Cuba, Trump and Havana
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As Nicolás Maduro was flown blindfolded and handcuffed in a special forces helicopter to a New York jail, Cuban-Americans took to the streets to celebrate.
They hope that the men who have made their country miserable, prompting the recent emigration of a quarter of the country’s population, may be next on Donald Trump’s list of problems in his hemisphere that he is willing to solve by force.
10hon MSN
Mexico becomes crucial fuel supplier to Cuba but pledges no extra shipments after Maduro toppled
Mexico has emerged as a key fuel supplier to Havana as the United States prepares to seize control of Venezuelan oil and the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump hardens its stance toward Cub
Secretary of State Marco Rubio backed his boss after he suggested it might be time to consider action against the "failing nation."
The complex geopolitics of oil mean Maduro’s capture may have as big an impact in Moscow, Beijing, Tehran and Havana than in Caracas.
The silence marks a sharp departure from the widespread and passionate condemnation this weekend of the U.S. capture of former Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.
President Donald Trump declared Saturday’s military operation that led to the ouster of Nicolás Maduro a major success.
Most worryingly for the U.S.’s fellow NATO allies, Trump doubled down on longstanding threats to annex Greenland, which is part of Danish territory. Danish and Greenlandic officials have repeatedly hit back at the White House’s references to controlling the Arctic island.
3don MSN
Trump on return trip to Washington predicts demise of Cuba, warns Colombia, threatens Greenland
The comments came less than 48 hours after the American military conducted a brazen raid inside Caracas to arrest Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.
US President Donald Trump said in the news conference following Maduro's seizure that the United States would "run" Venezuela and that the US was talking to Rodríguez. He also th