Trump’s warning landed like a bomb.
Just days after deadly strikes on Iran and the killing of its Supreme Leader, he’s already pointing to the next target — and this time it’s on America’s doorstep.
On live TV, he vowed another nation is “gonna fall pretty soon,” hinting at backroom deals, regime change, and a fifty–year grudge finally coming du…
Trump’s remarks about Cuba, delivered almost casually on CNN, were anything but accidental. Framed as an inevitability — “Cuba is gonna fall pretty soon” — his words carried the weight of decades of Cold War scars and failed invasions.
He boasted the island had “fallen right into my lap,” casting himself as the man history had been waiting for, even as Iran reels from US and Israeli strikes and the assassination of Ali Khamenei.
For Cubans, and for millions across Latin America, the threat revives old ghosts: embargo, isolation, and the specter of forced change from Washington.
Under Obama, cautious openings had begun to soften a hardened past; Trump first slammed those doors shut, and now hints at something far more direct.
Between Iran’s demand for “unconditional surrender” and Cuba’s supposed coming “fall,” a chilling question hangs over the hemisphere: how far is he willing to go this time?