CIA Director John Ratcliffe led a US delegation to Havana to meet with Cuban government officials on Thursday as the island grapples with a collapse of its energy sector amidspiraling relationswith the US, according to the Cuban government.
“Following the request submitted by the US government that a delegation presided over by the CIA Director John Ratcliffe be received in Havana, the Revolutionary Directorate approved the realization of this visit and the meeting with its counterpart from the Ministry of the Interior,” the statement read.
The meeting with the head of the CIA, the same agency Cuba has long accused of sabotaging its revolution, comes as tensions between the Cold War-era foes have risen to the highest point in decades.
Havana said its officials stressed in the meeting that Cuba “does not constitute a threat to the national security of the US” and that there are no “legitimate reasons” to include it on the US’s list ofState Sponsors of Terrorism, as it has been under the Trump administration.They also insisted the country does not harbor, support or fund terrorists – something the US has long accused it of doing – and denied hosting foreign military or intelligence bases.
Two sources confirmed to CNN that the CIA director made the trip.
News of the meeting comes just two days after US President Donald Trump suggested his administration was preparing to talk with Cuba, claiming the island was a “failed country” asking for help amid a deepening economic crisis.
“Cuba is asking for help, and we are going to talk!!! In the meantime, I’m off to China!” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post.
The president’s comments come after his administration recently intensified sanctions against Cuba and months after it effectively imposed anoil blockadeon the country. They also come after the US military ramped upintelligence-gathering flightsoff the coast of Cuba.
Other than one shipload of donated Russian oil, Cuban officials say they have been cut off by the US from any oil shipments for more than four months.
The Russian donation in late March has been exhausted and oil reserves that run the island’s beleaguered electrical grid areall but spent, Cuban Minister of Energy and Mines Vicente de la O Levy said in a televised appearance Wednesday night.
Source: Drudge Report