Cuba is ‘ready’ for talks with U.S. amid growing pressure from Trump
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ Cubaβs top diplomat in Washington says Havana is prepared to enter diplomatic talks with the United States, reiterating the countryβs willingness to engage even as tensions escalate with President Trump asserting that the island nationβs government could soon collapse.
βWe are ready to engage with the U.S. on the issues that are important for the bilateral relation, and to talk about those in which we have differences,β Ambassador Lianys Torres Rivera, who leads Cubaβs mission in Washington, told The Times on Wednesday.
Any dialogue would need to respect Cubaβs sovereignty and its βright to self-determination,β the ambassador said.
βWe are sure that it is possible to find a solution,β she said.
Her comments in a wide-ranging interview come at a particularly volatile moment for Cuba, which is under mounting economic pressure after the Trump administration imposed an oil blockade that has choked off the islandβs energy supplies.
The measures have deepened a humanitarian crisis and prompted Cuban President Miguel DΓaz-Canel to call for an βurgentβ overhaul to the countryβs economic model.
The situation in Cuba worsened after U.S. forces removed Venezuelan President NicolΓ‘s Maduro in January, allowing Washington to later cut off oil shipments from Venezuela to its longtime ally. The Trump administration later pressured other suppliers, including Mexico, to reduce deliveries.
βWe are doing our best, and we are being very creative, but it has a serious impact,β Torres Rivera said of the blockade. βIt is a collective punishment against the Cuban people.β
The White House this week framed Cubaβs worsening economic and humanitarian conditions as a potential opening to pressure Havana into negotiations.
βThe country is obviously in a very weak place, economically speaking, the people are crying out for help, and the president believes and knows the Cuban regime wants a deal,β White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said during a news briefing Tuesday.
Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Florida) told the Miami Herald on Wednesday that the Trump administration had been having secret, high-level conversations with several people in former President Raul Castroβs inner circle, a similar approach that was taken in Venezuela before Maduroβs capture. (The operation to seize Maduro killed 32 Cuban officers stationed in the country.)
Cuban President Miguel DΓaz -Canel, fourth from right, holds up a Cuban flag during a rally in Havana on Jan. 16, 2026, to protest the killing of Cuban officers during the U.S. operation that captured Venezuelan President NicolΓ‘s Maduro.
(Ramon Espinosa / Associated Press)
Another report by the USA Today this week said the Trump administration was close to announcing an economic deal with Cuba that would ease travel restrictions, among other things. A representative with the Cuban government declined to comment on the report.
The White House has not specified what a deal may look like. But Trump has said the United States is interested in a βfriendly takeoverβ and has suggested that the move would allow Cubans to visit the island, a place that many Cuban exiles have worried about returning to while the current regime is in place.
βIt is just a question of time before a lot of unbelievable people are going back to Cuba,β Trump said at an event last week.
Several news outlets have reported that the Justice Department is examining possible federal charges against officials within Cubaβs government, a move that could prompt a change in the islandβs government.
Torres Rivera said she is aware of the reports but said the βjudicial accusationsβ are an βinstrument of political coercion without any legitimacy.β
βIt is not something we are losing sleep over,β she said.
As for the potential negotiations, Torres Rivera did not provide specifics but talked about restoring diplomatic ties somewhat to how they existed during the Obama administration.
βWe are neighbors,β she said. βWe have common challenges, common threats, and we can speak about all that, and we can speak on the basis of respect for each otherβs sovereignty and each otherβs right of self-determination. We are ready for that.β
President Trump has approached diplomacy with Cuba with a harsher tone.
βAs we achieve a historic transformation in Venezuela, weβre also looking forward to the great change that will soon be coming to Cuba,β Trump said Saturday, one week after U.S. and Israeli forces attacked Iran and killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
He added: βCubaβs at the end of the line. Theyβre very much at the end of the line. They have no money. They have no oil. They have a bad philosophy. They have a bad regime that has been bad for a very long time.β
Trump said that he has put Secretary of State Marco Rubio in charge of leading the talks with Cuba and that he believes a βdeal would be made very easily with Cuba.β
Torres Rivera did not offer an opinion on Rubio being tapped to lead the negotiations. Rubio is the son of Cuban immigrants who came to Florida three years before Castroβs brother, revolutionary Fidel Castro, rose to power in 1959. She reiterated that Cuba is βready to engageβ in talks regardless of who is leading them.
βWe are not talking about persons, we are talking about the government and we are ready to engage with the U.S. to talk about the very important issues that we have in bilateral relations,β she said.