Havana has officially drawn a line in the sand, rejecting any U.S. attempts to negotiate the term of President Miguel Díaz-Canel or the country’s socialist political system. On Friday, Vice Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossio confirmed that while talks are occurring, the leadership of the nation is “non-negotiable,” despite a crippling U.S. oil blockade that has left tankers originally bound for Cuba diverting to nearby Trinidad.
The “Off-Ramp” Proposal
Leaked reports suggest the Trump administration is proposing a deal that mirrors the recent removal of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela. The plan allegedly includes:
Pushing Díaz-Canel from power with two years left on his presidential term. Relaxing trade restrictions and the embargo in exchange for a transition of power. Remarkably, the proposal reportedly leaves the influential Raúl Castro (94) and his family untouched, focusing solely on the “technocratic” leadership of Díaz-Canel.

A Nation Under Siege
The timing of these talks is critical. Cuba is facing a severe energy and food crisis, exacerbated by President Trump’s assertion that he can do “anything I want” with a sovereign neighbor. The comprehensive U.S. economic embargo remains the primary point of contention, with Cuba seeking damages for decades of economic warfare, while the U.S. continues to press 5,913 claims from Americans whose properties were nationalized in 1959.
The “Art of the Deal”
From my perspective, this is a game of chicken. By targeting Díaz-Canel specifically while sparing the Castro name, the Trump administration is betting that the Cuban military and Communist Party elites might be willing to sacrifice a single leader to save the economy.
However, unlike the centralized power of the Maduro era, authority in Cuba is spread across a complex network of party leaders and the military. If Washington thinks they can “whisk away” Díaz-Canel as they did with Maduro, they may be underestimating the institutional resilience of the Cuban state. As the Bank of Canada raises rate hike bets and the Iran war drains U.S. resources, Trump is looking for a “quick win” in the Caribbean, but Havana isn’t folding just yet.
















