Is Cuba Trump’s Next Target?
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Mar 23, 2026 Ada Ferrer, Pulitzer-winning historian of Cuba and Princeton professor, offers concise historical perspective. Jon Lee Anderson, long-time Cuba correspondent, shares vivid on-the-ground reporting about economic collapse and daily life. They discuss U.S. policy pressure, Venezuela’s oil cutoff, political bargaining in Havana, migration risks, and the fraught history shaping Cuban–American relations.
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Cuba Facing Near-Term Economic Collapse
- Cuba is in acute economic collapse with sustained blackouts, empty streets, and mass emigration.
- Anderson and Remnick describe up to 20% of the population leaving and hospitals lacking basic supplies and blood.
Empty Towns And Remittance-Dependent Elders
- Anderson describes visiting empty towns and meeting elderly friends sustained by remittances.
- He observed homes emptied by an exodus and younger skilled people leaving, often becoming care workers abroad.
Gone Oil Partners Revealed Cuba's Vulnerability
- Cuba previously survived loss of Soviet support then relied on Venezuelan oil; that safety net is now gone.
- Anderson recalls the 1990s 'special period' and the 25-year oil-for-expertise deal with Venezuela that ended with Maduro's collapse.


