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Trump administration used legal theories to justify Cuba intervention

Created at 31 May · 2:20 PM3 sources↑ Market-relevant3 events
IN SHORT

The Trump administration employed legal theories, including indictments and property claims, to justify potential interventions or exert pressure on Cuba. These actions are framed by the author as an abuse of legal theories and potentially driven by personal economic benefit.

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Key Numbers

94age of Raul Castro
67years ago property claims were made

Who's Involved

Raul Castro
former head of state of Cuba, indicted by the US Department of Justice
US Department of Justice
indicted Raul Castro
Supreme Court
gave green light to sue tourist industry actors
Marco Rubio
Secretary of State, agitated with Cuba's refusal to bow to his demands
Donald Trump
former US President, incoherence on Cuba policy noted

↳ Why This Matters

This article discusses the legal and political strategies employed by the US, particularly during the Trump administration, to justify potential interventions or exert pressure on Cuba. It highlights the use of indictments and property claims as pretexts for foreign policy actions, drawing parallels to actions taken regarding Venezuela. The piece also touches on the current economic hardships in Cuba and the political dynamics involving US officials and Cuban leadership.

Key facts

  • The US Department of Justice indicted Raul Castro.
  • The Supreme Court allowed Cuban-American-owned companies with property claims to sue tourist industry actors.
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio is publicly agitated with Cuba's refusal to bow to his demands.
  • The article suggests Trump's policy position towards Cuba may be driven by potential personal or family economic benefit.

This article discusses the legal and political strategies employed by the US, particularly during the Trump administration, to justify potential interventions or exert pressure on Cuba. It highlights the use of indictments and property claims as pretexts for foreign policy actions, drawing parallels to actions taken regarding Venezuela. The piece also touches on the current economic hardships in Cuba and the political dynamics involving US officials and Cuban leadership.

Frequently asked questions

The US Department of Justice indicted Raul Castro, and the Supreme Court allowed companies with old property claims to sue tourist industry actors.

The author believes the US is abusing legal theories to justify intervention and that Trump's policy may be driven by personal economic benefit.

The article suggests the US is using strained invocations of US rules against terrorism and enforcing Batista-era property rights.

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Cadence

How It Developed

31 May · 11:00 PM
The new article details a January 3 US "mini-invasion" of Venezuela, resulting in deaths and the capture of Maduro, justifying it with narcotics trafficking charges.
RT via PiQSuite
31 May · 4:50 PM
New reporting details legal theories used to justify potential US actions against Cuba, including indicting Raul Castro and allowing property claims lawsuits.
ZeroHedge News via PiQSuite
31 May · 2:13 PM
A secret plan for a Cuba invasion involving an armada, 2,500 marines, and special ops was revealed.
Drudge Report via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Inside secret plan for Cuba invasion with armada, 2,500 marines, special ops...m.piqsuite.com
T1
Manufacturing Consent For Trump's Invasion Of Cubam.piqsuite.com
T1
Scott Ritter: Cuba could be the bite Trump can't chewm.piqsuite.com

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