To receive daily emails from Breaking Christian News to your inbox CLICK HERE


SHARE THIS ARTICLE Printer friendly version of this page

How Is a Free Cuba in the National Interest of the United States?

Yoe Suarez-Commentary : Mar 6, 2026  The Washington Stand

A free Cuba, once again aligned with the West and an ally of Washington, would leave a much safer neighborhood for the United States. One without Chinese radar bases pointed at its territory...

[WashingtonStand.com] The phrase "America First" has been a recognizable rallying cry of the citizen and political movement that brought President Donald Trump to the White House twice. The America First Policy Institute believes that a foreign policy approach that prioritizes the United States is based on the idea that when the United States puts the security, prosperity, and general well-being of its people first, it is better positioned to lead the world and preserve peace and stability. (Image: Pixabay)

This last element dispels the widespread notion that an "America First" foreign policy would mean isolationism. The operation to remove dictator Nicolás Maduro and the beginning of a transition to democracy in Venezuela, or the weakening of the Iranian nuclear program, are key to achieving a robust peace under US hegemony.

Now, after these two international successes, the focus seems to be on Cuba, the oldest totalitarian regime in the West. Just 90 miles from the Florida Keys, Havana transformed the island from one of the closest allies in Hispanic America into a hub of anti-American propaganda in the heart of the continent since 1959.

Furthermore, the Castro regime made Cuba available to terrorist groups from Europe, Central and South America, and even some operating within the United States. On the other hand, it provided diplomatic and military support to anti-American regimes in Africa and Asia. It's no wonder that it earned a place on the list of state sponsors of terrorism in 1982, with brief interruptions during the Democratic administrations of Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

A free Cuba, once again aligned with the West and an ally of Washington, would leave a much safer neighborhood for the United States. One without Chinese radar bases pointed at its territory, like those denounced in the international press a few years ago.

To imagine this possible future, it is helpful to understand what past relations between Cuba and the United States were like. Yuleisy Mena, an adjunct professor at Florida International University, recalls that the relationship, not only commercial but also guided by geopolitical pragmatism, dates back to the 19th century. An example was the Spanish-American War of 1898, which marked a period in which islanders and Americans took up arms together.

"Many Americans wanted to help Cuba, knowing the horrors committed by the Spanish military officer Valeriano Weyler against the rural population; but also because many Cubans and Americans wanted to rid themselves of the domination of European empires in the hemisphere—something key to the Monroe Doctrine—and they also had an interest in Cuba becoming a republic for pragmatic and ideological reasons," Mena explained to me.

During the republican period, Cuba was a strategic ally in Latin America. That is, until 1959, when Cuba fully entered the Cold War, but on the Soviet side. That tension has not yet subsided, and Professor Mena believes that Castroism still poses a danger to the United States, especially regarding espionage. "These individuals are present in various industries and sectors of society," she states, "and they can be of Cuban or American origin; they simply have to sympathize with Marxism in its political or cultural forms."

In economic terms, to summarize, the US was Cuba's main trading partner between 1902 and 1958; sugar dominated bilateral trade; and US investments had a structural weight in key sectors of the island's economy.

On the other hand, there are always risks for a post-Castro Cuba, based on understanding and evaluating the available data. Professor Emeritus Octavio de la Suarée of William Paterson University believes that "one of the ills that has always been attributed to Cubans is the Hispanic legacy of caudillismo, that is, the figure of an all-powerful leader." That tradition, he recalls, stretches from the monarchy to the dictatorships of Latin American strongmen after the successive independence movements of the early 19th century, and on to the political processes of the 21st century.

Suarée, who is also president of the Cuban Academy of History in Exile, asserts that the communist indoctrination received by the Cuban population from 1959 to the present "requires a good dose of freedom and democracy, which cannot be learned overnight." He fears that a people "accustomed to the government thinking for them may not be prepared to think for themselves." (Image: Pixabay)

First, Suarée argues, it will be necessary to educate the Cuban people about the meaning of freedom, human rights, and democracy, and their importance, so they can vote consciously in free elections and exercise the right that has been denied them for so long.

And that is also fundamental, he asserts, to enjoying a good relationship with the United States. "We had a history as an independent nation during the Republic (between 1902 and 1958), and we could enjoy it again," according to the Cuban-American historian. But to achieve this, he believes it is essential to first build citizens who can create and sustain it. "We have a lot to learn."

"Let us remember that the United States is great because it enjoys basic institutions established from its beginnings; we never had them. Can we build them now?" he asks. "To be free, we need to create a civic-minded and responsible Cuban citizen, one who knows how to respect others, without mockery or boasting, a hard worker, dedicated, and respectful. Is that possible?"

Optimistic, Suarée reflects that Cubans have always risen to the challenge of adversity, fought hard, and triumphed. "And they will do so again." And in this New Cuba, "relations with the United States will once again be cordial," for the benefit of both nations and for the security and peace of the Western Hemisphere. Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here

Yoe Suárez is a writer, producer, and journalist, exiled from Cuba due to his investigative reporting about themes like torture, political prisoners, government black lists, cybersurveillance, and freedom of expression and conscience. He is the author of the books "Leviathan: Political Police and Socialist Terror" and "El Soplo del Demonio: Violence and Gangsterism in Havana."







SHARE THIS ARTICLE Printer friendly version of this page

To receive daily emails from Breaking Christian News to your inbox CLICK HERE

Other Recent Articles from Breaking Christian News

Devout Jew Decides to Disprove Scripture by Reading the Bible; Is 'Blown Away' by What He Finds

South Dakota Passes Prenatal Development Education Bill

How Is a Free Cuba in the National Interest of the United States?

Trump Forges Alliance With Conservative Latin American Leaders at the 'Shield of the Americas' Summit

[Video] Trump Has Highest Own-Party Approval of Any 21st Century President, CNN Survey Shows

Noem Saga Grows More Bizarre as IG Accuses DHS of Blocking Investigations, Including One Involving Butler

Trump Says Only Iran Deal He Will Accept Is 'Unconditional Surrender'

'Don't Mess With Texas': 'Overwhelming' Push Back on Sharia Law in the Lone Star State

Update on Savannah Guthrie's Plans, Investigation into Nancy's Disappearance: She 'May Already Be Gone'

Austin's Liberal DA Makes Major Call About Officers Who Shot Suspected Terrorist that Killed 3, Injured Over a Dozen

Media Ignore Arrest of 14-Year Illegal Alien with 30 Arrests in Case of Virginia Bus Stop Stabbing Murder

Poll: 57 Percent of Americans Want All Illegal Migrants Sent Home

US Supreme Court Hands Unanimous Victory to Trump Administration on Asylum Cases

Pentagon Releases Identities of 6 US Soldiers Killed in Kuwait: 'They Laid Down Their Lives'

Hegseth: Iran Regime Is 'Toast' as Israel, US Broaden Strikes

Senator Fetterman Joins GOP to Block Iran War Powers Effort

President Trump Replaces Kristi Noem at DHS with Senator Markwayne Mullin

[Watch] After Fleeing the Regime Decades Ago, She Fights for a Free Iran and Exposes 'Islamic Radicalism'

'Madam President' Melania Trump Becomes First World Leader's Spouse to Chair UN Security Council

Former Indiana Music Teacher Wins Settlement after Being Forced to Resign for Not Using Trans Pronouns



Search the Articles Archives

Keyword:  
Author:  
Words Posted On:  
Day Month Year



Subscribe to
Breaking Christian News


Follow BCN on Twitter
Are You Praying for Our Government Leaders?
BCN Staff

Steve Shultz
Steve Shultz, Managing Editor
Founder and Owner


Aimee Herd
Aimee Herd, Editor


BCN Plus
Are You Praying for President Trump?
 
 

All articles on this site and emails from BCN are copyrighted property of Breaking Christian News. Permission is given to link to, or share a BCN story if proper attribution is given to both the original writer and summarizer of the story. Breaking Christian News 2005-2019. All Rights Reserved.


Breaking Christian News is a division of Elijah List Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved


Disclaimer: Articles and links, as well as the source articles linked to; do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Breaking Christian News.

editor@breakingchristiannews.com