
Cuba on the Brink—and Europe Still Missing in Action
As Havana quietly opens talks with Washington amid deepening shortages and unrest, Brussels sticks to a long-failed policy of dialogue.

As Havana quietly opens talks with Washington amid deepening shortages and unrest, Brussels sticks to a long-failed policy of dialogue.

Speaking at the “Shield of the Americas” summit in Miami, the U.S. president said Havana is ready to negotiate with his administration.

The defendants, from Spain, Colombia, Cuba, Russia, and Belarus, face up to 15 years in prison.

The U.S. president warned Havana it would lose all Venezuelan-linked oil and financial support.

Kyiv claims to have information that more than 1,000 Cuban mercenaries have been recruited by Russia since early 2023.

Goods produced by forced labor under inhumane conditions are imported by EU countries in violation of international law, a report shows.

Drug trafficking, Islamic terrorism, and electoral fraud are exports of the Venezuelan regime.

The poisonous effects of the Cuban regime extend far beyond its shores. Brussels must take action.

Despite the well-known litany of human rights abuses, crimes, and intervention in Putin’s invasion, EU funding to Cuba has not stopped.

There are more political prisoners in Cuba than in all other South American nations combined.