Rubio: likelihood of negotiated agreement with Cuba ‘not high’

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the chances of a negotiated ​settlement with Cuba were “not high”, as Washington steps up ‌pressure on the island’s communist government.

Rubio said the United States would prefer a diplomatic solution.

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“That remains our preference with Cuba,” he told reporters. “I’m just being honest with ​you, you know, the likelihood of that happening, given who ​we’re dealing with right now, is not high. But ⁠if they have a change of heart, you know, we’re here. ​And in the meantime, we’ll keep doing what we need to ​do.”

President Donald Trump is pushing for “regime change” in Cuba, where communists have been in charge since Fidel Castro led a revolution in 1959.

Cuba has accepted a U.S. ​offer of $100 million in humanitarian aid, Rubio said.

Cuban Foreign Minister ​Bruno Rodriguez accused Rubio of inciting military aggression and falsely labeling Cuba a state ‌sponsor ⁠of terrorism.

“The U.S. Secretary of State lies once again to instigate a military aggression that would provoke the shedding of Cuban and American blood,” Rodriguez said, adding that Cuba poses no security threat to ​the United States.

The ​United States announced murder ⁠charges against former Cuban President Raul Castro on Wednesday, in a sharp escalation of tensions between the longtime Cold ​War rivals.

Rubio rejected suggestions Washington was engaged in nation-building.

“It’s ​not ⁠nation-building,” he told reporters before leaving for a NATO ministers meeting in Sweden. “We are addressing something that’s directly related to the national security of ⁠the ​United States.”

Source:  Reuters

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