US-Cuba Tensions Soar After Deadly Shootout Involving Mystery Speedboat

Cuban border guards killed four people on a US-registered speedboat after a shootout in Cuban waters, escalating existing tensions. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated the US is investigating the incident to determine what happened and who was involved. The event recalls historical conflicts like the Bay of Pigs, occurring amid a US oil embargo and Trump's designation of Cuba as a national security threat. Cuba has reaffirmed its right to defend its territorial waters as the US uses economic pressure hoping to force political change.

Key Points: US-Cuba Shootout: 4 Killed on Mystery Boat, Tensions Spike

  • Deadly maritime shootout in Cuban waters
  • US-registered mystery speedboat involved
  • Cuba claims self-defense against "aggressors"
  • US investigates citizenship of those onboard
  • Incident revives memories of historical US-Cuba conflicts
4 min read

Cuban forces kills four on US-registered 'mystery' boat in shootout amid high tensions

Cuba kills four on a US-registered speedboat in a shootout. US officials investigate as Trump labels Cuba an "extraordinary threat," escalating long-standing tensions.

"We're going to find out exactly what happened here and then we'll respond accordingly. - Marco Rubio"

New York, Feb 26

Cuba says it has killed four persons on a mystery US speedboat in a shootout in its waters, cranking up the already high level of tension between Washington and Havana, with US President Donald Trump declaring that country an "extraordinary threat".

"We're going to find out exactly what happened here and then we'll respond accordingly," US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said on the Wednesday incident.

"It is highly unusual to see shootouts on the open sea like that," he said. "It's not something that happens every day. It's something, frankly, that hasn't happened with Cuba in a very long time".

Cuba's Interior Ministry said that persons on the speedboat began shooting at its border guards when they approached it for identification on Wednesday morning, wounding the commander of the Cuban vessel.

When the Cubans fired back, four "aggressors" on the speedboat were killed, and six who were wounded were evacuated and are receiving medical treatment, the ministry said.

It did not identify the people on the boat, but gave the registration number, which indicated that it was registered in Florida, just about 150 kilometres from Cuba and has a large community of exiles.

A boat with the number it provided is shown in a vessel database as a 24-foot Pro-Line boat that is about 45 years old and can accommodate about 10 people.

The incident happened on a day the US made a show of slightly loosening the oil embargo it had placed on it by offering to allow some Venezuelan oil to flow to it, but with a huge caveat that it can go only to the private sector in a Communist country where most of the economy is under state control

Rubio, who is in Kitts and St Nevis for a meeting with Caribbean leaders, said that US diplomats in Cuba were trying to get in touch with the wounded people from the boat to determine if they were US citizens or permanent residents and what happened.

Rubio denied that it was a US government operation or that government employees were involved.

Vice President J.D. Vance said in Washington that the US was monitoring the situation, and added, "Hopefully it's not as bad as we fear it could be"

"But can't say more, because I just don't know more," he said, acknowledging the mystery of the boat.

Florida Attorney-General James Uthmeier ordered state prosecutors to investigate the incident and said, "We will do everything in our power to hold these communists accountable".

Cuba's Interior Ministry also said it was investigating the incident.

"In the face of current challenges, Cuba reaffirms its determination to protect its territorial waters, based on the principle that national defence is a fundamental pillar of the Cuban State," it warned.

Ever since the Communist takeover of Cuba under the leadership of the late Fidel Castro, the US has had an adversarial relationship with it.

Issuing several sanctions on Cuba and those involved in certain trades with it, Trump last month called Havana "an unusual and extraordinary threat" to US "national security and foreign policy".

He accused it of collaborating with Russia, Iran and various terrorist groups against the US.

The tensions flared to new heights after Venezuela's leader, Nicolas Maduro, a fast friend and ally of Cuba, was captured by US forces last month and brought to the US.

Cuba, which received discounted or free Venezuelan oil, is facing an economic crisis with the energy cutoff.

The US has wielded the oil weapon with expectations that a worsening crisis would topple the Cuban government headed by President Miguel Díaz-Canel.

"Cuba needs to change, it needs to change dramatically because it is the only chance that it has to improve the quality of life for its people," said Rubio, the son of Cuban exiles.

The mystery boat brought back memories of the Bay of Pigs incident in 1961, when a band of Cuban exiles with Washington's clandestine help launched a failed attack by sea on Fidel Castro's government.

Frequently, boats are used to smuggle people out of Cuba and shootings involving them and Cuban forces have been reported.

Earlier this month, Trump issued an order allowing US forces to intercept US boats heading to Cuba because of the extreme danger they would face.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The timing is suspicious, right after the US made a show of loosening the oil embargo. It feels like a provocation. Who were these people on a 45-year-old boat? Smugglers? Exiles? The whole "mystery" angle is troubling. Hope the wounded recover and the full truth comes out.
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Arjun K
Bay of Pigs memories indeed! The US never learns. Constantly interfering in other countries' affairs and then acting surprised when there's a backlash. Cuba is a small nation standing up to a giant. You have to respect that, even if you don't agree with their politics. 🇨🇺
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Priya S
Very tragic that lives were lost. But Rubio's statement "Cuba needs to change..." is so arrogant. Change according to whom? The US? Every country has its own journey. Using an oil embargo to deliberately cause an economic crisis and suffering for common people is not a moral foreign policy.
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Karthik V
As an Indian, I see parallels with how powerful nations treat smaller ones. The language – "extraordinary threat" – for a country like Cuba? Really? The real issue is the decades-long embargo that hurts ordinary Cubans. This shootout is a symptom of a failed policy.
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Michael C
Let's be fair, the article says the boat shot first and wounded a Cuban commander. Any coast guard in the world would return fire. The Florida AG's comment about holding "these communists accountable" is pure politics, jumping to conclusions. Need calm heads, not more tension.

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