Donald Trump names one country that could be targeted next
When President Trump declared “Cuba is next” during a speech in Miami, it didn’t come with a clear plan—just a stark signal of growing U.S. pressure on the island after recent actions against Venezuela and Iran.
That remark, echoed by U.S. officials in interviews and diplomatic statements, fed widespread uncertainty about Washington’s intentions: whether it points to deeper sanctions, intensified economic pressure, ongoing negotiations, or something more aggressive. Havana has acknowledged talks with U.S. representatives even as it rejects changes to its political system, and international voices have warned that mounting pressure could destabilize the Caribbean.
What’s clear from current coverage is that the phrase has heightened geopolitical anxiety: critics view it as an ominous hint of future U.S. actions, while others treat it as political rhetoric without concrete follow‑through. The broader context includes an ongoing energy crisis in Cuba and shifts in regional diplomacy, making the statement as much a catalyst for debate as a policy outline.