Conor here: When you’ve lost Robert Gates…
Former CIA director just said that a mass migration crisis — caused by Rubio’s own regime change effort — is the only threat Cuba could pose to US
So Rubio sprints to Axios to fabricate the “presence of Iranian military advisers in Havana”pic.twitter.com/HMKiHF1p5E https://t.co/6pSujBKWud
— Erik Sperling (@ErikSperling) May 17, 2026
By Julia Conley, a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams. Originally published at Common Dreams.
Cuban officials said the Trump administration is making “increasingly implausible accusations” against the country as it pushes to justify, “without any excuse, a military attack against Cuba,” after an unnamed White House official told the news outlet Axios that the Cubans have been “discussing plans” to launch drones against the US.
“Cuba is the country under attack,” said the Cuban embassy in a statement, months into a ramped-up oil blockade by the US that has left the island’s electric grid in a “critical state” and forced frequent rolling blackouts as well as causing a healthcare crisis, with tens of thousands of people waiting for surgeries.
But in Axios’ article, the Trump administration official took pains to push the notion that the US, with its nearly $1 trillion-per-year military, could face attacks from the tiny Caribbean nation 90 miles south of Florida because officials there have been preparing defensive capabilities.
Axios reported that, according to classified intelligence it viewed, Cuba has acquired more than 300 drones and has been considering plans to attack the US military base at Guantanamo Bay, various US military vessels, and Key West, Florida.
The country has been acquiring drones from Russia and Iran since 2023 and has sought more aid from Russia in recent months, according to the report. Intelligence intercepts have also shown Cuba is “trying to learn about how Iran has resisted us,” the official said, referring to Iran’s use of unmanned aircraft, its closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and its attacks on US military outposts in the Middle East in response to the US-Israel war on the country that began in February.
The Cuban embassy further responded with a reminder that “like any country, Cuba has the right to defend itself against external aggression.”
Like any country, Cuba has the right to defend itself against external aggression. It is called self-defense, and it is protected by International Law and the UN Charter.
Those from the US who seek the submission and, in fact, the destruction of the Cuban…
— Cuban Embassy in US (@EmbaCubaUS) May 17, 2026
“Those from the US who seek the submission and, in fact, the destruction of the Cuban nation through military aggression and war, do not waste a single moment fabricating pretexts, creating and spreading falsehoods, and distorting as extraordinary the logical preparation required to face a potential aggression,” said the embassy.
Journalist José Luis Granados Ceja, who is based in Mexico City and covers Latin America for Drop Site News, emphasized that “Cuba has the right to self-defense.”
“It would be arguably be wise for Cuba to incorporate a tool that has proven to be an extraordinary effective weapon and a powerful tool of dissuasion as part of its self-defense strategy,” said Granados Ceja.
Axios said the classified intelligence “could become a pretext for US military action” that President Donald Trump has expressed an interest in taking numerous times, before acknowledging toward the end of the article that “US officials don’t believe Cuba is an imminent threat, or actively planning to attack American interests.”
Rather, the intelligence showed that Cuban officials “have been discussing drone warfare plans in case hostilities erupt as relations with the US continue to deteriorate”—suggesting they could use drones in self-defense if attacked by the US.
.@Axios fabricates a “drone threat”, only to confess paragraphs later: “US officials don’t believe Cuba is actively planning to attack.”
This contradictory disinformation is a transparent, ludicrous pretext to justify US hostility.
We categorically reject these baseless smears. https://t.co/YPgwket1p6— Cuba in the UK (@EmbaCuba_UK) May 17, 2026
The reporting carried echoes of Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s rationale for attacking Iran in February. He stunned legal experts days after the war began by explaining that the US had decided to wage war on the Middle Eastern country because it feared Iran would retaliate after Israel began attacking it.
“The imminent threat was that we knew that if Iran was attacked, and we believed they would be attacked, that they would immediately come after us,” Rubio said.
The claim that Cuba’s reported preparations make the island a threat to US security “is a lie—with purpose,” said David Adler, co-general coordinator of Progressive International.
“Marco Rubio and his stenographers at Axios are manufacturing consent for the invasion of Cuba,” said Adler. “To fall for this flimsy propaganda is to fail the most basic test of civic literacy. And the stakes are millions of Cuban lives off our coast.”
Cuban drone attack with Iranian help? Now we know why Rubio has been hammering the message that Cuba is a threat and host to U.S. adversaries.
It reads like something out of a bad spy novel, but this regime-change propaganda represents a very real danger. https://t.co/bq1TAbLNt1
— José Luis Granados Ceja (@GranadosCeja) May 17, 2026
Rubio, the son of Cuban immigrants, has long sought regime change in the socialist country.
Axios’ reporting came days after CIA Director John Ratcliffe traveled to Cuba to pressure officials into complying with US demands, likely including political and economic reforms, heightening fears that the US could be planning a military attack unless the country complies.
White House officials also told CBS News Friday that the Department of Justice is preparing to criminally indict former Cuban President Raúl Castro for shooting down planes that belonged to a US group that had flown into Cuba’s airspace in the 1990s. In January, US forces invaded Venezuela and abducted President Nicolás Maduro, bringing him to the US where he was charged with drug trafficking, and pleaded not guilty.
Former Obama administration staffer and Pod Save America co-host Tommy Vietor said Sunday that “lots of signals pointing towards an imminent US regime change operation against Cuba.”
“The latest,” he said of the Axios article, “is this blatant effort to launder a pretext for war through the media.”


Spoiler: it was a vacuum cleaner. The spy novel is quite good but half a century old (“Our man in Havana”, Greene).
:-]
Reports that Hezbollah operatives are in Cuba to train the locals in the use of drones are totally untrue. In fact, there are Hamas operatives there to help Cuba build a tunnel from Cuba itself to Florida to enable thousands of illegal Cuban migrants to sneak into the country, triggering a mass migration crisis.
People keep saying something is going to trigger another “migration crisis” in the USA. The administration hit the ground running with building or funding those horrible detention centers for dollars to turn that into an opportunity for some investors. They have loads of grifts.
I’ve heard that Cuba acquired extra-terrestrial technology after the Roswell crash in 1947. Fidel himself smuggled it out while he was in the US using his ‘baseball player’ cover. They are just waiting until the time is right to control the entire US.
Seems as plausible as little Marco and trump’s info.
So, the US violates Cuban airspace and Cuban authorities are indicted for defending their airspace. That’s rich for the DOinJ having no jurisdiction to start with. Who cares these days about law.
The law these days is whatever you want to make of them. That is why Maduro is being prosecuted on a gun charge under US law when he was actually in his own country of Venezuela. It’s called “extraterritoriality”.
A confident thug gives no reasons for thuggery, but a thug stealing lunch money from a little kid is a bit ashamed, makes stuff up, huffs and puffs big bad wolf style.
Marco, it’s a bad look. Not at all presidential.