As Trump turns his gaze toward Cuba, the real target might be China

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With deposed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in custody in New York and his decapitated regime in Caracas quietly cooperating with the United States, President Donald Trump has shifted his hostile refrain to Cuba.

“Cuba is a failed nation,” Mr. Trump said recently. “That’s it for the countdown.”

And with the Trump administration’s severing of Venezuela’s oil lifeline to Cuba — and a Jan. 29 executive order threatening harsh tariffs on any country supplying oil to the island nation — that assessment appears increasingly accurate.

Why we wrote this

The deterioration of the situation in Cuba, in the context of the Trump administration’s aggressive posture towards the Western Hemisphere, is fueling a debate in Washington: regime change or agreement? Experts believe that the latter solution is more likely, while a more important strategic objective could be to curb the Chinese presence on the island.

The oil blockade quickly led Cuba to adopt harsh measures, including stopping all public transportation, instituting a four-day work week, closing tourist hotels that provided much-needed revenue, and increasing power outages.

Families already experiencing difficult living conditions are turning to wood and coal for cooking. Some international airlines have canceled flights to the island.

The rapid deterioration of the situation in Cuba is fueling an intensifying debate in Washington: agreement or regime change? Should Mr. Trump opt for a Venezuela-style deal that leaves a cooperative part of the current government in place? Or should he stick together to bring down a communist regime that has been the bane of the United States since 1959?

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