORE OIL OR MONEY GOING TO CUBA — ZERO! I strongly suggest they make a deal, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE.” That’s not diplomatic prose, it’s a reality check. ABC
Why did he say that? Because Cuba’s entire economy has been propped up by subsidized Venezuelan oil for years — and that oil is no longer flowing. That’s thanks largely to U.S. actions after a recent military operation that toppled Maduro and disrupted Venezuelan shipments. ABC
And yes, the usual narrative warriors are already spinning it as a threat. If you read left-leaning outlets, it’s all about how Trump’s rhetoric is menacing, destabilizing, and could result in … pretty much whatever scary buzzword they can find. But let’s be honest: Cuba has been in crisis for years, lines for gas and basic supplies are a thing, and no one seriously believes cutting off oil magically collapses an economy overnight — it just accelerates problems that already existed. ABC
Havana’s response? Predictable boilerplate about sovereignty and “nobody dictates what we do.” That’s what any government under pressure says when faced with hard choices and zero oil shipments. ABC
Nothing in Trump’s message this weekend suggested bombs or invasions — just an ultimatum to negotiate before Cuba finds itself with even less leverage than it already had. That’s the sort of blunt foreign policy most mainstream media whine about until it actually produces results.
Ask yourself: is urging a negotiation really the same as threatening war, or is it common sense to tell a partner to find a workable agreement before resources run out?
