Breaking News
January 1, UNPRECEDENTED Military Summit Unfolds at Guantanamo Perimeter

Wyatt’s Take
- Top U.S. commander meets Cuban military brass at Guantanamo fence line—first time in years this kind of sit-down happened.
- Comes as tensions spike between Washington and Havana, with America’s strategic base sitting right in communist Cuba’s backyard.
- Shows how fragile things are getting in our own hemisphere—negotiations happening through chain-link instead of diplomacy.
The head of U.S. Southern Command sat down with senior Cuban military officials Friday right at the fence line of America’s Guantanamo Bay naval base. This kind of face-to-face meeting hasn’t happened in years, and the timing tells you everything about how tense things have gotten between Washington and the communist regime ninety miles from Florida.
The meeting took place on the perimeter of the base itself—literally at the boundary where American sovereignty meets Cuban territory. That’s how strained relations have become: our commanders are negotiating through a fence instead of across a proper table.
#SOUTHCOM Commander Gen. Francis L. Donovan met with Army Corps General, Gen. Roberto Legrá Sotolongo, First Deputy Minister of the Chief of the General Staff, and other senior leaders from the Cuban military today at the perimeter of Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for a… pic.twitter.com/V4Fau3HxSo
— U.S. Southern Command (@Southcom) May 29, 2026
I believe the liberation of the wonderful people of Cuba from the clutches of communism is close at hand.
Cuba Libre.
— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) May 22, 2026
Guantanamo Bay remains one of America’s most strategic military installations, a critical naval station that’s been under U.S. control since 1903. The base sits in hostile territory, surrounded by a regime that’s been cozying up to Russia and China while thumbing its nose at American interests. Yet we maintain our presence there because it’s vital to projecting power and monitoring threats in the Caribbean.
Southern Command oversees all U.S. military operations in Central and South America, the Caribbean, and surrounding waters. When its top brass feels compelled to meet directly with Cuban military leaders at the fence line, you know the geopolitical situation has deteriorated significantly.
The meeting comes as the Biden administration has flip-flopped on Cuba policy—sometimes maintaining Trump-era sanctions, other times signaling openness to engagement. That inconsistency has left our military commanders to manage day-to-day realities with a hostile neighbor that hosts our most sensitive detention facility and a critical naval outpost.
Cuba continues to serve as a foothold for Chinese intelligence operations and Russian military cooperation in our hemisphere. The island’s communist government regularly protests the American presence at Guantanamo while accepting the annual lease payment—money they’ve refused to cash for decades but never returned.
Why It Matters
When our military has to conduct diplomacy at a fence line instead of through proper channels, it shows how unstable our own neighborhood has become. We’ve got Russian ships docking in Havana, Chinese spy stations operating ninety miles from Miami, and now our commanders meeting Cuban brass at the wire. America needs to project strength in our own backyard, not negotiate through chain-link.
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