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Trump emphasized the pressure on Cuba as Rubio said that diplomacy is unlikely to solve the problems

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U.S. President Donald Trump and a top U.S. official on Thursday raised concerns about military intervention in Cuba, a renewed concern that gained weight a day after the administration announced criminal charges against the island’s former leader, Raúl Castro.

Trump said former US leaders have considered intervention in Cuba for decades.

“Some presidents have been looking at this for 50, 60 years, doing something,” Trump told reporters when asked about Cuba during an environmental event in the Oval Office. “Also, it looks like I’ll be the one to do it. So, I’d be happy to do it.”

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters separately that Cuba has been a security risk for many years because of its relationship with America’s enemies and that Trump is determined to fix it.

Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants who has long opposed Cuba’s socialist leadership, said the Trump administration wants to resolve the dispute with Cuba peacefully but doubts the US can reach a diplomatic solution with the island’s current government.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio shows his hands outstretched, while speaking to a group of reporters in Florida.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio speaks to the media in Homestead, Fla., on Thursday. (Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AFP/Getty Images)

“Trump’s preference is always a negotiated peace agreement. That is always our preference. That is still our preference with Cuba,” Rubio said in Miami before boarding a plane to a NATO meeting in Sweden and then a visit to India.

“I’m just telling you the truth, you know, the chances of that happening, considering who we’re dealing with right now, are not great,” he said.

No more ‘waiting for us’: Rubio

Trump’s top aides — including Rubio, CIA director John Ratcliffe and other top national security officials — have met with Cuban officials in recent months to explore possible improvements in relations. But the American side was indifferent to those talks, which led to more sanctions on the Cuban government this past week.

A man talks on a cell phone, while standing next to pictures of Raúl and Fidel Castro displayed on a building in Havana.
Portraits of Raúl and Fidel Castro are seen on Wednesday on the wall of a building in Havana that houses the Cuban Revolution. (Ramon Espinosa/The Associated Press)

Over the years, Cuba has become accustomed to “buying time and waiting for us,” Rubio said. “They won’t be able to wait for us or buy time. We are very determined, very focused.”

When asked if the US would use force in Cuba to change the political system on the island, Rubio reiterated that diplomacy is recommended, but noted that “the president always has the option to do whatever is necessary to support and protect the interests of the country.”

He pushed back on the journalist’s suggestion that it sounded like “nation-building,” insisting that it was about dealing with a national security threat.

Cuban leader condemns impeachment

Federal prosecutors on Wednesday filed an indictment accusing Castro of ordering the shooting down of passenger planes leaving Miami in 1996. The charges, which were opened in private by a grand jury in April, include manslaughter and destroying the plane.

WATCH | The US case and Washington’s demands for change in Cuba:

Trump applauded the US case against former Cuban president Raúl Castro

US President Donald Trump has praised his Justice Department’s indictment of former Cuban president Raúl Castro for his role in the 1996 downing of two civilian airliners in Cuba that killed four people, including three Americans. Trump said the US is ‘liberating’ Cuba, but has no plans to ‘escalate.’

Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel denounced the impeachment as a political act seeking to “correct the folly of the military invasion of Cuba.”

Castro’s impeachment has led many to believe that the Trump administration is following the playbook of early January, when it captured then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in a military coup. Maduro, who has been in US custody since his arrest, faces drug-trafficking charges and has pleaded not guilty.

The US military announced the arrival of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz and its accompanying ships to the Caribbean Sea on the same day that Castro’s charges were announced. The US Southern Command said the ships are participating in naval exercises with Latin American allies that began in March.

Rubio would not discuss how the US might move to use the case against Castro, who will turn 95 next month.

Repeated threats of military action

Trump has been threatening military action in Cuba since he ousted Maduro and ordered a blackout that halted oil shipments to Cuba. That led to massive power outages, food shortages and economic collapse across the island.

A man boards a bicycle taxi, carrying two passengers, in Havana, Cuba.
A man drives a bicycle taxi, carrying two passengers, in Havana on Wednesday. (Ramon Espinosa/The Associated Press)

Trump has mixed talks about regime change in Cuba after promising to take over the country if its leadership does not open its economy to American investment and expel America’s enemies.

On Thursday, Rubio said Cuba is a serious threat to US national security because of its security and intelligence ties with China and Russia and its friendly relations with America’s enemies in Latin America.

China opposes US sanctions and pressure on Cuba, said the spokesperson of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Guo Jiakun, on Thursday.

“China firmly supports Cuba in protecting its national sovereignty and national dignity and opposes foreign interference,” Guo said.

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