The talks took place amid mounting pressure on the island from the Trump administration
US and Cuban military officials have held a rare in-person meeting at the Guantanamo Bay naval base as Washington continues to increase pressure on the island nation.
The US acquired the site on Cuba’s southeastern coast in 1903. While Cuba retains formal sovereignty over the territory, Washington exercises full jurisdiction and control under a lease agreement that Havana considers illegitimate.
According to US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM), its commander, General Francis Donovan, met with Cuba’s chief of the general staff, Lieutenant General Roberto Legra Sotolongo, on Friday for “a brief exchange on operational security matters.”
Donovan also “led a perimeter security assessment of the naval base and discussed force protection, safety of service members and their families, and operational readiness with base officials,” SOUTHCOM said.
Cuba’s Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces described the meeting as “positive,” saying both sides agreed to “maintain communication between the commands.”
In January, US President Donald Trump imposed sweeping restrictions on fuel supplies to Cuba, contributing to fuel shortages and blackouts across the island. He has argued that the Cuban government poses a security threat and has repeatedly threatened the country with military action.
Last week, former Cuban President Raul Castro was indicted by the US Justice Department over the 1996 shootdown of two American aircraft operated by anti-communist Cuban exiles off the island’s coast. Around the same time, the Pentagon announced that the USS Nimitz carrier strike group arrived in the Caribbean, prompting comparisons with the military buildup that preceded the US commando raid in Venezuela earlier this year, which ended with the capture of President Nicolas Maduro.
CIA Director John Ratcliffe paid a rare visit to Havana earlier this month, reportedly pressing for reforms including political liberalization and a transition from socialism to a market-based economy.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel has denounced the US measures as illegal under international law and vowed to defend the country against any military action.
“If we need to die, we’ll die, because as our national anthem says, ‘Dying for the homeland is to live,’” he said last month.
Diaz-Canel added that Cuba is ready for talks with the US, but only on equal footing.