Trump on Cuba: “No Escalation” — Says Country Is “Falling Apart” and “Lost Control”
US President Donald Trump has dismissed the prospect of military escalation with Cuba, telling reporters “there won’t be escalation” while delivering a blunt assessment of the island nation’s condition — describing it as “falling apart” and a place that has “sort of lost control.”
Trump’s comments come just days after Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel warned that any US military action against Cuba would lead to a “bloodbath” with incalculable regional consequences. Trump’s response effectively deflates that confrontation — not through diplomatic language but through dismissiveness. He is not treating Cuba as a serious military threat requiring engagement. He is treating it as a failing state barely worth the attention.
The phrase “they’ve sort of lost control” is particularly pointed. It frames Cuba not as a geopolitical adversary requiring strategic confrontation but as a government struggling to maintain basic function — a characterization that will infuriate Havana while playing directly to Trump’s domestic political base.
For Cuban leadership Díaz-Canel’s warning was intended to project strength and deter any American adventurism. Trump’s casual dismissal — delivered in a brief exchange with reporters — undercuts that projection entirely. Being told your country is “falling apart” by the American president is a different kind of humiliation than being threatened.
The underlying reality Trump is pointing to is real. Cuba faces severe economic crisis, fuel shortages, blackouts, and an unprecedented wave of emigration as citizens vote with their feet on the condition of life on the island.
Falling apart or not — the people of Cuba are the ones living inside that reality every day.
— KeStar Worldwide | Fast. Clear. Unfiltered.
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