A A A
Temperature Humidity
News Archive Can search within past 12 months

CIA boss holds talks with Cuban officials in rare trip

2026-05-15 HKT 15:28
Share this story facebook
  • Ramon Romero Curbelo, chief of intelligence in the Cuban Interior ministry, invites CIA director John Ratcliffe to sit down for talks. Photo: Reuters
    Ramon Romero Curbelo, chief of intelligence in the Cuban Interior ministry, invites CIA director John Ratcliffe to sit down for talks. Photo: Reuters
The head of the CIA has visited Cuba in an extraordinary step-up in contact between Washington and Havana as the communist-run island reels from US pressure, declaring that it is out of oil.

The Central Intelligence Agency, at the heart of the decades-long struggle between the United States and Cuba, confirmed on Thursday a Cuban government statement about director John Ratcliffe's visit.

Photos posted by the agency on X showed Ratcliffe alongside several people with blurred-out faces meeting with Ramon Romero Curbelo, chief of intelligence in the Cuban Interior ministry, and other Cuban officials.

The visit comes during a deepening crisis in US-Cuba relations, with the island enduring constant power outages prompted by President Donald Trump's fuel blockade.

Only one tanker from Russia – a historic ally of the Cuban authorities – has got through.

And that oil has now "run out," Energy Minister Vicente de la O Levy told state television. "The impact of the blockade is indeed causing us significant harm...because we are still not receiving fuel."

Trump has repeatedly signalled that he wants to topple the communist government in Cuba.

According to a report on CBS News, citing unidentified US officials, the Trump administration is also seeking to indict Raul Castro, the 94-year-old brother of the late Cuban communist leader Fidel Castro.

But Cuba framed the Ratcliffe visit as a chance to calm tensions.

The meeting with Ratcliffe took place "in a context marked by the complexity of bilateral relations, with the aim of contributing to the political dialogue between both nations," a government statement read.

The exchanges "made it possible to demonstrate categorically that Cuba does not constitute a threat to US national security, nor are there any legitimate reasons to include it on the list of countries that allegedly sponsor terrorism," the Cuban statement added.

Cuba "has never supported any hostile activity against the United States, nor will it permit actions against any other nation to be carried out from Cuba," it emphasised.

In a post on X, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel urged the United States to lift its blockade.

"The damage could be eased in a much simpler and faster way by lifting or relaxing the blockade, since it is known that the humanitarian situation is coldly calculated and induced," he said. (AFP)



Edited by Tony Sabine

CIA boss holds talks with Cuban officials in rare trip