Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Cuba on the brink? Trump predicts downfall, but CIA cautions Havana’s survival story is not so simple

Cuba on the brink? Trump predicts downfall, but CIA cautions Havana’s survival story is not so simple

Posted on 11 January 2026 By jobuzo

WASHINGTON, Jan 11 — US intelligence has painted a grim picture of ‌Cuba’s economic and political situation, but its assessments offer no clear support for President Donald Trump’s prediction that last weekend’s military action in nearby Venezuela leaves the island nation “ready to fall,” said three people familiar with the confidential assessments. 

The CIA’s view is that key sectors ‍of the Cuban economy, such as agriculture and tourism, are severely strained by frequent blackouts, trade sanctions and other problems. The potential loss of ‌oil imports and other support from Venezuela, for decades a key ally, could make governing more difficult for the administration that has ruled Cuba since Fidel Castro led a revolution in 1959.

But the most recent CIA assessments were inconclusive on whether the worsening economy would destabilise the government, said the people familiar with the intelligence, speaking on the condition of anonymity to share sensitive ‍information.

Cuba ‘ready to fall’: Trump

These assessments are notable because Trump and other US officials have suggested that shutting off Venezuelan oil to the island after the Caracas operation could topple the government in Havana, a longtime dream of Secretary of State Marco Rubio and some other high-ranking officials in the Trump administration.

“Cuba looks like it is ready to fall,” Trump told reporters on Air Force One on Sunday. “I don’t know if they’re going to hold out, but Cuba now has no income. They got all their income from Venezuela, from the Venezuelan oil.”

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

The White House, the CIA and the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not respond to requests for comment. Reuters could not determine if the CIA had produced an updated assessment since US forces arrested Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro last Saturday.

Venezuela is Cuba’s top oil supplier. Since Maduro’s capture, the US has successfully pressed Venezuelan interim President Delcy Rodriguez to send essentially all of Venezuela’s oil to the US

Given the dire assessments of Cuba’s energy situation even when Venezuelan ‍oil was flowing to the island, ‍the impacts of Caracas’ shifting oil flows on Cuba’s economy will be severe, independent analysts say.

Enough pain for a revolution?

Cuba’s communist economy has performed poorly for decades amid rigid state planning and a US embargo.

But a confluence of factors in recent years – including Venezuela’s declining economy and a drop-off in tourism following the Covid-19 outbreak – has compounded Cuba’s pain.

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

The people who were familiar with the intelligence and spoke to Reuters said the CIA had described Cuba’s economy in very poor terms – although their descriptions differed in degree.

One official said the situation described in the assessments was not quite as bad as the “Special Period” of the 1990s, a time of prolonged economic pain following the withdrawal of the Soviet Union’s support in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Laura Rosa sells produce in Havana after power returns from a grid collapse, December 3, 2025. — Reuters pic

One of the officials, however, said blackouts were lasting on average 20 hours a day outside of Havana, which had not occurred previously.

Whether or not economic suffering actually leads to government change is unclear – a reality acknowledged ‌in the CIA assessments.

Outmigration of younger people

Two US officials said the US government assessed that there has been a demographic collapse on the island in recent years, with large numbers of people under 50 having migrated from Cuba. That could blunt the push for political reform, which in ‍other countries tends to draw energy from young people.

Cuba’s census estimated the population at over 10 million in 2023, but one of the officials said it likely ‌now stands at less than ‍9 million.

Richard Feinberg, a professor emeritus at the University of California San Diego who served in high-ranking US national security roles for decades, said economic conditions in Cuba were “certainly very bad”.

He ‍noted that Cuba’s President, Miguel Díaz-Canel, who took office in 2021, does not have the widespread legitimacy enjoyed by former leader Fidel Castro.

“When a population is really hungry, what it ‍does is, your day-to-day is just about survival. You don’t think about politics, all you think about is ⁠putting bread on the table for your family,” Feinberg ‍said.

“On the other hand, people can become so desperate that they lose their fear, and they take to the streets.” — Reuters

Cuba on the brink? Trump predicts downfall, but CIA cautions Havana’s survival story is not so simple


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Why is Travis Hunter not playing today vs Bills? Here’s when Jaguars star could return
Next Post: Iranian president says gov’t determined to address economic problems, urges refrain from “destructive actions”

Related Posts

Ant Digital warns of fake tokens as crypto scams persist in Hong Kong Ant Digital warns of fake tokens as crypto scams persist in Hong Kong News
OpenAI robotics lead Caitlin Kalinowski quits in response to Pentagon deal OpenAI robotics lead Caitlin Kalinowski quits in response to Pentagon deal News
Trump to decide on Iran action in 2 weeks: White House Trump to decide on Iran action in 2 weeks: White House News

Latest

  • Crow-Armstrong’s RBI single in the bottom of the 9th lifts Cubs past the Athletics 7-6
  • ‘Sanctimonious’ stars or guardians of journalism? 60 Minutes’ implosion tightens Trump’s media grip
  • 16-year-old boy in Thailand allegedly stabs stepfather to death for attacking his mother
  • Love Island UK’s George Knight Suddenly Quits, Leaves Villa
  • Ahead of its IPO, Anthropic’s Daniela Amodei shrugs off doubts about AI’s returns
  • Airbnb’s Brian Chesky plans to launch a new AI lab
  • US public cheers dancing Unitree robots while Congress looks to ban them
  • Israel, Lebanon agree to implement ceasefire
  • Russia says energy crisis shows Europe cannot survive without its oil and gas
  • Lansing shooting: Shots fired at E 170th Street, opposite Lansing Police Department in Illinois; first details

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs