The turbulent history of US-Cuban relations


“I think I could do anything I want with it”: That’s what Donald Trump said about Cuba mid-March. Yet he is hardly the first US president with such expansionist desires, notes historian Michael Zeuske, a professor at the Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies at the University of Bonn. Zeuske says the US had already set its sights on the island asย early as the mid-19th century.

An elderly man washes a classic American car as Cuban flags hang in the background
More than just classic cars and soft power: The US has long tried to exert direct control over CubaImage: Eric Kruszewski/Design Pics/picture alliance

Cuba is not for sale

Back then, Cuba was still a Spanish colony. In 1820, Thomas Jefferson, who had served as the third president of the nascent United States from 1801-09, declared that his country should seize the first opportunity to annex Cuba.

Three years later, then-Secretary of State John Quincy Adams remarked: “There are laws of political as well as of physical gravitation; and if an apple severed by the tempest from its native tree cannot choose but fall to the ground, Cuba, forcibly disjoined from its own unnatural connection with Spain, and incapable of self support, can gravitate only towards the North American Union, which by the same law of nature cannot cast her off from its bosom.”

In 1848, the 11th US president, James K. Polk, offered the Spanish $100 million for Cuba, only for the European colonial power to reportedly reply that it would rather sink the island into the sea. Spain desperately wanted to keep hold of the colony, one of the few still in its possession.

But just six years later the US was at it again: Its diplomats drafted a secret document in which they claimed the right to take Cuba by force should Spain continue to refuse their demand to sell the island. Nothing would come of it, however.

The ‘apple’ is ripe

All these plans were a result of the Monroe Doctrine, a foreign policy direction rooted in then-President James Monroe’s 1823 message to the European colonial powers that “America [is] for the Americans.”

A photo collage showing James Monroe and Donald Trump
US President James Monroe’s foreign policy has been echoed in Donald Trump’s expansionist and interventionist aimsImage: AFP

On the surface, this message concerned the sovereignty of the young nation in North and South America. However, the US itself had already long ago embarked on a course of expansion. So wouldn’t it be logical to finally pick that apple lying just 160 km (99 miles) off the south coast of Florida? It was practically on their doorstep.

Finally, in 1898, the US found a pretext to take over the island. The Cubans had been fighting bitterly for years to rid themselves of Spanish rule, andย Washington established a strong military presence on the island, on the pretextย that it was protecting its citizens there. As part of this, the USS Maine, a navy battleship, was anchored in Havana Harbor for weeks.

The exploded USS Maine in a harbor
More than 250 US sailors died in the explosion of the USS Maine, in Havana harbor; the boat sunk but its ruins were later recoveredImage: The Print Collector/Heritage Images/picture alliance

On February 15, 1898, a massive explosion tore open the ship’s hull, sinking the vessel almost immediately. Was it caused by a smoldering fire that reached the ammunition? Or had the Spanish torpedoed the ship, as the US claimed? According to Zeuske, the accusation has never been substantiated; there is no proof it was an attack. The US nonetheless declared war on Spain.

Soldiers in Cuba posing as a group under the American flag during the Spanish-American war
‘Remember the Maine! To hell with Spain!’ became the rallying cry of soldiers in the Spanish-American warImage: Everett Collection/picture alliance

Cuba becomes a de facto protectorate

The war lasted just four months and ended with Spain losing its last major colonies: Puerto Rico, Guam, the Philippines and Cuba. The United States finally took control of the Caribbean island โ€” but it didn’t become a state. This is due in large part to US Senator Henry M. Teller, who opposed Cuba’s annexation, supposedly to protect the sugar industry in his home state of Colorado from Cuban competition.

Yet Cuba also wasn’t given full independence. The United States refused to withdraw its troops unless the new government accepted the conditions of the “Platt Amendment.” Cuban leaders had to include it in the constitution, Zeuske explains. The amendment would define future relations between the two countries, effectively allowing the US to have a say in foreign policy, national debt and health policy, as well as to intervene militarily and build naval bases. The base at Guantanamo still exists today.

On May 20, 1902, US military rule ended and the Republic of Cuba installed its first president. But even then, Cuba remained a quasi-protectorate of its powerful northern neighbor. The US was driven largely by economic interests: By 1926, US companies controlled about 60% of Cuba’s sugar industry. American investors also poured large amounts of money into hotels, bars and casinos in Havana.

A classic car is pictured in front of Havana's Hotel Nacional
In 1946, some 500 mafia bosses stayed in the Hotel Nacional (pictured) in Havana under the pretext of attending a Frank Sinatra concert; their real purposes was dividing up business on CubaImage: CTK/dpa/picture alliance

The mafia’s long reach

In 1920 the US banned alcohol, and tourists began flocking to Cuba. Organized crime groups followed soon after. Cuba was close enough to the US to be easily reached but far enough away to avoid its law enforcement.

Havana became a major hub for gambling, drug and arms trafficking, money laundering and prostitution. US crime groups and the circle around Cuba’s dictatorial leader Fulgencio Batista made millions in profits. Batista maintained close ties with mob boss Meyer Lansky, who became a key business partner and informal adviser.

Fulgencio Batista, Meyer Lansky and Lanksy's wife sitting at a table during a meal
Cuban ruler Fulgencio Batista (left) had close personal and business ties to US mafia boss Meyer Lanksy (right), seen here with his wife in a photo from c. 1948Image: Public Domain

The Cuban Revolution and its aftermath

While the elites were growing wealthier, much of the population was struggling in poverty. In 1953 Fidel Castro led an initial insurrection that government forces crushed. His “26th of July Movement” subsequently waged a guerrilla war that ended in 1959 with Batista fleeing the country.

Cuba’s revolution

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

“Castro initially tried to maintain a good relationship with the United States,” Zeuske says, but US officials showed little interest in negotiating with a socialist revolutionary. What’s more, Castro ordered the expropriation of US-owned refineries and sugar plantations and grew closer to the Soviet Union.

In 1960, President Dwight D. Eisenhower imposed a trade embargo on Cuba. In 1961, Cuban exiles, covertly supported by the CIA, attempted to land at the Bay of Pigs, on Cuba’s southern coast, and overthrow the Castro government. The operation failed miserably and became a public embarrassment for the United States. Cubans celebrated Castro as he made further overtures toward Moscow, turning Cuba into a Soviet-aligned state in the Western Hemisphere.

In 1962, the Soviet Union deployed nuclear missiles to Cuba, bringing the world to the brink of nuclear war. The crisis ended when the Soviets withdrew the weapons in exchange for a US pledge not to invade Cuba. But US efforts to eliminate Castro continued, first through assassination plots and later through schemes involving poisoned cigars, a contaminated diving suit and an explosive device disguised as a seashell. These attempts caused Cubans to rally even more closely around their leader.

Fidel Castro
Fidel Castro (pictured here in 1995) ruled Cuba from 1959 to 2008, when he transferred power to his brother, RaulImage: Jose Goitia/AP Photo/picture alliance

Is Cuba ‘ready to fall’?

In the decades that followed, relations between the countries improved twice, under Presidents Jimmy Carter in the late 70s and Barack Obama in the 2010s. President Donald Trump later reversed that course.

In early January, Trump claimed Cuba was “ready to fall” and increased pressure on the island by blocking its foreign oil supplies, including those from Cuba-friendly Venezuela, where the US had taken military action. In March, Trump added on camera: “I think I will have the honor of taking Cuba.”

US sanctions, silent allies: Where have Cuba’s friends gone?

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

The Cuban response was swift: Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernandez de Cossรญo told NBC News that the country was sovereign and would not accept being controlled by another state.

People hold their noses as they walk past garbage piling up in the streets
Since early 2026, Cubans have been living with the effects of a US energy blockade, leading to garbage in the streets, among other thingsImage: Ramon Espinosa/AP Photo/picture alliance

Conditions in Cuba remain strained. Its energy supply has faltered, and blackouts have become common. Tourism has declined, garbage has piled up in the streets, and food has spoiled during power outages.

“When it comes to leadership, the military and territorial control, Cuba is extremely resilient,” Zeuske says. “At the same time, people are deeply dissatisfied with their government, especially with the power cuts. Conditions continue to deteriorate. Many young people want to leave.”

This article has been translated from German.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *